Personal Project // Music

No No Yeah Okay

 

When I started No No Yeah Okay with a few close friends I had absolutely zero experience making music before then. I also didn’t realize how little that mattered when it came to recognition and building a following.

No No Yeah Okay taught me more than most other “professional” projects about what it means to stay true to your identity while consistently delivering something new and unexpected.

 

 

 

01

 

Bands & Brands

Of course the music has to be what people want to hear but to continue to elevate you have to treat a band like a business. The narrative behind our music, visual identity, show experiences, music videos, and even interviews helped define No No Yeah Okay and gave us the recognition needed to perform to massive audiences.


 

02

 

Content Engine

Beyond the music itself, we focused on all areas of content. Our album art contained easter eggs that created dialogue, our music videos were narrative based short films, our live performances were carefully planned with minimal interruptions in music and on stage projection mapping further consumed fans at shows. And that was just our creative content. With interviews, PR and social in the mix, we were intentional with how we crafted our image.

 

Music Videos


 

03

 

Listen

Everything we made was for the love of making music, but is was our brand that helped us stand out and ultimately what intrigued our label, Little Assembly (West One Music Group). Each project had a special theme that guided our sound, art and story.

Changes (Single)

The recognition that growth always equals change. We will come to miss what now feels uncomfortable.

Cabal (EP)

A deep dive into personal identity, how it changes and transforms to create an evolving self-image.

Dual (EP)

Follow the evolution of nearly everyone’s first serious relationship; the rise, fall, and everything in-between.