Hubbry Logo
search
logo
477079

Jonathan Rado

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Key Information

Jonathan Rado is an American musician, record producer and engineer, best known as a multi-instrumentalist in the indie rock duo Foxygen. Rado is a native of Westlake Village, California, where he formed Foxygen with his classmate Sam France in 2005.[1][2][3]

After releasing four albums with Foxygen, Rado began producing albums for other artists, including the Killers,[4] the Lemon Twigs, Tim Heidecker, Matt Maltese, Whitney, Alex Cameron, Father John Misty and Weyes Blood.[5] In 2018, Billboard called Rado "one of indie rock's most in-demand producers".[5] Rolling Stone called him an "analog fetishist who's become a producer of choice for a particular breed of like-minded indie-pop artists."[6]

Rado is married to singer-songwriter Jackie Cohen.[7] He also appeared in a 2008 episode of the television series Weeds[8] and a 2009 episode of the sitcom Community.[9] Rado is of Hungarian descent.[10] He studied screenwriting at the School of Visual Arts in New York.[11]

Discography

[edit]

Solo

with Foxygen

Credits

[edit]
Year Artist Album Credits
2013 Foxygen We Are the 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace & Magic Performer, Songwriter
2014 Foxygen ...And Star Power Producer, Performer, Songwriter
Dub Thompson 9 Songs Producer
2015 Dante Elephante Anglo-Saxon Summer Producer
2016 Tim Heidecker In Glendale Additional Production
Whitney Light Upon the Lake Producer
The Lemon Twigs Do Hollywood Producer
2017 Foxygen Hang Producer, Performer, Songwriter
Los Angeles Police Department Los Angeles Police Department Producer
Beach Fossils Somersault Producer
Trevor Sensor Andy Warhol's Dream Producer
Alex Cameron Forced Witness Producer
2018 Cut Worms Hollow Ground Producer
Father John Misty God's Favorite Customer Producer
Matt Maltese Bad Contestant Producer
Jackie Cohen Tacoma Night Terror, Part 1: I've Got the Blues Producer
Houndmouth Golden Age Producer
Jackie Cohen Tacoma Night Terror, Part 2: Self-Fulfilling Elegy Producer
2019 Weyes Blood Titanic Rising Producer
Foxygen Seeing Other People Producer, Performer, Songwriter
Houndmouth "Talk of the Town" from California Voodoo Part II Producer, Songwriter
Jackie Cohen Zagg Producer, Songwriter
Tim Heidecker What the Brokenhearted Do... Producer
Cuco "KeepingTabs" and "Far Away From Home" from Para Mi Producer
Whitney Forever Turned Around Producer
Alex Cameron Miami Memory Producer
Jungle Green Runaway with Jungle Green Producer
Adam Green Engine of Paradise Producer
2020 Purr Like New Producer
Alex Izenberg "Caravan Château" from Caravan Château Producer
Matt Maltese "Queen Bee", "Madhouse", "Leather Wearing AA" from Madhouse EP Producer
The Lemon Twigs Songs for the General Public Additional Production
The Killers Imploding the Mirage Producer, Songwriter
Tim Heidecker Fear of Death Additional Production
2021 Crumb Ice Melt Producer
Silvertwin Silvertwin Producer
The Killers Pressure Machine Producer, Performer, Songwriter
Oberhofer Smothered Producer, Performer
2022 Diane Coffee With People Producer, Performer
Jackie Cohen Pratfall Producer
Weyes Blood And in the Darkness, Hearts Aglow Producer
2023 Whitney "For a While" Producer, Performer
Purr Who is Afraid of Blue? Producer
Whitney "Kansas" Producer
2024 Beyonce & Miley Cyrus "II Most Wanted" from Cowboy Carter Additional Production, Performer
Crumb Amama Producer
The Killers "Bright Lights" Producer
2025 Miley Cyrus Something Beautiful Producer, Songwriter, Performer

