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Vundabar Release New Song ‘I Got Cracked’

Vundabar have returned with a new single, ‘I Got Cracked’, via their new label Loma Vista. Check out director Christopher Phelps‘ video for it below.

“In a six week window that I could only describe as a careening crash landing, a long term relationship of mine imploded, my dad died, and I broke my arm in a hotel while on tour in Europe,” bandleader Brandon Hagen explained in a statement. “One week after that I was at his funeral and the one after that I was recording this song in Los Angeles. I reeled at the connectedness of it all; so much of these intangible fractures now grounded in the very physical break within my body, this physical break then dictating the floatier bits as I made music determined by the limitations of that injury.”

In 2022, Vundabar released a collection of previously unreleased tracks called Good Old.

MILLY Share New Single ‘Running the Madness’

Ahead of the release of their new album Your Own Becoming this Friday, MILLY have released a new single called ‘Running the Madness’. Following previous entries ‘Drip From the Fountain’, ‘Spilling Ink’, and ‘Bittersweet Mary’, the track comes paired with a music video directed by Nate Kahn. Check it out below.

“This song should feel like a little bit of a nightmare,” the band’s Brendan Dyer explained in a statement. “I think that the chorus works well in it’s release, kinda balancing out the psychosis on the verses.. it’s mostly about existing in some sort of mad house in a dreamlike state and needing to get the fuck out. We’ve all been there — cornered by our own thoughts.. right? It’s like the cusp of something imploding, but like all good stories (and songs) it works out okay. It’s a happy ending by the end of it, kinda glorious.”

Kahn added of the visual: “Discover the transformative power of rock music in the latest music video, where a man lost in the depths of Los Angeles depression finds unexpected salvation. Opening a random door and putting on headphones, he’s transported into a vibrant, musical journey that reignites his spirit.”

Crazy Town Frontman Shifty Shellshock Dead at 49

Shifty Shellshock, the co-leader of the Los Angeles rap-rock band Crazy Town, has died. Variety reports that the singer, whose real name was Seth Brooks Binzer, was found in his Los Angeles home earlier this week. Shifty was 49 years old.

Binzer was born to Rollin Binzer, a director who helmed the 1974 concert film Ladies and Gentlemen: the Rolling Stones, and former model Leslie Brooks. He met his eventual Crazy Town co-founder and co-vocalist, Bret Hadley “Epic” Mazur, at a recording session for will.i.am’s early group Atbann Klann in 1992. Together, the pair formed a rap group called Brimstone Sluggers before expanding their lineup and changing their name to Crazy Town in 1999. The band signed to Columbia and released its debut album, The Gift of Game, in November 1999. The record featured the song ‘Butterfly’, which was built on a Red Hot Chili Peppers and reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Crazy Town’s second album, Darkhorse, arrived in 2002, but the band disbanded after it failed to reach the same commercial success. Shellshock went on to pursue a solo career, collaborating with Paul Oakenfold on his 2002 hit ‘Starry Eyed Surprise’. In 2004, Shellshock released his first solo album, Happy Love Sick. Crazy Town reformed in 2007 and released one more album, The Brimstone Sluggers, in 2015.

Shifty Shellshock was open about his struggles with substance abuse, appearing on reality shows such as Celebrity Rehab With Dr. Drew and Celebrity Rehab Presents Sober House. Last year, he made headlines after getting into an altercation with bandmate Bobby Reeves, and Crazy Town were subsequently kicked off the Nu Metal Madness 2 Tour.

Shellshock is survived by his three children, Halo, Gage and Phoenix.

Bright Eyes Announce New Album ‘Five Dice, All Threes’, Share New Single ‘Bells and Whistles’

Bright Eyes have a new album on the way: Five Dice, All Threes will arrive on September 20 via Dead Oceans. The band’s 10th studio album and first since 2020’s Down in the Weeds, Where the World Once Was features guest appearances from Cat Power, the National’s Matt Berninger, and the So So Glos’ Alex Orange Drink. To accompany the news, they’ve shared the first single, ‘Bells and Whistles’, alongside a video directed by Josh Boone and filmed in Omaha, Nebraska. Check it out below, and scroll down for the album cover, tracklist, and the band’s just-announced UK and European tour dates.

Speaking about the new track, Conor Oberst said in a statement: “This is a song about the many little details in life that can seem insignificant or frivolous or temporary at the time but eventually end up forming your destiny. And it’s also kind of a whistle while you work scenario.”

