Orla Gartland has returned with a new single, ‘Little Chaos’. The track is accompanied by a music video from Danish director Anne-Sofie Lindgaard. Check it out below.
Speaking about the new song, Gartland said: “I think a lot about how to move through the world alongside a partner and for a long time I wanted to show up in relationships as easy-going & palatable, never taking up too much space – now I can’t think of anything worse. I can be loud, funny, clumsy, loyal, intelligent, annoying, caring, angry; this song is about showing up as all of it, all at once. I think dropping the act and showing your true self feels like the most vulnerable thing you can do.”
Newly sober, Dennis Monk is stuck. Approaching six months of sobriety, he’s back at his parents house in Philadelphia, accepting their generosity until suddenly, he’s kicked out. For the rest of his first sober year, he goes from apartment to couch to bed, rooming with attractive women in exchange for apartment repair or college friends to reminisce with. With each story in his linked collection, Michael Deagler examines sobriety, friendship, romance, and gets Monk into a decent amount of trouble each time. With a keen wit, an empath’s heart, and a propensity to distill life as we know it down to its purest moments, Early Sobrieties is as solid and self-assured as a debut gets.
Our Culture sat down with Michael Deagler to talk about episodic novels, escape, and the passage of time.
Congratulations on your debut novel! How does it feel now that it’s out?
It’s great! Very exciting, I thought I’d be more stressed, but it’s been very chill, people saying nice things to you. If things are going bad behind the scenes, nobody tells you, so it’s been surprisingly pleasant.
Early Sobrieties is basically a novel in stories, with each character and situation being contained to the chapter they’re in. Why did you want to go about this structure?
I guess I think of myself as a short story writer more than a novelist — that’s been the form I’ve always been drawn to. I’ve always liked the linked collection, like A Visit From the Goon Squad, The Things They Carried, Jesus’ Son, sort of right up on the border between novel and story collection. It frees you from the expectations of the traditional novel structure, but you still have the continuity of following the same characters and being in the same world. I was already inclined towards that structure, but I thought for a book about sobriety, it made particular sense because there’s this recovery maxim of taking one day at a time. Each chapter, each episode is a new opportunity for Monk to live soberly. Not just in the sense of abstaining, but to be well, to be good. And sometimes he succeeds, sometimes he fails, and each episode allowed me to explore a different aspect of sobriety without having to artificially create some larger novelistic arc.
I think as stories, they’re so well-paced and fleshed-out; you get a sense that you’re capturing these characters at a pivotal moment in their lives, and Dennis is witness to it all. You mentioned Jennifer Egan — her collection Emerald City operates the same way. What was it like exploring so many different characters through their situations?
That’s interesting — yeah, Jennifer Egan is kind of a genius when it comes to the short story structure, figuring out what event to pivot a story around. I think in my mind, I knew what aspect of sobriety I wanted to be tackling. I mean, in this chapter, he’ll encounter another sober person, or an alcoholic who’s not yet sober, etc. When you’re working on a project, your mind’s open to collect things to fit into it, all the conversations you have, things you read, all of it subconsciously slots into holes in the manuscript. Once I filled those holes, the pivotal events presented themselves.
Like your protagonist, Dennis Monk, you’re sober, and you mentioned writing fiction about sobriety is trying to capture the “baffling, humiliating beauty of it.” Did you think you achieved that goal, and how does it come out through the novel?
Yeah, I hope I achieved it. I don’t know if the beauty is there as much. I knew I wanted him to be sober the whole time, but it doesn’t start the day after he gets sober, it’s like six months after. The book basically covers the second half of his first sober year, not the first. I feel like the first half, they call it “pink clouding,” these moments of extreme bliss. Everything is so beautiful, you’re so thankful to be alive. Part of it is just the chemicals in your brain adjusting. You have this rosy feeling that starts to go away, and the book starts when the pink clouding fades, and he has to deal with the real world again. Initially, I had wanted to capture more of that blissed-out time, but fiction is fueled by conflict and negative emotions for the most part, so ultimately it became clear he couldn’t wander around, happy all the time.
