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The Alanis Morissette Album From the 90s America Needs Now
MAY 3, 2018
The following article was originally published in the New York Times on June 19, 2017, following the announcement of the upcoming A.R.T. production.
by Hanif Abdurraqib
Alanis Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill, which just had its 22nd anniversary, is not only one of the landmark albums of the 90s; it has proved evergreen even as time has left other albums of similar aesthetic and acclaim behind. …
Too often, Jagged Little Pill is discussed only in terms of its bitterness and aggression—something that, I imagine, wouldn’t be so common if the album had been recorded by a man. The album was acclaimed upon its release—and remains so today—but even the most glowing praise still reduced Ms. Morissette’s work to its harshest emotions, and labeled them surprising. This flattening out of the album’s story does something that is still all too common: it reduces a woman’s emotions to the ones that are easiest for men to dismiss. In 2017, too many Americans still react with confusion and alarm to a woman who steers a conversation on her own terms. During Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Tuesday [June 13, 2017], Senator Kamala Harris, Democrat of California, was consistently interrupted and talked over, and Mr. Sessions told her that she was making him nervous while she looked him in the eyes, unmoving.
There are men in the narrative of Jagged Little Pill, but what’s thrilling about the album, especially today, is that Ms. Morissette seems so uninterested in bowing to their presence. To label Pill a breakup album is shortsighted, despite how it navigates the nuances of closure in a relationship. Ms. Morissette is, largely, not facing an ex, but facing away from him and looking to new endeavors, both romantic and mundane. Pill is not only an album of breaking, but also one of rebuilding, of finding a sliver of hope and stretching it beyond its limits. Every emotion is its own moving part that almost becomes a character: the sadness is a breathing, moving thing. The anger is a cloud that sits thick in the sky and then parts just in time for a little joy to leak through, and then the joy dances. It is an album of impeccable balance. I listen to the songs and realize that I have both felt this way and feared making anyone feel this way about me.
Without knowing how the musical will make the album come to life, I’m still excited to see how it will sit in our political and cultural moment. A musical pulled from a 90s album won’t keep anyone safe or save anyone, beyond offering a small reprieve from the horrors of the outside world. But if it stays true to what I believe the clearest reading of the album is—as a celebration of small joys amid larger heartbreaks—it will resonate mightily. There are juicy and salacious breakup songs on Pill, sure. But I’m most drawn, now, to songs like “Head Over Feet” and “Hand In My Pocket” which seem like odes to rediscovering brief and impermanent freedoms. The latter song opens with the lyrics: “I’m broke but I’m happy / I’m poor but I’m kind.” Simple in language, but layered in its message about life’s balance—the album’s entire ethos distilled down to two lines.
Though I’ve never forgotten what it’s like to have to search for joy along a vast terrain of seemingly endless misery, it has been an especially notable feeling in the past year. The pain, anxiety, and anguish many of us feel now, and have felt for months, isn’t attached to a severing of romantic ties. Rather, it is the slow and hovering sadness of a country, and the people in it, some of whom are more afraid than others about the far-reaching ramifications of a Donald Trump presidency. Not everyone is feeling the weight of this sadness and tension, but for those in the thick of it, a small escape is needed—to stand on a corner with a hand in a pocket, briefly unafraid.
The musical that catches on is the one that reflects the moment it is released into, intentionally or unintentionally. … But the album, as it stands, has aged into this time extremely well. Even if men are still not equipped to handle the full spectrum of women’s emotion when it is directed at us, or when it bypasses us altogether. And even if the country is in the throes of a different type of heartbreak. It is possible that when brought to life, Ms. Morissette’s songs will extract something useful out of our shared grief and horror. At best, they will remind us what it is to seek out the small crack in the heaviest clouds. And if they don’t do that, at least they will give some of us a moment of nostalgia—something to look back on for a couple of hours, ignoring everything outside.
Hanif Abdurraqib is a poet, a columnist for MTV News, and the author of the essay collection They Can’t Kill Us Until They Kill Us.
From The New York Times, June 19 © 2017 The New York Times. All rights reserved. Used by permissions and protected by the Copyright Laws of the United States. The printing, copying, redistribution, or retransmission of this Content without express written permission is prohibited.