
Cool It Down
Cover photography by Alex Prager, interior photography by David Black, art by Julian gross.
Vinyl features gatefold LP with lyric and photo booklet.
CD features four-panel wallet with 20-page lyric and photo book.
It could only be called alchemy, the transformative magic that happens during the Yeah Yeah Yeahsā most tuned-in moments in the studio, when their unique chemistry sparks opens a portal, and out comes a song like āMapsā or āZeroā or the latest addition to their canon, āSpitting off the Edge of the Worldā ā an epic shot-to-the-heart of pure YYYs beauty and power. āItās really awe-inspiring to watch the process of Karenās melodies and lyrics just coming to her, right there,ā says guitarist Nick Zinner. āLike, āwhat the fuck, where did that come from?ā When it strikes her, itās the most incredible thing.ā
āThe look on Nick's face when that happens,ā Karen O says, with a laugh, āitās primo, man. I know Iām onto something because I can tell it's hitting him somewhere in his soul. We've been doing this together so long, and there are moments when the song comes from God-knows-where, and it feels like thereās a change in the air quality, in the atmosphere, like when itās about to thunderstorm.ā
A thunderstorm of a return is what the legendary trio has in store for us in 2022, with the release of Cool It Down, their first new music since 2013ās Mosquito. Their fifth studio album is an eight-track collection, and an expert distillation of their best gifts that impels you to move, and cry, and listen closely and is bound to be a landmark in their catalog.
They never expected it to be so long between albums, and they certainly had stayed busy: There was a tour for their 2003 debut album, Fever to Tell that was re-issued in 2017; Karen released an album with Danger Mouse (Lux Prima, 2019) and co-composed the score for the animated film Where Is Anne Frank?; Nick made an album with his hardcore side-project Head Wound City, scored Films, and collaborated with artists including Phoebe Bridgers, Amen Dunes and Songhoy Blues, Brian started his own label Chaiken Records. Karen and drummer Brian Chase both became parents in recent years.
The band had even begun talking about new music back in early 2020, but then the world stopped. āI was having dreams, as Iām sure many people were during the early part of the pandemic and lockdown, of places Iād been,ā Karen says. āDreams of cities weāve toured in the last twenty years together, whether itās Byron Bay or Paris morphed with Mexico ā my brain was taking me to all these places. And I felt, for the first time, āwhat if we donāt get to do it again?ā That thought had never crossed my mind before and I really felt it profoundly during the pandemic: I realized Iād taken for granted that weāll always be able to go out on the road and play shows, that weāll always be able to make more music when we want to. And having gone through the collective trauma of what we experienced, I really wanted to get in a room together and jam, and see what our subconscious was going to unleash after all that time.ā
She and Nick got together in spring of 2021 to give it a try. āWe started playing music and it just came flooding out of us,ā Karen remembers. Their longtime collaborator Dave Sitek (ābasically a fourth member of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, at this pointā) had shared some tracks heād set aside, including the framework for āSpitting Off The Edge of The World,ā and Karen connected with it right away. āWhen I heard the opening line, it felt like a waterfall,ā she says. ā[David] Bowie came to mind immediately. Sitek was actually friends with Bowie, and it felt like he was tuning into that frequency of artistry. And so when I was writing the lyrics and the melody, thatās who I was trying to tune into, as well. Because Iāve never tried to evoke Bowie before. But heās gone now, and thereās a big, gaping hole.ā And when she imagined another voice joining hers on the tune, the idea to invite Perfume Geniusās Mike Hadreas felt obvious. āMike really has a bit of Bowie in him,ā she says. āHe was literally the first and only person that came to mind for it.ā
Perfume Genius also co-stars alongside Karen in the visual for āSpitting,ā as an avenging angel limo driver to her desert rebel queen. The visual was directed by another longtime YYYās collaborator, Cody Critcheloe (aka Ssion), who designed the artwork for Fever To Tell and also directed Perfume Geniusās amazing āQueenā video.
Karen explains that the lyrics for āSpittingā¦ā reflect on the state of the environment, and the need for honesty about the damage weāre doing to the Earth. āWeāre all experiencing this climate crisis through a system which is broken and not really addressing it,ā she says. On āSpittingā¦,ā she reframes the topic as a personal conversation with her son about the world heās inheriting. āI see the younger generations staring down this threat, and theyāre standing on the edge of a precipice, confronting whatās coming with anger and defiance,ā she says. āItās galvanizing, and thereās hope there.ā
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Cool It Down
Cover photography by Alex Prager, interior photography by David Black, art by Julian gross.
