Tag Archives: gibbard

Rihanna And 2 Chainz’s Cape Rule Grammy Red Carpet

A panel of fashion experts from MTV and VH1 weigh in on the hottest looks from Sunday night. By Jocelyn Vena Rihanna at the 2013 Grammy Awards Photo: Getty Images

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Rihanna And 2 Chainz’s Cape Rule Grammy Red Carpet

Postal Service Deliver ‘A Tattered Line Of String’: Listen Now!

Song will be one of two unreleased tracks on Give Up reissue, due April 9. By Katie Atkinson Ben Gibbard Photo: Getty Images

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Postal Service Deliver ‘A Tattered Line Of String’: Listen Now!

Zooey Deschanel Files For Divorce From Ben Gibbard

‘New Girl’ star and Death Cab for Cutie frontman announced their separation in November. By Kara Warner Ben Gibbard and Zooey Deschanel Photo: Getty Images It looks like there is no reconciliation in sight for Zooey Deschanel and Death Cab for Cutie frontman Ben Gibbard. After announcing their separation back in November, the “New Girl” star officially filed for divorce a month later. According to People magazine, Deschanel filed the documents with L.A. County Superior Court on December 27. The papers list their actual date of separation as October 31 and cite “irreconcilable differences” as the reason behind the split. Although Deschanel spoke with the magazine recently, she didn’t have much to say about the end of her relationship with Gibbard but did mention that they will likely remain friends. “We’re friendly,” she told People. “It’s all fine.” Check out a breakup playlist of Death Cab and She & Him songs. Deschanel’s statement reflects a similar sentiment that a source told Us Weekly at the time of their separation: “It was mutual and amicable. There was no third party involved.” Deschanel’s star power has been on the rise over the past few years, particularly after her scene-stealing turn in “(500) Days of Summer” and “Our Idiot Brother,” but more recently since the debut of her critically acclaimed and Golden Globe-nominated new sitcom “The New Girl.” Gibbard has been equally busy with Death Cab for Cutie promoting the release of their seventh studio album, Codes and Keys, which was recently nominated for a Grammy for Best Alternative Music Album. The couple were introduced by their mutual manager three years ago. They got engaged in 2008 and were married in 2009. They have no children. Related Photos Zooey Deschanel And Ben Gibbard: A Look Back Related Artists Death Cab For Cutie

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Zooey Deschanel Files For Divorce From Ben Gibbard

Death Cab For Cutie Play Private KCRW Show

Santa Monica, California, radio station will air performance and interview on November 1 episode of ‘Morning Becomes Eclectic.’ By Matt Elias Death Cab for Cutie’s Ben Gibbard performs at Berkeley Street Studio in Santa Monica, California on Thursday Photo: Jeremiah Garcia SANTA MONICA, California — Death Cab for Cutie treated about 150 fans to a private performance Thursday night. The tiny show took place at legendary producer/mixer Bob Clearmountain’s Berkeley Street Studio in Santa Monica, California. If you weren’t one of the lucky few to attend the intimate affair, don’t fret: Local public radio station and tastemaker KCRW served as the evening’s host and will air the performance on the November 1 episode of “Morning Becomes Eclectic.” It will be available in KCRW’s archives the same day. The cozy space was a perfect setting for the Seattle quartet’s lush melodies. While the room was small, Death Cab didn’t seem to scale down their performance one bit, playing as if they were onstage at an arena. They opened their 10-song set with “Crooked Teeth,” off 2005’s Plans . Many of the songs that followed were from the band’s recent release, Codes and Keys, including “You Are a Tourist” and “Stay Young, Go Dancing.” About halfway through the set, the band sat down with KCRW DJ Anne Litt for a Q&A, which will also air on the “MBE” episode in November. The band chatted about the inspiration behind the lyrics in “You Are a Tourist,” books they’re reading and being enthralled by the Foo Fighters’ stage presence — something they witnessed firsthand after opening for them. It was their ability to absolutely own the stage that singer Ben Gibbard said he admired most about the Foos, who were doing just that across town Thursday night, playing to a sold-out crowd at the Forum. Death Cab ended with a two-song encore, or “noncore,” which Gibbard said happens when a stage is too small for a band to exit before returning. Despite the tiny venue, the band did its best to make the audience feel like it was in an arena. Related Artists Death Cab For Cutie

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Death Cab For Cutie Play Private KCRW Show

