Fashion
Liz Phair on Being ‘Soberish’ and the New Generation of Indie Rockers Inspiring Her
Published
4 years agoon
By
Terry Power
There was a part of Liz Phair that thought she’d never make solo music again. “If that younger generation hadn’t come forward with all those female artists, I very much doubt I’d put out a new record or tour,” the platinum-blonde singer says over Zoom from her home in Los Angeles. Phair, now 54, is referring to artists like Soccer Mommy, Snail Mail, Haim, and Phoebe Bridgers, all of whom have asserted their autonomy within a mysoginist industry. There’s now a space for vulnerable songwriting, and the once-taboo topics Phair was criticized for bluntly singing about—sex and the power dynamics of a male-dominated world—are the norm. She couldn’t be more thrilled.
For the past few years, Phair’s has been inching toward a comeback. In 2018, there was the re-release of her landmark debut Exile in Guyville for its 25th anniversary, along with her bedroom tapes, which she recorded under the moniker Girly-Sound. There was a tour in 2018 to coincide with it, and she’d been working on a record (since scrapped) with now-disgraced singer-songwriter Ryan Adams. In 2019, Phair released her debut memoir Horror Stories, an introspective look at the moments that have haunted her throughout her life. That same year, she shared her first single in 10 years, “Good Side,” with the assumption that Soberish would soon follow. But the pandemic hit and life went on pause. “I didn’t realize I was putting something out that would hang in the air for a year,” she explains. “I thought we were going to follow right up with the next one, the next one, the next one. There was a dance that we were about to perform for you that didn’t happen.”
Now, finally, Phair is ready to share her seventh studio album, a sonic palette filled with pop hooks, frank storytelling, and familiar guitar riffs representative of her storied career. “I knew I wanted to have our old sounds, so that there was a resonance between our early work together and this one,” she says of working with producer Brad Wood. Still, Phair is “pushing the boundary futurewise,” with sticky choruses and rule-breaking arrangements, while paying homage to the guitar and drum sounds of Guyville.
Below, Phair speaks to ELLE.com about her creative process, playing psychologist to people angry about her 2003 self-titled LP, and being “soberish.”
It’s been 10 years since you released a record. Why now?
It’s funny, I think it’s actually been longer than that. Even though Funstyle was a record, I never intended that to be considered an actual “Liz Phair record,” per se. That’s why I called it “Funstyle.” It was what we were doing on the side while I was scoring television, so [Soberish] is my first attempt at an actual album in 16 years. Lots has happened since then. My son went to college, and I started to go back to my music career thinking, “Yeah, I’ll tour now.” I meant to make a record, as some people know now, with Ryan Adams. That was an on-off process for a couple of years that kept starting and stopping. That was kind of demoralizing, and it took until we worked on the reissue [of Exile in Guyville] with [Matador Records] that I connected again to that part of my career. Because Brad and I were in touch, it felt so easy to slide right into working with him again. It just was a slow process, and then boom, 2020 hits right as we’re about to release, and we get another delay. Though it has been slow, it has been deliberate for at least the last five years—trying to get back into making an album proper.
What made it so challenging for you to actually make a record again?
I’m a very big-picture person, so if I ever have writer’s block, it’s about not seeing the vision for the end product. I knew I wanted this to have our old sounds, so that there was a resonance between our early work together and this. The way Guyville sounded fresh and new to people then, I wanted this to be pushing the boundary future-wise a little bit. I was aiming for something that would be us with the guitar and drum sounds of Guyville, but positioning us as maverick-feeling—the way it felt back then, like we were breaking some rules and pushing the edge. That was a hard ask after 20 years of practically not working together. How do we sound like our old selves, but sound like we’re leaning forward into a place that people have to move toward?
My happiest life is lived on that street corner where I can toggle back and forth between sober and that other self—that’s my party self.
What is the meaning behind the term “soberish” and why did it become the album title?
