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OK GO'S AND THE ADJACENT POSSIBLE – The Grammy®-Winning Band's First Album In A Decade

OK GO'S AND THE ADJACENT POSSIBLE – The Grammy®-Winning Band's First Album In A Decade

Scoop24-04-2025
OK Go returns with And the Adjacent Possible, the band's ambitious fifth studio album and first full-length release since 2014's Hungry Ghosts. Even for a band known for pushing boundaries, the album is wildly eclectic—postmodern and genre-dissolving, with nods to Phil Spector, Toni Visconti, and Nile Rodgers sandwiched between the fuzzy, psychedelic opener, 'Impulse Purchase,' and the meditative, Zen-like closer, 'Don't Give Up Now.' Glued together by the distinctive mixing of the band's longtime collaborator Dave Fridmann (The Flaming Lips, Spoon, Tame Impala, MGMT), the twelve tracks collectively paint a portrait of a band comfortable in its own chameleon skin.
Listen to And the Adjacent Possible, released via Paracadute here: https://sym.ffm.to/andtheadjacentpossible
The band will deliver an extra special performance of 'Love,' its new single, on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Tuesday, April 15. Like the album's first track 'A Stone Only Rolls Downhill,' 'Love' is written from a father's perspective, but the weighty concerns of the first song give way to wonder and joy on this soaring new anthem.
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Damian Kulash says, 'You know that dream where you're somewhere familiar, maybe your childhood home, but there's a door, one that was never there before, leading to some impossible magical place? Having children did that to my understanding of love. Suddenly, a huge new ballroom opened up off of the little apartment I've inhabited so long: a whole new wing of love, grand and soaring and utterly overwhelming. It is endlessly amazing that we exist — little, conscious clusters of stardust occurring, apparently by chance, in the vast emptiness of the universe. And we get to experience love. It is unbelievable.'
And since this is OK Go, of course there is a mind-melting music video. It always seems like the band can't possibly top themselves, but with today's release of the video for 'Love,' they've done it again. The single-take video features complex choreography between the band, 29 robots, and upwards of 60 mirrors to create a dazzling — and this time deeply moving — spectacle of infinite reflections and human-scale kaleidoscopes. Shot in the faded glory of a Budapest train station, the clip was concepted in partnership with creative agency SpecialGuest, co-directed by Damian Kulash, Aaron Duffy, and Miguel Espada, and produced by 1stAveMachine, with technology integration by SpecialGuestX.
View the video for 'Love' here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gz9BRl7DVSM
Always looking for new ways to document their elaborate videos, OK Go's Damian Kulash, Timothy Nordwind, Andy Ross, and Dan Konopka wore Ray-Ban Meta glasses throughout the production to capture behind-the-scenes footage - watch HERE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQufZQMXUhY. Learn more about the Universal Robots in the video HERE: https://www.universal-robots.com/en-us/landing-pages/syncing-30-robots-to-a-beat-the-making-of-ok-go-s-love-music-video/. For a more in-depth behind-the-scenes documentary on the making of the video courtesy of Project Management Institute - please view HERE: https://youtu.be/_EKQKF4qPPI?si=q2wPiVop6qhaB3gT
'We're always drawn to spectacle and wonder,' says Kulash, 'and the goal, this time, was to take them somewhere more heartfelt and emotional than we have before. This song is so personal for me, and the infinite reflections bouncing between two mirrors are a perfect metaphor for the kind of overwhelming, reality-shifting love that I'm singing about. Two simple things come together, and new dimensions burst from them into existence. Magic unfurls endlessly. It's the impossible, right there before you. That's the kind of wonder that can bring me to tears.'
Combined views of OK Go's previous video, the stunning moving mosaic for 'A Stone Only Rolls Downhill' that features 64 videos playing across 64 phones, has already surpassed five million. Directed by Kulash and Chris Buongiorno (Star Wars: Skeleton Crew), it required more than a thousand takes, and over two hours and twenty minutes of single-take clips which are condensed into the final frame. Filmmaking magazine Shots marveled, 'Whenever a new OK Go video drops, the creative community's mixture of anticipation and professional jealousy is palpable."
The album packaging also demonstrates boundless creativity and meticulous attention to detail. The first vinyl pressing, limited to 3,000, is a two-LP set on 180-gram, 45RPM discs in a foil-stamped gatefold with full-color inner sleeves. A 3-dimensional sculpture pops up when listeners open it. The packaging was designed by Yuri Suzuki and Claudio Ripol from Team Suzuki with 3D sliceform design and popup structure by Wombi Rose, Hà Trnh Quc Bo, and Emilio LaTorre for Lovepop.
To listen to And the Adjacent Possible is to be taken on an emotional rollercoaster… in the best way possible. While the music is largely upbeat, the lyrics can be dark. OK Go's sardonic wit drives 'Impulse Purchase,' a playfully direct address to the algorithms that will choose its audience: 'Now, as a practical matter it's pointless/to address you directly here/Any probabilistic adjustments/will dissolve in the sea/of the everything-everyone-everywhere-ever-has-done that you swallowed before.' Even the brightly titled 'A Good, Good Day at Last' features lines like, 'Anger, she's more loyal/than her fickle sister Hope.' Yet rays of hope ('Love,' 'Don't Give Up Now') also abound.
Track Listing – And the Adjacent Possible
Impulse Purchase
A Stone Only Rolls Downhill
Love
A Good, Good Day at Last
Fantasy Vs. Fantasy
This Is How It Ends
Take Me with You
Better Than This
Golden Devils
Once More with Feeling
Going Home
Don't Give Up Now
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Letters to the Editor: property, cycling and Zen
Letters to the Editor: property, cycling and Zen

