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So-Called Chaos

Alanis Morissette

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Album Review

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.

Customer Reviews

More Mature Alanis

I really like this album. Alanis has really grown musically and it's obvious in "So-Called Chaos". Compared to "Jagged Little Pill", this album has lost a lot of Alanis' signature rage in her music. Some people will say she's lost something. I however feel, it has allowed her to expand her musical horizen to include some fabulous new themes in her music. From the upbeat music of "Eight Easy Steps" and "Excuses" to the beautiful meaningful "Everything" this album is amazing!

A new side of the Alanis we know and love

I really enjoyed this latest album from Alanis because I think it shows great maturity in her music and in her writing skills. "Doth I Protest Too Much" shows her satirical side and "This Grudge" conveys perfectly her emotional cleansing of all the anger she had on previous albums. I know others will say she's done better, or that they miss all the anger, but I for one am glad to get to know another side of Alanis through this album.

Disappointment

Coming on the heels of her best work, you'd expect a let-down, and this one fills that prophecy. Look, I love Alanis. I'm a huge fan (check out my other reviews). But this record is all over the place. Perhaps she just wanted to let her hair down and rock a little, and who can blame her? It lacks the composition and through lines of her earlier records. My only complaint about her is that she doesn't put enough music out. She and Sheryl Crow have made the most out of the least. The difference being her greatest work is so brilliant, you wish she'd offer up more music. This record is for die-hard Alanis fans only (yeah, I bought it), but for most, download "Everything," which is truly inspired (if overplayed), then go back and play Under Rug Swept, one of the best albums of the decade.

Biography

Born: June 1, 1974 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

Genre: Pop

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

Alanis Morissette was one of the most unlikely stars of the mid-'90s. A former child actress turned dance-pop diva, Morissette later transformed herself into a confessional alternative singer/songwriter in the vein of Liz Phair and Tori Amos. However, she bolstered that formula with enough pop sensibility, slight...
Full Bio

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