The Incompatible Okay Kaya
Offering an emulated live performance experience including tracks 'Dance Like You' and 'Psych Ward', Wilkins aims to reconnect with a world enveloped in chaos. Centering on vocals and the foundation of a track reinforces Wilkins's craft and her cathartic expression. After a year and a half of zero live performances, Wilkins wanted to capture moments from her recent shows inspired by at-home productions done throughout quarantine. office had the opportunity to sit down with Okay Kaya and discuss her writing process, when a track feels finished, and her go-to ramen order.
Check out the exclusive interview below and listen to "The Incompatible Okay Kaya" on October 22.
Thank you for taking the time to sit down with office.
Thank you office for sitting down with time, I mean me.
Where are you right now?
Im in a blue studio in Greenpoint making a record, drinking coffee.
Your new mixtape offers a stripped-down version of tracks that many know and love, tell me a bit about the choice to pair down and do more acoustic music following your dance-influenced albums like ‘watch this liquid pour itself.’
Into dabbling in all sorts of different genres and different practices/disciplines, this record took me back to square one of music making, started out recording in my room in NYC around 2013 equipped with a guitar and GarageBand. As I’ve continue to make more kinds of music over the years and played with some amazing musicians I’ve mostly toured cost efficiently alone. Like everyone else I was immobile last year but did a bunch of online “gigs”. Stripped down versions of songs and some covers for the cover-lovers thought it sweet to share with everybody etch it into a tape
What is the process like emulating the live experience on this new mixtape?
Very similar, some of the songs on the mixtape are from my first show after a year and a half of no real life social gathering, its a special energy. Recording live streams in my living room was not as nerve wrecking as playing in front of a fleshier audience but almost. So it still has that palms sweaty drunk anyway here’s wonderwall feel to it.
As you explore new sounds and approaches to existing songs, how do you hope your music will live on and gain new life in the future?
I wanna give people the sonic touch of an idea in its original from, when a song works stripped down feels like a good sign.
Do you ever feel a song is fully done, if so which of yours are, if not how would you change them?
Nothing seems ever fully cooked, to practice to learn to let go, and trust that your subconscious will remind you of what you gotta, continue to explore. So many themes/symbols/aesthetics keep on emerging in new shapes or forms, be the ripple, move through.
What are some other covers you would love to sing one day (whether recorded or karaoke)?
Recently sang Barry White “you’re the first my last my everything” for the second installment of Popspa, a mixtape where I sing pop songs over ambient/electronic music. This particular exercise gives my brain great amounts of pleasure. My friend Joanna made us sing Prince “call my name” for her birthday, it was fun but basically blasphemy.
What draws you to songwriting?
A good song makes me cum. A handshake of melody and short narrative might be the language closest to my hearts tongue? I often have a hard time expressing myself conversationally have to soak there in feels before I give them names. Lets out frustration and gives shape becomes beauty sometimes.
What is your favorite song to sing from this mixtape?
Fake it!
Here’s the scenario, you’re wandering around the Lower East Side, and you become hungry. It starts to rain, and you run into a ramen bar soaked head to toe. You seat yourself. What does your order look like?
Miso ramen, extra seaweed, big ole jug of Sapporo, yum.