In a dark kitchen in the middle of a sweaty night in Las Vegas, all 6'4' of Dan Reynolds is hunched over a laptop, slapping beats on the table and crooning lyrics into a tiny microphone. Before long, he and the other three members of indie rock band Imagine Dragons would be playing'It's Time,' that same laptop-demo-turned-supersized-anthem, from the roof of a parking garage to a wave of thousands of screaming fans. This song title to the single from their 2012 d
ebut KidInaKorner/Interscope release'Continued Silence EP' is an all too apt descriptor of the band's hard-earned success but it's also emblematic of the deep-seated anxiety Reynolds and the rest of the band experienced leaving behind any realistic expectation of a normal job to do the thing they love most.