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jonathan Rado (born February 9, 1990, in Los Angeles, California) is an American multi-instrumentalist, singer-songwriter, record producer, and audio engineer best known as the co-founder of the indie rock duo Foxygen.[1][2] Rado co-founded Foxygen in 2005 with vocalist Sam France while attending high school in the San Fernando Valley.[3] The duo gained prominence in the indie music scene with their 2013 debut studio album We Are the 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace & Magic, followed by …And Star Power 2 (2014), Hang (2017), and Seeing Other People (2019), all of which drew from 1960s and 1970s psychedelic rock, pop, and folk influences.[3] Rado contributed as a guitarist, pianist, producer, and co-songwriter on these releases, often recording in home studios to achieve a raw, analog sound.[4] As a producer, Rado has collaborated with a wide array of indie and mainstream artists since the mid-2010s, working primarily from his Woodland Hills studio.[5] Notable productions include Father John Misty's God's Favorite Customer (2018), Weyes Blood's Titanic Rising (2019), Whitney's Light Upon the Lake (2016) and Forever Turned Around (2019), The Lemon Twigs' Do Hollywood (2016), and The Killers' Imploding the Mirage (2020) and Pressure Machine (2021).[4] His approach emphasizes live band recordings, tape saturation, and playful experimentation, influenced by mentors like Richard Swift.[6] More recently, Rado co-produced tracks on Miley Cyrus's 2025 album Something Beautiful (nominated for Best Pop Vocal Album at the 68th Annual Grammy Awards), including the single "End of the World," blending pop maximalism with indie sensibilities.[6][7] In addition to his band and production work, Rado has pursued a solo career, releasing Law and Order in 2013, a self-recorded collection of lo-fi pop songs.[8] His second solo effort, the EP Children's Songs, arrived in 2016 as a set of whimsical, four-track recordings with proceeds benefiting social causes.[9] Rado's third solo album, For Who the Bell Tolls For, was issued in December 2023 via Western Vinyl, featuring glam-infused tracks processing personal loss.[10]

Early life and education

Early years

Jonathan Rado was born on February 9, 1990, in Westlake Village, California.[11] Growing up in this suburban Los Angeles community, he was exposed to music from an early age through his family's record collection. His parents were fans of 1970s rock acts such as Heart, Fleetwood Mac, and Steely Dan, which introduced him to sophisticated pop and rock arrangements during his childhood.[12] Rado's initial musical interests emerged in adolescence, shaped by a mix of classic and contemporary sounds. Around age 12 or 13, he became inspired by punk-pop band Blink-182, prompting him to buy his first guitar at a local store near Agoura Hills.[12] This period also saw him discovering the melodic intricacies of 1960s pop and 1970s folk rock, influences that would later define his style, alongside edgier adolescent favorites like Limp Bizkit.[12][13] In high school, Rado began his first musical experiments, teaching himself to play guitar and dabbling in production using basic recording equipment. He created several informal albums during this time, honing his multi-instrumental skills and experimenting with songwriting in a casual, exploratory manner.[14] These early efforts reflected the suburban environment of Westlake Village, where local landmarks and a sense of youthful restlessness fueled his creative beginnings.[12] This foundation in self-taught music laid the groundwork for his later move to New York to study screenwriting.[15]

Education

Rado attended the School of Visual Arts (SVA) in New York City to pursue a degree in screenwriting after graduating high school in the late 2000s.[16] His enrollment at SVA marked a significant relocation from Los Angeles, where he had co-founded the indie rock duo Foxygen with Sam France during their high school years.[16] During his studies at SVA, which extended into the early 2010s and overlapped with Foxygen's formative period, Rado balanced academic coursework with intensive musical collaboration. He and France, who was living a more nomadic lifestyle at the time, recorded Foxygen's debut album Take the Kids Off Broadway in a shared apartment in Astoria, Queens, near the SVA campus.[16] This period fostered key creative exchanges, as Rado's screenwriting classes introduced him to multimedia storytelling techniques that paralleled his growing interest in conceptual songwriting.[17] Rado later reflected that he did not particularly enjoy the screenwriting program, finding it less engaging than his musical endeavors.[17] Nonetheless, the SVA environment provided opportunities to connect with like-minded artists and peers, sparking further collaborations that blended narrative-driven ideas with his emerging songcraft.[16]