Well, I wrote the song first. Sometimes I look for an album title within the titles of the tracks and “Soberish” became ever more important to me. I’ve always been into smoking pot—that was always my favorite escape of choice. I lived my life mostly sober, and then I’d go out and party, and I’d feel no qualms whatsoever about doing whatever drugs were on offer. Slowly, when they legalized pot, that became a second puberty for me, and I was like, “I can’t handle this.” I needed the roadblock, and it became this thing of, “How do I want to live my life?” I decided that “soberish” was a really good line to draw: You’re not wasted, you’re not totally straight, you’re just “soberish,” and that can be anything.
I’ve decided to envision this as a street sign [on the album art], so that there’s “Sober Avenue” and “Ish” Street. When I go from being sober to “it’s time to party,” I step back into a second self that I’m very familiar with, like, “I’m back!” and it feels like I’ve just turned a corner. My happiest life is lived on that street corner where I can toggle back and forth between sober and that other self—that’s my party self. We don’t have good words for this in this culture because it’s always been deemed a sin, but to me, it’s not a sin at all. It’s ridiculous to think of it that way. [It’s about] identifying that crossroads between one side of yourself and another, and trying to hold that position, because I think that’s a pretty kick-ass position to be in.
Courtesy
How did you approach shaping the sound of the album?
The first thing I came in with was, “Have you heard ‘Old Town Road’?” It had just broken, and I was like, “Brad, that is the biggest song in the entire nation, and it’s two minutes. It’s like a mash-up between I don’t even know what styles, and we are going to do something [where] none of the songs are going to be the same. They’re all going to be catchy and yet no one’s going to notice how much shit we’ve [played] with behind the scenes.” I’ve stuck bridges in second verses all over this record. I’ve added whole second songs to the back end of shortened front songs. There’s a lot of sound design, and there’s a lot of playing with spatial sounds. And then there’s Brad with his incredible ability to make stuff gorgeous. I can throw a shitty little hook that I played out of time to him, and he can slap some plugins on it. We’re like crazy, mad scientists in there, and we both agree when it’s right.
In 2019 you released your first new single in 10 years, “Good Side.” Why was that the perfect reintroduction for you?
Honestly, I don’t know if it was a perfect introduction. It was infectious, and the lyrics weren’t super heavy. I thought of it as a, “Hi, hello there, we’re about to lay out a whole series of things for you.” It felt positive with a little snark, and some accessibility to it. It just felt like a good door to welcome people to Soberish. It also had a cool structure, and I said from the beginning that none of these songs are going to be traditionally structured and we’ll be playing with all sorts of rule-breaking of the canon.
A few years ago you played shows with Soccer Mommy and Snail Mail. How have you been inspired by this generation of unflinchingly honest indie rock singer-songwriters?
These young female artists are so, to my eyes, free right now: to be, and to be autonomous and to be respected and be taken seriously. That is so different from when I was their age, so I take enormous pleasure, inspiration, and joy. The fact that women came forward—I guess, because of the technology, they could do their own recordings—the gatekeepers fell away. That is the wind beneath my wings. It’s so embarrassing to say, but it kind of is. That’s a world I want to live in, that’s a game I want to play in, and that’s a field I want to be on. It’s so important to me that they’re doing what they’re doing, and it’s why I’m back.
If that younger generation hadn’t come forward with all those female artists, I very much doubt I’d put out a new record or tour.
I know Funstyle wasn’t exactly a record, but technically that was your last album, and it got pretty mixed reviews. How do you look back on it now?
I look back on it exactly the same way I felt when I put it out. I thought it was quite obvious that this was supposed to be a “fun thing.” I’ve got so many songs that just sit in the closet that didn’t make an album cut, and we were doing these things that cracked us up.
I think you’re being very kind to say that it was mixed reviews. I misperceive how people look at me a lot of the time. I misperceive how people look at music output, what fans invest in musical output, and I see it from my point of view as a creative output-er. I think I lost my management over it. They were like, “We can’t promote this.” I wish you had more freedom as an artist to try things and experiment and not give the same weight to each one. But there’s a way that the music business works where to get people to promote, it’s like a political campaign. People are asking favors of other people to get certain things done, and there’s a whole choreography to this. There’s too much capitalism in our art, I think.
NBC
In a way that reminds me of your pop-leaning self-titled record, which has some great songs, but at the time of its release was perceived as you “selling out.”
