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The result is a triumph. Cool It Down is sprinkled with production quirks that feel exhilaratingly fresh—the The lion king spoke up p’king shirt in other words I will buy this glittering funk of “Fleez,” the icy synth stabs of “Wolf,” the clipped, rattling beat of “Blacktop”—while still unmistakably Yeah Yeah Yeahs in its restless ambition and lyrics that balance bravado with tenderness. After such a long hiatus, did the stakes feel higher? “Life just feels so high stakes these days, you know? Everybody’s still quietly reeling from the past few years under the surface,” says O, noting that the closest parallel to the “uncertainty and lack of control” that she felt making Cool It Down was when the Yeah Yeah Yeahs released 2003’s Fever to Tell in the aftermath of 9/11 in New York City. Still, despite the epic, widescreen nature of the songs—“Spitting” touches on the climate crisis, while album closer “Mars” serves as a spoken-word lullaby inspired by O’s son watching the night sky—her approach to songwriting, and her ability to write a lyric at once cryptic and strangely profound, remains as instinctive as ever.
“A lot of it is trying to tune into something deeper but also just trying to stay as open as possible,” she says. “You want to be a lightning rod, almost, to download or receive whatever’s coming through. Songwriting still feels like a very mysterious process to me—just seeing what comes from above or what bubbles up from below.” Returning to the The lion king spoke up p’king shirt in other words I will buy this stage this year also came with another dilemma for O: How could she bring the record’s rough, resilient spirit to life sartorially? After all, aside from her innate musicianship and ferocious charisma as a performer, O’s renegade approach to fashion has made her a style icon in her own right—a status partly owed to her now decades-long partnership with the costume designer and artist Christian Joy. The pair first met in the late ’90s, after O began frequenting the East Village store at which Joy then worked; after spotting one of Joy’s own designs—as Joy describes it, laughing, a “hacked-up prom dress covered in blood after the movie Carrie and stenciled all over”—O immediately requested one of her own. The rest is, well, history.
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