Career

Formation of Foxygen

Jonathan Rado and Sam France met as teenagers at Agoura High School in Westlake Village, California, and formed the indie rock duo Foxygen in 2005 when they were both 15 years old.[18][19] As multi-instrumentalists, Rado primarily handled guitar, keyboards, and production duties, while France focused on vocals and drums, creating a collaborative dynamic that emphasized experimental and lo-fi aesthetics in their early work.[20] Their initial performances earned them first place in the school's Battle of the Bands, solidifying their partnership.[18] In the formative years, Foxygen embraced a DIY ethos, self-releasing four EPs between 2007 and 2011 that drew heavily from 1960s pop, psychedelia, and folk influences, including artists like the Beach Boys and the Zombies.[18] These early recordings, such as the lo-fi demos and EPs circulated in limited runs, featured raw, eclectic arrangements with Rado's multi-instrumental contributions—spanning guitars, keyboards, and rudimentary production—shaping their signature blend of nostalgic revivalism and youthful improvisation.[19] The duo's style borrowed melodic hooks and harmonic structures from the era, but infused them with modern indie experimentation, often recorded in home setups that captured their unpolished energy.[18] Foxygen's breakthrough came with their 2013 debut full-length album, We Are the 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace & Magic, released on Jagjaguwar Records, which Rado co-produced and where he played multiple instruments including guitar, keyboards, and bass.[21] The album received widespread critical acclaim for its frantic yet precise emulation of 1960s and 1970s styles, from Motown soul to psychedelic rock, earning Pitchfork's "Best New Music" designation with an 8.4 rating and praise for channeling retro influences into a cohesive, innovative vision.[21] Critics highlighted tracks like "Shuggie" and "In the Hospital" for their gritty drums, harmonica flourishes, and Rado's layered instrumentation, which evoked the raw spirit of the era while adding contemporary twists.[22][23] The duo followed with the ambitious double album ...And Star Power in 2014, also on Jagjaguwar, where Rado's production role expanded to incorporate field recordings, orchestral elements, and a sprawling 24-track format that reflected the band's evolving dynamics.[24] This release innovated by blending concept-album storytelling with genre-hopping indulgence, drawing from glam rock, prog, and R&B, though reviews were mixed—Pitchfork lauded its exhilarating chaos and unhinged energy, while others noted its bloated length as occasionally exhausting.[24][25] Rado's instrumentation, including piano and synths, drove the album's theatricality, marking a shift from their DIY roots toward more polished, narrative-driven experimentation.[25]

Solo career

Jonathan Rado began his solo career in 2013 with the release of his debut album Law and Order on Woodsist Records. Recorded during a break from Foxygen, the album features a psychedelic pop style influenced by 1960s sounds, including warbling synths and diverse tracks that blend simplicity in lyrics with unique musical elements, such as duets evoking Scott Walker and Johnny Cash.[26][27] This project marked Rado's initial exploration of independent artistry, showcasing his multi-instrumental versatility and a joyful, skewed spirit that echoed early Foxygen experiments in a more personal format.[27] Rado followed with the EP Children's Songs in 2016, self-recorded on a four-track and released via Bandcamp, featuring whimsical, experimental tracks like "Mr. Bad Guy" and "The Elephant Song." All proceeds supported the Standing Rock protests, underscoring a charitable dimension to his solo output.[9] These short, playful pieces experimented with childlike narratives and lo-fi production, contrasting his fuller albums. In 2017, Rado released Born to Run, a full cover album of Bruce Springsteen's 1975 classic, issued as a limited-edition vinyl of 1,000 copies by Turntable Kitchen. As a devoted Springsteen fan, Rado reinterpreted the entire record with an anthemic indie rock approach, highlighting tracks like "Thunder Road" to pay homage to the original's themes of youthful aspiration and escape.[28] This release demonstrated his interpretive skills outside original songwriting, bridging his production expertise with performative reverence. His most recent solo work, For Who the Bell Tolls For (2023), was issued in December 2023 via Western Vinyl and available on Bandcamp, delving into introspection through themes of grief and loss, serving as a tribute to late friends Richard Swift and Danny Lacy. The album's dynamic production weaves glam-pop, 1960s influences, 1980s synth, and jazz elements in an analog style, capturing complicated emotions from guilt to sorrow without sentimentality.[10][29] Lyrically honest and varied, it reflects Rado's evolved sound, blending indie rock with personal storytelling to process mourning through humor, beauty, and artistic revival.[29] Over time, Rado's solo endeavors have progressed from playful psychedelia to homage and cathartic narrative, emphasizing emotional depth and genre experimentation.

