NEW YORK – When he first started working with Imagine Dragons, music producer Alex da Kid was looking for some inspiration for the Broadway musical, Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark.
I thought they would be great to help me come up with ideas for U2, the Grammy-nominated English producer said.
There was just one problem: The demos they recorded were too good.
So instead of using the alternative band to collaborate on the score by Bono and The Edge, Alex da Kid – the creator of Eminem and Rihannas colossal hit Love the Way You Lie – immediately signed the Las Vegas-based foursome to his label imprint KIDinaKORNER Records, distributed through Interscope Records.
Imagine Dragons released its debut album, Night Visions, in September and so far has reached gold status, selling more than 581,000 units, according to Nielsen SoundScan. The band currently has two songs on the charts with Its Time and Radioactive and they are on a sold-out U.S. tour that wraps June 3 in Phoenix.
Imagine Dragons had been building a buzz on the music scene as an independent act before Alex da Kid got hold of them. They released four EPs and toured America. Lead singer Dan Reynolds said the group was dead set on being an independent act.
We had offers from those labels all throughout the years and we turned them down, he said. It was so important that we built that organic, independent fan base.
Three of the band members met while playing jazz together a lot at the Berklee College of Music.
I just didnt think Id ever play with them again to be honest. I hoped that I would someday, said guitarist Wayne Sermon (bassist Ben McKee and drummer Dan Platzman round out the group). I called (Reynolds) and he had eight credits left before he could graduate and get his degree, but apparently he didnt care much about that, so he just actually left and dropped everything and came to Vegas.
Meeting Alex da Kid, born Alexander Grant, changed his perception about staying independent. He says the producer filled a void in the bands sound.
We didnt feel like we were ready as a band. We didnt understand our sound enough and our theme and who were are, and we didnt want to try to tell people that story until we didnt understand ourselves, Reynolds said. (Alex) was the perfect match for what we had been trying to do for three years.
Its Time – the breakthrough anthem for the band – was built from Reynolds personal issues.
Ive always struggled a bit with depression and anxiety and that song was at a particularly low point for me: I was dropping out of college (and) going through some personal issues, he said. Late one night I was in my kitchen and I was really just writing a song for myself. I wasnt thinking of writing for the band or anything.
But watching him onstage with his bandmates wouldnt give you the impression that hes struggling with anything: The 25-year-old is wild as he works the crowd with dance moves that shows hes got rhythm and swag.
Looks, of course, can be deceiving.
Ive always dealt with it my entire life, Reynolds continues about battling depression. Ive never been able to feel like I can fully be myself until I walked onstage and sang a song.
