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Nick Zinner
Nick Zinner
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Key Information

Nicholas Joseph Zinner (born December 8, 1974) is the guitarist and record producer for the New York rock band Yeah Yeah Yeahs.[2][3] Zinner is also a photographer.[4]

Musical career

[edit]

Before forming the Yeah Yeahs Yeahs with Karen O and Brian Chase in 2000,[5] Zinner attended Bard College where he played in the Boba Fett Experience, who later changed their name to Challenge of the Future because of concerns about being sued by George Lucas. The band moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn in the late 1990s and broke up in 2001.[6]

Since 2001, Zinner has many collaborative efforts with such acts as TV on the Radio, Har Mar Superstar, Ronnie Spector,[7] The Horrors, and Scarlett Johansson. He contributed guitar and keyboard to several tracks on Bright Eyes' 2005 album Digital Ash in a Digital Urn and went on tour with the band as part of the rotating roster.

In 2005, Zinner formed a band Head Wound City along with members from The Locust and The Blood Brothers.[8]

Zinner produced the re-mix of the track 'Compliments' on British group Bloc Party's 2005 album Silent Alarm Remixed, and has remixed The Plot to Blow Up the Eiffel Tower's song, "INRI," on their INRI ep. Zinner has also remixed Single Frame's song, "People are Germs," in addition to appearing in the music video.

In 2007, he also re-mixed The Hives's song, "Tick Tick Boom", which was used as a B-side for the release of their single "T.H.E.H.I.V.E.S".[9]

In August 2009, Zinner was included at number 16 in NME magazine's future 50 list.[10]

In early 2011, Zinner contributed guitar to the song "Go" by Santigold.[11]

In May 2011, Zinner was commissioned to curate, compose and lead a performance 41 Strings in NYC to celebrate the 41st Earth Day. The performance, in which he collaborated with musicians Hisham Bharoocha and Ben Vida, involved 41 players of various stringed instruments, plus additional percussion and synthesiser parts. 41 Strings was performed at Sydney Opera House in Australia as part of Sydney Festival 2012, and Royal Festival Hall in London UK as part of James Lavelle's Meltdown in 2014 with guest guitarists from The XX, Savages, Deap Vally, Damon Albarn band, Magic Numbers and The Verve.[11][12][13]

In 2013, Zinner reformed his college band Challenge of the Future in order to play a benefit show at Union Pool in Brooklyn to raise money for the daughter of a friend who died.[14] Challenge of the Future then released the single "You Can't Call Off the Dog," which was recorded at Adrian Grenier's Wreckroom studio in New York.[15]

In 2013, Zinner produced and recorded Santigold's contribution to the Hunger Games: Catching Fire soundtrack, "Shooting Arrows at the Sky." The 2015 album “Music in Exile” by Malian band Songhoy Blues was produced by him. In 2016 he produced the album Femejism by Deap Vally and "Sports" by Fufanu.[3]

In 2018, Zinner was announced as the new guitarist of the alternative rock band The Rentals, and made his debut in their 2020 album Q36.[16]

Photography

[edit]

Zinner studied photography at Bard College and also in Lacoste, France. He has released four separate collections of his work: No Seats on the Party Car (2001), Slept in Beds (2003), I hope you are all happy now (2004) which features an introduction written by director Jim Jarmusch, and Please Take Me Off the Guest List (2010).

An exhibit – 1001 Images – of Zinner's photographs was mounted in NYC in October 2010[17] and in San Francisco in February 2011.[18]

In January 2011, Zinner was commissioned by Lee Jeans to shoot their Winter ’11 advertising campaign.[19]

In May 2011 A further exhibit of his photographs was mounted at the Anastasia Photo Gallery in New York City, featuring shots of the crowds at his concerts.[11]

Personal life

[edit]

Zinner is a vegan and a supporter of PETA.[20]

Album appearances

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
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from Grokipedia
Nicholas Joseph Zinner (born December 8, 1974) is an American musician, photographer, and best known as the for the band . Born in , Zinner moved to in 1990 and co-founded the band in 2000 alongside vocalist and drummer . Zinner's musical career with has spanned over two decades, marked by critically acclaimed albums such as (2003) and (2022), blending elements of art punk, , and new wave. Beyond the band, he has contributed as a producer and composer for projects including film soundtracks like (2009) and collaborations with artists such as and the band . In parallel to his music, Zinner is an accomplished who majored in the field at , graduating in 1996, and studied further in Lacoste, . His work focuses on documentary-style images, capturing street scenes, band life, and personal moments, resulting in five published books—including Please Take Me Off (2010) and 131 Different Things—and solo exhibitions in cities like New York, , , and . As of 2022, Zinner divides his time between and .

