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==Awards and nominations== | ==Awards and nominations== | ||
{{Main|List of awards and nominations received by Fiona Apple}} | {{Main|List of awards and nominations received by Fiona Apple}} | ||
{{expand section | with summary of most important nominations, with citations, as WP does not allow WIkilinks in place of information or sourcing | small = no | date = March 2020}} | |||
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 19:21, 26 March 2020
American singer-songwriter
Fiona Apple | |
---|---|
Apple performing in New York City, 2015 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Fiona Apple McAfee-Maggart |
Born | (1977-09-13) September 13, 1977 (age 47) New York City, U.S. |
Genres | |
Occupation | Singer-songwriter |
Instruments |
|
Years active | 1994–present |
Labels | |
Website | fiona-apple |
Fiona Apple McAfee-Maggart (born September 13, 1977) is an American singer-songwriter and pianist. Her accolades include one Grammy Award, and an additional seven Grammy Award nominations in various categories.
The daughter of actor Brandon Maggart, Apple was born in New York City, and raised between there and her father's home in Los Angeles. Classically trained on piano as a child, she began composing her own songs when she was eight years old. Her debut album, Tidal, written when Apple was 17, was released in 1996 and received a Grammy Award for Best Female Vocal Rock Performance for the single "Criminal". She followed with When the Pawn... (1999), produced by Jon Brion, which was also critically and commercially successful and was certified platinum.
For her third album, Extraordinary Machine (2005), Apple again collaborated with Brion, and began recording the album in 2002. However, Apple was reportedly unhappy with the production and opted not to release the record, leading fans to erroneously protest Epic Records, believing that the label was withholding its release. The album was eventually re-produced without Brion and released in October 2005. The album was certified gold, and nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Pop Vocal Album. In 2012, she released her fourth studio album, The Idler Wheel..., which received critical praise and was followed by a tour of the United States and was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album in 2013.
She has sold over 10 million albums worldwide and has received numerous awards and nominations, including a Grammy Award, 2 MTV Video Music Awards and a Billboard Music Award.
Early life
Born in 1977 and raised on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, New York City, Apple is the daughter of singer Diane McAfee and actor Brandon Maggart, who met when both were cast in the Broadway musical Applause. Her father is from Tennessee, and through him, Apple has Melungeon ancestry. Her maternal grandparents were dancer Millicent Green and big band vocalist Johnny McAfee. Her sister sings cabaret under the stage name Maude Maggart, and actor Garett Maggart is her half brother. Apple grew up in Morningside Gardens in Harlem with her mother and sister, but spent summers with her father in Los Angeles, California.
Apple was classically trained on piano as a child, and began composing her own pieces by the age of eight. When learning to play piano, she would often take sheet music and translate guitar tablature into the corresponding notes. Apple later began to play along with jazz standard compositions after becoming proficient, through which she discovered Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald, who became major influences on her.
At age 12, Apple was raped outside the apartment she shared with her mother and sister in Harlem. She then developed an eating disorder, purposely slimming her developing body, which she saw as "bait". After the incident, Apple also suffered panic attacks while walking home from school, which led to her relocating to Los Angeles to live with her father for one year. In an interview in 2000, she stated that she did not write songs about this trauma: "It doesn't get into the writing. It's a boring pain. It's such a fuckin' old pain that, you know, there's nothing poetic about it."
Career
1994–2001: Tidal and When the Pawn...
Apple was introduced to the music industry in 1994, when she gave a demo tape containing the songs "Never Is a Promise", "Not One of Those Times", and "He Takes a Taxi" to her friend who was the babysitter for music publicist Kathryn Schenker. Schenker then passed the tape along to Sony Music executive Andy Slater. Apple's abilities captured his attention, and Slater signed her to a record deal.
In 1996, Apple's debut album, Tidal, was released by Work Records and Columbia Records. The album sold 2.7 million copies and was certified three times platinum in the U.S. "Criminal", the third single, became a hit and the song reached the Top 40 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100. The song's controversial Mark Romanek-directed music video played on MTV. Other singles from Tidal included "Shadowboxer", "Sleep to Dream", and "Never Is a Promise". Apple accepted the MTV Video Music Award for Best New Artist at the 1997 MTV Video Music Awards for her song "Sleep to Dream", during her acceptance speech she said:
This world is bullshit. And you shouldn't model your life—wait a second—you shouldn't model your life about what you think that we think is cool and what we're wearing and what we're saying and everything. Go with yourself.