Vinyl features gatefold LP with lyric and photo booklet.
CD features four-panel wallet with 20-page lyric and photo book.
It could only be called alchemy, the transformative magic that happens during the Yeah Yeah Yeahsā most tuned-in moments in the studio, when their unique chemistry sparks opens a portal, and out comes a song like āMapsā or āZeroā or the latest addition to their canon, āSpitting off the Edge of the Worldā ā an epic shot-to-the-heart of pure YYYs beauty and power. āItās really awe-inspiring to watch the process of Karenās melodies and lyrics just coming to her, right there,ā says guitarist Nick Zinner. āLike, āwhat the fuck, where did that come from?ā When it strikes her, itās the most incredible thing.ā
āThe look on Nick's face when that happens,ā Karen O says, with a laugh, āitās primo, man. I know Iām onto something because I can tell it's hitting him somewhere in his soul. We've been doing this together so long, and there are moments when the song comes from God-knows-where, and it feels like thereās a change in the air quality, in the atmosphere, like when itās about to thunderstorm.ā
A thunderstorm of a return is what the legendary trio has in store for us in 2022, with the release of Cool It Down, their first new music since 2013ās Mosquito. Their fifth studio album is an eight-track collection, and an expert distillation of their best gifts that impels you to move, and cry, and listen closely and is bound to be a landmark in their catalog.
They never expected it to be so long between albums, and they certainly had stayed busy: There was a tour for their 2003 debut album, Fever to Tell that was re-issued in 2017; Karen released an album with Danger Mouse (Lux Prima, 2019) and co-composed the score for the animated film Where Is Anne Frank?; Nick made an album with his hardcore side-project Head Wound City, scored Films, and collaborated with artists including Phoebe Bridgers, Amen Dunes and Songhoy Blues, Brian started his own label Chaiken Records. Karen and drummer Brian Chase both became parents in recent years.
The band had even begun talking about new music back in early 2020, but then the world stopped. āI was having dreams, as Iām sure many people were during the early part of the pandemic and lockdown, of places Iād been,ā Karen says. āDreams of cities weāve toured in the last twenty years together, whether itās Byron Bay or Paris morphed with Mexico ā my brain was taking me to all these places. And I felt, for the first time, āwhat if we donāt get to do it again?ā That thought had never crossed my mind before and I really felt it profoundly during the pandemic: I realized Iād taken for granted that weāll always be able to go out on the road and play shows, that weāll always be able to make more music when we want to. And having gone through the collective trauma of what we experienced, I really wanted to get in a room together and jam, and see what our subconscious was going to unleash after all that time.ā
She and Nick got together in spring of 2021 to give it a try. āWe started playing music and it just came flooding out of us,ā Karen remembers. Their longtime collaborator Dave Sitek (ābasically a fourth member of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, at this pointā) had shared some tracks heād set aside, including the framework for āSpitting Off The Edge of The World,ā and Karen connected with it right away. āWhen I heard the opening line, it felt like a waterfall,ā she says. ā[David] Bowie came to mind immediately. Sitek was actually friends with Bowie, and it felt like he was tuning into that frequency of artistry. And so when I was writing the lyrics and the melody, thatās who I was trying to tune into, as well. Because Iāve never tried to evoke Bowie before. But heās gone now, and thereās a big, gaping hole.ā And when she imagined another voice joining hers on the tune, the idea to invite Perfume Geniusās Mike Hadreas felt obvious. āMike really has a bit of Bowie in him,ā she says. āHe was literally the first and only person that came to mind for it.ā
Perfume Genius also co-stars alongside Karen in the visual for āSpitting,ā as an avenging angel limo driver to her desert rebel queen. The visual was directed by another longtime YYYās collaborator, Cody Critcheloe (aka Ssion), who designed the artwork for Fever To Tell and also directed Perfume Geniusās amazing āQueenā video.
Karen explains that the lyrics for āSpittingā¦ā reflect on the state of the environment, and the need for honesty about the damage weāre doing to the Earth. āWeāre all experiencing this climate crisis through a system which is broken and not really addressing it,ā she says. On āSpittingā¦,ā she reframes the topic as a personal conversation with her son about the world heās inheriting. āI see the younger generations staring down this threat, and theyāre standing on the edge of a precipice, confronting whatās coming with anger and defiance,ā she says. āItās galvanizing, and thereās hope there.ā
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Cover photography by Alex Prager, interior photography by David Black, art by Julian gross.