I really enjoyed Monk’s quiet sort of desperation — he goes with the flow and follows girls home he meets at bars, reconnects with old flings by standing outside their house — but it always seems like he isn’t deluded about what he’s doing, maybe an effect of the sobriety. Even though he’s flighty, do you think at this moment in time he has a good grip as to what he’s trying to do?
I think he’s pretty self-aware about a lot of things. He’s not a complete idiot, since the temptation in fiction is to make your protagonist kind of a moron, or very oblivious. It’s easier to get them in trouble. I didn’t want him to be a fool, because I thought that’d be cheating a little. I think if you make a character who’s self-aware, the things they aren’t aware of hit a little harder. The blind spots become slightly more, not egregious, but there’s more weight to them. But I do think he doesn’t quite know what he wants, so that creates a level of passivity that can cause him to drift into various situations. Even people with no history of addiction, your 20s are a time of drifting where you find yourself in a lot of places where you’re not sure what you want out of them, but it’s a part of discovering yourself. And that’s a main process of the book, rediscovering who he is and what he wants.
The family dynamics in the first chapter are very striking, and very funny. Did you pull from real life to form Monk’s parents and brother?
The parents, I would say, are superficially similar to my own, to the point that I was worried about it. They finally read the book about a month ago, and I was concerned as to how they’d react. My parents have the same jobs as his, and they’ve said some of the same things, but mine are very kind, complex human beings, whereas his are a little more one-dimensional in order to be minor characters in fiction. But I don’t have a brother, and the reason he does is that early in the writing process I realized he couldn’t just be me, he needed to be different, so giving him a brother would change the family dynamic and it could evolve in different ways. And the brother ends up returning in the book, his existence ended up having a big impact on Monk’s arc. It ended up being a useful choice to lean into the fictionality.
There’s this very intimate flash of superiority in one chapter’s ending; he’s staying with this woman Maureen, whose brother arrives critiques the furniture Dennis is making for her. One day Neal has an episode in the middle of the night, and when Dennis goes to comfort him, he thinks, “We are strangers, you and I. The chasm between us is the width of two lifetimes: yours and mine. His other [hand] floundered blindly for my palm, but I held my own hands high in the air, high enough that he couldn’t touch them. High enough to make clear to anyone who might be watching that I was my own man, of whom nothing and no one else might form an essential part.” Walk me through that scene and revealing this part of his personality.
I think it was a part of writing the book, that with any kind of fiction, you learn who your character is after putting them in circumstances and threatening them with the realities and personalities of other people. Not that I don’t think Monk is an unreliable narrator, but narrators can present any version of the world, and it’s not until you have them interacting with other characters where you see who they really are and who they’re really afraid of. I think in that story, he’s created this domestic situation for himself that allows him to feel stable and adult. The dream of that is punctured by the arrival of the brother of this woman he’s been staying with, and it not only forces him to deal with this guy who has these complex emotional problems, but he has to deal with this woman who he’s been fantasizing about building a life with, parts of her life that would be parts of his. Maybe he’s not ready for that level of what it actually means to have a family, to be responsible for other people. It’s sort of a dark, selfish moment. We all have selfish moments. He’s making the decision to not be empathetic in that moment, which is ironic, because he’s always complaining that people aren’t being empathetic towards him.
Later, he attempts to escape to Pensacola through his friend who has a car, and later with a woman that wants to go to Nebraska City. Neither plan works out, but why do you think Dennis was so intent on leaving — just burnout, or something deeper?
Over the course of the book, he’s trying on different permutations of how he can make life work for him — moving a lot, staying with different people, trying on different jobs. I think by that point he’s done with Philadelphia and latches on to the idea of Pensacola, despite not knowing anything about it. He’s just seen tourism pictures on the internet. That’s just about leaving things behind, rather than the specific allure of any place he’d go to. Not to psychoanalyze him too much, but I’ve noticed in my own life, for many years after I got sober I felt stuck in the Philadelphia area and was always trying to travel or come up with a reason to move away. I felt that strong wanderlust and for me, ultimately, running away from your problems is too dramatic, but if you can change the setting, you can be a different person, the person you want to be. But the change all has to be internal. I now live in California, which is wonderful in many ways, but you’re the same person. You know how it is, however far away you are, it doesn’t solve all your problems.
