Rolling Stone reported E saying that it was composed after the
COVID-19 pandemic and was a “quarantine daydream I desperately needed to have” E is also quoted to say ”Are We Alright Again”, was really me writing a song trying to cheer myself up and give myself some hope that things will get better and I can only hope that it could do that for other people too... that was the only one that was done during the pandemic – it was done during the early days of the pandemic when it was just first getting bad and it was like a daydream I just needed to think about. Y’know, the whole quarantine thing ending, and part of me was secretly hoping that maybe by the time the album came out, it wouldn't be such a fantasy but more of a reality.But of course, that wasn't [how it] turned out, so it remains as much of a fantasy today as the day I wrote it. But I hope that it can still give us all some hope and something to look forward to, and that some day there will be a day when it feels like more of a reality.”
The Financial Times reflects that Are We Alright Again “looks forward to a time when the world can go back to doing and enjoying normal things.” The
NME noted the irony “If you were laying bets on who would turn out to be 2020’s Mr Brightside, only the bravest would back Mark ‘E’ Everett. The indie star is reclusive, recently divorced, prone to recording albums about intense personal trauma and psychological collapse...Yet there he was on ‘Are We Alright Again’....singing his vision of post-Covid idyll: all “smiling skies”, marching bands and avian bong buddies”. ==See also==