Sharon Van Etten and Angel Olsen are used to being compared to one another, and they donāt mind. In fact, they see it as the highest form of compliment. On their new single, āLike I Used To,ā the musicians merge their vocal powers and songwriting prowess for a record that oozes nostalgia. Itās the kind of beckoning power ballad that fans know and love from the artists, arriving just in time for wistful late sunsets and 70-degree nights.Ā Below, Van Ettenāwhose recent release, epic Ten, also includes features by Lucinda Williams, Fiona Apple, Shamir, and Courtney Barnettāspeaks with Olsen about emerging from a year of solitude to create and collaborate.
āāā
SHARON VAN ETTEN: Hi, sorry Iām late. How are you?
ANGEL OLSEN: Iām okay. Iām hanging in there. How are you? Where are you coming from?
VAN ETTEN: Iām house-sitting for a friend. Just couch surfing, but hanging in there. Just me and the dog hanging out, unpacking.
OLSEN: I feel that.
VAN ETTEN: Are you in North Carolina right now?
OLSEN: Yeah, Iāve been here. Well, I went on a trip about a week or so after I got back, and Iāve been here since. Iām hoping to stay here for a while until July. So I have a few questions for you. Hold on. Iām really bad at interviewing someone I already know.
VAN ETTEN: I know. I mean, thereās so much I still want to know about you, Angel.
OLSEN: Do you feel like you changed a lot about your career during this time? Because for me, I didnāt miss touring. I want to get back out there with my band because I love making music, but I also got to be home for the first time in like seven years. So I was just wondering if it was like that for you as well?
VAN ETTEN: It was definitely a mix of emotions for me. I feel like any time thereās an emotional hurdle you have to get over, the first one is really hard, and then with the next one youāre just kind of bracing yourself for something else, and at every point, things kept changing. I just said, āOkay, well this is how it is right now, and Iāll adjust again.ā We had just relocated from the East Coast and were finally starting to feel a bit settled, and I didnāt even realize what a homebody I was before COVID happened. It was nice to spend more time with my kid and figure out this new balance and what it means to be home and do all the things. Have you tried to offset your time at home with any activities other than music?
OLSEN: For a while, I was like, āMaybe Iāll start writing about my life,ā or āmaybe Iāll start a zine.ā And I started to feel like, who wants to know about my life right now? Iām sure the fans want to know about what led me here, but I started to feel like I was taking up space by doing that, which is dumb because my entire singing career is taking up space. I had a big talk with Christian, my manager, and was like, āMaybe Iāll take some time off from recording and touring and doing that back-to-back all the time.ā But of course I donāt really know how to stop doing that because Iām in it, you know? So here I am. Iāve continued to sing and found myself continuing to work on stuff, even if it felt slower because I was home. I really, really needed that. I love to be at home, but I also love having a purpose. I donāt want to stop making music or working, but at a certain point, you do need to take a moment and think about all the years that you spend on the road. Thereās been a lot of reflection this year.
VAN ETTEN: I know that youāve written a lot. Do you find that the things that youāre writing tend to be more reflective of whatās happened this past year? Or is it kind of a mix?
OLSEN: I started to feel like I was overzealously wanting to use my platform for talking about politics and what was happening in the election and the music industry and what my place in it all was. I was sort of manically excited to be sharing news and ideas and thoughts, and then I just came to a halt and was like, āIām taking up space again.ā At a certain point, the best way for me to really express these thoughts and feelings and fears and to really confront myself about these things was to continue what Iāve always been doing, which is write music and try to put some of this stuff into songs. The way that I write anything, itās pretty open-ended. But a lot of stuff that was happening has affected my writing recently.
VAN ETTEN: Iām still in the process of figuring out how it all fits together. You know, having a studio at home has been nice, but at the same time, Iāve had to learn when to stop to let other people find themselves in it. I donāt know if you feel that.
OLSEN: I do feel that. I definitely get attached. There are certain songs that I canāt let go of the way that they were. Was the beginning of āLike I Used Toā an older demo, or was it something that you put away for a while?
VAN ETTEN: I wrote that last year as COVID was hitting. Itās such an effort to say to myself, āI want to try to write a feel-good song.ā Make it a little bit faster than normal, which is still slow for me, and just try to get myself in a different tempo and mindset and energy while still reflecting on whatās actually happening. At the beginning of all this, I found myself falling into old habits now that I was home. Itās like laughing at my adult self that stays up too late and has a couple of extra drinks than Iām supposed to. It was more of a joke to myself at first when I started it. And I did put it aside. You and I had been talking when we were working on the āFemme Fataleā cover, and I was just like, āYou know what? Iām going to push my luck here.ā But I had this internal dialogueāI felt like I was singing like you. I was paranoid that I was ripping you off. And so I was like, āIām just going to send it to her and see if sheās going to call me on it.ā
OLSEN: Your writing and singing style remains really unique. Honestly, this is just so cool that we were able to meet each other with our voices and with our writing and go back and forth on this. A lot of people over the years are like, āYou guys sound alike,ā and I think we sound really distinctly different, but with harmonies you learn to step back or to match someoneās style. Harmonizing is not about sticking out, necessarily. Itās about making something strong. I just have to keep my head down and continue to sing and play music. People have compared us to each other, but Iāve never felt weird about it. Iāve always felt like the relationship between us has been really strong. There are definitely artists where Iām like, āI should wait to listen to it until itās doneā because I donāt want to accidentally create something thatās too much like theirs. But with this song, it was an opportunity for us to get together and make something with both of our styles attached to it, and I love that.
