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Neotheater is the third studio album by American pop band AJR. It was released on April 26, 2019 [2] by the band's label AJR Productions. The album was self-produced by the trio. It is a follow-up to the trio's 2017 album The Click (2017).
AJR at "We the People" in 2021American indie pop band AJR has written or co-written every song in their discography, except various covers and two featured songs.The trio was formed by the brothers—Ryan Met (keyboard, ukulele, vocals), Jack Met (guitar, sampler, lead vocals), and Adam Met (bass guitar, backing vocals)—in Chelsea, Manhattan. [1]
The discography of American indie pop trio AJR consists of five studio albums, forty-three music videos, eight extended plays, twenty-seven singles, [needs update] and eight promotional singles. The band is also featured on seven songs and have three independent releases.
On January 30, 2019, AJR released the song "100 Bad Days", which would later become the lead single for Neotheater. [58] A music video for the single was released on March 7. [59] The song was additionally included on Taylor Swift's Apple Music playlist, "Playlist by ME!", in May 2019, with the pre-chorus' lyrics being used for Taylor's ...
"Karma" is a song by American pop band AJR, appearing as the eighth track on their third studio album Neotheater. It is the second-most popular song from the album, amassing over 82 million streams as of February 2024.
During the Neotheater World Tour, AJR visualized the layers of the chorus for "Don't Throw Out My Legos". [9] The song's production began from sampling the sound of car keys being dropped, [10] being pitched up an octave and combined with a drum beat in 3 4 time signature and at a tempo of 147 beats per minute.
Jack and Ryan Met attended Columbia University while writing and producing Neotheater.After the release of "Dear Winter", AJR put out a statement that "the song was a letter to [Ryan's] future child about the awkwardness of dating". [3]
AJR additionally hired Bruce Healey, a previous arranger for the Mellomen's music, to arrange the choir on "Next Up Forever". [4] Healey used recording equipment such as a Pacific Bell telephone from the 1940s to create an authentic close harmony choir sound rather than using plug-ins to emulate the sound.