Five Dice, All Threes Tracklist:

1. Five Dice
2. Bells and Whistles
3. El Capitan
4. Bas Jan Ader
5. Tiny Suicides
6. All Threes
7. Rainbow Overpass
8. Hate
9. Real Feel 105°
10. Spun Out
11. Trains Still Run On Time
12. The Time I Have Left
13. Tin Soldier Boy

Bright Eyes 2024 UK and EU Tour Dates:

Nov 10 – Wolverhampton, UK – Wulfrun Hall
Nov 11 – London, UK – O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire
Nov 12  – Nijmegen, Netherlands – Doornroosje
Nov 13 – Ghent, Belgium – Ha Concerts
Nov 14 – Cologne, Germany – Carlswerk Victoria
Nov 15 – Berlin, Germany – Tempodrom
Nov 16 – Weissenhauser Strand, Germany – Rolling Stone Beach
Nov 18 – Stockholm, Sweden – Fållan
Nov 19 – Oslo, Norway – Parkteatret

Xiu Xiu Announce New Album, Release New Single ‘Common Loon’

Xiu Xiu have announced a new LP, 13″ Frank Beltrame Italian Stiletto with Bison Horn Grips. The follow-up to last year’s Ignore Grief is set to arrive on September 27 via Polyvinyl. Mixed by John Congleton, the album was partly inspired by the band’s recent move from Los Angeles to Berlin. Today’s announcement comes with the release of the new single ‘Common Loon’, which frontman Jamie Steward described as “a boogie embrace for queer perverts across the multiverse.” Check it out and find the album artwork, tracklist, and Xiu Xiu’s upcoming tour dates below.

‘Common Loon’ arrives with an NSFW video (the uncensored version of which you can watch here) directed by and starring performance artist Alicia McDaid as “Mcdazzler, Britney Spears, The Angelologist, Smurfette, Garfield, Pepe, Anna Nicole Smith Joker, Led Zeppelin groupie, Galactica Darkstar, Jason Voorhees, Frida Kardashian, Viagra, Goth Monica Geller, Chemtrails, Ghöstmilf, She Hulk, Carmela Soprano, Cathy, Bret Michaels Andy Warhol and Odie.”

Of the video, Stewart said: “The song ‘Common Loon,’ for us, is about revelling in perversity, cuckooness, queerness and/or the unquenchable personal requirement to wild out. As MASSIVE fans of Alicia McDazzler’s work, we could think of no one else more qualified to embody those ways of being and no one else who would crank them up further than we would have ever imagined. She is an inspiration and icon to all LOONS!”

Alicia McDaid added: “I used footage of myself as @mcdazzler and lots of different characters from the past 10 years to compose what I hope feels like an end of pop culture freak life flashing before your third eye journey to the corndog underworld which emerges into the collective funnel cake in the sky that exists within everything and nothing where all beings are truly free to headbang as Garfield and Odie simultaneously.”

Read our 2023 interview with Xiu Xiu.

13″ Frank Beltrame Italian Stiletto with Bison Horn Grips Cover Artwork:

13″ Frank Beltrame Italian Stiletto with Bison Horn Grips Tracklist:

1. Arp Omni
2. Maestro One Chord
3. Common Loon
4. Pale Flower
5. Veneficium
6. Sleep Blvd.
7. T.D.F.T.W.
8. Bobby Bland
9. Piña, Coconut & Cherry

Xiu Xiu 2024 Tour Dates:

20/09 – Reno, NV @ The Holland Project
21/09 – Boise, ID @ Shrine Social Club
22/09 – Seattle, WA @ The Vera Project
23/09 – Portland, OR @ Holocene
24/09 – Arcata, CA @ The Miniplex
26/09 – San Diego, CA @ The Loft at UCSD
27/09 – Phoenix, AZ @ Rebel Lounge
28/09 – Tucson, AZ @ 191 Toole
30/09 – Austin, TX @ The Parish
02/10 – Denton, TX @ Rubber Gloves
03/10 – New Orleans, LA @ Siberia
05/10 – Orlando, FL @ Conduit
06/10 – Miami, FL @ Gramps
07/10 – Tampa, FL @ Crowbar
08/10 – Savannah, GA @ Lodge Of Sorrows
09/10 – Atlanta, GA @ The Earl
10/10 – Durham, NC @ TBA
11/10 – Washington, DC @ Black Cat
13/10 – Baltimore, MD @ Metro
14/10 – Philadelphia, PA @ PhilaMoca
15/10 – New York, NY @ LPR
16/10 – Providence, RI @ AS220 Live Arts
17/10 – Portland, ME @ Space Gallery
18/10 – Montreal, QC @ Theatre Fairmont
19/10 – Toronto, ON @ Velvet Underground
20/10 – Columbus, OH @ Ace of Cups
21/10 – Chicago, IL @ Sleeping Village
22/10 – Milwaukee, WI @ Cactus Club
23/10 – Des Moines, IA @ xBk
24/10 – Lawrence, KS @ The Bottleneck
26/10 – Fort Collins, CO @ The Coast
27/10 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge
29/10 – San Francisco, CA @ Gray Area Foundation for the Arts
30/10 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Lodge Room
01/11 – Oberlin, OH @ The ‘Sco – Oberlin College
08/11 – Groeningen, Netherlands @ Vera
09/11 – Den Bosch, Netherlands @ FAQ Festival
10/11 – Rotterdam, Netherlands @ De Doelen
11/11 – Brussels, Belgium @ La Botanique
13/11 – Bristol, UK @ Strange Brew
14/11 – Brighton, UK @ Attenborough Centre for the Creative Arts (ACCA)
15/11 – Stockport, UK @ St Mary’s
16/11 – Glasgow, UK @ Room 2 Cottiers
17/11 – Oxford, UK @ The Bullingdon
19/11 – London, UK @ Heaven #
20/11 – Cardiff, UK @ Clwb Ifor Bach #
22/11 – Brest, France @ Festival Invisible #
23/11 – Paris, France @ Hasard Ludique #
25/11 – Grenoble, France @ Le Ciel #
27/11 – Nurnberg, Germany @ Soft Spot / Kantine #
28/11 – Prague, Czech Republic @ Meet Factory #
29/11 – Berlin, Germany @ Lido #
30/11 – Poznań, Poland @ Próżność #
05/17 – Seattle WA @ Moore Theatre %
05/18 – Seattle, WA @ Moore Theatre %

X Announce Final Album and Farewell Tour

Los Angeles punk legends X have announced Smoke & Fiction, which they say will be their final album. The band’s original lineup – John Doe, Exene Cervenka, DJ Bonebrake, and Billy Zoom – recorded the album with producer Rob Schnapf (Beck, Foo Fighters). It will be out August 2 via Fat Possum Records, and X will then embark on a farewell tour of North America. Listen to the first single, ‘Big Black X’, and check out the list of dates below.

“X is a great band name; also a bad idea sometimes when it gets lost in print or on the marquee,” Cervenka remarked in a statement. “Gotta have a sense of humor. We all did in the early days. Los Angeles was a carnival of weirdness back then, with left over traces of silent movie stars, long haired hippies, bikers, and brand new self-defined punks doing anything we wanted. When we started touring the country we found like-minded people everywhere, and somehow they all found us. Even if the X was lost on the old marquee.”

‘Big Black X’ comes with an accompanying video directed by Gilbert Trejo and Shane McKenzie, who said: “Inspired by 80s video art and the great punk documentaries of the time / shot on VHS, edited tape to tape, using Polaroids + 35mm photos, smashed together with analog video mixers and CRT televisions / it’s a tornado of the past and present – Ed Colver’s photos were a blast to video mix and they are the glue holding it all together.”

Smoke & Fiction Cover Artwork:

Smoke & Fiction Tracklist:

1. Ruby Church
2. Sweet Til The Bitter End
3. The Way It Is
4. Flipside
5. Big Black X
6. Smoke & Fiction
7. Struggle
8. Winding Up the Time
9. Face in the Moon
10. Baby & All

X 2024 Tour Dates:

Jun 24 – Los Angeles, CA – The Troubadour – SOLD OUT
Jul 6 – Kansas City, MO – The Uptown
Jul 7 – Omaha, NE – The Waiting Room
Jul 9 – St. Louis, MO – Del Mar Hall
Jul 10 – Milwaukee, WI – Turner Hall
Jul 12 – Minneapolis, MN – The Varsity
Jul 13 – Chicago, IL – Square Roots Festival
Jul 14 – Chicago, IL – Fitzgerald’s – SOLD OUT
Jul 16 – Detroit, MI – The Masonic
Jul 17 – Kent, OH – The Kent Stage
Jul 19 – Indianapolis, IN – The Vogue
Jul 25 – Los Angeles, CA – The Regent
Jul 26 – Los Angeles, CA – The Regent
Jul 28 – Costa Mesa, CA – Pacific Amphitheatre
Jul 30 – Solana Beach, CA – Belly Up
Aug 19 – Menlo Park, CA – The Guild Theatre
Aug 20 – Menlo Park, CA – The Guild Theatre
Aug 22 – Boise, ID – Knitting Factory
Aug 23 – Spokane, WA – Knitting Factory
Aug 25 – Portland, OR – The Aladdin
Aug 28 – Salt Lake City, UT – The Depot
Aug 30 – Denver, CO – The Summit
Sep 1 – Albuquerque, NM – The El Rey
Sep 22 – Derry, NH – Tupelo Music Hall
Sep 23 – Boston, MA – The Wilbur
Sep 25 – Albany, NY – Empire Live
Sep 26 – Rochester, NY – Water Street Music Hall
Sep 27 – Pittsburgh, PA – Jergel’s
Sep 28 – Falls Church, CA – The State Theatre
Sep 30 – Philadelphia, PA – Keswick Theater
Oct 1 – Patchogue, NY – Patchogue, Theatre
Oct 2 – Norwalk, CT – District Music Hall
Oct 4 – New York, NY – Town Hall
Oct 5 – Middletown, CT – Harbor Park
Oct 18 – Austin, TX – The Paramount
Oct 19 – San Antonio, TX – Empire Live
Oct 21 – Houston, TX – White Oak Music Hall
Oct 22 – Dallas, TX – Granada Theater
Oct 24 – Memphis, TN – Minglewood Hall
Oct 25 – Nashville, TN – Brooklyn Bowl
Oct 26 – Birmingham, AL – Iron City
Oct 29 – Charlotte, NC – The Neighborhood Theatre
Oct 30 – Columbia, SC – The Senate

Mabe Fratti Unveils New Song ‘Quieras o no’

Mabe Fratti has unveiled a new single, ‘Quieras o no’, taken from her forthcoming album Sentir Que No Sabes – out this Friday (June 28) via Unheard of Hope. Following previous offerings ‘Enfrente’, ‘Kravitz’, and ‘Pantalla azul’, the track is accompanied by an interactive website and music video designed and built by Theo Ellin Ballew. Check it out below.

Ballew said of the visual:

‘Quieras o no’ moves from one phase to another, like truncated opera, and so does the website: one mode of interaction gives way to another that’s totally different. Peopled with a mixture of original footage by Gerardo del Valle and gifs found on GifCities.org, this online world posits a cyborgian future where the computational and biological intermingle. Here, wherever your cursor moves, indelible marks are made: this is not a clean Jetsons-like future, but a dirty, cyberpunk one that registers your foot- and fingerprints.

The same moving images appear at the same moments in the song, no matter what–so, there are key similarities to all experiences of the website. However, each experience is slightly different: the initial gifs appear in random positions and in random sizes, and all elements are draggable, so viewers can arrange them as they wish, like a pile of triggering family photos. Any experience of the site is valid–as long as you keep your sound on, and try dragging everything. Enjoy, and be in touch with @theo_on_silver with comments, screenshots, etc.

The WAEVE Announce New Album ‘City Lights’, Share New Single ‘You Saw’

The WAEVE – the duo of Graham Coxon and Rose Elinor Dougall – have announced a new album City Lights. The follow-up to their self-titled 2023 debut will be out on September 20 via Transgressive Records. Along with the previously released title track, the LP includes the new single ‘You Saw’. Check it out below and scroll drown for the album cover and tracklist.

“‘You Saw’ is a song about acknowledging how seemingly tiny decisions can have a seismic impact on the course of one’s life, how sometimes it feels like the way things turn out are predestined,” the duo explained in a statement. “It’s about reconciling a past version with the new version of one’s self and being grateful for how things work out. It’s built around a rhythmic string line to reflect the sense of propulsive forward motion.

City Lights Cover Artwork:

City Lights Tracklist:

1. City Lights
2. You Saw
3. Moth To The Flame
4. I Belong To…
5. Simple Days
6. Broken Boys
7. Song For Eliza May
8. Druantia
9. Girl of the Endless Night
10. Sunrise

Author Spotlight: Sarah Crossan, ‘Hey, Zoey’

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When Dolores discovers Zoey, a sex doll, in her garage, her first instinct isn’t to throw her husband, David, out of the house. Instead, it’s to reflect — to think back on her history with him, and her family dynamics with her step-brother Gavin. What could she have done better? Is she the problem? The doll, which Dolores ends up talking to — sarcastically then intimately — brings up an unavoidable question about what David wished for during their relationship. Was he secretly wishing Dolores was more like Zoey, inert and unresponsive? Or is it just a sexual fantasy he separated from the love he has for his wife?