The book ends with this simple but true idea of taking life day by day, slowly, however you can best manage. One line sticks out to me: “On the peaks of holy mountains, in the mood-lit dens of sex clubs, they are counting their days.” What does this theme mean to you and why did you want to explore it?
It goes back to the one day at a time notion. When you’re sober, especially in your first year, you think so much about time, the accumulation of it, and it’s equated with safety. The day you quit drinking, a day feels like a really long time. The more days you have, the more secure you feel. A week is everything, then a month is everything. AA is kind of set up this way, with the chips at various stages. But it’s hard to think about the accumulation of days without also thinking about your own mortality. You want time to pass, but it’s also time you’re never gonna get back. There’s this weird trap in thinking about life that way. I think the tyranny of the passage of time is definitely one of the engines of the novel.
Finally, what are you working on now? Are you continuing with a storied, fragmented approach or trying something different?
I’m trying to write a novel that’s more of a traditional, proper novel, not episodic. It’s very different from Early Sobrieties, and in some ways that’s nerve-wracking, but it’s challenging and I’m growing as a writer. I’d like to stop being a short story writer, I’d like to become a novelist.
Many of us can’t imagine starting the day without a cup of aromatic coffee. The popularity of this Ethiopian beverage is undeniable, and every day, we walk down the streets of our cities and towns and see new cafés offering their specialties and exceptional coffee.
However, coffee consumption varies from country to country. In some countries, it is common to drink only espresso; in others, the market is dominated by coffee and milk beverages with different flavors. What are the differences in coffee culture and habits in different parts of the world?
The cradle of espresso coffee – Italy
Although Italy’s geographical location is not conducive to coffee cultivation, the country is known for its deep coffee tradition. Il galateo del caffè is the name given to the Italian coffee drinker’s etiquette, which is strictly adhered to to get the maximum flavor and pleasure from a small cup of coffee.
The aroma of freshly ground, dark-roasted coffee beans floods almost every Italian café in the morning. Italians have a short espresso, a slightly longer lungo, or a cappuccino every morning before work. Coffee is usually taken standing up, but together with a muffin, it makes the perfect breakfast for many Italians.
In the Italian tradition, each espresso must be stirred before drinking to combine the flavors in the foam and the coffee without making the coffee too bitter. In addition, the taste buds need to be prepared for the first sip of coffee before the water, so it is customary to get a glass of water with the espresso.
You have probably heard that in Italy, it is not acceptable to have a cappuccino in the afternoon. Italians consider coffee with milk too heavy to drink after food. If you order a cappuccino after a hearty lunch or dinner, you will get one, but in general, the locals do not.
As far as Italian culture is concerned, it is worth noting that while coffee is central, it also contains a lot of tobacco – a cigarette or other tobacco products along with coffee has become a daily ritual for many. This combination, part of Italian coffee culture, is common in other countries.
Northern European hygge culture
Interestingly, the Nordic countries lead the world in coffee consumption. The main principle of Nordic coffee is to bring out the unique, distinct flavor of high-quality and sourced coffee beans, enjoy quality coffee, and experience a range of natural flavors.
Northern European coffee culture strongly emphasizes quality and sustainability. Many quality coffee shops in this region buy only ethically sourced beans that are roasted to perfection, preserving the coffee’s flavor characteristics. Such coffee is usually produced using alternative methods.
In Denmark, as in Sweden and Finland, drip coffee, known as drip or filter brew, and other alternative brewing methods are popular. Here, it is common to enjoy a larger cup of coffee, drunk slowly, while enjoying the drink and a tasty snack together.
The coffee culture in these countries is based on the concept of hygge, which has no exact translation but roughly means coziness and well-being, the pleasure of being. Cafés have a warm and cozy atmosphere, making them the ideal place to enjoy leisurely coffee.
From filter coffee in coffee shops to premium beans in the USA
In the United States, coffee culture is as diverse as the country. Coffee enthusiasts can enjoy various tastes and experiences, from filter coffee in every snack bar to modern cafés and roasters that provide the perfect quality coffee.
