Vampire Weekend In 2005, Ezra formed the indie rock band
Vampire Weekend. The name of the group was in reference to an unreleased indie film of the same name that Ezra and his friends produced during a vacation. In the film, Ezra portrayed the protagonist, Walcott, a man hell-bent on escaping
Cape Cod as he believed vampires were coming. Many songs from the band's eponymous release made reference to the film. Ezra met his bandmates at
Columbia University, prior to 2003. After already having met drummer Chris Tomson, Koenig became acquainted with
Rostam Batmanglij. The two immediately bonded over
Radiohead at a party during freshman year and vowed to start a band one day. Rounding out the group was
Chris Baio, Koenig's suite-mate in his sophomore year, with whom he shared a love of
Destiny's Child. The group immediately got to work, playing their first show in 2006 at a battle of the bands in a campus basement. They placed third out of four. Later that year, some of their demos appeared online, earning raves from sites like
Stereogum and
Pitchfork. Before they knew it, they were selling out shows and appearing on the cover of
Spin without even having released an album. Their
eponymous debut album arrived on January 29, 2008, and by the end of the year they had performed on
Saturday Night Live, played for 40,000 fans at England's Glastonbury festival, and sold nearly half a million albums. The album was self-produced while they were working full-time jobs. Since then, the band have released another four albums:
Contra (2010),
Modern Vampires of the City (2013),
Father of the Bride (2019), and
Only God Was Above Us (2024). The band has been nominated for multiple
Grammy Awards. In 2011,
Contra was nominated for
Best Alternative Music Album, but
Brothers by
The Black Keys won the award. In 2014,
Modern Vampires of the City was nominated in the category and, this time, the band won the award. Following the win, Koenig exclaimed, "I'm the pre-eminent Ezra of my time, and when I die, then we can talk about who comes next." In 2020,
Father of the Bride earned the band a second win for Best Alternative Music Album and a first nomination for
Album of the Year. "
Harmony Hall" was nominated for
Best Rock Song.
Time Crisis In 2015 Koenig began hosting his own podcast on
Apple Music. The show,
Time Crisis, features Koenig with co-host
Jake Longstreth, an American painter, musician, and internet radio personality. Each episode lasts two hours, during which Koenig and company discuss corporate snack food history, the tasteful palette of ’70s rock (with a focus on the Grateful Dead),
portmanteaus, and respond to emails from listeners. Often, the show ends with The Top Five where Koenig and Longstreth compare the top five songs on Apple Music this week to that of a week from the past relevant to the discourse of the episode.
Jonah Hill,
Rashida Jones,
Mark Ronson,
Florence Welch,
Jamie Foxx,
Tim Heidecker,
James Corden, and Koenig's sister Emma Koenig have appeared as guests on the internet radio show. The show debuted on July 12, 2015, and new episodes air fortnightly. The show is in its eighth season.
Neo Yokio Following a hiatus from Vampire Weekend, Koenig wrote and produced an animated comedy-adventure series about a depressive, demon-slaying playboy voiced by
Jaden Smith. The series,
Neo Yokio, debuted on
Netflix in September 2017. The show was written and produced in 2015, with the final sound mix being completed in January 2016; however, due to issues with
Fox, the show was postponed until finally being picked up by Netflix.
Neo Yokio is presented in the style of an
anime series. However, in an interview with
Rolling Stone magazine, Koenig stated that he believes the show is not a traditional anime: "First of all, out of respect for true anime, I've always called Neo Yokio "anime-inspired" – it's a hybrid. But I've always been a fan of anime, and I always wanted to do something that was kind of an homage to it. Maybe a loving parody. Initially the people I was working with thought I should be the voice of the main character, but I was, like, 'I just spent seven years being the frontman of something, using my voice all the time. What I need right now is to slip into the background of something.'" Upon release, the show's first season received mixed reviews from critics, earning a 54% score on
Rotten Tomatoes. Shannon Liao of
The Verge criticised the show's story and voice-acting, writing that "the initial glamor of the backdrops and talent involved wears off fast. It has awful voice acting, and a pointless, predictable story that’s only surprising because it’s so willing to hit the bottom of the barrel."
The New York Times gave the show a more optimistic review, stating that "if a defensive reading of the line, “Yes, my girlfriend broke up with me to take a finance job in San Francisco,” makes you chuckle, “Neo Yokio” may be for you." On an episode of
Time Crisis in early 2018, Koenig spoke about the future of
Neo Yokio, hinting that "Neo's not dead." However, Netflix canceled the show the following month after one season and a Christmas special. ==Other projects and appearances==