In any case, David leaves, ashamed, and Dolores is left to pick up the pieces of their fractured relationship. She’s a schoolteacher keeping an eye on a student who might have a secret affair with a much older teacher, but her sister pulls her back to New York City for support after a miscarriage. All the while, she tries to get rid of Zoey, while meeting with Gavin, thinking about their encounters in the past, and trying to get the full picture of who she herself is as a person. Hey, Zoey’s ability to provoke feelings throughout and past the novel is ambitious and edgy, making it another intense and intelligent work from Irish novelist Sarah Crossan, who plays with human emotions and language in a deeply memorable and idiosyncratic way. There aren’t many books — or authors — that prompt you to inquire within yourself after the last words have left the page.

Our Culture sat down with Sarah Crossan to talk about sex dolls, unlikeable narrators, and the ways in which abuse and love are intertwined.

Congratulations on your new novel! How does it feel for it to be close to being out in the US?

It’s always really nerve wracking! It’s totally out of your control. I’ve done the bit I can do, and it’s up to publishers and readers to decide what it’s about. But I know I’ve done the best that I can do, so the bit within my power is completed. I feel proud of myself, and we’ll see what happens now. 

You’ve written countless young adult novels, a dystopian series, edited anthologies, and now, with Hey, Zoey, have two adult books under your name. What’s been the evolution of your writing like, and how do you decide what stories to tell?

I did a masters’ in creative writing, so I was writing for adults first, then I was writing a novel. You know these writers — I was one of them — who was writing the same novel for ten years. I was just learning my craft through writing this novel, then I was teaching in New Jersey, in Hoboken, and I was trying to get my grade six students to read. I found Out of the Dust by Karen Hesse, which is a verse novel, it won the Newbery Medal in the nineties. Somebody gave it to me, said ‘You should read it and give it to your grade sixers.’ I thought there was no way they would want to read poetry, but they did! I was, like, ‘Oh, that’s not a huge thing in the UK.’ I thought I could try it, so I did, and I got an agent almost immediately. I had never sent out to agents before. I became known as the UK and Ireland as the trailblazer in terms of verse novels, but actually, I had stolen this form! I thought about whether I could make it work for an adult novel, so I tried with Here Is the Beehive, and it worked. With Zoey, I wanted to do something different, and it wasn’t going to work in verse; I tried short prose. I love experimenting with writing — I’m so lucky to have a publisher who lets me do what I want. That’s the best gift, creatively, is just to be given freedom. And so many authors don’t; they have a brand they have to fulfill. And maybe in a way it’s problematic since no one really knows me or what I do because I’m always doing different things. But that’s what being an artist is about — it’s not about your commercial branding, but doing the thing that you love. I’m lucky I’m able to do that. 

Hey, Zoey is a product of our AI fascination and fear — Dolores’ life comes apart when she finds out her husband, David, is hiding a sex doll in the garage. What inspired that?

I just saw an article, after COVID, that said there was a rise in synthetic sex dolls. And you can get AI versions, which are more sophisticated than the robotics, which were way behind. And these dolls, they can’t stand up and walk around or anything, but I was wondering what would motivate someone to want one of these. Then I wondered about the partner of someone who would have one of these. It’s obviously about this disconnect in the relationship, and your communication with other human beings. I wanted to write about misogyny, about internalized misogyny, abuse, love, how those things connect. I had this idea for a story, and I wondered if I could find a way to write about these things through this story. When I said it to my agent, that I wanted to write about abuse and women, and I sent her the opening, and she said ‘This is horrendous. How are you going to make that work without it feeling really tacky?’ But she said I should try, so I did.

After initial reluctance, Dolores begins to talk to Zoey, who is calm, helpful, and knows just about everything. What was it like writing these conversations between a human and non-human?

