So-Called Chaos (Remastered) Alanis Morissette

Album info

Album-Release:
2015

HRA-Release:
28.10.2015

Label: Warner Music Group

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Adult Alternative

Artist: Alanis Morissette

Composer: Alanis Morissette

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Eight Easy Steps 02:52
  • 2 Out Is Through 03:53
  • 3 Excuses 03:32
  • 4 Doth I Protest Too Much 04:03
  • 5 Knees Of My Bees 03:41
  • 6 So-Called Chaos 05:03
  • 7 Not All Me 03:58
  • 8 This Grudge 05:08
  • 9 Spineless 04:16
  • 10 Everything 04:35
  • Total Runtime 41:01

Info for So-Called Chaos (Remastered)

Alanis Morissette crashed into pop music's collective consciousness in the mid-1990s as a woman scorned, carrying loads of resentment along with her alt-pop leanings. Morissette's fourth studio album, „So-Called Chaos“, reveals that she has come a long way from the days of 'You Oughta Know,' thanks, in part, to the healing powers of love. In this case, actor Ryan Reynolds is the object of her affection, and Morissette embarks on an in-depth exploration of the various aspects of romance.

Backed by a band that includes former Jane's Addiction bassist Eric Avery, the Canadian singer-songwriter casts out a wide range of emotions. She goes from the playful wordplay of 'Knees of My Bees,' with its loops and sitar-like flourishes, to the more serious concept of forgiveness at the heart of the melancholy 'This Grudge.' Not surprisingly, introspection drives Morissette's creative engine. With it comes material leaving her in a vulnerable, confessional mode, whether she's acknowledging jealousy while telling her paramour otherwise on 'Doth I Protest Too Much' or exploring a fear of weakness on 'Spineless.' These songs reveal a mature tone missing from her early outings, and mark another fine and eclectic album by the always-intriguing artist.

„Alanis Morissette has often written about affairs of the heart, but she's rarely written from the perspective of being in love, and she's certainly never recorded an album where she seems so in love and at peace as she has with her fourth album, So-Called Chaos. She doesn't hide her romance with Canadian actor Ryan Reynolds, perhaps best known as the title role of National Lampoon's Van Wilder, thanking him in the liner notes and alluding to their relationship throughout this romance-heavy record. There are still strands of bitterness, cynicism, and jealously, yet they feel like unfinished business that she's slowly putting to rest. Nowhere is this more true than on 'This Grudge,' which for all intents and purposes looks like the final chapter in the tale of 'The Relationship,' the one that fueled 'You Oughta Know,' since she acknowledges that she's held 'this grudge' for '14 years, 30 minutes, 15 seconds' and through '11 songs' and 'four full journals' (and, given Alanis' penchant for confession and single-minded obsession, chances are she's not exaggerating). She's not just leaving this relationship behind, she's maturing, and there's a calm directness to much of her writing that leads her to both open-hearted love songs and, occasionally, a sly sense of humor (as on the sardonic opener, 'Eight Easy Steps'). Morissette still has a tendency to overwrite and then deliver these tangled tenses in exceedingly odd phrasing -- the chorus to 'Knees of My Bees' doesn't sound much like 'tremble and buckle,' it sounds for all the world like 'jambalaya, Bucko!' -- but that's simply par for the course with Alanis. What's unexpected, though, is the confidence of her music, which recaptures some of the vigor of Jagged Little Pill, as it's brighter, denser, catchier than either of its immediate predecessors, and boasts her most assured singing yet. Even with all this, it's not heavy on immediate singles -- the first, 'Everything,' takes awhile to have its hook settle in -- but as an overall record, it's her most satisfying since her blockbuster breakthrough.“ (Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AMG)

Alanis Morissette, vocals, producer, piano, keyboards
Scott Gordon, programming, engineer, drum programming
Jamie Muhoberac, keyboards
Tim Thorney, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, bass, piano, keyboards
Joel Shearer, acoustic guitar, bouzouki, guitar, guitar
Paul Livingstone, sitar
John Shanks, guitar, bass, keyboards
Zac Rae, piano, keyboards, vibraphone
David Levita, acoustic guitar, electric guitar
Jeff Rothschild, programming
Jason Orme, electric guitar
Eric Avery, bass
Paul Bushnell, bass
Kenny Aronoff, drums
Blair Sinta, drums, programming

Recorded 2003 at Groovemasters, Santa Monica; The Village Recorder, Los Angeles; Henson Studios, Los Angeles; Stage and Sound, Los Angeles
Engineered by Scott Gordon, Mark Valentine
Mixed by Chris Lord-Alge
Produced by Alanis Morissette, Tim Thorney, John Shanks

Digitally remastered

Please Note: we do not offer the 192 kHz version of this album, because there is no considerable or audible difference to the 96 kHz version!

No biography found.

This album contains no booklet.

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