Early life and education

Childhood and family background

Nicholas Joseph Zinner was born on December 8, 1974, in . He spent his formative years in this suburban town outside . Zinner's exposure to music began in childhood when he took up the , later describing himself as a "little prodigy" on the instrument before becoming disillusioned with his teachers. His interest in guitar emerged during , when he acquired his first instrument through a trade with a friend involving comic books, marking the start of his lifelong engagement with rock and alternative sounds. In high school, Zinner developed a passion for photography after his girlfriend introduced him to her camera, prompting him to enroll in a photo class. He was drawn to the medium's ability to remove subjects from their everyday contexts, transforming ordinary scenes into something more abstract and revealing. This hobby became a way to document and reinterpret his surroundings, laying the groundwork for his later visual work.

Academic studies and early interests

He pursued formal education at in , majoring in as part of the institution's liberal arts program. As part of his studies, Zinner participated in a study abroad program in , , where he honed photography techniques and drew inspiration from the region's artistic heritage. During his time at in the mid-1990s, Zinner began cultivating early musical interests, experimenting with the guitar and performing in a campus band called the Experience. He frequently traveled to to engage with the burgeoning music scenes, absorbing influences from local performances and underground venues. Zinner relocated from to in 1990, immersing himself in the vibrant arts community of the East Village and . In this environment, he connected with emerging creative figures, including meeting singer at a dive bar like .

Musical career

Yeah Yeah Yeahs

The were formed in 2000 in by vocalist and keyboardist , guitarist Nick Zinner, and drummer , emerging from the city's vibrant scene. The trio quickly built a reputation through raw, energetic performances at underground venues like the , where their debut show opening for in September 2000 captured the attention of local tastemakers and helped propel them into the national spotlight. Zinner's angular, noise-infused guitar riffs—often layered with effects pedals for dissonant textures and loops—became a cornerstone of the band's sound, drawing influences from art-punk pioneers like while compensating for the absence of a dedicated through sampled and multi-tracked elements. The band's debut EP, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, arrived in 2001 via Touch and Go Records, showcasing Zinner's experimental approach with unconventional tools like a Zoom RT-123 drum machine sampled for choruses in songs such as "Maps" and "Y Control." Their first full-length album, Fever to Tell (2003), amplified this intensity with Zinner's razor-sharp Stratocaster tones and fuzz-driven distortion, earning critical acclaim and a Grammy nomination for Best Alternative Music Album in 2004. Subsequent releases like Show Your Bones (2006), co-produced in part by Zinner alongside David Sitek, explored more melodic terrain while retaining his signature effects-heavy style, including delay and vibrato for ethereal swells; the album garnered another Best Alternative Music Album nomination in 2007. It's Blitz! (2009) shifted toward synth-pop edges, with Zinner incorporating keyboard elements and receiving a third Grammy nod for Best Alternative Music Album in 2010. Zinner's contributions deepened on Mosquito (2013), where his production input helped blend punk urgency with electronic flourishes, and the album supported extensive world tours that included headline slots at major festivals. The band made notable appearances at Coachella in 2006, 2009, and 2013, with the latter performance on the main stage highlighting Zinner's live looping techniques to build immersive soundscapes. Following a hiatus, Cool It Down (2022) marked a return, with Zinner playing all bass parts on short-scale instruments, ditching traditional amps for direct recording via Kemper profilers on most tracks, and introducing studio use of the EBow for sustained, harmonic layers on songs like "Spitting Off the Edge of the World" and "Blacktop"—a technique that earned a 2023 Grammy nomination for Best Alternative Music Performance. The album itself received a Best Alternative Music Album nomination that year, underscoring Zinner's evolving role in shaping the band's lush, synth-guitar hybrid. In October 2025, the band's song "Maps" was named one of the greatest songs of the century by Rolling Stone. In early 2025, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs teased a comeback tour via a poster listing cities including , , , , , and , building anticipation after nearly a decade without full-scale touring. The "Hidden in Pieces Tour" was officially announced in March 2025, featuring intimate theater residencies starting June 16 at Manchester's O2 Apollo, followed by shows at 's (June 18–19), 's Teatro Metropolita (June 30–July 1), , 's Davies Symphony Hall on July 15, , and additional North American dates including three nights at New York City's Beacon Theatre (July 28–30); the tour concluded successfully in July 2025, signaling the band's renewed activity post-hiatus.