The USA is famous for its coffee diversity, from classic filter coffee to flavored coffee and milk drinks. Although the US is most often associated with people hurrying to drink coffee to work, there are many different ways to consume coffee, whether enjoying a slow cup of specialty coffee or a hurried morning americano.
The US is also the leading importer of quality coffee, just behind Europe. Along with offering high-quality coffee prepared in classic and alternative ways, coffee shops are creating coworking spaces that are growing in popularity worldwide.
But coffee is not just hot. In the US, where iced lattes with syrups are popular, the cold extraction method, known as cold brew, where coffee is brewed with cold water and left to steep for a dozen to a few dozen hours, has also gained popularity.
So, in the United States, you’ll find what you like best. Whether it’s a strong black coffee, a sweet milky coffee with whipped cream, or a cold-extraction cold brew, you won’t be disappointed.
Coffee culture spreads around the world
Coffee culture in different countries reflects the uniqueness of each nation and the different rhythms of life. Still, it also shows that many people cannot imagine everyday life without coffee. Coffee culture is spreading worldwide, and countries are slowly adopting the coffee culture of other countries.
So whether you’re sipping a traditional espresso in Rome, enjoying filter coffee in America, or exploring the specialty coffee shops of Northern Europe, coffee culture continues to unite people all over the world and delight its lovers with a cup of perfectly brewed coffee every day.
Hidden halos are now a popular choice for jewelry. They are a modern version of the original style that gives people an exclusive sense of luxury. They are perfect for people who want to express emotions like love and self-affirmation without wearing the obvious. Try integrating them into your daily outfit in the following ways.
Introducing the Hidden Halo Ring
A hidden halo engagement ring has a central stone that is usually surrounded by smaller stones on the upper part of the band instead of the visible top part, where the main diamond is typically positioned in a traditional halo setting. This configuration enhances the sparkle of the center stones without too much decoration from above, giving them a delicate shimmer.
The Appeal of Subtle Sophistication
A hidden halo ring exudes sophistication without trying too hard. This creation is perfect for people who like small things and would rather not have their luxuries noticed. This design particularly targets lovers of hidden gems in life that exist both in reality and metaphorically.
How To Incorporate Hidden Halo Rings into Your Everyday Style
Learn to use these exceptional items to enhance everyday dressing with understated glamour.
Pair with Minimalistic Outfits
Minimalist outfits are perfect for low-profile, complex, hidden halo rings. With classic pieces like fitted pants or a little black dress, as it clings against your figure, modest jewelry brings depth and sophistication.
Mix and Match with Other Jewelry
Due to their discreet design, hidden halo rings offer incredible versatility when mixing and matching with other pieces. They fit perfectly with another ring for a casual look or can be partnered with earrings that scream class yet are not too flashy.
Make It Your Signature Piece
Wear your hidden halo ring as part of your day-to-day dressing to give it a truly personal feel. Like a favorite watch or beloved necklace, hidden halo rings can be the signature pieces representing who you are and your style statement.
Highlight It on Special Occasions
Don’t hesitate to make your hidden halo ring shine even during special occasions. Its secret sparkle shows off its beauty in a candlelight or romantic dinner or under the bright lights of a gala event, making it a great conversation starter.
Choose the Right Stone and Setting for You
The hidden halo is versatile enough to be customized to match any taste or lifestyle. Whether you choose vibrant-colored gemstones for that pop or classic diamonds for timeless elegance, selecting the right stone and setting helps you create engagement rings for women that will be a cherished addition to your everyday look.
The Final Word
The hidden halo ring epitomizes beauty, combining intimacy with extravagance in a manner that caters to contemporary taste toward jewelry that expresses depth. Perfect for expressing love, achievement, or individuality, this beautiful piece adds grace and mystery to your ensemble.
“‘Oh No!’ is the sort of song that just tumbles out of you,” Colin Meloy explained in a statement. “It all started with the first line — ‘It was on a wedding night / How they danced by the firelight’ — and flowed from there. In my mind, the narrator of the song is channeling the two brothers from Emir Kusturica’s immortal film, Underground. This song is about causing havoc, causing chaos, its narrator forever followed by an even greater form of chaos, a great darkness. But it’s a darkness you can dance to!”
