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Fiona Apple confused by all her issues
11/28/2005 2:53 AM, Reuters
Conflicts: We've all got
'em -- those religious, parental and societal messages that
occasionally cancel each other out. Some folks talk them out
with a psychiatrist, others avoid them with a bottle of booze.
Fiona Apple dresses them up and sets them to music.
Apple pulled into the Wiltern on Saturday with her issues
on display, pushing through a 100-minute set filled with
internal and interpersonal conflicts, many of them overlapping.
A distinct tension came through in the sometimes analytical,
sometimes angry lyrics, but that tension was matched in the
music's tone, Apple's delivery and her stage presence.
Touring behind her first album in six years, Apple did not
communicate well between songs, in part because enough women in
the audience felt a need to shriek during the quiet moments
that they blurred most of her comments. But Apple also showed a
certain nervousness about talking. She introduced "Shadowboxer"
as "a song I mean very much," then apologized after performing
it, noting that she'd been referring to a different song. As a
result, she implied -- probably unintentionally -- that she
hadn't really felt a connection to "Shadowboxer." At another
point, an audience member yelled out "We love you," and Apple
seemed entirely flummoxed.
Apple's actual singing proved much stronger and coherent.
Brooding and introspective performances dovetailed with
forceful and angry ones, and she often vacillated between those
emotional states within a single number.
Backed by a bass, drums and two electronic keyboard
players, Apple spent much of her time seated at a baby grand.
But when she stood center stage, her physical movements
supported the conflicts within her songs and her vocal
performance. Apple clutched frequently at her blue gown, kicked
often with her right leg and occasionally broke a tense pose by
flinging an arm or two. Whether she was acting or literally
reliving the emotions of the songs, she seemed frustrated,
distraught and entirely conflicted.
Musically, all of that was supported by chords that toyed
with dissonance, shifting rhythms and off-kilter phrasings.
It's as if the songs were teetering, just about to lose their
balance. Utilizing the eerie fuzz of synthetic keyboards, the
arrangements had a loose, hazy quality about them. The
drummer's primary role thus became providing sturdiness to
intentionally unstable material.
Impressionistic color swatches on the backdrop added to the
lack of resolution inherent in the works, and that visual
enhancement proved completely appropriate, given that much of
the evening felt like a dramatic soundtrack to an Alfred
Hitchcock movie, ever-so-slightly lighthearted while it
unravels some very perplexing mysteries.
While performing the title track to her new "Extraordinary
Machine" CD, Apple noted that she's "good at being
uncomfortable." That came through loud and clear in multiple
ways during an evening of intriguing conflict.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
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