If we were to restart the draft, my next pick would easily be among my top five. There are some very good reasons I'm only now taking it here in round 14 though, chief among them being that prior to the draft, I had no idea I would become a Fiona Apple fan.
When the Pawn ... - Fiona Apple (1999)
I freely admit it. I'm a bandwagoner, a newbie, a wannabe poser arriving painfully late to the party. Whatever, call me all the names you want, as long as I still get to join the club. Fiona Apple is amazing and I would have never learned that had I not entered this draft and actually bothered to listen to the songs Gadget posted when she picked The Idler Wheel. I could not believe every song I played, one after the other, I liked better than the one before it. By the time I'd finished the whole album, I was hooked.
Of course, I knew of Fiona Apple in the 90s, which is to say I knew her name and recognized "Fast as You Can" and a few other singles. But in my ignorance, really expected her to be just another soulful, alternative act the decade pumped out like a factory.
But she has a unique intensity and edge, particularly here on When the Pawn, that truly shocked me. Certainly, the poetic complexity of her lyrics and range of emotions she brings add exponentially to that. And of course she is also gloriously gifted at softer, soul-filled songs when she chooses. But I focus on the "intensity" because that's what sealed my newfound fandom and really comes to light during her live performances.
Here she is performing "Limp" on Letterman to promote the release of When the Pawn in '00. The audio is bad, the setting is kind of cheesy and there are points when the backing band starts to compete with her vocals. Yet, through all that, she still utterly kills it. And this is just the one live performance I could actually post. She brings it every time and no two performances are the same. It is absolutely awe-inspiring.
Notice her pained facial expressions, thousand yard stare at the end and spastic, slightly terrifying dance moves throughout. A lot of musicians will do things on stage during live performances that seem thoroughly unnatural to me, but are somehow expected as proof that the act is rocking. Nothing she does seems forced. I totally buy that she is just that into the music and the moment. Somehow, she manages to bottle that intensity into When the Pawn as well.
I'm new to the fandom and am likely compensating for missing out nearly two decades, but I'm decidedly glad and grateful this draft finally, formally introduced me to Fiona Apple.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/When_the_Pawn...