VAN ETTEN: Itās funny because weāve toured a lot, highway high-fiving each other and stuff, and weāve had hangs along the way in Europe and at festivals. Iāve been to your shows, Iāve cried in the audience. I imagine people think that we hang out all the time but because of our schedules and especially this past year, itās not something we really get to do. Iām honored that you wanted to fly out here to be a part of it and put so much of your heart in it during such a hard time.
OLSEN: It was nice to participate in something and have it be shared versus having to be at the complete center of it. It was a little less stressful.
VAN ETTEN: It did feel very shared to me. Not just between you and me, but by everyone that was a part of the video as well. I felt like everyone was in it and cared about it. It was nice to focus on something other than the routine that weāve had in isolation; to travel and to be in the same room with people and to feel creative and working towards the same goal has definitely lit a spark in me, and I canāt wait to get to do it more when Iām in the right headspace.
OLSEN: Do you have any questions for me? We got to hang out a little bit after the shoot, but we didnāt really get to hang deep because it was just full days working.
VAN ETTEN: There were long days, and you had longer days than me since you had to go back home. You were such a trooper. You have two shows out here this year, right? Whatās on the books?
OLSEN: I think Iām going to see you at Outside Lands. I know that.
VAN ETTEN: I donāt know how itās going to feel like when Iām there, what a festival is going to feel like after Zooming. But Iām excited.
OLSEN: How do you feel about doing TV performances however you want to do them? Because I love that, and Iām going to have a really hard time going back. I did it for Whole New Mess and Iām sure I could have done something a little more creative than I planned. At the time it was the middle of the pandemic and itās in the middle of Asheville. Iām not in L.A. so there are less people around to facilitate a music filming thing. I just watched Billie Eilish on Fallon or one of those late nights, and sheās in Joshua Tree and it sounds perfectly like a studio recording, itās crazy. I am looking forward to performing. Performing this song live will be fun. Iām trying to imagine what my next record will sound like and how that will form with the band. Itās really weird to be completely clueless and then one day it happens and you just do it over and over and over again. Itās hard to know what the next thing is going to be.
VAN ETTEN: I think just like minor league baseball stadiums, you know? All outdoors, secondary markets. A booking agentās dream.
OLSEN: For sure. Well, Iām looking forward to it, whatever it is.
VAN ETTEN: You have songs to make a record, right? Youāre going to be sesh-ing it up?
OLSEN: My goal is to write four more songs in the next two months. I already have like 12 songs written that I wrote in 2020. Everyoneās going to be coming out with a record at the same time because weāve all been on hold. Iām just trying to figure out the timing of everything. But yeah, my goal is to continue writing more over the next two months and then record as soon as possible, maybe in July, but weāll see. That way I can be on tour in the spring of 2022. Who knows?
VAN ETTEN: 2022.
OLSEN: I know, itās so weird to say that out loud. It feels like there was a year skipped in life, but it was definitely meant to happen. All of the changes that happened for me in 2020 personally were meant to happen. So Iām blessed. Itās a weird backwards blessing, but Iām excited to be recording and sharing my experiences a little bit. For right now, Iām still gathering. Iām still forcing myself to get in the mood to write. Iāve hit kind of a wall, but hopefully I can push myself to that goal. Are you going to record anytime?
VAN ETTEN: Right now Iām listening to stuff. Iām so bad, I just create lists and lists and more lists and reorganize and go back and forth in what world I want them to live in. Thereās part of me that just wants to allow them to coexist in different worlds because thatās how I feel like my brain and my heart have been. I donāt want it to feel like itās a compilation of songs that donāt make sense together, so thereās always that balance. Iām trying to wrap my brain around what that is, but I still feel like I need to organize the demos, figure out what can I build upon, what do I want to re-record, who I want to work with. I know itās a struggle for people to want to work on something thatās kind of hodgepodge. Iāll just put a synth across all of them and my drum machine and call it a day.
OLSEN: I look forward to hearing whatever it is, even if itās a playlist.
VAN ETTEN: An Angel Olsen record?
OLSEN: Yeah.
VAN ETTEN: Iām actually calling my next record Angel Olsen. Youāre giving me hope.
OLSEN: I canāt wait to hear what youāre making because it keeps getting better and better every time I hear it.
VAN ETTEN: I hope I donāt disappoint you. Iām trying to force myself to write happy songs, but Iām really, really good at being sad.