OK Go - And The Adjacent Possible Tour, 7 December | Event in Atlanta | AllEvents

OK Go - And The Adjacent Possible Tour

The Eastern

Highlights

Sun, 07 Dec, 2025 at 08:00 pm

The Eastern

Advertisement

Date & Location

Sun, 07 Dec, 2025 at 08:00 pm (EST)

The Eastern

777 Memorial Drive SE, Atlanta, Georgia, United States

Save location for easier access

Only get lost while having fun, not on the road!

About the event

OK Go - And The Adjacent Possible Tour
Zero Mile Presents

OK GO - AND THE ADJACENT POSSIBLE TOUR
L.A. Exes

SUN, 7 DEC 2025 at 08:00PM EST
Ages: All Ages
Doors Open: 07:00PM

OnSale: Fri, 18 Jul 2025 at 12:00PM EDT
Announcement: Mon, 14 Jul 2025 at 12:00PM EDT

Talking to Damian Kulash will take you deep into the mind of a seasoned artist—cerebral, welltheorized, brimming with ideas and opinions. But at his core, the multi-hyphenate OK Go
frontman is fueled by something simpler: He wants to play. He’s forever trying to nurture that child-like sense of awe in himself and his band.

“What good is doing any of this — any kind of art — if you’re not surprising yourself?” he asks.
“Without that electric shock of discovery, there’s nothing at all.”

OK Go (Kulash, bassist Timothy Nordwind, multi-instrumentalist Andy Ross, and drummer Dan
Konopka) have been professional collaborators for nearly 30 years, during which time they’ve
put a wild variety of notches on their belts. Yes, they’ve racked up billions of streams, topped
radio charts, directed dozens of award-winning videos, and collected three VMAs and a
GRAMMY. But they’ve also collaborated with DNA scientists and Muppets, testified before
congress, published in academic journals, launched a K-12 educational non-profit, and earned a
mountain of accolades that are much more unusual for a rock band: twenty-one Cannes Lions,
twelve CLIOS, The Smithsonian Ingenuity Award, and a spot in the permanent collection of
MoMA. Now, a new generation of online creators who grew up on their seminal videos regularly
reference OK Go as forebears of a new brand of creativity.

But to hear Kulash tell it, the band measures success not by awards, but by the thrill of creative
discovery and the freedom to pursue it, and as the band prepares to release its ambitious fifth
studio album, And the Adjacent Possible, he says they’re more energized than ever, and full
of gratitude. “Spending our lives chasing ideas simply because they’re inspiring or beautiful, full
stop, is something we all dream of when we’re young. A few people are lucky enough to get a
shot at it, but it almost always gives way to other agendas, more practical concerns. To be
midlife and spending our days in pursuit of wonder or spectacle or catharsis simply for their own
sake… it’s such a privilege, such a gift.”

And the Adjacent Possible testifies to just how curious — and adventurous — OK Go have been
of late. Even for a band known for pushing boundaries, this album is wildly eclectic—
postmodern and genre-dissolving, with nods to Phil Spector, Toni Visconti, and Nile Rodgers
sandwiched between the fuzzy, psychedelic opener “Impulse Purchase,” and the meditative,
Zen-like closer “Don’t Give Up Now.” Glued together by the distinctive mixing of the band’s
longtime collaborator Dave Fridmann (The Flaming Lips, Spoon, Tame Impala, MGMT), the 12
tracks, which arrive a decade after OK Go’s previous studio LP, collectively paint a portrait of a
band comfortable in its own chameleon skin. “I think we were able to stretch out more because
we didn’t feel we needed to plant a flag,” says Kulash. “Our flag has been planted for a long
time now.”

That sure-footedness is nowhere more apparent than in Kulash’s lyrics. He’s quick to admit that,
despite OK Go’s reputation for upbeat music, his “words have always been pretty dark — I think
it’s my way of coping in a world I’m honestly pretty cynical about.” And true to form, even the
brightly titled “A Good, Good Day at Last” features lines like, “Anger, she’s more loyal/than her
fickle sister Hope.” But to listen to the new LP is to be taken on an emotional rollercoaster… in
the best way possible. The first two singles both address fatherhood from nearly opposite
perspectives: In “A Stone Only Rolls Downhill,” Kulash laments the world his children are
inheriting with “And oh the inertia/of our ravenous brand of avarice/of our selfishness/It was just
too much/to overcome/Now we’re overrun,” and just moments later, in the soaring anthem
“Love,” those frustrations have given way to ecstasy as he sings “In this grand ballroom of
nothingness/your hand so warm with somethingness/we whirl and twirl and music’s invented
again.” And the sardonic wit of their earlier albums isn’t entirely gone: on “Impulse Purchase,”
the album opens with a playfully direct address to the algorithms that will choose its audience:
“Now, as a practical matter it’s pointless/to address you directly here/Any probabilistic
adjustments/will dissolve in the sea/of the everything-everyone-everywhere-ever-has-done that
you swallowed before.”

Given the legacy of their videos, famed for their inventive use of treadmills and dogs; slow
motion and zero-gravity, Rube Goldberg machines, optical illusions, and musical stunt driving,
the band couldn’t very well return without an eye-popping video in hand, and in January they
delivered: The stunning moving mosaic for “A Stone Only Rolls Downhill” features 64 videos
playing across 64 phones. Directed by Kulash and Chris Buongiorno (Star Wars: Skeleton
Crew), it required more than a thousand takes, and over two hours and twenty minutes of
single-take clips are condensed into the final frame. Filmmaking magazine Shots remarked,
“Whenever a new OK Go video drops, the creative community's mixture of anticipation and
professional jealousy is palpable."

The video for “Love” is even more elaborate and ambitious, shot in the faded glory of a
Budapest train station and featuring dozens of robots doing mind-boggling tricks with mirrors.
Kulash seems somewhere between inspired and bemused by what lies ahead. When asked
what he thinks the next five years look like for the band, he replies, “A five-year plan is a very
reasonable idea. But the only place I ever want to be in five years is somewhere I couldn't
possibly predict today.”


You may also like the following events from The Eastern:

Also check out other Music events in Atlanta, Entertainment events in Atlanta, Arts events in Atlanta.

interested
Stay in the loop for updates and never miss a thing. Are you interested?
Yes
No

Ticket Info

Tickets for OK Go - And The Adjacent Possible Tour can be booked here.

Advertisement

Nearby Hotels

The Eastern, 777 Memorial Drive SE,Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Reserve your spot

Host Details

The Eastern

The Eastern

Are you the host? Claim Event

Advertisement
OK Go - And The Adjacent Possible Tour, 7 December | Event in Atlanta | AllEvents
OK Go - And The Adjacent Possible Tour
Sun, 07 Dec, 2025 at 08:00 pm