Production work

Jonathan Rado emerged as a prominent producer in the indie rock scene during the late 2010s, earning recognition as one of the genre's most in-demand talents for his analog-focused approach to recording.[30] His work often draws from the freewheeling energy of Foxygen's sound, adapting it to collaborations with emerging and established artists alike.[30] Rado's production credits include Weyes Blood's Titanic Rising (2019), where he co-produced the album alongside Natalie Mering, emphasizing lush, orchestral arrangements inspired by 1970s soft rock and FM radio aesthetics.[31] He also helmed Father John Misty's God's Favorite Customer (2018), crafting a polished yet intimate sound that highlighted Josh Tillman's wry songwriting through live band performances captured on tape.[32] For The Lemon Twigs, Rado produced their debut Do Hollywood (2016) in his garage studio, fostering the duo's retro power-pop style with multi-instrumental jams reminiscent of 1960s rock bands like The Beatles and The Beach Boys.[33] Similar techniques shaped Whitney's Light Upon the Lake (2016), blending country-soul elements with analog warmth to evoke classic Americana. and Alex Cameron's Forced Witness (2017), where Rado amplified Cameron's narrative-driven synth-pop with vibrant, character-rich production. In 2020 and 2021, Rado co-produced The Killers' Imploding the Mirage (2020) and Pressure Machine (2021) with Shawn Everett, infusing the albums with stadium-ready anthems that channeled 1980s influences like U2 while prioritizing live instrumentation for an organic feel.[34] More recently, he contributed to Miley Cyrus's Something Beautiful (2025) as a producer, musician, and co-writer on tracks like "End of the World," bringing his signature blend of emotional depth and polished indie textures to the visual album's themes of healing and existential reflection.[35][36] Rado's production philosophy centers on analog recording techniques, rejecting digital computers in favor of tape machines and live band sessions to capture spontaneous energy and bleed between instruments, often drawing from 1960s and 1970s rock for a timeless indie context.[30][37] He emphasizes jamming as a creative starting point, influenced by Brian Eno's Oblique Strategies, to build songs organically while building confidence in raw, unpolished sounds as taught by collaborator Richard Swift.[37]

Personal life

Family

Jonathan Rado is married to singer-songwriter Jackie Cohen, with whom he shares a partnership rooted in mutual artistic influences within the indie music scene.[38][39] The couple's relationship, which evolved from collaboration and companionship, remains ongoing as of 2025, though specific details such as the marriage date are not publicly disclosed.[40][41] Rado and Cohen maintain their family life primarily in the Los Angeles area, particularly in the San Fernando Valley, where the environment fosters a balance between personal stability and creative pursuits.[42][38] This West Coast base aligns with Rado's California roots and supports his ability to engage in production and performance work without extensive relocation.[39] Their shared experiences as musicians, including overlapping inspirations from psychedelic and folk elements, enrich their domestic life, though Rado has consistently emphasized privacy in personal matters.[40] The couple has one child, Fox Holland Rado (born September 19, 2025).[43] Rado's Hungarian heritage, inherited through his family, subtly informs their cultural background but is not a focal point of their shared narrative.[41]

Acting roles

Jonathan Rado's involvement in acting has been limited to minor roles, primarily as a side pursuit influenced by his background in screenwriting. After studying screenwriting at the School of Visual Arts in New York, Rado explored on-screen work without committing to a full-time acting career, instead using it to complement his primary focus on music and production.[16] Rado made one of his earliest acting appearances in the 2007 short film Corpus Callosum, where he played the role of a mysterious guitar player. This minor part marked an initial foray into film acting during his formative years.[44] In television, Rado appeared as Weiner in the 2008 episode "The Three Coolers" of the Showtime series Weeds (Season 4, Episode 4), a small role in a scene involving characters interacting at a karaoke bar amid the show's ongoing narrative of suburban drug dealing.[45] He followed this with a guest spot as Lance, a Greendale Community College student in Professor Whitman's accounting class, in the 2009 episode "Introduction to Film" of the NBC sitcom Community (Season 1, Episode 3), where his character briefly features in a subplot about classroom dynamics and a film project.[46] Rado's later acting credits include appearances in films such as The Mayor of Mott Street (2012), which he also wrote, and We Are Your Friends (2015), though specific roles in these projects remain undocumented beyond general actor listings. These sporadic engagements underscore his acting as an occasional extension of his creative interests rather than a central profession.[47]

