Bringin' It Backwards Podcast

Podcast: Bringin’ It Backwards Chats With OK Go

We had the pleasure of interviewing Tim of OK Go over the phone!

Formed as a quartet in Chicago in 1998 and relocated to Los Angeles three years later, OK Go (Damian Kulash, Tim Nordwind, Dan Konopka, Andy Ross) have spent their career in a steady state of transformation. The four songs of the all-new Upside Out EP represent the first preview of Hungry Ghosts, due out in the fall on the bandโ€™s own Paracadute. This is the bandโ€™s fourth full-length and the newest addition to a curriculum vitae filled with experimentation in a variety of mediums.

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The band worked with longtime producer and friend Dave Fridmann (Flaming Lips, Weezer, MGMT), while also enlisting a new collaborator in Los Angeles, veteran Tony Hoffer, (Beck, Phoenix, Foster the People) to create their most comfortable and far-reaching songs yet. Building on (and deconstructing) 15 years of pop-rock smarts, musical friendship, and band-of-the-future innovations the EP, Upside Out, offers a concise overview of forthcoming Hungry Ghostsโ€™ melancholic fireworks (โ€œThe Writingโ€™s on the Wallโ€), basement funk parties (โ€œTurn Up The Radioโ€), IMAX-sized choruses (โ€œThe One Momentโ€), and space-age dance floor bangers (โ€œI Wonโ€™t Let You Downโ€).

Drawn from the same marching orders issued to big-hearted happiness creators as Queen, T. Rex, The Cars or Cheap Trick, and a lifetimeof mixed tapes exchanged by lifelong music fans, Upside Out is a reaffirmation of the sounds and ideas that brought the band together in the first place. The four songs provide an assured kick-off to a new sequence of interconnected performances, videos, dances, and wild, undreamt fun.

โ€œAs the band has evolved over the last 15 years, the creative palette we work with has expanded in so many unexpected and gratifying directions,โ€ says frontman Damian Kulash. โ€œThis record feels like itโ€™s the musical manifestation of that โ€” like we can speak in a clearer voice when we are playing in a bigger sandbox. Just as the bandโ€™s whole project became clearer to us as we learned to find more homes for our creativity โ€” we triangulated it from more directions. And, I think the music itself has gotten more focused for similar reasons. We went in with fewer preconceptions of who we are or what our sound is, and came out with a record that sounds much more uniquely our own because of it.โ€

Continuing a career that includes viral videos, New York Times op-eds, a major label split and the establishment of a DIY trans-media mini- empire, collaborations with pioneering dance companies and tech giants, animators and Muppets, OK Go continue to fearlessly dream and build new worlds in a time when creative boundaries have all but dissolved.

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