In creation, change is inevitable. Taking an idea from nothing to something means transforming intention into action, bringing a vision to reality, resolving constituent parts into a coherent whole.
That doesn’t mean change comes easy – especially for an artist like Rostam Batmangli, the Los Angeles-based founding member of the band Vampire Weekend turned independent musician and multi-genre producer who opens up about his relationship to those shifts on his second solo album, Changephobia.
“One of the central themes of this album is being aware of the world around you and your own responses to it,” he explains. “‘Changephobia’ is a response that we all have, but if we're aware of it, then we can be bigger than that.”
Here the three-time Grammy-nominated musician and producer discusses the necessary dissonance of his latest album, the story of his legacy Aeron, and how you can overcome your own “changephobia.”
That doesn’t mean change comes easy – especially for an artist like Rostam Batmangli, the Los Angeles-based founding member of the band Vampire Weekend turned independent musician and multi-genre producer who opens up about his relationship to those shifts on his second solo album, Changephobia.
“One of the central themes of this album is being aware of the world around you and your own responses to it,” he explains. “‘Changephobia’ is a response that we all have, but if we're aware of it, then we can be bigger than that.”
Here the three-time Grammy-nominated musician and producer discusses the necessary dissonance of his latest album, the story of his legacy Aeron, and how you can overcome your own “changephobia.”






