Brian Hiatt
Contact Brian Hiatt on X View all posts by Brian Hiatt June 27, 2026
"If it can happen with 'Go Away,' it could happen to any of our songs," says Rivers Cuomo Brendan Walter* Weezer will hit a rare milestone Aug. 21, releasing a 20th studio LP, The Gold Album, after maintaining a relatively stable line-up for most of their existence — bassist Scott Shriner is still the newest member, and he joined 25 years ago. Even more impressively, the album — co-produced Klas Åhlund and Kenneth Blume, who worked Geese’s Getting Killed — is strong from start to finish, living up to the first two singles, “Shine Again” and “We Might As Well Be Strangers” featuring the band Wednesday.
In a new episode of Rolling Stone Music Now, founding members Rivers Cuomo and Patrick Wilson talk about the new album, the newfound viral success of the Bethany Cosentino duet “Go Away” from 2015, and much more. To hear the whole thing, check out Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or just press play above. Some highlights follow:
Wilson wrote “Shine Again” without thinking about Weezer at all. “I think of nothing,” he says of his songwriting process. “I didn’t even think it was a Weezer song. One day I was like, ‘Oh.’ It all just poured out, and I recorded it, and on a whim I just brought it in.” “
The viral success of “Go Away” has given Cuomo a new philosophy about the entire Weezer catalog. “If it can happen with ‘Go Away,’ it could happen to any of our songs,” he says. “Maybe five years from now there’ll be some new platform, and people will go back through our catalog and find something else. I’m just happy when people hear our music.” Cuomo acknowledges the song’s success helped convince him to try another duet for “We Might As Well be Strangers.” “[Wednesday’s Karly Hartzman] sat right down and said, ‘Okay, here’s my idea,’ and she just pulled out some text file on her phone, and Kenny played the track, and she sang it to me,” he recalls. “I was just blown away.”
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Wilson says burnout led to Josh Freese filling in on drums for last year’s tour — but he says he hopes to return to drums for Weezer’s 2026 shows. “Last year, it’s kind of a long story, but I was just burnt,” Wilson says. “I was not in a great place, and a lot of it was physical, which of course makes you emotionally feel lame as well.” He’s been grinding through physical therapy. “I have what every drummer has to go through — your thoracic region from years of bad posture is, you know, happening. I’m 57. I’m just trying to get straightened out so that we get through the tour and we’ll be the classic version.” As for whether Freese returns: “So far there’s no plans. But I won’t lie, I love playing guitar.”