Death Cab For Cutie Take You Behind The Scenes Of ‘You Are A Tourist’ Video

Bandmembers say they weren’t nervous about live broadcast of video shoot. By James Montgomery, with reporting by Matt Elias Death Cab for Cutie’s Ben Gibbard Photo: MTV News As you are probably aware by now, on Tuesday night, Death Cab for Cutie managed to pull off their “You Are a Tourist” video — which was shot live, in one continuous take, and broadcast to the entire world via the Internet — without incident. Although the final product looked effortless, it only came together after a full day of rehearsals in Los Angeles, where Death Cab for Cutie worked (and reworked) the “Tourist” choreography with director Tim Nackashi and a bevy of background dancers. Now that “Tourist” is in the books — and disaster-free — we decided it was time to have DCFC take us through the process of making the clip, live, without a net. “The idea actually came to us from a friend of ours that’s been a creative collaborator with us over a number of projects over the years, named Aaron Stewart-Ahn,” Death Cab bassist Nick Harmer said. “He basically had a concept for the video and passed it to us, and we were able to go out into the world and find Tim Nackashi to direct and come up with a great treatment. … Really, it’s been a lot of minds all working on the same puzzle, and those two, between Tim and Aaron, deserve all the credit.” “Honestly,” frontman Ben Gibbard laughed, “we’re just the beneficiaries of all these great ideas.” As Gibbard explained, the trick to pulling off “Tourist” had a lot to do with the choreography — more specifically, striking a balance between too much and too little of it. “The balance here is to try to have there be a legitimate amount of choreography involved, but not so much that if one thing goes wrong, the whole thing topples like a house of cards,” he said. “There are some very kind of tight moves throughout the video, but nothing that, you know, if I’m not standing here at this one point, the Rube Goldberg [machine] falls apart and you’re standing there for the next three minutes looking like a moron.” To that point, DCFC said that though they’d be shooting a video live for the entire world to see, they weren’t nervous in the slightest. Because really, all the hard work was left to Nackashi and Stewart-Ahn. All the guys in the band had to do was hit their marks and everything would, in theory, be OK. As it turns out, it was. “I feel kind of fine. I mean, we’ve done enough live TV actually performing — and we’re not performing in this video, we’re not playing our instruments, we’re lip-synching — so because there’s no performance element, it doesn’t make me nervous,” Gibbard told MTV News on Monday. “Because really, all I have to do is remember the words that are being played over the P.A. and be standing in the right place at the right time. And there will be enough people kind of getting us to where we need to be that I’m not too nervous yet. But then again, it’s not for 24 hours, so I could maybe wake up tomorrow morning and be a little bit freaked out, but I think we’ll be OK.” Related Artists Death Cab For Cutie

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Death Cab For Cutie Take You Behind The Scenes Of ‘You Are A Tourist’ Video

Death Cab For Cutie Strive ‘To Make Music We Enjoy’ On New Album

Frontman Ben Gibbard says band’s only motivation these days is to have fun. By James Montgomery Death Cab for Cutie Photo: Frank Micelotta/ Getty Images The last time MTV News spoke to Death Cab for Cutie about the status of their new album, guitarist/producer Chris Walla said things were still in the “scratchy, unfinished demos” stage but that the music was already looking to split the difference between the live-and-loose Narrow Stairs and the more polished Plans. So, when we got DCFC frontman Ben Gibbard on the phone last week — to discuss his love of all things Seattle Mariner-y — we asked him for an update on the project. From the sound of things, the focus has sharpened considerably. “We’re going in the studio in June to start working on the record,” Gibbard told MTV News. “We’re going to be recording through the summer and into the fall, and all things being equal, we’re probably looking for a spring 2011 release.” Echoing Walla’s earlier sentiments, Gibbard said that the new Death Cab tunes do seem to be gleaned from a live setting or just a jam session in a room full of friends. “We all live in different cities now, but I strangely feel closer to my bandmates than I ever have before, and I think that as we move forward as a band, our only motivation is to make music that we enjoy, and to make music because it’s fun,” Gibbard said. “All of the accolades that we once hoped for — that we were striving for that were directly outside of the creative process — we’ve met almost all of those goals. So now, for us, it’s more of, ‘Oh, you know, I love hanging out with Chris and Nick and Jason, and talking about music and playing guitar.’ It’s just fun. We’re only doing it because we enjoy it.” And in keeping with that vibe, some of Gibbard’s early favorites for the album came from an informal e-mail he got from Walla that contained a couple of demos the guitarist had been working on purely on a whim. “We’ve had a couple of songs where Chris has sent me music, and I’ve done some arrangements and lyrics and melodies on them, and in the batch of material we’ve got sitting in the coffer ready to go on the record, that to me is the most exciting stuff,” he said. “They were a couple of tunes that he sent me that I’ve kind of finished, I’m really excited about.” More than a decade into their career, with both a platinum-selling album ( Plans ) and a #1 debut ( Narrow Stairs ) under their belts, Death Cab finally feel like they’ve reached a place where they can make the kind of music they want to, without worrying about impressing anyone other than themselves. And that appears to be the driving force behind the new album: complete, hard-won artistic freedom. “I’d like to think a lot of inspiration comes from that being the motivation, rather than, ‘Oh, this is our major-label record, we’ve got to do it great, or else people are going to say this,’ ” Gibbard said. “All those things you never talk about, but they’re all in your mind. So for us now, going into this next record, we’ll assess our accomplishments after we’re done making them, and … I feel like we have a lot more records to make. “We’ve all kind of landed in a place in our lives, personally and professionally, where we can all get together and enjoy each other’s company and enjoy making music,” he reiterated. “I certainly feel a lot more confident as a songwriter and a musician, and confident in the ability of my bandmates to make things that we’d want to listen to ourselves.” What is your favorite Death Cab for Cutie song? Share your thoughts about the band in the comments below. Related Artists Death Cab For Cutie

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Death Cab For Cutie Strive ‘To Make Music We Enjoy’ On New Album

Exclusive: Watch Death Cab For Cutie’s ‘Meet Me On The Equinox’ Video

Clip for the first ‘New Moon’ single features light, shadow and plenty of shirtless Robert Pattinson. By James Montgomery Death Cab for Cutie’s Ben Gibbard in the “Meet Me on the Equinox” music video Photo: Atlantic Records Death Cab for Cutie are very pale.

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Exclusive: Watch Death Cab For Cutie’s ‘Meet Me On The Equinox’ Video

Ben Gibbard and Jay Farrar team up to record Kerouac album

The last time Ben Gibbard split off from the rest of Death Cab for Cutie to record an album's worth of songs, that album was the Postal Service's Give Up, and half a million sensitive indie types swooned.

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Ben Gibbard and Jay Farrar team up to record Kerouac album