Fiona Apple
Biography
Singer/songwriter Fiona Apple gained a recording contract in 1995 as one in a crop of mid-'90s female artists, but her confessional writing and throaty vocals made the teenager sound like much more than just the latest flavor. Born in 1977 in New York to singer Diana McAfee and actor Brandon Maggart, Apple began playing the piano at the age of eight and started composing her own songs just four years later, after the separation of her parents and her own brutal rape. After leaving high school at the age of 16, she journeyed to Los Angeles to see her father and make a demo tape of her songs. After several months of tape-passing, Sony Music signed Apple in 1995.
After recording Tidal with producer Andrew Slater, she released the album in mid-1996 and began touring. Constant video play of "Criminal" and "Shadowboxer" brought Tidal into the upper reaches of the album charts; it eventually went platinum, and landed her a Grammy plus an MTV Video Music Award. (She made one of the most famous VMA acceptance speeches in history when she proclaimed "This world is bullsh*t" and quoted Maya Angelou.)
The long-awaited When the Pawn Hits the Conflicts He Thinks Like a King What He Knows Throws the Blows When He Goes to the Fight and He'll Win the Whole Thing 'Fore He Enters the Ring There's No Body to Batter When Your Mind Is Your Might So When You Go Solo, You Hold Your Own Hand and Remember That Depth Is the Greatest of Heights and if You Know Where You Stand, Then You Know Where to Land and if You Fall It Won't Matter, 'Cuz You'll Know That You're Right -- the album's full title -- followed in 1999. It was a bold move on Apple's part, to follow her debut with an album with 90 words in the title. But she was more confident than ever on When the Pawn, working with producer Jon Brion to craft literate, jazzy pop that played mightily to her strengths. Some of her more casual fans were turned off, but the Apple diehards only grew, and When the Pawn peaked at number 13 on the Billboard charts (aided by the single "Fast as You Can"). Still, its brash title, heady sound, and Apple's on-again, off-again relationship with the public proved obstacles to repeating Tidal's platinum success.
She wasn't heard from again until 2002-03, when word spread through the internet that Sony was unhappy with Apple's newest songs. (By now the Apple cult had grown immensely, helped along by blogs and message boards.) The controversy continued through 2004, with the facts about who was responsible for the griping -- Apple or her label -- ranging from murky to downright unclear. But tracks from her recording sessions had certainly leaked, and while they were apparently unfinished, the fan response was mostly rabid. Apple could now add internet sensation to her lengthy list of titles (prodigy, tease, true songwriting talent, etc.).
By summer 2005, Fiona Apple's third album had a name and a release date. Extraordinary Machine was slated for an October release; it would feature production work from Mike Elizondo and at least some of the material that had leaked, though in what form was unclear. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
Selected Discography
This is one bad b**ch......y o u chicks could learn a thing or two from her.
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"I got my feet on the ground and I don't go to sleep to dream." My god what a lyric. My mantra in life. Fiona, music needs you... 2010.
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love her...brings back memories of being an angry 17 yr old chain smoking and rockin' out to her.
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I've never heard any of her music other than the Tidal album, but luckily I have Pandora to listen to all her other stuff...and I think I like it! Wonder when she's coming out with another album? It's about that time.
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Lyrically outstanding, but musically challenged. If you listen to Tidal from beginning to end, the music all has the same basic backing music- the bass parts on all of the songs is virtually indistinguis h a b l e from one song to the next.
What's with all the big female vocalists of the 90's being raped or molested? Fiona, Tori Amos, Courtney Love...could it have been a marketing ploy? I'm just asking, don't read anything more into it then what I asked. |
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in my opinion,
one of the best lyricists, poets, singers, and vocal performers of all time |
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in 'sullen girl' on tidal, her voice sounds vaguely like sara bareilles (sp?) doesn't it?
lol... i was named after fiona apple |
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Yes! I Peter D. do love your music and your whole being. I'm just glad that you were born, as you bring life and what is that word that I'm looking for?
Happiness yes. as a landscaper and tree trimmer type of guy, you are a wonderful person to know. Thank You Peter Davis invanmed@sbc g l o b a l . n e t |
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I love Fiona's voice, if you haven't heard her cover of Elvis Costello's "I Want You" your really missing out.. It's one of her best and you can find her singing it live on You Tube. ( prepare to get blown away)
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Every time I get crucially upset and need some serious Man-Hater music for the moment...she ' s always at the top of my list. I love all of her music. Her voice is phenomenal and her lyrics are achingly intuitive. LOVE HER!!!
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I love all of Tidal and some of When the Pawn but cant get into Extroardinar y Machine at all.
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she is 100 times better than Alicia Keys or Norah Jones, or all these other faux R&B or soul female singer songwriters that get all the acclaim. True music fans know this.
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I like her wavery voice. There's something sort of enveloping about it. It's like she breaks away from all the clear voices out there and makes music her own.
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