"C’est marrant parce que j’ai le sentiment que l’ère des groupes classiques – quatre types, une batterie, une guitare, une basse – est terminée. Quand on a commencé Vampire Weekend, former un groupe comme le nôtre était le truc le plus banal du monde. Et aujourd’hui, il n’y a que des groupes de deux mecs ou des collectifs. C’est très étrange du coup parce qu’on se sent à part maintenant, on est une minorité. La vérité, c’est qu’on s’est toujours sentis un peu à part. Quand on a commencé, on nous demandait sans cesse si on pensait faire partie d’une certaine scène new-yorkaise et on n’a toujours dit non parce qu’on s’en fichait. Alors aujourd’hui, être un de ces dernières groupes “classiques”, je trouve ça drôle."

Les Inrocks - Vampire Weekend : “On ne voulait pas faire ‘Contra part.2’ “

It’s funny because I feel like the era of classic bands - four people, drums, guitar, bass - is over. When we started Vampire Weekend, forming a band like that was the most boring thing in the world. And today, there are bands of two guys or collectives. It’s very strange because we now feel like a minority. Truthfully, we’ve always felt a little apart. When we started, people always asked us if we felt like part of a certain New York scene and we didn’t always say “no” because we didn’t care. Now, being one of the last “classic” bands, I think it’s funny.

"Je me suis rendu compte très tard que je parlais beaucoup du temps qui passe, de mourir et de vieillir sur Modern Vampires… Je me sens aussi plus apaisé dans ma façon d’écrire. A nos débuts, je voulais tout le temps placer tout un tas de mots et de références dans mes paroles. Je les voulais à la fois folles et abstraites. Aujourd’hui, je crois être plus apte à exprimer des idées dans nos chansons, d’une façon plus simple. Si sur le premier album ma version de la chanson d’amour était Oxford Comma, aujourd’hui ce serait plutôt Don’t Lie. En écoutant les cordes que Rostam avait écrites pour ce titre, j’ai tout de suite imaginé quelqu’un à genoux, qui supplie qu’on ne le quitte pas. Ce qui me semblait un peu culcul auparavant m’est apparu sous un jour bien plus poignant."

Les Inrocks - Vampire Weekend : “On ne voulait pas faire ‘Contra part.2’ “

I realized very late that I talked a lot about old times, dying, and aging on Modern Vampires…I also feel more calm in my writing process. In the beginning, I wanted to heap words and references into my lyrics all of the time. I wanted them to be crazy and abstract. Now, I’m more into expressing ideas in our songs in a simpler way. If on the first album my idea of a love song was “Oxford Comma,” today it’d be “Don’t Lie.” In listening to the chords that Rostam wrote for that song, I immediately imagine someone on their knees, begging someone to not leave. This seemed a bit tacky to me before, but now it’s more poignant.

(Source: ezramichaelkoenig)

Vampire Weekend discuss Chromeo’s “Hot Mess” on rage.

(Source: youtube.com)

"I do think the first album is a little more provincial, a little more naïve. In a sense it has a youthful joyfulness. This album has joy, too, but I think maybe we’re more equipped as songwriters and as people to deal with things like fear and anxiety, love, all the classic themes of music."
Vampire Weekend takes dark, dense turn on new album Modern Vampires of the City | Toronto Star
"If you’re lonely, bored, or unhappy, remember you are mad young. There is so much time to meet new people and go to new places. Learn that math and English. School often sucks but you gotta take it seriously."
Ezra Koenig’s advice for teens (via teamvampireweekend)
"It reminded me of ‘Brideshead Revisited,’ ” said Mr. Koenig, who writes the band’s lyrics. “The naïve joyous school days in the beginning. Then the expansion of the world, travel, seeing other places, learning a little bit more about how people live. And then the end is a little bit of growing up, starting to think more seriously about your life and your faith. If people could look at our three albums as a bildungsroman, I’d be O.K. with that."
Vampire Weekend’s Evolution in ‘Modern Vampires of the City’ - NYTimes.com
"‘Ya Hey’ is that song. Rather than dropping oblique reference points every third line, it sees Koenig adopt a magnificently blasphemous posture from start to finish. He is talking to Jehovah/The Almighty/The Big Cheese as the representative of a world of non-believers and hardened cynics. He is demanding to know, ‘When confronted with such global indifference and outright aggression, why you would not announce your existence with absolute certainty?’"
DiS Does Singles 6.05.13: Vampire Weekend - Ya Hey (XL) / In Depth // Drowned In Sound

thesufjanstevensmodel5000:

YHWH in the house. (Or, when Vampires sing about God it sounds like this).

mouth-rainboy:

pitchfork:

Watch the lyric video for Vampire Weekend’s new track, “Ya Hey”.

this .gif is how i feel about my life right now

mouth-rainboy:

pitchfork:

Watch the lyric video for Vampire Weekend’s new track, “Ya Hey”.

this .gif is how i feel about my life right now

Vampire Weekend share a special moment with I Love London Town

“One of our favorite things to do when we come to London is go and wrestle the swans in Hyde Park”

"It’s great to be like everyone else, it’s great to be able to identify what’s important to you and respect what’s important to other people and find a middle ground where you feel connected to people. There’s something narcissistic about thinking you’re special and everyone else is boring, and if you end up doing normal things you’re a loser. You have to find your way around that otherwise it will just fuck you up."
Vampire Weekend: ‘People tried to pretend we were rich idiots’ | Music | The Guardian

Vampire Weekend’s first shoot with Q Magazine, February 2008. [scans by @baionce]

Vampire Weekend’s first shoot with Q Magazine, February 2008. [scans by @baionce]

bbook:

Hacking with my boyz.

IKEA 4 LIFE

bbook:

Hacking with my boyz.

IKEA 4 LIFE

(Source: tandembike)

"We dressed like rich kids and played up to the image, but that went over the heads of the people who got angry. Now, what is there left to say about Vampire Weekend and money? Actually, class is still one of my favourite topics but I’d like to think we’ve moved on, that we’ve got some new stuff to talk about."
Ezra Koenig, by AIDAN SMITH for The Scotsman.com (via vampyweeks)