South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Gibbard’s goal with album: Get Ono’s music in front of people

- By Mark Kennedy

Ben Gibbard wasn’t necessaril­y looking for music by Yoko Ono when he went record shopping a few decades ago. He was just browsing in the “O” section and stumbled on a copy of her 1973 album “Feeling the Space.”

“It wasn’t super expensive, and I was like, ‘Yeah, I’ll take a shot on this. I’m feeling adventurou­s,’ ” recalls the lead vocalist and guitarist for Death Cab for Cutie.

He took it home, anticipati­ng something experiment­al and challengin­g from the avant-garde and multimedia artist who became John Lennon’s collaborat­or in life and art. But Gibbard found something warm and lovely.

“As I started to delve deeper into her catalogue, I found her songwritin­g just incredibly arresting,” he says. “Yoko is, in my opinion, one of the most brilliant artists of the 20th century, hands down across all media.”

He’s hoping more music fans will hear Ono’s work with the recent release of “Ocean Child: Songs of Yoko Ono,” a 14-track album of covers from such artists as David Byrne, Yo La Tengo, Sharon Van Etten, Thao, Japanese Breakfast and The Flaming Lips. The album’s release coincided with Ono’s 89th birthday on Feb. 18.

“I have a hard time believing that when people hear this music that they will just shrug and walk away from it. I think it’s too good to be ignored,” says Gibbard. “I think it’s incredibly overdue for a reevaluati­on or in some cases, just an evaluation, because it wasn’t as if there was much of an evaluation in the first place.”

The offerings include Byrne and Yo La Tengo covering “Who Has Seen the Wind?,” Deerhoof doing “No, No, No,” and Japanese Breakfast trying “Nobody Sees Me Like You Do.” A portion of the album’s proceeds will be donated to WhyHunger.

“This record ended up being kind of amalgamati­on of old-school Yoko fans like myself and David and Yo La Tengo, and then some younger artists,” says Gibbard. “The thing I’m the most proud of this record is just how it seems to have a very cross-generation­al feel to it.”

Singer and songwriter Thao, who is friends with Gibbard and has opened for Death Cab for Cutie on tour, picked “Yellow Girl (Stand for Life)” to cover and considers it a thank-you to an artist often misperceiv­ed and wrongly vilified.

“The song just sometimes finds you at the right time. And that’s very much the case for this song and the tribute album,” Thao said. The song’s title alone drew her in. “I was embarrasse­d that I didn’t know more about her as a songwriter.”

She noted that the album’s recording coincided and pushes back against a climate of rising anti-Asian violence and rhetoric. “I’ve experience­d racism, but it wasn’t at the pitch and with the vitriol that was taking place at that time,” she said.

Gibbard said all the artists involved — whether on their own or with his suggestion­s — found a song they could relate to. “There was no kind of complainin­g about a lack of songs. There’s just so many great ones,” he said.

Death Cab for Cutie naturally had first pick and took Ono’s “Waiting for the Sunrise.” Gibbard said the song felt right to record during the first COVID-19 lockdown. “It just felt like that was the state we were all living in at that time: We’re all waiting for the sunrise.”

Gibbard has never met Ono but leaned on her son, Sean Lennon, as an intermedia­ry for the project, saying it owes him “a debt of gratitude.”

Gibbard’s goal is just to get Ono’s music in front of people. “I do not have a savior complex or anything around this record, you know?” he says, laughing.

“My hope is just that this leads music fans to a place where they get a little kind of adventurou­s — as adventurou­s as one can be when you can dial up anything that was ever recorded on your phone — and pull up ‘Feeling the Space’ or pull up ‘Approximat­ely Infinite Universe’ and give it a spin and see if they like it,” he added.

“If people do that, then we’ve succeeded.”

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SWEENEY/INVISION 2018, LEFT, JOEL RYAN/INVISION 2016 ?? Ben Gibbard and his band Death Cab for Cutie are among the artists covering songs by Yoko Ono on a new album.
OWEN SWEENEY/INVISION 2018, LEFT, JOEL RYAN/INVISION 2016 Ben Gibbard and his band Death Cab for Cutie are among the artists covering songs by Yoko Ono on a new album.
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