Two's a charm
Fiona Apple's sophomore triumph
by Gary Susman
Say this for Fiona Apple: she
sure knows how to get attention. Unfortunately, it's the kind that often
distracts from her music. First, there was the Calvin Klein kiddie-porn vibe of
her video "Criminal," which even fabulous wreck Courtney Love thought
excessive. Then there was her notoriously ungrateful acceptance speech at the
MTV awards a couple years ago, in which she said, "I'm gonna use this
opportunity the way I want to use it. . . . What I want to say
is . . . this world is bullshit, and you shouldn't model your
life after what you think we think is cool." And then there's her whole
persona, both in song and in the flesh, which combines her New York
private-school princess upbringing with such irritating traits as the beatnik
spaciness of a Rickie Lee Jones, the shaggy rage of an Alanis Morissette, the
honky-tonk-via-Juilliard mannerism of a pianist like Tori Amos or Ben Folds,
and the self-directed waifsploitation of a Britney Spears.
If all that wasn't enough, there's the title of her new album: 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 (Clean Slate/Epic). That's
90 words, folks, almost certainly enough for the recordkeepers at Guinness, and
probably the longest and goofiest album title since Tyrannosaurus Rex's My
People Were Fair and Had Sky in Their Hair But Now They're Content To Wear
Stars on Their Brows back in 1968. Hell, that's even longer than Mark
Wahlberg's appendage when he played a porn star in Apple boyfriend Paul Thomas
Anderson's Boogie Nights.
It's too bad that Apple's PR is so clumsy (if probably earnest -- her album
title is a poem she used to recite at concerts to psych herself up), because it
may turn listeners off from what's most important: her music. And that's where
she really delivers. If her debut, 1996's Tidal, often had the
tentative, wispy sound of a 19-year-old still very much discovering her own
voice, her sophomore effort (let's just call it When the
Pawn . . . ) sounds as if she'd found it with a
vengeance. If her throaty alto chilled you on Tidal, it sounds even
deeper and more robust here, with an eerie, world-weary blues sense well beyond
her 22 years. And she pounds the keys with a newfound authority and sense of
swing; even on her most serious songs, Apple sounds as if she might almost
(dare I say it?) be enjoying her job.
Her arrangements, too, show a precocious maturity, as if she'd been listening
not just to fellow Lilith Fair crooners but also to weirdos like Waits and
Weill -- tastes you'd imagine would be unusual for a 22-year-old. Such
eclecticism shows in the odd, funhouse moments where the harmonies turn a
strange corner in songs like "On the Bound" and "Fast As You Can," or in the
implausibly catchy choruses of "Mistake" and "Get Gone," where the melodies
soar and swoop precariously, like a child testing her limits on a playground
swing. Yet there's nothing so hard-rocking about the music that it would be out
of place among VH1 peers twice Apple's age.
Where Apple still shows her callowness is in her lyrics, notably in "Mistake,"
where she repeatedly demands the privilege of a teenager who doesn't happen to
be a public figure to make her own mistakes. That's not unreasonable, but
surely listeners would be more forgiving if she just went ahead and made the
mistakes. And on "Limp," one of many songs in which she complains about the
shortcomings of men, she taunts, "So call me crazy, hold me down/Make me
cry/Get off now, baby/It won't be long till you'll be/Lying limp in your own
hands." Now maybe there's something perversely empowering about that kind of
masochistic contempt, but it sounds awfully creepy, especially coming from a
woman who's actually survived a rape.
Still, Apple can be forgiven her awkward urgency because her music is
ultimately strong and insistent enough to steamroller any opposition. As the
title of her new album suggests, with its metaphoric combination of Kasparov
and Ali, she can stare you down and wear you down into submission.