What I did in order to write the book, is when I had ideas, I’d talk to Siri, Alexa, and Google. They’re all gonna talk to me now, since I said their names. ChatGPT wasn’t quite developed then, because I probably would have been chatting to it too. I also had an app that was called, I think, ‘iGirlfriend,’ and I’d talk to her as well. I was having conversations with lots of AIs at the same time, and I amalgamated them in order to create Zoey’s responses. Those were the most fun scenes to write because I was doing it in real life. It’s just interesting the way different AI systems respond in different ways. And even in the writing of it, they became more compassionate and more responsible in the way they responded. I noticed that I was writing, since it took about three years in total. It was interesting to see how AI was progressing in terms of its ability to sound human. Kind of frightening how quickly it changed.

There’s this emotional and devastating undercurrent that runs through your adult novels — in this and Here Is The Beehive, the narrators are so sharp and astute. People so many times sanitize their narrators, and I respect and love that you don’t. Where do you think this kind of style comes from?

Yeah, it was so interesting when I wrote the second book, because I knew Ana in Here Is the Beehive would be unlikeable to so many people, just because she’s a woman having an affair. She’s particularly unlikeable to married women, and I had a lot of married women not wanting to read the book. It was abhorrent to them on a moral level. It was interesting, but I could get it — I had been married. My editor said that she was a bit sharp-edged, could we soften her a bit? And I said, ‘Oh my goodness, she says half of what I think!’ Not even close to being unlikeable, in terms of the worst things that go through my head. We all have these awful thoughts. Someone walks into a room and we’re scanning them, the things we think about people when we meet them and the ideas we have about ourselves and what we like vs what we know is socially acceptable. We’re all a lot kinder and we’re all a lot darker than we’d ever admit to ourselves. It was surprising to me that it was her reaction. I mean, I think I could get much closer to the bone. I’m writing a book at the moment, and thinking, ‘Can I go this close?’ We’ll see.

There’s a scene in Hey, Zoey where she describes the sex doll pornography she’s watching, and that was a huge scene, so much in that was real! I had looked, like, what is it in this pornography, what do these men do to these dolls? And it was horrific. And my editor said we can’t have it, it’s just too horrific to read. It’s cold on the page. There were loads of moments that I had to cut because it was really unpalatable. When I read the audiobook aloud, the engineer said, ‘Oh, this sounds fun, I’m looking forward to doing this with you.’ By the end, he’s like, 

‘[heavy breathing]… That was tough.’ I think you have to be aware of that as well. There are certain movies you can enjoy, but wouldn’t watch again. In literature, you have to make sure the person wants to pick it up again.

While Dolores is talking to her sister and friends about what to do with David and Zoey, there’s this parallel storyline at her school between a teacher and a student that gets into dangerous territory — even Dolores gets involved and invites the student to her house under false pretenses. Why did you want to explore this storyline? 

Dolores wants to know what men want, and what boys want. She wants to understand at what age boys become men, and boys become culpable. There’s also the scene where the boy is being expelled; he’s in the meeting with the headteacher and the social worker. She’s thinking, ‘Oh, we can hold him responsible for his actions at 14.’ Oliver is a very good boy, [Dolores] thinks he might be having sex with a teacher but she’s not sure. Part of her wants to protect him and get in the way of that relationship, and she also wants to see how he reacts to Zoey, what his feelings are about this doll, and whether David’s reaction is natural. Her question is, ‘What do men want, and what’s my value beyond a body, beyond being a sleep and people doing what they want with me?’ Out of all the characters, Oliver is the one who shows her that’s not what men want. I was really careful. A lot of readers might assume something untoward will happen between them, that she’ll do something she regrets, and I wanted to subvert that. He was useful in a lot of ways. I really like Oliver. I don’t usually like my characters, but there’s just something so honest and vulnerable about him.

Through talking with Zoey, Dolores’ past resurfaces through her memories of her stepbrother, Gavin, and the story takes on a much darker, intense tone. What was it like writing those scenes, and why did you want to include these ideas in the book?

That’s why she’s so disturbed by the doll. It’s not that it’s a sex toy, she says at one point she has her own, even though the battery’s gone. Her moral objection is not to the doll. Her question is, ‘Did David want me to be asleep? Did David not want me to speak, to be more doll-like?’