The New Yorker and NYRock criticized her MTV award show speech. "When I have something to say, I'll say it," she said, responding to these criticisms in an article in Rolling Stone in January 1998. During this period, Apple also covered The Beatles' "Across the Universe" and Percy Mayfield's "Please Send Me Someone to Love" for the soundtrack of the film Pleasantville. She later canceled the last 21 dates on a tour in support of her album due to "personal family problems".
Apple's second album, When the Pawn..., was released in 1999. Its full title is a poem Apple wrote after reading letters that appeared in Spin regarding an article that had cast her in a negative light in an earlier issue. The title's length earned it a spot in the Guinness Book of Records for 2001. However, as of October 2007, it no longer has the longest album title, as Soulwax released Most of the Remixes, a remix album whose title surpasses When the Pawn's length by 100 characters. When the Pawn was cultivated during Apple's relationship with film director Paul Thomas Anderson. When the Pawn, which was produced by Jon Brion, used more expressive lyrics, experimented more with drum loops, and incorporated both the Chamberlin and drummer Matt Chamberlain. The album received a positive reception from publications such as The New York Times and Rolling Stone. It did not fare as well commercially as her debut, though it was an RIAA-certified platinum album and sold one million copies in the U.S. The album's lead single, "Fast as You Can", reached the top twenty on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart and became Apple's first Top 40 hit in the UK. The videos for two follow-up singles, "Paper Bag" and "Limp" (directed by then-boyfriend Anderson), received very little play.
In an infamous February 2000 'meltdown', after performing for forty minutes in a set hampered by equipment issues to 3,000 audience members at the New York City Roseland Ballroom, a frustrated Apple left the stage without returning. Her performance saw Apple appearing distraught at the sound quality, apologizing numerous times for the sound and crying. After completing a concert tour in support of her second album in 2000, Apple relocated to Los Angeles.
2002–2010: Extraordinary Machine
During her hiatus, Apple contemplated retiring from her recording career. Apple sang with Johnny Cash on a cover of Simon & Garfunkel's "Bridge over Troubled Water" that ended up on his album American IV: The Man Comes Around and was nominated for a Grammy Award for "Best Country Collaboration with Vocals". She also collaborated with Cash on Cat Stevens's "Father and Son", which was included in his 2003 collection Unearthed.
Apple's third album, Extraordinary Machine, was originally produced by Jon Brion. In spring 2002, Apple and Brion, her longtime friend and producer on When the Pawn, met for their weekly lunch meeting. Brion reportedly "begged" Apple to make another album. Apple agreed, and Brion went to Apple's label, Epic Records, with strict stipulations (including no deadline), which the label eventually agreed to. Recording sessions began in 2002, at Ocean Way studios in Nashville, Tennessee, but later moved to the Paramour Mansion in Los Angeles. Work on the album continued until 2003, and in May of that year it was submitted to Sony executives. In 2004 and 2005, tracks were leaked on the Internet in MP3 format and played on U.S. and international radio. Subsequently, MP3s of the entire album went online. Although a Web site distributing the album was quickly shut down, it soon reached P2P networks and was downloaded by fans. A fan-led campaign supported the album's official release.
Mike Elizondo, who had previously played bass on Pawn, was brought back as co-producer to complete the tracks he had begun with Brion and Apple. Spin later reported the following: "Fans erroneously thought that Apple's record label, Epic, had rejected the first version of Extraordinary Machine... in reality, according to Elizondo, Apple was unhappy with the results, and it was her decision to redo the record, not her label's." In August 2005, the album was given an October release date. Production had been largely redone "from scratch" by Elizondo and was co-produced by Brian Kehew. Two of the 11 previous leaked tracks were relatively unchanged, and one new song was also included. Despite suggestions that the album had caused a rift between Brion and Apple, they regularly perform together at Largo, a club in Los Angeles, including a joint appearance with Elizondo on bass just before the news broke of an official release. Extraordinary Machine debuted at number seven and was nominated for a Grammy Award for "Best Pop Vocal Album". It was eventually certified gold, though its singles ("Parting Gift", "O' Sailor", "Not About Love", and "Get Him Back") failed to enter any Billboard charts. Apple went on a live tour to promote the album in late 2005.
In June 2006, Apple appeared on the joke track "Come Over and Get It (Up in 'Dem Guts)" by comedian Zach Galifianakis. Galifianakis previously appeared in the music video for Apple's "Not About Love". Apple recorded a cover of "Sally's Song" for the 2006 special edition release of the soundtrack for the Tim Burton film The Nightmare Before Christmas. In May 2006, Apple paid tribute to Elvis Costello on VH1's concert series Decades Rock Live, by performing Costello's hit "I Want You". Her version was subsequently released as a digital single. Apple toured the East Coast during August 2007, with Nickel Creek. In 2008, Apple recorded a duet titled "Still I" with Christophe Deluy. In 2009, Apple covered "Why Try to Change Me Now" and "I Walk A Little Faster" for The Best Is Yet to Come – The Songs of Cy Coleman.
