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Ben Gibbard

Broken Record with Rick Rubin, Malcolm Gladwell, Bruce Headlam and Justin Richmond

Pushkin Industries

Society & Culture, Music

4.54.2K Ratings

🗓️ 4 July 2023

⏱️ 90 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In September, Ben Gibbard, the founder of Death Cab For Cutie, will set out on a nationwide tour to celebrate the two very different albums that have come to define his career.

Both albums came out in 2003. The first was called Give Up, and it was a collaboration with his friend and producer Jimmy Tamborello. They’d made it while Gibbard was taking a break from the relentless cycle of touring and releasing music with Death Cab. They called their new band The Postal Service. Give Up steadily built momentum, found critical acclaim, and eventually became Gibbard’s first platinum selling record. Musically, the Postal Service incorporated various synth and new wave-inspired elements behind Gibbard’s confessional songwriting style, which set a precedent for many of the indie releases over the following decade.

Later that same year, Gibbard went back to his band roots and released Death Cab For Cuties’ breakthrough album, Transatlanticism. This fall Gibbard and his band will play both Transatlanticism and Give Up in their entirety. And today we’ll hear him play three acoustic renditions of his classic songs.

On today’s episode Justin Richmond talks to Ben Gibbard about the conditions that led to the most successful year of his career. Gibbard also gets candid about the woman who inspired multiple songs on Transatlanticism, including the brutally honest, “Tiny Vessels.”

You can hear a playlist of some of our favorite Ben Gibbard songs HERE.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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0:00.0

In September, Ben Gibber, the founder of Death Cab for QT, will set out on a nationwide

0:16.7

tour to celebrate two very different albums that have come to define his career.

0:22.8

Both albums came out in 2003.

0:25.4

The first was called Give Up, and it was a collaboration with his friend and producer

0:29.2

Jimmy Tamborello.

0:31.3

They'd made it while Gibberd was taking a break from the relentless cycle of touring

0:34.7

and releasing music with Death Cab.

0:37.3

They called their new band The Postal Service.

0:40.0

Give Up steadily built momentum, found critical acclaim, and eventually became Gibberd's

0:45.0

first platinum-selling record.

0:47.7

Musically, The Postal Service incorporated various synth and new wave inspired elements

0:52.0

behind Gibberd's confessional songwriting style, which set a precedent for many of the

0:57.0

indie and electronic releases over the following decade.

1:01.2

Later that same year, Gibberd went back to his band Roots and released Death Cab for QT's

1:05.0

Breakthrough album, Trans-Atlanticism.

1:08.4

This fall, Gibberd and his band will play both Trans-Atlanticism and Give Up in their

1:12.8

entirety.

1:14.4

For someone who listened to both of these records incessantly in 2003 and 4, I'm excited

1:19.5

to say he'll also play three acoustic renditions of songs from those classic records in this

1:23.6

episode.

1:24.6

And today's episode, I also talked to Ben Gibberd about the conditions that led to the

1:28.8

most successful year of his career, and he gets candid about the woman who inspired multiple

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