It’s also about the way in which love and abuse can intersect. It can be very confusing. There are a lot of people I’ve spoken to who have these complicated relationships to abusers — whether it’s a family member, someone they’re in a relationship with. Oftentimes people become complicit in that abuse, and they’re not sure if it was abuse or not, whether it was their fault. In that #MeToo movement, it felt very black and white, whether someone did something wrong or not. Dolores doesn’t think that way, and I don’t think I think that way; so many relationships are complicated and there’s a question mark. I don’t think there is one with Gavin, but I think there can be. She talks, for example, about a man she dated who said that one of the ways she lures him is by saying, ‘These are the things this other guy made me do.’ And he says, ‘You can only do these things if you really love them.’ So there’s a coercive part to that relationship. All of those gray areas, I was interested in. But I only touch on them because the goal in some ways is to have the reader think about their own lives, their own interactions or sexual encounters, or other encounters that are discomforting for other reasons. Just think about it, there’s no answer.

Completely. For me, it really takes a turn once the reader links in their head the similarities between Zoey, this responsive but unconscious doll used for sex, and a sleeping human. Was this parallel the one you envisioned?

Yeah, what I want for the reader is that they’re laughing, they’re thinking it’s a bit of a romp, and then you’re confronted by your own laughter, or your ease in reading it. A lot of people are reading it, and it’s not until they get to the end where they feel they’ve been hit by a bus. If anyone ever had the energy or audacity to re-read it, you could do so in a completely different way. 

I think [sexual education and communication] is a lot better now, for young people, in some ways, and in other ways, it’s more difficult. We have pornography educating everyone about what it means to be intimate. I think it’s a much bigger problem than what anyone is prepared to admit. If you talk about it, say, look, ‘Is it a problem that pornography makes choking, spitting, slapping, all of those things seen as a normal part of a sexual relationship, is that a problem? Am I anti-feminist? Not sex-positive?’ Well, no, not really, I’m just asking questions. I think this easy access to pornography is pornography is probably really dangerous for everyone, in terms of the power dynamic, in heterosexual porn, women being the subjects, the ones getting destroyed or slammed. But again, it’s difficult to talk about it, because then you admit you have some knowledge about it. No one wants to admit it. But you also don’t want to act like you’re not a sex-positive person. ‘No, I’m cool!’ It’s such a hard thing to talk about. It’s a difficult thing to bridge in civil society.

You wrote an interesting tweet recently that says it’s tough to speak about a book’s themes because “I write fiction because finding a straight line through ideas is my problem and story writing is my solution.” Maybe this antithetical to what you wrote, but do you want to expand on that idea of how you approach a thorny idea through fiction?

It’s so much easier! Because it’s a story, and someone can reach their own conclusions. Story writing is about creating empathy with one person, and seeing the world through their eyes. I was asked by my publishers in both the US and the UK to do op-eds and articles. I just can’t. I don’t know how to talk about these things in a nonfiction way, where I don’t wrap myself into knots where I don’t say the wrong thing. I don’t think in fiction I can say the wrong thing. I can just tell a story. I really admire journalists and anyone who does nonfiction writing, because you need a thesis and to be able to write in some kind of straight line. With this novel, I didn’t; it’s quite spiky, and it could bloom outwards. The piece that speaks to you, you can hold onto, and the rest, you can let go, in a way. 

Totally — I liked how Hey, Zoey doesn’t end on a definitive note, with a solid moral compass on everything you discussed.

I don’t know about you, but I’m so fickle in my ideas. I have an idea now, and then in three years someone will say something and it’ll change my mind. I don’t know what my view is. I’m 46, and I still have no handle on what I really think is true. I think that’s a decent place to be; I’m open to people influencing me. Nonfiction doesn’t allow for that, and this stuff stays online forever. And if it’s narrative nonfiction about your own life you could hurt people, but I can disguise things and create characters and I’m not betraying their privacy. There’s so many benefits to writing fiction.

Finally, what’s next? You said you’re working on another book, can you say anything about its themes?

I’m working on my next adult book, and tinkering with ideas for young adults. I think the next thing I’m gonna write about is grief. My mom passed away a couple of years ago, and it was a really strange experience, and I didn’t know how to write about it, again, without invading privacy or getting sued. But I want to write about the pain of losing someone and being shut out in those last moments. I think I’ll stick to prose for it — I like the short-form scenes. I can miss out quite a few boring bits when I do that.


Hey, Zoey is available now.

Kim Gordon Shares Video for New Song ‘ECRP’

Kim Gordon has released a new single, ‘ECRP’. Produced by Justin Raisen, the non-album single arrives with a video directed by her daughter, Coco Gordon Moore. Watch and listen below.

Kim Gordon released her second solo album, The Collective, earlier this year. It landed on our 30 Best Albums of 2024 (So Far) list.