![]() It seems to resonate with a lot of women, and I'm just wondering what your relationship to it is.įor my part, it came out when I was 12, but gained traction when I was 13/14, I think. Everything’s going to be fine, fine, fine.In the thread about angsty teenage music, one of the higher posts is about this album. In the easygoing “Hand in My Pocket”, now a time capsule of cigarettes and taxi cabs, she forgives herself for not having it all figured out. Perhaps that’s why, for all her angst and anger, Morissette is relatively kind to herself. Yet even if the album’s core spirit is disillusionment-a refusal to smile, play along or indulge-listeners seem to cling to its hopefulness, the idea that bleeding, screaming and learning is also, ultimately, living. For women, many of Morissette's lyrics felt like a reckoning: “Right Through You” skewers a man for not taking her seriously (“You took a long hard look at my ass/And then played golf for a while”), and on “You Oughta Know”, the cheating-ex send-up lit with rage, she captures the fury felt from such blatant disrespect: “And every time I scratch my nails down someone else’s back I hope you feel it/Well, can you feel it?” On “Not the Doctor”, she refuses to play mother or babysitter for someone else’s problems. Human weakness is a theme-she’s hyperactive and distracted on “All I Really Want”, disoriented by happiness on “Head Over Feet”-but then, so is strength. So when the 21-year-old former Nickelodeon star released it in 1995 after being dropped by her label, MCA Canada, its fresh and unapologetic worldview just hit different.īeneath the record's radio-friendly hooks and shiny harmonies were startling observations on the messiness and banality of life. It is also fearlessly confrontational, with sharp-edged criticisms of Catholicism, technology and boyish men that few artists since have had the guts to echo. Her blockbuster third LP (following two teen-pop records that went Top 40 in her native Canada) was poetic and straightforward, cynical and idealistic, sarcastic and wide-eyed, lost but hopeful (baby!). Like Morissette, whose arrival bridged the gap between grunge, alternative and mainstream pop, much of the album’s enduring magnetism is in its embrace of chaos and contradiction. Alanis Morissette’s era-defining album is full of these moments-snarling, eye-rolling, ugly truths that feel so good to say out loud. Everyone has a moment on Jagged Little Pill that they feel like they belong to-a spitting wisecrack or rhetorical question that struck a nerve early on and continued to reveal its wisdom with age, time and experience. ![]()
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