Biography
Okay here is the deal, many of you have written me asking me to put up the Bio on Ani before I do the next album Lyrics.  So I decided to "Borrow" her Biography from Righteous Babe Records.  They wrote it up, and I figure they know more about Ani then I do at this point in time.  So enjoy getting to know Ani while you wait for me to get this page better up and running.  I promise to write up my own Bio for Ani as soon as I get time, whenever that might be!  :)~
Unofficial book "Ani DiFranco Righteous Babe" was released early May 2000.  Click here to read more about this unofficial biography!
Ani DiFranco's career as a singer, songwriter, and guitarist is proof positive that "alternative rock" can mean much more than a group of guys with electric guitars and a hefty record contract. In a culture where multinational corporations sing the praises of the "indie" aesthetic, Ani has created a truely provocative means of producing music on her own terms and getting in to listeners. She has broken just about every rule of the music industry, and in the process has paved the way for other artists, emerging and established performers alike, seeking real alternatives to corporate control.

Born in Buffalo, NY in 1970, Ani's first interests were dance and visual art.  Her earliest awareness of music came not from pop albums and radio airplay, but from first-hand encounters with working musicians in Buffalo bars, many of whom stayed overnight with her family on their way across the Northeast.  The intimacy and hand-to-mouth economics of the folk tradition fueled Ani's own passion for live performance, and she began singing and playing acoustic guitar in these same Rust Belt bars before she was 10 years old.  By age 15, she was writing songs of her own and hitting the regional coffeehouse and club circut herself.

By the time she decided to record a cassette in1990, Ani had more than 100 original compositions to choose from.  Ani's lyrics, then as now, were as plainspoken as they were poetic; she wrote about the world around her, using her own experience as a starting (never an ending) point.  Like countless performers before her, Ani chose to release that first album herself, without the finacial backing of a able.  Borrowing money from freinds to cover the costs of incorporation and studio time, 20 year old Ani produced her own self-titled debut album and sold it from the trunk of her hand-painted car while blazing a path across the college campuses and seedy dives of America.

Those live shows, along with fourth-generation dubs of several early acoustically spare recordings, sparked interest in Ani from coast to coast.  Fans invariably asked for now just one album but every album Ani would ever produce; which then became fodder for homemade mix tapes passed from friend to friend.  Offers from labels large and small began to pop up more and more often, but unlike most young artists under similar circumstances, Ani decided to continue releasing albums herself (11 of them by early 1998), which allowed her a far greater degree of artistic control that any outsideinterest would have provided. To this day , Ani had the last word on how often her albums come out, what songs they contain, what the graphics and accompanying merchandise look like, which singles and videos get released, and so on.

But Righteous Babe is no longer a dining - room - table operation.  In the eight years since the first album, Ani has played larger and larger venues (currently averaging 2-600 seats), sold more and more records (over 1,120,000 ar last count), made the covers of various national magazines, and appeared several times on network television.  Each of these developments, while not an end in itself, has provided the impetus for new opportunities.  Ani's income from concerts and record sales get channeled directly back into future projects, which in turn allow her to support like-minded fellow artists, Buffalo businesses, and grassroots culture workers.

Everything happens organically in DiFranco-land.  After figuring out for herself over the course of many albums how to capture her sound in the studio, Ani has become a sought - after producer (Janis Ian, Dan Bern) and guest vocalist and guitarist (Bruce Cockburn).  she has contributed to the soundtracks of films from low-budget student projects to "My Best Friends Wedding"  and "The Jackal".  and she has even begun to release work by other artists on her lable, starting with her critically acclaimed collaboration with folk legend Utah Phillips, "the Past didn't go anywhere".

There is no single sound or song which encapsulates the range of Ani's craft.  Over the course of her career so far, she has performed solo, with the accompanying bass and drums, and, on one memorable occasion, with the Buffalo Philharmonic; in the studio, she has employed horn sections, gospel singers, sample, and answering maching recordings; she has released spoken word tracks, dance remixes, and a double live album.  The only constants in Ani's world are her fans' deep connection to her work, and her intuitive insistence on doing things her own way.
~Righteous Babe Records~

(this Biography writtin by RBR was last updated 2/4/98 ... so album sales and numbers are VERY outdated!)
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