Those songs come alive when we start working on the tracks together. We’ll write literally a hundred songs, and then eventually bring them all together and figure out which ones resonate the most with the group. The songs typically start with a demo written by one or two members of the band. We want to give it at least as much room to incubate and develop as the last album, so we are taking our time. It’s too soon for us to really talk about the new music, but we are really excited about it. What can you share with us about that project? He’s been a great mentor for us and is always challenging us to push ourselves creatively. Tell us about working with Alex Da Kid on the album.Īlex is a really talented guy. Sometimes music that is personal has the ironic effect of resonating with people on a more universal level.
Our songs are more of journals than anything else - so the only rule is to write from a true place. We don’t really write with specific themes in mind. You’ve had massive success with Night Visions. What are some of the themes that resonate throughout your songs that speak to so many people around the world? Now as the band leaps into their newest project – writing their upcoming second studio album – BMI was there as they reflected on their recent success, creative process and advice to aspiring songwriters. I’m a pretty young guy and I’m still trying to figure out the answer to those questions.” This rawness of their music has earned them respect from the songwriting community and led them to be embraced by music fans around the world. I was trying to decide what I wanted to do with my life, trying to figure out how seriously to take music.
“It seemed like everything was going wrong. “I wrote ‘It’s Time’ during a very transitional period in my life,” Reynolds has said. It is at once very personal and universal. Their music thrives on alchemy, extracting from that resistance and creating music that has a redemptive and uplifting message.
Their breakthrough single, “It’s Time,” earned the group a groundswell of interest and chart-topper “Radioactive,” off their album Night Visions, solidified their place as the industry’s next big hitmakers, with Rolling Stone proclaiming the song “the biggest rock hit of the year.”Ĭall it modesty or persistence against the odds, the band – frontman Dan Reynolds, recently honored with the Songwriters Hall of Fame’s prestigious Hal David Starlight Award, guitarist Wayne Sermon, bassist Ben McKee and drummer Daniel Platzman – has managed to stay true to their ethos of authenticity and emotional struggle. The band recently wrapped the last show of their Into the Night tour and has scored countless awards and recognitions once inconceivable from their humble beginning six years ago in Vegas – a GRAMMY for Best Rock Performance (“Radioactive”), two BMI Pop Awards (“It’s Time” and “Radioactive”), an American Music Award for Favorite Alternative Artist and 14 Billboard Music Award nominations, among others.