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By the age
of 21, Ottawa, Canada native Alanis Morissette had established herself
as the musical voice of the fight for strength and self-realization.
Alanis's U.S. debut album Jagged Little Pill was released in early 1995
on Madonna's Maverick Records. And no one--least of all the artist
herself--could've predicted that she'd sell nearly 20 million albums,
making hers one of the successful debut albums ever released.
Alanis wrote all of the lyrics for this record when she was 19
years-old, and enlisted the help of veteran musical collaborator Glen
Ballard, most famous previously for his work with Wilson Phillips, to
pen the music. This was an interesting choice for Alanis, whose music
was confrontational and revolutionary rather than pop-cute and
guileless. Yet Ballard delivered--and their tunes became the battle cry
for anyone who had their emotions quashed by the breakup of a love
relationship or had ever tried to reassemble their own broken heart.
Perhaps the most compelling reason for Alanis's phenomenal success was
her knack for articulating thoughts that most people felt no one else
could relate to. Alanis said what others wanted to say but couldn't
think of until it was too late. Interestingly though, Alanis is the
first person to admit that because of her age, a lot of the material in
her songs is based on her observations and poetic prowess rather than
her own misfortunes.
Alanis Morissette
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No biography about Alanis would be complete or fair without briefly
mentioning her past life as a Canadian pop princess--in fact, she won
her first Juno Award (the Canadian equivalent to our Grammys) when she
was 10. However, her music in those days was so blatantly contrived by
others that those records could hardly be looked upon as the genesis
which led to Alanis today. Accused of being a hostile man-hater by some
(men mostly), adulated by others (mainly women), Alanis Morissette has
won countless awards, has had the best-selling album by a female solo
artist of all time, and has accomplished her goal of trying to help
young women to empower themselves. Considering the excitement
surrounding her Pill follow-up Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie, one
of the most anticipated new releases of 1998, it's safe to say that
Alanismania shows no signs of dying down any time soon.
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