“I'm committed to a bit that I don't even get anymore,” corook says on the title track of their album Committed to a Bit. It’s a chilling, straightforward admission stripped of all the color and whimsy that normally weaves through their songs. How did we get here? To do that, we have to go backwards.
corook’s infectious earworms were made for virality. Inside each bright and bubbly song is a keen understanding of pop melodies and songwriting, underscored with an arresting vulnerability as the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-born songwriter navigates the intersections of their identity, life, and passion with a changing world. Born Corinne Savage, the 30-year-old artist prepares for the release of the diaristic Committed to a Bit—a debut album that could only have been made after putting a magnifying glass on every facet of themself.
“I don’t think I would have made corook until I found out who Corinne was,” they admit. “I realized that my creativity didn't have to just be this serious work of, ‘How can I write the best song?’ It was like, ‘How can I put me in a song?’ And it turns out it was just a bunch of really bad jokes and humor.” Armed with a prestigious Berklee education, corook began crafting disarmingly funny and whimsical songs, including the mega-viral “If I Were a Fish.” Born out of coping with vicious online harassment, the charming self-love anthem took on a life of its own. The self-acceptance anthem surged across social media, amassing over 21 million Spotify streams and 2.5 million YouTube views with critical acclaim pouring in from publications including Rolling Stone, NPR and more.
corook holds onto a quote by Dr. Brené Brown: "Joy is the most vulnerable emotion we feel.” Facing the public arena of social media, it’s easy for the positive to get drowned out by the vitriol. “Joy is resistance within the face of everything that wants us not to be joyful,” corook says. In comes Committed to a Bit.
Like a peek into one’s home videos, cringy diary entries, and therapy sessions, Committed is corook at their most raw. They constantly go back and refer to their childlike innocence juxtaposed with an uncomfortable awareness of the world around them. Songs like “ballerina” and “Pepto Bismol” recall what corook describes as existing as a “sensitive” child who learned to be funny, a side effect of being a middle child. “Out the womb, I'm just so sensitive, and I think that that's what makes me so honest, and that honesty is what makes me brave enough to continue showing up to social media everyday.” There’s also tender love songs dedicated to their longtime partner in both romance and music, Olivia Barton, like the chilling “death.” “That was the first time I thought about losing her and what that would be like...it was the first time I felt like I was actually able to say, ‘I want to be with you forever,’ and I feel like the song captures how awkward and scary it is to say that for the first time.”