As It Ever Was, So It Will Be Again will arrive on June 14 through YABB/Thirty Tigers.
There are a million ways to take in I Saw the TV Glow, director Jane Schoenbrun’s terrific second feature about two teenagers who obsess and bond over a monster-of-the-week TV show in the 1990s. Shoenbrun has said they wanted “the whole movie to feel like the memory of television,” and though I didn’t grow up during that decade, Buffy the Vampire Slayer – a clear reference point for The Pink Opaque, the series that both shapes the friendship between Owen (Justice Smith) and Maddy (Brigette Lundy-Paine) and distorts their relationship to reality – was formative in my coming-of-age. One sequence in the film that stirred something in me – nostalgia, you might call it – echoes the scenes in Buffy where the action would pause for live performances at the show’s fictitious club venue, the Bronze. Here was my memory of television, at once summoned, blurred, and amplified.
Shoenbrun asked the artists on the I Saw the TV Glow soundtrack – mostly queer and emerging stars in the indie world (a few of which have been featured in our ArtistSpotlightinterviewseries) – to contribute songs they would have written if they were to play a club like the Bronze. A couple of those artists, King Woman and Sloppy Jane (playing in a band with Phoebe Bridgers), literally deliver their songs onscreen, and the sequence that threads their performances also happens to split the movie in half. While Sloppy Jane and Bridgers’ contribution, ‘Claw Machine’, perfectly blends into the atmosphere of teenage angst and abstract melancholy that pervades the first half of the film, King Woman’s hellish shriek alone is transformative – not only veering into the realm of horror, but becoming a vessel for catharsis. After all, it’s the only moment in the film where music really assumes the same role as television for the audience. “It was weird how I basically put all of my emotional energy and love into that television show instead of my own life, but it was a coping mechanism,” Shoenbrun recently said of Buffy. “It was similar with the hug that Elliott Smith’s music gave me growing up, or any of the other music that got me through my teens.”
All the artists here recognize this feeling (Bridgers certainly does), and as a collection listeners can fervently latch onto independently of the film, the soundtrack extends a similar embrace. Although the stylistic contrast between the aforementioned songs is deliberately jarring, the compilation is uniformly gorgeous and intoxicating, especially when experienced alongside the haunting score by Alex G, who reunites with Shoenbrun following his work on We’re All Going to the World’s Fair. On a conceptual level, though, it’s also fascinating to hear those artists essentially go back in time in an effort to articulate feelings that remain elusive but familiar to all of us, but whose expression will especially resonate with those approaching them from a relative distance, who aren’t directly inside them like the film’s protagonists. The soundtrack plays to the artist’s strengths, but rather than adheringto its cinematic vision, it also invites them to play with their own memories of being a teenager (or listening to music as a teenager), universalizing the the film’s anxieties without necessarily illuminating them.
A certain demographic might immediately recognize the anthemic significance of Broken Social Scene’s ‘Anthems for a Seventeen Year Old Girl’, but yeule’s glitched-up rendition positions it in the film’s liminal – or downright transitional – space: between truth and fiction, adolescence and adulthood. It immediately introduces us to the movie as a kind of dream world, one that bends even the most familiar signifiers while allowing these artists to stretch their sound within it. Most glaringly, Caroline Polachek trades her kaleidoscopic synthpop for an explosive (though still subtly fractured) grunge song that soundtracks a euphoric binge-watching sequence; Jay Som and Drab Majesty do a great job of emulating upbeat ‘90s alt-rock hits, which also serves to brighten the somber, otherworldly mood that dominates the soundtrack.