Otago Daily Times

time18-06-2025

  • Otago Daily Times

Letters to the Editor: property, cycling and Zen

Today's Letters to the Editor from readers cover topics including overseas purchases for properties over $5m, cyclists on Albany St, and Zen and the art of climate management. Economics lesson on foreign buyer proposal I was surprised by South Island Minister James Meager's assertion that non-residents should be allowed to buy properties over $5 million because, "Look at the kind of people who are looking to move here. I mean, [Hollywood actor] Jason Momoa basically lives here, right?" James needs an economics lesson. Value is relative. Allowing overseas purchases for properties over $5m will instantly create inflation; properties valued at $3-4m will rise to $5m. Those valued at $1m-2m will rise to the fill the gap. Before 2018 investors and realtors gleefully rubbed their hands as overseas buyers looking for an investment as opposed to a home used cheap money to price out Kiwis in their own country. In the United Kingdom unlimited overseas access to the property market means people born in London can no longer afford to live there. Properties in that city that once have housed young professionals are now luxury hotels and apartments worth millions. Everyone else has departed on a decade long route march to depressing cookie-cutter homes blanketing a once green and pleasant land. Even worse is that many investment properties in London are empty: over 35,000 empty homes in London mean high rents due to a lack of supply. If Jason Mamoa wants to own a property in New Zealand then he can do what everyone else in his position has done: apply for residency. I am sure he would be welcome to join our beautiful nation to contribute as an equal. Where are the cyclists? Re a cycling and walking bridge across Albany St. I believe this was originally costed at about $20 million, which seems a bit extravagant considering there is already a footpath and road. A frequent shopper at that end of town I have yet to see more than one or two cyclists. Lots of students are already managing to walk on already paved footpaths. What I don't see is work starting in South Dunedin, especially urgent work in Surrey St. This work should be top of DCC to-do list. Who are the councillors pushing for this vanity project? We need councillors focused on projects based on urgent need. Not some airy-fairy nice-to-have. In fact no need at all. Throttled streets The current noise about the Albany St "improvements" makes me reflect on the makeup of Dunedin's planning and transport departments. The last council elections clearly showed that Dunedin ratepayers rejected the Greens' anti car, pro-cyclist agenda. Council is now made up of a more balanced cross-section of views. However it is clear that while anti-car councillors were cleared out, no change has occurred in the council's planning and transport departments. The idea that streets be throttled and parking removed to make areas supposedly more pedestrian and bike "friendly" still pervades council. The Caversham/Wingatui tunnels fiasco is another, where council staff want to spend millions that ratepayers can't afford and most don't want. All to appease a cycling at all costs ideology. It is even seemingly insulting to council staff if any councillor questions staff attitudes or intentions. DCC staff need to wake up. They work for ratepayers. They need to implement policies and planning that represent the balance of councillor and ratepayer preferences. Not their own ideological preferences. Cataclysmic events and how to save millions The Otago Regional Council's Zen Room could allow councillors to rest their minds from the hurly-burly of current fads and fashions, and to contemplate life from a broader perspective. They might reflect that Otago once had a much warmer climate, as evidenced by the warm-temperate to subtropical biota from 23 million years ago preserved in Foulden Maar. They might reflect that nature has always had, and will continue to have, its cataclysmic events. Deadly cyclones, typhoons, flooding and droughts did not begin, or even increase, with the industrial revolution. In fact, annual climate-related deaths worldwide have fallen dramatically in the last century. Regarding the control of introduced species, they might reflect that current biomes in New Zealand are already irreversibly changed from the pre-human period. It may now be more cost-effective, and beneficial in other ways, to regard species such as wallabies, possums, and lagarosiphon as benign or positive additions to present day ecosystems. These reflections made in equanimity could save ratepayers tens of millions of dollars. Feature hailed as timely as war rages on The Weekend Mix (14.6.25) carries an article "Never Again" by Tom McKinlay. It's an interview with Emir Hadzic who survived a genocide in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in the 1980s. Unfortunately what happened there is still happening today in other countries. I don't need to spell them out but strongly recommend you read the article. In the words of George Orwell: "A society becomes totalitarian when its structure becomes flagrantly artificial: that is when its ruling class has lost its function but succeeds in clinging to power by force or fraud." In my opinion George Orwell's words unfortunately speak loudly and clearly in today's world. Oh no it's not Jenny McNamara claims the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled Israel is committing genocide (Letters ODT 7.6.25). That is false. In January, the ICJ merely said South Africa's allegations were plausible — a procedural threshold, not a verdict. 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Tributes to Brian Wilson flood in from across the music world
Tributes to Brian Wilson flood in from across the music world