Vinyl features gatefold LP with lyric and photo booklet.
CD features four-panel wallet with 20-page lyric and photo book.
It could only be called alchemy, the transformative magic that happens during the Yeah Yeah Yeahsā most tuned-in moments in the studio, when their unique chemistry sparks opens a portal, and out comes a song like āMapsā or āZeroā or the latest addition to their canon, āSpitting off the Edge of the Worldā ā an epic shot-to-the-heart of pure YYYs beauty and power. āItās really awe-inspiring to watch the process of Karenās melodies and lyrics just coming to her, right there,ā says guitarist Nick Zinner. āLike, āwhat the fuck, where did that come from?ā When it strikes her, itās the most incredible thing.ā
āThe look on Nick's face when that happens,ā Karen O says, with a laugh, āitās primo, man. I know Iām onto something because I can tell it's hitting him somewhere in his soul. We've been doing this together so long, and there are moments when the song comes from God-knows-where, and it feels like thereās a change in the air quality, in the atmosphere, like when itās about to thunderstorm.ā
A thunderstorm of a return is what the legendary trio has in store for us in 2022, with the release of Cool It Down, their first new music since 2013ās Mosquito. Their fifth studio album is an eight-track collection, and an expert distillation of their best gifts that impels you to move, and cry, and listen closely and is bound to be a landmark in their catalog.
They never expected it to be so long between albums, and they certainly had stayed busy: There was a tour for their 2003 debut album, Fever to Tell that was re-issued in 2017; Karen released an album with Danger Mouse (Lux Prima, 2019) and co-composed the score for the animated film Where Is Anne Frank?; Nick made an album with his hardcore side-project Head Wound City, scored Films, and collaborated with artists including Phoebe Bridgers, Amen Dunes and Songhoy Blues, Brian started his own label Chaiken Records. Karen and drummer Brian Chase both became parents in recent years.
The band had even begun talking about new music back in early 2020, but then the world stopped. āI was having dreams, as Iām sure many people were during the early part of the pandemic and lockdown, of places Iād been,ā Karen says. āDreams of cities weāve toured in the last twenty years together, whether itās Byron Bay or Paris morphed with Mexico ā my brain was taking me to all these places. And I felt, for the first time, āwhat if we donāt get to do it again?ā That thought had never crossed my mind before and I really felt it profoundly during the pandemic: I realized Iād taken for granted that weāll always be able to go out on the road and play shows, that weāll always be able to make more music when we want to. And having gone through the collective trauma of what we experienced, I really wanted to get in a room together and jam, and see what our subconscious was going to unleash after all that time.ā
She and Nick got together in spring of 2021 to give it a try. āWe started playing music and it just came flooding out of us,ā Karen remembers. Their longtime collaborator Dave Sitek (ābasically a fourth member of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, at this pointā) had shared some tracks heād set aside, including the framework for āSpitting Off The Edge of The World,ā and Karen connected with it right away. āWhen I heard the opening line, it felt like a waterfall,ā she says. ā[David] Bowie came to mind immediately. Sitek was actually friends with Bowie, and it felt like he was tuning into that frequency of artistry. And so when I was writing the lyrics and the melody, thatās who I was trying to tune into, as well. Because Iāve never tried to evoke Bowie before. But heās gone now, and thereās a big, gaping hole.ā And when she imagined another voice joining hers on the tune, the idea to invite Perfume Geniusās Mike Hadreas felt obvious. āMike really has a bit of Bowie in him,ā she says. āHe was literally the first and only person that came to mind for it.ā
Perfume Genius also co-stars alongside Karen in the visual for āSpitting,ā as an avenging angel limo driver to her desert rebel queen. The visual was directed by another longtime YYYās collaborator, Cody Critcheloe (aka Ssion), who designed the artwork for Fever To Tell and also directed Perfume Geniusās amazing āQueenā video.
Karen explains that the lyrics for āSpittingā¦ā reflect on the state of the environment, and the need for honesty about the damage weāre doing to the Earth. āWeāre all experiencing this climate crisis through a system which is broken and not really addressing it,ā she says. On āSpittingā¦,ā she reframes the topic as a personal conversation with her son about the world heās inheriting. āI see the younger generations staring down this threat, and theyāre standing on the edge of a precipice, confronting whatās coming with anger and defiance,ā she says. āItās galvanizing, and thereās hope there.ā