Collaborations and productions

Nick Zinner has contributed as a producer and guest musician to numerous projects beyond his work with Yeah Yeah Yeahs, often infusing experimental sonic elements drawn from his background in post-punk and noise rock. In these collaborations, he frequently explores hybrid textures, blending raw guitar work with electronic or global influences to enhance the artists' visions. Zinner's production credits include Santigold's "Shooting Arrows at the Sky," a track for the 2013 The Hunger Games: Catching Fire soundtrack, where he co-produced with Santigold and Doc McKinney, contributing synthesizer and percussion to create an atmospheric, urgent soundscape. He also served as co-producer on Songhoy Blues' debut album Music in Exile (2015), alongside Marc-Antoine Moreau, helping the Malian desert blues band integrate Western rock grooves with traditional rhythms during sessions that emphasized energetic, groove-driven experimentation. In 2016, Zinner produced Deap Vally's second album Femejism, guiding the duo toward a more restrained yet fractured rock aesthetic that incorporated grunge and psychedelic edges, as heard in tracks like "Smile More." That same year, he produced Fufanu's album Sports, recorded in Iceland, where his involvement amplified the Icelandic trio's post-punk urgency with palpable, driving electronic pulses on songs such as the title track. As a guest musician, Zinner provided guitar and keyboards on five tracks of Bright Eyes' 2005 album Digital Ash in a Digital Urn, adding sighing, romantic melodies to electronic-leaning songs like "Easy/Lucky/Free" and enhancing the record's produced, band-centric shift. He contributed guitar to Santigold's 2011 single "Go!" (featuring Karen O), a punk-infused track co-produced by Q-Tip, Switch, and Santigold, where his fretwork propelled the skittery, rampaging energy. On Scarlett Johansson's 2008 debut album Anywhere I Lay My Head, a collection of Tom Waits covers, Zinner played guitar across several tracks, supporting the lush, layered production by TV on the Radio's Dave Sitek. Early in his career, Zinner offered guitar contributions to TV on the Radio's EP Young Liars (2003), appearing on "Staring at the Sun" and "Blind," and on their 2004 album Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes, notably on "Dreams," where his playing complemented the band's experimental art-rock foundations. These efforts highlight Zinner's role in bridging with diverse genres, often applying angular guitar techniques honed in to foster innovative recording sessions.

Other musical projects

In 2005, Zinner co-founded the supergroup alongside vocalist and guitarist Cody Votolato of The Blood Brothers, bassist Justin Pearson and drummer of . The band released its debut self-titled EP that year through Three One G Records, featuring chaotic noisegrind tracks such as "Radical Friends" and "I'm a Taxidermist I'll Stuff Anything." The group went on hiatus shortly after but reunited in 2014, culminating in the full-length album A New Wave of Violence in 2016, which blended hardcore precision with Zinner's angular guitar work. Zinner curated and composed 41 Strings, an orchestral for 41 string instruments plus percussion and synthesizers, inspired by the 41st anniversary of . The project premiered in in May 2011 with a 41-piece ensemble, followed by a performance at the during the Sydney Festival in 2012 featuring members of the Australian . It was staged again at London's on June 20, 2014, and received a studio album release in 2022 via Chaikin Records, highlighting Zinner's exploration of expansive, ambient textures. In 2018, Zinner joined as guitarist, contributing to their fourth studio album Q36, a record about space released in 2020. His playing on tracks like "Nowhere Girl" and "9th Configuration" infused the band's new wave sound with raw, edges. Zinner launched the grindcore duo More Pain with Justin Pearson in 2019, building on their prior collaboration in . The project debuted with a self-titled three-track EP on Three One G Records, including the blistering single "Hammering Tenderness," characterized by brief, thrash-infused bursts and Pearson's guttural vocals.