1News

time12-06-2025

  • 1News

Tributes to Brian Wilson flood in from across the music world

Tributes for the Beach Boys' Brian Wilson from across the music and entertainment world have flooded in following his death at 82. Wilson's family posted news of his death on his website and social media accounts today. Further details weren't immediately available. The influence of Wilson's music was felt far and wide, which has been reflected in the tributes made by other musicians and entertainers. 'Brian Wilson was my friend and my brother in songwriting. We shared a similar sensibility, as evidenced by his 4 over 5 chord under Aaaah! in Good Vibrations and mine under I'm Into Something Good. We once discussed who used it first, and in the end we decided it didn't matter. The world will miss Brian, but we are so lucky to have his music," singer-songwriter Carole King said on Facebook. 'I know Orbison is the king of emo, but man if there was a human being who made art out of inexpressible sadness….damn it was Brian Wilson," drummer and producer Questlove said on Instagram. ADVERTISEMENT John Cusack, who played Wilson in the 2014 biopic Love & Mercy, said: 'The maestro has passed — the man was a open heart with two legs — with an ear that heard the angels. Quite literally. Love and Mercy for you and yours tonight. RIP Brian.' The morning's headlines in 90 seconds including passengers stuck on ferry overnight, new flights to Sydney coming, and the weirdest things we leave in Ubers. (Source: 1News) Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards posted to Instagram. 'Rest in Peace,' he wrote. 'Oh no Brian Wilson and Sly Stone in one week - my world is in mourning. So sad," said Richards' bandmate Ronnie Wood on X. 'Anyone with a musical bone in their body must be grateful for Brian Wilson's genius magical touch !! And greatly saddened of this major worldly loss!! My thoughts go out to his family and friends," Fleetwood Mac drummer Mick Fleetwood said on X. 'First Sly, now Brian … this is really just," Maggie Rogers wrote on her Instagram Story, adding a heartbreak emoji. 'Anyone who really knows me knows how heart broken I am about Brian Wilson passing. Not many people influenced me as much as he did. I feel very lucky that I was able to meet him and spend some time with him. He was always very kind and generous. He was our American Mozart. A one of a kind genius from another world," Sean Ono Lennon said on X. ADVERTISEMENT 'SO very sad to hear that our dear friend, inspiration and mentor for decades has passed away. Rest In Peace BRIAN love, Dewey & Gerry," Dewey Bunnell and Gerry Beckley, the only remaining founding members of the band America, wrote on Instagram. Nancy Sinatra posted to Instagram, saying: 'His cherished music will live forever as he travels through the Universe and beyond. God bless you, sweet Brian. One of the biggest thrills of my life was singing California Girls with Brian.' 'To me, Brian Wilson was not merely about surf music, rather a true musical genius toiling away at melding POP into startling sophistication. He will be missed mightily," John Cale, Velvet Underground musician and producer, wrote on X. 'Brian Wilson was a musical and spiritual giant. His melodies shaped generations, & his soul resonated in every note. I was fortunate to know him; we all were blessed by his genius. Rest peacefully, Brian," Micky Dolenz of The Monkees said on X. Randy Bachman, co-founder of Bachman-Turner Overdrive, said: 'We lost one of the greatest composers and messengers who took jazz harmony, put it to a Chuck Berry beat and made a new genre of music. Some of the best singles in the world. Dennis, Carl and Brian are all together now. Other worlds to sing in.'