Discography

Solo releases

Jonathan Rado's solo discography spans experimental lo-fi recordings to polished art-pop, beginning with his debut full-length album in 2013. His releases are characterized by self-production, often utilizing home setups and multi-instrumental layering to evoke retro influences while exploring personal themes. Law and Order (2013) marks Rado's first solo album, released on September 3 by Woodsist Records. Self-recorded and produced by Rado in a lo-fi style reminiscent of 1960s pop and psychedelia, the album features 11 tracks blending garage rock grooves with singer-songwriter introspection, such as the funky opener "Seven Horses" and the trippy "Hand in Mine." Critics praised its charming throwback vibe and Foxygen-adjacent experimentation but noted its hasty, rarities-like feel. Pitchfork highlighted the front-loaded strong tracks and Rado's versatile production, calling it a demonstration of his ability to craft full records independently. Paste Magazine commended the diverse influences, from Kinks-esque odes to Johnny Cash nods, infused with Los Angeles grit. The Fire Note described it as a fine collection of 60s-influenced flower power pop, emphasizing cuts like "Faces" for their appeal. In 2016, Rado released the EP Children's Songs on November 24 via Bandcamp, a four-track self-recorded project originally issued in 2015 as part of Polyvinyl's 4-Track Singles Series, Vol. 2 and recorded on a 4-track recorder. The whimsical, lo-fi set includes playful tunes like "Mr. Bad Guy" and "The Elephant Song," with all proceeds matched and donated to the Standing Rock protests. Produced entirely by Rado at home, it showcases his experimental side through simple, childlike arrangements without major critical coverage, serving as a low-key interlude in his output.[9][48] Rado's next solo project, Born to Run (2017), is a full-album cover of Bruce Springsteen's 1975 classic, released on May 12 as a limited-edition vinyl (1,000 copies) through Turntable Kitchen's Sounds Delicious series. Self-produced by Rado, the record reinterprets all eight tracks with indie rock flair, including an anthemic take on "Thunder Road." Pitchfork covered the announcement, noting Rado's fandom for the source material and the project's place among full-album covers by artists like Ben Gibbard. While not extensively reviewed, it was celebrated for its sincere homage and vinyl exclusivity, aligning with Rado's penchant for reinterpretive self-production. Leading into his 2023 return, Rado released singles including "Farther Away" (September 21, 2023), "Easier," "Blue Moon," and "Don't Wait Too Long" as previews for his album. These tracks appear on For Who the Bell Tolls For (2023), Rado's second proper solo studio album, released on December 1 by Western Vinyl. Self-produced with elevated art-pop production techniques, including lush arrangements and glam rock elements, the seven-track record grapples with grief over the deaths of friends Richard Swift and Danny Lacy, balancing mourning with life-affirming bounce. The tracklist is: 1. "For Who the Bell Tolls For"; 2. "Don't Wait Too Long"; 3. "Easier"; 4. "Blue Moon"; 5. "Farther Away"; 6. "Walk Away"; 7. "Yer Funeral". Pitchfork awarded it 7.5/10, praising its auteur-like depth, emotional compactness, and playful charm as a "proper coming-out party" for Rado. Paste Magazine called it a stirring, grief-filled portrait of loss with youthful vigor. No significant chart performance was noted for any solo releases, reflecting their indie niche.[10]

Foxygen releases

Foxygen's major-label discography began with the release of We Are the 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace & Magic on January 22, 2013, through Jagjaguwar.[49] As co-founder and multi-instrumentalist, Jonathan Rado contributed guitar, keyboards, bass, and percussion, while also serving as co-producer alongside the band's vocalist Sam France.[50] The album's psychedelic and garage rock influences drew from 1960s and 1970s acts, marking Foxygen's breakthrough and leading to an extensive North American and European tour that showcased their energetic live performances, though it was interrupted by an onstage incident in 2013.[51] The duo followed with ...And Star Power on October 14, 2014, also via Jagjaguwar, expanding into a double album of experimental psychedelic pop spanning 19 tracks.[52] Rado played multiple instruments including guitar, synthesizer, and drums, and handled engineering duties in addition to co-producing with France.[52] This ambitious release supported a world tour that highlighted Foxygen's conceptual live sets, blending theatrical elements with rock improvisation across dates in the US, UK, and Europe.[53] In 2017, Foxygen issued Hang on January 20 through Jagjaguwar, incorporating orchestral arrangements and progressive pop elements with contributions from a 40-piece ensemble.[54] Rado co-produced the record, performed on guitar, keyboards, and other instruments, and co-wrote its songs with France, emphasizing a more mature, California-inspired sound.[54] The album prompted a tour across North America and select international stops, where the band performed with expanded lineups to replicate its lush production.[55] Foxygen's most recent album, Seeing Other People, arrived on April 26, 2019, under Jagjaguwar, framed as a reflective "breakup" record exploring personal and band dynamics through glam rock and funk-infused tracks.[56] Rado served as multi-instrumentalist—handling guitar, bass, and synthesizers—and co-producer, collaborating closely with France and additional musicians.[57] Unlike prior releases, the band opted against touring to prioritize creative recovery, though they made select promotional appearances.[57] As of 2025, Foxygen remains on an indefinite hiatus with no confirmed new projects or releases since 2019, though the band's label has described each album as a symbolic rebirth amid ongoing personal endeavors for Rado and France.[58]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.