Even when they don’t directly operate within the framework of the movie, many of the songs wander through the same liminal space, so they feel of it. Shoenbrun’s dialogue often withholds more than it reveals (though I still think about the line “someone took a shovel and dug out my insides”), which makes the conversational intimacy of songs like ‘Another Season’ by Frances Quinlan (of Hop Along) and Sadurn’s ‘How Can I Get Out?’ particularly striking, however unintentional. And thanks to the openness of Shoenbrun’s directions, even the musicians who stick to their style offer varying interpretations of the darkness and longing shared by the film: Maria BC’s is a bottomless well, shrinking rather than swelling with emotion, unlike L’Rain’s nostalgia-drenched ‘Green’. If Florist’s ‘Riding Around in the Dark’ provides an opportunity for escape and warmth, Bartees Strange’s ‘Big Glow’ tunes back into the hypnotizing glow. That glow is a metaphor, of course, and filtered through so many eyes and ears, it can mean so much. “Nobody wants to dwell inside thе meaning,” the Weather Station’s Tamara Lindeman reminds us on ‘Moonlight’, however. “The dreaming, the longing, the feeling comes on slowly.” Another takeaway, it seems, is that it never really leaves you.
Los Campesinos! have announced All Hell, their first album since 2017. The follow-up to Sick Scenes is slated for release on July 19 via the band’s label Heart Swells. Along with the news, they’ve shared the new single ‘Feast of Tongues’. Check it out and find the album cover and tracklist below.
All Hell was produced by the band’s Tom Bromley and features contributions from Holly Carpenter on violin, Eileen McDonald Sparks on cello, and Jon Natchez on saxophone. In a statement, the band said:
All Hell is an album on…
drinking for fun and drinking for misery // adult acne // adult friendship // football // death and dying // love and sex // late-stage capitalism // Orpheus // day dreaming // night terrors // the heart as an organ and as a burden // suburban boredom // Tears of the Kingdom // the punks on the playlist // increments of time // climate apocalypse // the moon the moon the moon ///
It’s All Hell
All Hell Cover Artwork:
All Hell Tracklist:
1. The Coin-Op Guillotine
2. Holy Smoke (2005)
3. A Psychic Wound
4. I. Spit; or, a Bite Mark in the Shape of the Sunflower State
5. Long Throes
6. Feast of Tongues
7. The Order of the Seasons
8. II. Music for Aerial Toll House
9. To Hell in a Handjob
10. Clown Blood/Orpheus’ Bobbing Head
11. kms
12. III. Surfing a Contrail
13. Moonstruck
14. 0898 HEARTACHE
15. Adult Acne Stigmata
Ahead of the release of her debut solo album Lives Outgrown on Friday, Beth Gibbons has shared one more single called ‘Lost Changes’. It follows the previously unveiled tracks ‘Reaching Out’ and ‘Floating on a Moment’. Check it out via the Juno Calypso-directed video below.
This Is Lorelei, the solo project of Water From Your Eyes’ Nate Amos, has shared another single from his upcoming LP Box for Buddy, Box for Star. This one’s called ‘Where’s Your Love Now’, and it follows earlier cuts ‘I’m All Fucked Up’ and ‘Dancing in the Club’. Check it out below.
“‘Where’s Your Love Now’ is equal parts diary entry and song study – trying to use longstanding singer/songwriter strategies to write about the balance between maintaining self-worth and living with a policy of forgiveness,” Amos explained in a statement.
Squirrel Flower has shared a cover of Neil Young & Crazy Horse’s ‘Cortez the Killer’. Ella Williams recorded her version of the song, which originally appeared on Young’s 1975 album Zuma, live at Cheer Up Charlies in Austin, TX on March 15 as part of her set at the Stereogum & Topshelf Records Unofficial Showcase. She’s joined by alexalone’s Alex Peterson, Greg Freeman, Horse Jumper of Love’s Dimitri Giannopolous, and Truth Club’s Travis Harrington on guitar, Michael Cantella on bass, and Teethe’s Kai Wilde on drums. Listen below.
“I decided to cover ‘Cortez’ with my friends as a way to feel the power of community amidst the fascism surrounding us that week in Texas,” Williams explained in a statement. “I love Neil Young and his uncompromising convictions, so I thought this song would be the perfect expression against everything going on. I had the idea the day before the show. Alex offered up their practice space, we ran through it a few times, and then Dimitri and Greg joined the crew day-of. We put it all out there with this one. In the words of Neil, it was ‘one of the pleasures of my life to be able to be on this stage with these people.’”
Last year, Squirrel Flower released her latest album Tomorrow’s Fire, which she broke down track-by-track with us.