Alex Orange Drink
Everything Is Broken, Maybe That’s O.K.
Shea Stadium Records / Freeman Street Records
Friday, July 9, 2021
BROOKLYN-BASED SONGWRITER ALEX ORANGE DRINK (OF THE SO SO GLOS) ANNOUNCES BRAND NEW SOLO ALBUM, EVERYTHING IS BROKEN, MAYBE THAT’S O.K.
FIRST SINGLE “HOW HIGH?” NOW STREAMING ON YOUTUBE AND ALL PLATFORMS
EVERYTHING IS BROKEN, MAYBE THAT’S O.K., PRODUCED BY ADAM REICH, AVAILABLE VIA SHEA STADIUM RECORDS AND FREEMAN STREET RECORDS ON FRIDAY, JULY 9
WITH PRE-ORDER ONLINE NOW
Brooklyn-based songwriter Alex Orange Drink, the solo moniker for Alex Zarou Levine of The So So Glos, is proud to announce the Friday, July 9 release of his sophomore album titled Everything Is Broken, Maybe That’s O.K. (pre-order). On the upcoming album, Alex explores personal subjects, including grappling with a rare and life-threatening disorder, heartbreak, never-ending teenage angst, and broken political systems. Half of the album was recorded before the pandemic in a party-like atmosphere – with basic tracking captured live among friends, family and lovers – while the other half was completed by a heartbroken protagonist reflecting in isolation.
A 3 a.m. drunken attempt at escape from a dynamic that has you feeling powerless, the album’s lead single “How High?” is a jangly and punchy departure from the house, a pandemic, yourself or someone else. When you’re giving so much to someone or something that you’ve lost yourself, it feels like the only thing left to do is give up or runaway. Oy vey!
Alex Zarou Levine has been writing music and lyrics since youth in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. Most notably with his brothers in D.I.Y. punk outfit The So So Glos. There’s dark subtext to his lyrics, which are often laced into bright, hooky outsider anthems. During a period in which his band went on hiatus and local DIY venue (and home base) Shea Stadium shuttered, Alex Orange Drink was born. The new solo project took its name “orange drink” as a nod to the medication Alex depends on to treat a rare metabolic disease, Homocystinuria. As with his work in The So So Glos, by flipping a slang term from the ordinary to a new identity, Alex once again exhibited a gift for spinning a negative force into something positive.
On his sophomore record, Everything Is Broken, Maybe That’s O.K., a permanent state of teenage angst manifests itself through even more hushed tones and sugar-coated sweetness than his debut, resulting in a more complex, vivid soundscape.
There is something eerily medical about this collection of songs – two contrasting songs about grappling with a life-threatening disorder (“Homocystinuria Pt. 1” & “Pt. 2”), three songs about chemical addictions triggered by love (“Oxytocin,” “It’s Only Drugz,” “I L.U.V. I.O.U.”), plenty of references to the intersection of technology and mental health (“Clickbait, Click Me”), and a closing track that implies that a cure may be found in a return to the natural world (“The Sun Is Only Shining”). Lyrically, Alex delves even further into brave personal territory, continuing to explore his own individual crises and life story in a world that’s even more disjointed and damaged than before.
Collaborating again with producer Adam Reich (who was behind the board for an impressive list of classics from Brooklyn’s D.I.Y. scene), dark subject matter is transformed into positive energy, enriching the music more than any of Alex’s previous recordings. If the most cohesive and fulfilling music of Alex’s career is the outcome of everything being broken, then maybe that’s O.K.