Artist welded to his dream
Artist welded to his dream

Otago Daily Times

time11-06-2025

  • Otago Daily Times

Artist welded to his dream

Ben Pearce has known since he was 4 years old that he was going to be an artist. His dreams of welding and making have come true as he creates his large Corten steel sculptures, he tells Rebecca Fox. Instead of looking ahead at the view when hiking, Ben Pearce has his head down searching for interesting chunks of rock, taking photographs and picking up the odd rock shard as he goes. "I'm like I've still got 15km to go that day. Right, I've got to get there and start ignoring this. And I always come back with a kilo of rocks in the pocket." The best of the haul goes on a shelf in his workshop where there are rocks from his hikes as far and wide as the Hump Ridge Track in the south to the Tongariro Alpine Crossing in the north. For Pearce, every rock is beautiful, whether it is found on the side of the road or up a mountain. "It's a very democratic thing to be inspired by." He also has a special soft spot for standing stones, such as Stonehenge, finding them very intriguing. "It's sort of really interesting as humans how we put a kind of meaning into rocks." For Pearce, who lives in Hawke's Bay, his fascination with stone is funnelled into his sculptural practice. He is known for his large, Corten steel sculptures, inspired by stacked rocks, which are held in private collections throughout New Zealand, Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States. He recently made a large "miniature" Stonehenge-like work popped up on a rock called On a hill at night faint music could be heard , which was included in Auckland's sculpture trail last month alongside works from nine other artists, including Lisa Reihana's giant female octopus Te Wheke-a-Muturangi . But his works started out as small sculptures made from offcuts of different types of wood from his work with furniture and lighting designer David Trubridge. "I was, like, painting little pictures of rocks and looking at the different kind of meanings of the different kind of powers that something had." Then he was asked to make a piece for the Brick Bay Sculpture Trail in Matakana, north of Auckland. "I was looking at one of the little wooden creations that I made, and I thought, oh, that would be really amazing, you know, three or four metres high. Doing that work spawned the whole thing." However, his love of art has always been with him. "I actually remember when I was 4, knowing that I'd be an artist for my whole life. As a little kid I remember having these dreams about being in a workshop and welding and making things. Like, I just, I knew. I remember I had a really strong passion for it. "I had a vision of what I'd be doing and just along the way things kept falling into place." As a child, he would enter every art competition he could and his mother encouraged him, even suggesting he enter the competition for the phone book cover, giving him some old eyeliner brushes and test pots of paint to use. "I entered and I won. I was, like, 14 years old. And I was like, that's two and a-half grand. That's going to pay for my first year of art school." As things fell into place, Pearce never questioned his direction. Intuitive feelings about what he should be doing have led his direction ever since and he headed off to art school, majoring in sculpture, at the Quay School of the Arts, in Whanganui, in 2003. Working with Trubridge meant he was surrounded by wood, so for the next five to 10 years he worked mostly in wood. But when Trubridge, with whom he worked for 18 years, and some friends set up an art and design incubator in Hawke's Bay, he saw sculptors working in steel. "It opened my eyes. Actually, I can make much more large and adventurous things in steel and am not limited to them being inside. Yeah, and I thought, 'OK, there's something really interesting in working with steel'." The sculptors allowed Pearce to use their workshop when they were not working. "It's quite different when you're standing in front of a piece of timber and you're carving it or drilling it. But when you're in front of a piece of steel, when you pull the trigger on a welder, you've got like hot melting metal flying around. "It has quite a big impact on you and you feel like you're working with the forces of nature." That feeling is what drew him to working with steel as well as the ability to fix mistakes. "You can just weld it and put it back together and carry on." Working with steel