I was a young mom, and I think I took it as like, “How can I help these people?” All the phone [interviews] I was doing [were] therapy with people who were angry at me personally for putting that record out. I would just get 10 in a row and I was trying to help them through their anger at me. There were some things that hurt, but for the most part, I was busy.
As people know now, Matador connected with Capitol Records; I didn’t choose to be on Capitol. And then when they left, I was retained, and that was not my choice, and I was the only artist left behind on Capitol Records, and they happened to be going into a big pop phase. I got the very distinct sense that if I didn’t play ball, I wasn’t going to play at all. I figured out a way to navigate that in a way that I’m fine with. Like, “Favorite” is a little embarrassing, and it was at the time. I remember arguing with Lauren [Christy], “I can’t sing that,” and she’s the co-writer. She’s like, “Yes you can, it’s a hit.” The experience of my career from my point of view, compared to the fans’ point of view, is very, very different. I had fun making pop records, and I still love singing those big pop songs live. That record to me looks very different than it does to the fans, and it sucked to be vilified. It definitely weighed me down, but I didn’t take it, even then, as personally as people probably thought I ought to.
It sucks that you had to do the emotional labor of being people’s therapists in interviews.
I did. Over and over again. I had to keep reminding people it was just music. You don’t have to buy it. This isn’t going to impact your life, or it doesn’t have to. To some extent, I care only because I hate to see people upset. I would prefer that music be music. You should enjoy all of it if you like it.
When you were promoting your book Horror Stories in 2019, you said you were already working on another memoir. What’s the status of that?
It’s Fairy Tales, and it’s the second part of Horror Stories. It was always designed as a two-parter memoir, and I saw it as sort of the yin and yang symbol: Horror Stories would be these sexual, unconscious, darker, stories. The regret, but with this bright, clearly defined center of beauty, hope, life, and truth. Then Fairy Tales will be the glamorous stories, my rock stardom, and fantastic trips I’ve taken, with this hard, dark sense of something upsetting, disturbing or corrosive at the center of it. A horror story is a fairy tale depending on where you start it and how you tell it. And a fairy tale is a horror story depending on how you tell it. Life is mutable that way. I’m playing with a soundboard but with writing, and that’s the game for me.
Ilana Kaplan is a writer and editor based in Brooklyn.
This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io
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Fashion
Jennifer Lopez Joined Ben Affleck In L.A. With Kids For Thanksgiving
Published
3 years agoon
26 November 2021By
Terry Power
On Wednesday night, Jennifer Lopez arrived in Los Angeles with her 13-year-old twins Max and Emme. The family was likely there to join Lopez’s boyfriend, Ben Affleck, for the Thanksgiving holiday. Lopez recently returned from the much colder climate of British Columbia, Canada, where she was filming her latest project, The Mother.
J. Lo touched down in her private jet wearing a teddy fur coat from Coach’s Autumn/Winter 2019 collection, and a pair of Ugg boots. Classic airplane outfit, celebrity style. Lopez and Affleck originally dated in 2002 and broke up in 2004. Their romance was rekindled earlier this year, soon after Lopez ended her relationship with baseball player Alex Rodriguez. The new couple went official in July, while celebrating Lopez’s 52nd birthday abroad.
Affleck’s most recent relationship with Ana de Armas ended in January after about a year together. He had divorced ex-wife Jennifer Garner in 2015 after being married for almost a decade. Garner and Affleck had three daughters, Violet, Seraphina, and Sam.
Before traveling back to the U.S., Lopez posted a story to Instagram Reels about how grateful she was to be headed home.
“Hey everybody, it’s my last day here shooting on The Mother out in Smithers in the snow, it’s been beautiful, but tonight I’m on my way home,” she said, as she walked through the wild landscape in a black coat and beanie.
“I’m so excited for Thanksgiving! I hope everybody has an amazing weekend with their families and their loved ones, there’s so much to be grateful for this year. I’m on my way!”
This is the first major holiday of the year since Lopez and Affleck reunited, so it’s likely to be a big one for both families.