In January 2010, Fiona Apple and Jon Brion performed together at "Love and Haiti, Too: A Music Benefit", a charity concert for the people hurt by the Haiti earthquake. Fiona sang a cover of "(S)he's Funny That Way", composed by Neil Moret, lyrics by Richard Whiting, which is often associated with the singer Billie Holiday. In June 2010, Fiona released a song titled "So Sleepy", produced by Jon Brion and written by children involved with the non-profit organization 826LA. The song was included on a compilation album released by the organization titled Chickens in Love. Apple collaborated with Margaret Cho on her album Cho Dependent, which was released on August 24, 2010.
2011–2018: The Idler Wheel...
In late 2010, Billboard published an article stating that Apple was planning on releasing a new album in spring 2011, with musician Michelle Branch claiming to have heard some of the new tracks. Drummer Charley Drayton also told Modern Drummer magazine that he was co-producing the record. However, the album was not released in the spring and Billboard reported later that Epic was not aware of a record. Apple delayed the album's release until 2012, explaining that she was waiting "until her label found a new president and that she didn't want her work to be mishandled amid corporate disarray." In January 2012, after its new record label head, LA Reid hinted at new music from Apple, Epic Records announced that the album would be released later in the year. Apple announced performances at the South by Southwest Festival and a spring 2012 tour soon after.
The Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do, Apple's fourth studio album, was released on June 19, 2012, in the United States. It received critical acclaim. According to an article in American Songwriter "The Idler Wheel isn't always pretty, but it pulses with life, brutal and true."
Apple contributed a previously unreleased song entitled "Dull Tool" to the soundtrack of the 2012 Judd Apatow film This Is 40. Another song recorded for the film that was not included in the soundtrack has yet to be released. In September 2013, a Chipotle ad appeared online with a soundtrack of Apple covering "Pure Imagination" from the 1971 film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. The video, which follows a scarecrow as he discovers the truth about factory farming and processed food, was described as "haunted," "dystopian," "bizarre," and "beautiful." In 2014, Apple wrote the opening theme, "Container", for the Showtime drama series The Affair. During 2014, Apple also appeared at a number of performances by Blake Mills, including in New York City and Cambridge, MA, during his tour in support of his second full-length album, Heigh Ho. The pair first publicly collaborated on an acoustic version of Apple's song "I Know" in 2013. Fiona Apple has collaborated with Andrew Bird, and in 2016, she was featured in the song "Left Handed Kisses" from the album Are You Serious.
In 2017, she released "Tiny Hands" for the Women's March on Washington.
In 2018, she joined Shirley Manson at the female-driven Girl School Festival in Los Angeles for a cover of "You Don't Own Me" by Lesley Gore, wearing a white T-shirt with "KNEEL, PORTNOW" written across it in ink. This was considered in response to Grammy head Neil Portnow's heavily criticized comments that women need to "step up" in order to earn more Grammy nods.
2019–present: Fetch the Bolt Cutters
In January 2019, Apple collaborated with King Princess on a version of her 1999 song "I Know". The song was released for Spotify's RISE program on January 25.
In two Instagram posts in March 2019, Apple hinted at the recording of a fifth album. In a September 2019 interview with Vulture, she confirmed the yet unknown album is in its final stages, was recorded with a band and planned for an early 2020 release. In a follow-up interview with Vulture in January 2020, she said her new album would probably be out "in a few months."
In 2019, Apple was featured in the documentary and soundtrack for Echo in the Canyon with Jacob Dylan covering songs by artists such as The Beach Boys and The Byrds. In November, she covered "Whole of the Moon," a Waterboys song, for the series finale of Showtime's The Affair.
On March 8, 2020, Apple posted a video showcasing her saying "M-Y-R-E-C-O-R-D-I-S-D-O-N-E" in American Sign Language. In an interview with The New Yorker it was announced the new album will be called Fetch the Bolt Cutters. The album is entirely self-produced and consists of 13 songs.
Personal life
This article needs attention from an expert in Biography. The specific problem is: the section is a dumping ground of out-of-date content, with no rhyme or reason in its ordering. WikiProject Biography may be able to help recruit an expert. (March 2020) |
Apple is a vegan. During an in-depth interview on Marc Maron's WTF podcast she revealed that she has battled obsessive–compulsive disorder throughout her adult life and had recently decided to quit drinking. She has also gone on record about struggling with depression, self-harm, post-traumatic stress and trust issues with men, particularly in the wake of her rape.