Photography career

Beginnings and style

Nick Zinner began photographing in high school after borrowing a camera from his girlfriend and subsequently taking a class, which sparked his interest in capturing moments as a way to cope with his self-described poor memory. He viewed the practice as a personal diary, using it to document everyday experiences and serve as a surrogate for recollection, a habit that persisted throughout his life. This early voyeuristic approach involved secretive, close-up shots of strangers and scenes, reflecting an aggressive, intuitive style honed through . Zinner's style evolved during his studies at , where he majored in photography, and further in , France, under influences like and , emphasizing candid, documentary-style images of urban life and intimate moments. At Bard, guidance from instructor encouraged a "shoot first, ask questions later" method, leading to unposed shots of city streets, unmade beds, and personal vignettes that captured the raw, unfiltered essence of daily existence. His work often featured black-and-white surveillance-like perspectives, evoking a sense of intrusion into ordinary, overlooked scenes. Following his graduation in 1996, Zinner transitioned to professional around 2000, pursuing it parallel to his music career with the , which allowed him to document the rock scene intimately through photos of bandmates and tour life. His first major collection, No Seats on the Party Car (2001), showcased this unique perspective on urban and social vignettes, blending poetry with images that highlighted voyeuristic glimpses of . Signature themes emerged in series like Slept in Beds, where he obsessively photographed rumpled hotel beds as motifs of transience and intimacy, amassing hundreds of such images starting in the early to preserve fleeting personal traces.

Publications and exhibitions

Zinner's photography has been compiled into five notable collections: No Seats on the Party Car (2001), Slept in Beds (2003), which documents unmade hotel beds from his tours with the , I Hope You Are All Happy Now (2004), featuring intimate snapshots of nightlife and personal moments, Please Take Me Off the Guest List (2010), a visual chronicle of concert crowds and behind-the-scenes rock scenes shot over years on the road, and 131 Different Things (2018), a collaboration with Zachary Lipez and Stacy Wakefield blending photographs and narrative. Key exhibitions of Zinner's photographs include 1001 Images, a large-scale display of tour documentation mounted in New York City at Levi's Photography Workshop in October 2010. The show traveled to San Francisco's gallery in February 2011, where it ran through early March and highlighted raw, unfiltered glimpses of life on tour. In May 2011, Anastasia Photo Gallery in hosted another solo exhibition of his work, focusing on crowd shots from concerts and running through early June. More recently, in 2024, Janine Bean Gallery in presented selections from Zinner's Slept in Beds series as part of a dual exhibition with photographer Jose Girl, opening on and featuring over 300 images of beds spanning two decades of travel. The show emphasized the anonymous, transient nature of these spaces and ran through July 6. Zinner received a commercial commission in January 2011 from Lee Jeans for their Winter '11 , where he photographed denim-clad subjects in urban settings to evoke rock 'n' roll energy, with images appearing in posters, magazines, and online promotions. For ongoing work, Zinner maintains an active account @nickzinnerphoto, where he shares archival and new photographs from the to the present, including recent digital releases and previews of exhibitions.

Personal life

Activism and lifestyle

Zinner has maintained a vegan lifestyle for over two decades, initially adopting during high school after a family dinner where he found the texture of "vile," prompting an immediate decision to stop consuming animal flesh. He later transitioned to , citing ethical concerns for animal rights as a core motivation. His commitment is evident in public endorsements, including a 2006 interview with peta2, PETA's youth division, where he promoted vegan dining options in , such as Zen Palate and Kate's Joint, and described the city as an ideal place for vegans. Through this collaboration, Zinner supported PETA's campaigns to encourage youth adoption of plant-based diets and advocacy. Zinner's animal rights activism extends beyond personal choices to broader ethical stances, aligning his lifestyle with efforts to reduce animal exploitation. He has been recognized in PETA-related polls as a prominent vegan advocate in the music industry, reinforcing his role in promoting compassion toward animals. Philosophically, Zinner views art and life through a lens of preservation and , particularly in his , which he describes as a therapeutic tool to combat his poor memory and innate voyeuristic tendencies. He has stated that he photographs to capture and retain moments of beauty or interest that he would otherwise forget, serving as a surrogate for unreliable recollection. This practice, for Zinner, documents transient experiences as a form of personal evidence against the inevitability of loss, blending documentation with emotional therapy.

