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Along
with counterparts Jewel and Fiona Apple, Alanis Morissette was
one of the most successful singer/songwriters to ride in on the
second wave of grrrl rock in the mid-'90s. Born on June 1, 1974,
Alanis Nadine Morissette and her two brothers were raised in Ottawa,
Canada by French-Canadian and Hungarian parents. By the age of
10, the precocious Morissette had landed a role on the Nickelodean
TV show "You Can't Do That on Television" and recorded
her first single, "Fate Stay With Me." She spent most
of her pre-pubescent years performing throughout Canada, singing
"O Canada" at sporting events and even making the de
rigueur appearance on "Star Search."
The hard work paid off and at 14 Morissette was offered a recording
contract with MCA/Canada. Her debut, Alanis, a collection of dance-pop
songs, was released in 1991 and went platinum in Canada. That
year, Morissette won the Juno award (Canada's Grammy) for Most
Promising Female Vocalist. Her sophomore effort, 1992's Now Is
the Time, was recorded and released before Morissette graduated
from high school. However, this album -- another collection of
teeny bop dance tunes -- sold only half as well as her debut,
and at age 17 it looked as if Morissette's career was on the wane.
After high school, Morissette moved to Los Angeles where she had
the good fortune to hook up with songwriter/producer Glen Ballard,
known for his work with Michael Jackson, Paula Abdul and Wilson
Phillips. The creative chemistry between Ballard and Morissette
was evident from the beginning. Ballard pushed Morissette to pursue
darker, edgier themes in her music, venturing away from the cutesy
teenager and toward the introspective young woman.
"Most of the songs
are, in a roundabout way, actually addressed to myself,"
says Morissette of her work with Ballard at this time. "There's
a certain aspect of the songs that's very confessional, very unadulterated...It
was a very unfettered, spiritual experience."
The resulting demo tape
was shopped around to the major labels and Madonna's Maverick
imprint eventually signed Morissette. Jagged Little Pill, was
released in the summer of 1995. On the strength of the break-out
single "You Oughta Know," the album reached platinum
status and the Top 10. Follow-up singles "Hand in My Pocket,"
"All I Really Want" and "Ironic" kept Jagged
Little Pill on the album charts the next two years, ultimately
selling 28 million copies worldwide.
Morissette was showered with industry
awards for Jagged Little Pill, including Grammys for Album of
the Year, Best Female Rock Vocal Performance, Best Rock Song and
Best Rock Album. Her much-anticipated follow-up, Supposed Former
Infatuation Junkie, was released in November 1998 on Maverick
has sold over 7 million copies worldwide. David Basham After finishing
her recent tour with Tori Amos, Alanis Morissette has headed to
New Zealand and Australia for a month-long tour, though she took
time out to tape an episode of "MTV Unplugged" scheduled
to air next month. Morissette's stripped-down set was recorded
at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in mid-September, during which
the Canadian songstress performed acoustic versions of such songs
as "You Oughta Know," "Uninvited," and a cover
of the Police's "King of Pain." The Alanis Morissette
"Unplugged" is currently scheduled to be broadcast on
MTV on November 1. Morissette also plans to release an accompanying
"Unplugged" album via Maverick Records on November 23,
and a version of "That I Would Be Good" from the taping
is tentatively set to be issued as a single in early November.
The song originally appeared on last year's "Supposed Former
Infatuation Junkie."
[ source:
maverick.com
]
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