The fallout from Apple's breakup with her first serious boyfriend, Tyson, was the basis for her first album, Tidal. According to a 1998 profile in Rolling Stone, the two of them managed to stay on good terms. In the late 1990s, she was linked with illusionist and endurance artist David Blaine, followed by writer/director Paul Thomas Anderson during the 2000s and writer/TV creator Jonathan Ames in the mid to late 2000s. She has admitted she maintains friendships with all of her ex-boyfriends, noting "I really care about them. I care about their lives with their girlfriends. I feel like maybe an annoying mother or something." In a June 2012 interview, she revealed she had briefly married a French photographer "for complicated reasons" and had a passing liaison with a younger woman.
On September 19, 2012, Apple was arrested at an internal U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint in Sierra Blanca, Texas, and charged with possession of hashish, detaining her en route to a concert in Austin, Texas, at the Hudspeth County Jail.
As of 2012, Apple resided in Los Angeles. In November 2012, Apple wrote a letter to her fans – a scan of which was posted to her website and her Facebook page – postponing the South American leg of her tour due to the health of her dog, Janet. According to the letter, the dog has Addison's disease and has had a tumor "idling in her chest" for two years.
On June 30, 2019, Apple pledged to donate two years' worth of earnings from her song "Criminal" to the While They Wait fund, an initiative that provides immigrants seeking asylum with financial support for legal services and necessities, organized by Brooklyn Defender Services, Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services, and American Civil Liberties Union. While They Wait's Scott Hechinger revealed to Vulture that Fiona has donated $90,000, and that donation will help out 15 families.
Discography
Main articles: Fiona Apple discography and List of songs recorded by Fiona Apple- Tidal (1996)
- When the Pawn... (1999)
- Extraordinary Machine (2005)
- The Idler Wheel... (2012)
- Fetch the Bolt Cutters (2020)
Awards and nominations
Main article: List of awards and nominations received by Fiona AppleThis section needs expansion with: with summary of most important nominations, with citations, as WP does not allow WIkilinks in place of information or sourcing. You can help by adding to it. (March 2020) |
See also
- "Apple of Sodom", a Marilyn Manson song inspired by Apple
References
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- "Album review: Fiona Apple, 'The Idler Wheel ...'". Chicago Tribune. June 18, 2012. Retrieved June 10, 2018.
- "Fiona Apple performs at the Midland". The Kansas City Star. July 17, 2012. Retrieved June 10, 2018.
- "Anything We Want" / "Every Single Night" (live at SXSW) Exclaim. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
- "'I Just Want to Feel Everything': Hiding Out With Fiona Apple, Musical Hermit". Vulture. June 17, 2012. Retrieved March 1, 2016.
- Ehrlich, Dimitri (January 5, 1997). "A Message Far Less Pretty Than the Face". The New York Times.
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(help) - Johnson, Carolyn D. Harlem Travel Guide. p. 94.
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- ^ New Yorker Apple's robust contralto, though sometimes heavy on vibrato, gave her line readings a pleasingly sinister feel.
- "Fiona Apple with David Garza and Damien Rice". San Diego Arts. Though most of her lyrics are sung in a straightforward pop contralto, she judiciously adds vibrato, sudden jumps into her head voice, and rapid reiterations of the same pitch (what academics in the classical music field call a "Monteverdi vibrato").
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- "Decades Rock Live". YouTube.com. Retrieved April 12, 2014.
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External links
Awards and achievements | ||
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Preceded byAlanis Morissette | MTV Video Music Award for Best New Artist 1997 |
Succeeded byNatalie Imbruglia |
Fiona Apple | |
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Studio albums | |
Compilation albums | |
Singles | |
Other songs |
|
See also |
- Fiona Apple
- 1977 births
- 20th-century American women pianists
- 20th-century American pianists
- 21st-century American women pianists
- 21st-century American pianists
- 20th-century American singers
- 21st-century American women singers
- 20th-century American women writers
- 21st-century American women writers
- 20th-century American women singers
- Alexander Hamilton High School (Los Angeles) alumni
- Alternative rock singers
- American contraltos
- American female singer-songwriters
- American pop pianists
- Art pop musicians
- Ballad musicians
- Feminist musicians
- Grammy Award winners
- Columbia Records artists
- Epic Records artists
- Living people
- People from Harlem
- People from the Upper West Side
- People with obsessive–compulsive disorder
- Singers from New York City
- Songwriters from New York (state)
- Writers from New York City