Residences and relationships

Zinner splits his time between residences in New York City and Los Angeles, a routine he adopted in the 2010s to accommodate his creative pursuits across both coasts. In 2020, he referred to his Los Angeles home as a new base, reflecting the band's gradual westward shift while maintaining strong ties to their New York origins. This bicoastal lifestyle involves frequent travel between the cities, often aligned with photography exhibitions and personal projects that draw him to each location's distinct cultural scenes. As of 2025, Zinner continues to divide his time between Los Angeles and New York City. Zinner's key personal relationships are rooted in the early New York music community, where he met vocalist at the in the summer of 2000, leading to their foundational band partnership in . The two shared a apartment in 2001, fostering a close creative bond that has endured as a central friendship despite occasional tensions. He maintains connections with figures from the city's indie and punk circles, including mutual friends from the scene who introduced him to O, as well as ongoing ties in photography communities through shared exhibitions and collaborations.

Discography

Yeah Yeah Yeahs albums

The ' debut , Yeah Yeah Yeahs, was released in 2001 on the band's own Shifty label, with Nick Zinner contributing angular, distortion-heavy guitar lines that defined the group's early garage-punk sound on tracks like "Bang" and "Art Star." A follow-up EP, , arrived in 2002 via , where Zinner's experimental riffing continued to underpin the raw energy of songs such as "Machine." The band's first full-length album, , came out on April 1, 2003, through , featuring Zinner's inventive guitar work that blended punk aggression with indie-rock nuance, including whirring sine-wave-like tones on "Rich" and pointillistic patterns on "Maps." Zinner handled all guitar duties, adding low-end thump and overdriven solos that elevated tracks like "" and "Cold Light," while the standout single "Maps" highlighted his ability to create emotive, cascading lines in support of Karen O's vocals. Show Your Bones, released on March 21, 2006, by , showcased Zinner on guitar and keyboards, delivering versatile textures from car-alarm shrieks to Ennio Morricone-inspired swells on songs like "Cheated Hearts" and "Phenomenal." His contributions emphasized a more polished yet chaotic edge, with fuzzy, driving riffs propelling the album's emotional core. On It's Blitz!, issued March 31, 2009, via , Zinner shifted toward keyboards and synths alongside guitar, co-producing the record and incorporating drum machines and bass to craft a assault, as heard in the single "Heads Will Roll" with its barn-burning guitar solo. His reduced reliance on traditional guitar allowed for slashing, spider-like lines that maintained the band's punk spirit amid electronic influences. The fourth studio album, , was released on April 16, 2013, by , with Zinner providing guitar, bass, keyboards, and vocals, his brilliant riffs anchoring chaotic tracks like "" and adding layered intensity to the eclectic mix. Finally, , the band's fifth album, appeared on September 30, 2022, through , where Zinner focused on supportive guitar roles using techniques like for sustained harmonies on "Spitting Off the Edge of the World" and fuzz pedals for "Burning," integrating his playing with synths in a nuanced, non-dominant fashion.

Guest and production credits

Zinner has contributed guitar and production work to various artists' albums outside his primary band commitments. His guest appearances include guitar on tracks from Bright Eyes' Digital Ash in a Digital Urn (2005), where he played on songs such as "Devil in the Details," "Light Pollution," and "Easy/Lucky/Free." He also provided electric guitar throughout The Rentals' Q36 (2020), enhancing the album's synth-driven sound alongside band members Matt Sharp and Ronnie Vannucci Jr. On Santigold's Master of My Make-Believe (2012), Zinner contributed guitar to the track "Go!," which features vocals from Karen O. In production roles, Zinner helmed Songhoy Blues' debut album Music in Exile (2015), recording and engineering much of the material to blend Malian with rock elements. He produced Deap Vally's Femejism (2016), co-writing tracks like "Turn It Off" and shaping the duo's raw into a more polished feminist statement. Similarly, Zinner produced Fufanu's Sports (2017), capturing the Icelandic trio's energy during sessions at Hljóðriti Studio. Other notable credits include Zinner's role as guitarist in the grindcore supergroup on their self-titled EP (2005), a collaboration with members of The Blood Brothers and . Additionally, under the project More Pain with Justin Pearson, Zinner released a self-titled EP in 2019 featuring grindcore tracks like "Hammering Tenderness." Zinner co-wrote and performed on several tracks for the soundtrack album Where the Wild Things Are (2009) by Karen O and the Kids, including "All Is Love" and "Rumpus." In 2022, Zinner released 41 Strings, a studio recording of his original composition for string orchestra, initially created for an Earth Day event in 2012. Zinner contributed guitar to multiple tracks on Africa Express's album Presents... Bahidorá, released July 11, 2025, including "Soledad" and "Hacernos Así."

References

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