Photo credit: Piper Ferguson

OK Go Announces New Album And the Adjacent Possible—And Yes, the Videos Are Still Mind-Blowing

Grammy-winning rock band returns with their first album in over a decade—because making music videos that break the internet takes time.

OK Go is back. After a decade of blowing minds with viral music videos, playing with gravity, and making even treadmills look cool, they’ve finally announced a brand-new album. And the Adjacent Possible lands on April 11, promising 12 fresh tracks that will make you dance, think, and probably question the laws of physics.

To celebrate, they’ve already dropped two new singles—because waiting is overrated. “A Good, Good Day at Last” (featuring Ben Harper, Shalyah Fearing, and BEGINNERS) is a euphoric anthem, while “Going Home” brings a more introspective touch. Both tracks come with animated lyric videos by top designers because, obviously, OK Go never does anything the boring way.

OK Go’s New Album: A Decade in the Making

A ten-year gap between albums might seem excessive, but OK Go had a few things going on. Touring Hungry Ghosts for five years, making viral videos, raising kids, surviving a pandemic, and—casual flex—directing an Apple TV+ feature film (The Beanie Bubble). Now, they’re ready to return with a record that frontman Damian Kulash describes as “just us, comfortable in our skin.” No flags need planting; OK Go’s already flying high.

The lead single, “A Stone Only Rolls Downhill,” set the tone last month with a staggering video featuring 64 phones and more than 1,000 takes over eight grueling days. That level of perfectionism is exactly why the world keeps obsessing over them.

OK Go’s Music Videos: Still Breaking the Internet

Let’s be real—OK Go’s music videos have their own fanbase. The band has turned everything from Rube Goldberg machines to zero gravity into visual masterpieces, setting the gold standard for creative filmmaking in music.

Their latest video for “A Stone Only Rolls Downhill” continues this tradition, stacking 64 individual phone screens into a mesmerizing mosaic. The New York Times called it “ingenious and playful,” while Fast Company described it as a “whimsical riff on modern digital life.” Even Apple CEO Tim Cook couldn’t resist tweeting about it.

What to Expect from And the Adjacent Possible

This album isn’t just a nostalgia trip. It’s a full-circle moment for OK Go, bringing together nearly 30 years of creative evolution. The band has always been about pushing boundaries, and And the Adjacent Possible feels like a fitting title for a group that thrives on exploring the impossible.

With a mix of vibrant rock anthems, intricate production, and OK Go’s signature playfulness, expect an album that’s as colorful and unpredictable as their career.

OK Go Is Back. Get Ready.

It’s been a long wait, but OK Go’s return promises to be worth every second. The album drops April 11, and with their track record, you can bet the surprises won’t stop there. Until then, check out “A Good, Good Day at Last” and “Going Home,” and prepare for another era of mind-melting music and visuals.