This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io
Fashion
Everlane’s Black Friday Sale is Packed With Winter Essentials
Published
3 years agoon
26 November 2021By
Terry Power
Courtesy
This is not a drill: Everlane just kicked off its Black Friday sale. Now through Monday, November 29, the direct-to-consumer brand is offering 20 to 40% off its cozy sweaters, minimalist activewear, and popular jeans. If you’re not super familiar with Everlane, let me spell it out for you: this is a big deal.
The e-tailer might be known for making sustainable, ethically made clothes and accessories at a fair, affordable price, but Everlane rarely has sales beyond its Choose What You Pay section. So, if you want to stock up on cute basics for less, now’s your time to shop.
And, in true Everlane fashion, the brand is taking this opportunity to give back. Everlane is partnering with Rodale Institute and help U.S. farmers transition their farmland to regenerative organic—and donating $15 per order to the cause. A great sale that gives back? I’m sold.
But, hurry! These deals are going to sell out fast, so you won’t want to waste any time filling your e-cart.
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1
The Cloud Turtleneck
$150 $105 (30% off)
Sweater weather is officially here, so why not pick up a few fresh layers? This turtleneck is the S’s: snuggly, stylish, and on sale.
2
The Authentic Stretch High-Rise Skinny Jeans
everlane
$78 $58 (25% off)
Looking for a great pair of jeans, minus the markup? Everlane’s classic skinny style is not only super stretchy, but it’ll look good with everything from chunky sweaters to silky blouses.
3
The ReNew Teddy Slippers
everlane
$65 $39 (40% off)
Why limit the shearling trend to the upper half of your body? These plush slippers will give even your most worn-in sweats a stylish edge.
4
The Chunky Cardigan
everlane
$110 $77 (30% off)
Sure, this may not be the cardigan Taylor Swift was talking about. But, with an exaggerated collar and ribbed finish, this style would definitely score top marks from the singer herself.
5
The Canvas Utility Boots
everlane
$115 $59 (40% off)
Brave the cold weather in style with Everlane’s chic boots. The canvas uppers and thick sole make these an ideal, all-weather option.
6
The Lofty-Knit Henley
everlane
$150 $105 (30% off)
Made with a nubby blend of merino wool, alpaca, and recycled nylon, this henley is perfect for a cozy night in, yet stylish enough to wear in public.
7
The Perform Bike Shorts
everlane
$45 $22 (51% off)
No, you can never have too many stretchy pants. Everlane’s bike shorts ooze major Lady Di vibes — for under $25, no less.
8
The ReLeather Court Sneakers
everlane
$110 $66 (40% off)
Made with recycled leather, these refresh sneakers will serve up major curb appeal — and Mother Nature’s seal of approval.
9
The Field Dress
everlane
$100 $60 (40% off)
Found: a fun, flouncy frock you can wear year-round. For a wintry take, pair with opaque tights and your favorite chunky boots.
10
The Cozy-Stretch Wide-Leg Sweatpants
everlane
$150 $75 (50% off)
With a straight-legged silhouette and wool material, it’s safe to say these are the chicest sweatpants we’ve ever seen. To sweeten an already enticing offer, this pair is half off.
11
The Organic Cotton Flannel Popover
$80 $56 (30% off)
Everlane reimagined the traditional flannel with a cropped silhouette, voluminous sleeves, and a slew of minimalist colors.
12
The Studio Bag
everlane
$275 $192 (30% off)
Large enough to fit all your essentials, but not too big that it’ll weigh you down, Everlane’s Studio Bag is the perfect everyday purse.
13
The ReNew Long Liner
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$158 $118 (25% off)
House Stark was right: winter really is coming. Made with recycled materials, this liner is a great layering piece that’s considerably chicer than the yesteryear’s Michelin Man-worthy parkas.
14
The Felted Merino Beanie
everlane
$50 $30 (40% off)
All set on clothes? Pick up this cheery beanie, which is 40% off its original price.
Kelsey Mulvey is a freelance lifestyle journalist, who covers shopping and deals for Marie Claire, Women’s Health, and Men’s Health, among others.
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Fashion
29 Winter Fragrances That Exude Main Character Energy
Published
3 years agoon
26 November 2021By
Terry Power
29 Winter Fragrances That Exude Main Character Energy