meant new tools were needed and new skills. But he says it comes naturally to him. His parents taught him knitting and cross-stitch as a child and his father was always working on old cars. "One funny memory is, like, whenever I got a new toy, like it might have been a toy I was waiting for or I really wanted, as soon as I got it, I would immediately take the whole toy apart, all the little screws, just to learn how it works." He first sketches into his workbook, often knowing what the works will look like before he comes up with the ideas for the shapes of his sculptures. "So it's neat to be able to bring those ideas, those kind of mental images that you might have, into, like, physical objects. Then it's a physical brute force to make it happen." Luckily, he has been able to pick up some skills not just through research but in his day jobs. At a winery fabrication company, he worked inside stainless steel wine tanks doing fine metal work which had to meet high standards. "I don't think I'll ever be finished learning all that stuff." He finds Corten steel to be a nice material to work with. "It's almost like you're working with nature a little bit. Like, depending on the day that you apply the patina, it can be quite different. If it's a really hot day, it is different to doing it on a cold day. The steel reacts differently, so no two works can ever look the same." One of the challenges he has faced as his works have got larger and more precarious is getting them to stand up straight, especially when they are not bolted down. He has devised large square bases to provide a stable platform from which he can cantilever anything. "Then it's kind of hidden engineering inside the work. There's large supporting beams inside the hollow form." Until four years ago, he was making his works in a single carport at his Napier home which was open to the road. He managed to fit in what was essentially a full engineering workshop. But it was not secure and his tools were regularly stolen. "When it rained, the rust would wash down the road and I'd have to sweep it up. It was really challenging. But a really well-known UK artist, Anthony Caro, worked out of his garage carport as well. And he's amazing. It didn't stop him from becoming one of the most worldwide known sculptors. " With enough work coming in and receiving the Hawke's Bay artist targeted fellowship (Ara Trust Award) in 2022 meant he was able to rent a secure space in a Hastings industrial area which has room for a studio for drawing as well as workshop space, including a welding bay and outdoor area. Pearce's interest in making things work has come in handy when it comes to fixing the multiple tools he has for his work. He even rescued a second-hand forklift headed for the recyclers and, with a bit of tinkering, got it going. "It has meant I can go a little bit bigger as well. I'm not trying to lift everything. I tend to have to roll the sculptures across the gravel and the concrete. So I just kind of work on them, and now I can just flip them up, turn them around." Pearce, who has been a finalist in the Wallace Art Awards and won people's choice in 2009, recently received his first commission for a bronze version of one of his sculptures. The costly material elevates the work into "serious" territory, he says. "It's going to be really fun. You can't be, as a sculptor, afraid of risk and complexity. It's either all in for something or you just don't do it. Yeah, it requires a very determined kind of mindset." He also makes smaller sculptures from bronze, wood or stone. His works have ended up all around the country, some hidden in gardens and others looking out to the mountains but often he does not know where they go. In 2022, he took part in Paper Pals Aotearoa, a large-scale, four-plinth public commission for the Wellington Sculpture Trust, outside Te Papa. "I had my first work from a collector in Hawke's Bay. She moved back to the Netherlands and she decided to sell most of the artwork but she kept my big sculpture and actually shipped it to the Netherlands. That was like a 100kg sculpture." Just getting his sculptures from Hawke's Bay to Dunedin for his exhibition at Milford Gallery was interesting. Six sculptures were packed into a trailer to be driven south — just 400mm under the maximum height to go on the ferry — and the freight company gave him daily updates. To see Ben Pearce, "Sculptures for a Wilderness", Milford Gallery Dunedin, June 14-July 7.

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