#The Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do
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#fiona apple girl#fiona apple#when the pawn#when the pawn hits the conflict he thinks like a king#tidal#tidal fiona apple#extraordinary machine#extraordinary machine fiona apple#the idler wheel#the idler wheel is wiser than the driver of the screw and whipping cords will#paper bag#paper bag fiona apple#fetch the bolt cutters#fetch the bolt cutters fiona apple#girlhood#girlblogger#girl blogger#girlblogging#femcel#hell is a teenage girl#female hysteria#female manipulator#yearning#girl interrupted syndrome#esoteric girl#esoteric#yearning hours#girl yearning#yearning girl#sapphic yearning
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Fiona š¤āą¹ą£ ā
#The Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do#Fiona Apple
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The Idler Wheel is Wiser than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords will serve you more than Ropes will ever do, is 11 years old this weekend.
#fiona apple#the idler wheel#2012#The Idler Wheel is Wiser than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords will serve you more than Ropes will ever do
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#left alone#fiona apple#the idler wheel#the idler wheel is wiser than the driver of the screw and whipping cords will serve you more than ropes will ever do#music
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#fiona apple#left alone#the idler wheel is wiser than the driver of the screw and whipping cords will serve you more than ropes will ever do#fiona apple lyrics#blue#eyestrain#heres a boring fact about me: i generally dont care much for the colour blue#but electric blue and black is one of my favourite colour combinations ever#lyrics#self#q#lonely#slove#about#glitch#100
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#fiona apple#fast as you can#love more#tidal#tidal fiona apple#when the pawn#extraordinary machine#the idler wheel#The Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do#fetch the bolt cutters#paper bag
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Fiona apple didnāt write āRack of Hisā for half her fans to be transphobes.
#fiona apple#tidal fiona apple#when the pawn#extraordinary machine#the idler wheel#the idler wheel is wiser than the driver of the screw and whipping cords will serve you more than ropes will ever do#fetch the bolt cutters
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Fiona Apple's The Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than The Driver Of The Screw And Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do
#fiona apple#the idler wheel#the idler wheel is wiser than the driver of the screw and whipping cords will serve you more than ropes will ever do#music#pop#rock#art pop#piano rock#ballad#jazz#baroque pop#alternative#experimental#avant garde#available everywhere
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Fiona Apple - Every Single Night promotional 7" single
#fiona apple#every single night#music#The Idler Wheel is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do#vinyl#7"#physical media
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yeah, āThe Idler Wheelā¦ā still hurts :,)
full review coming next week at some point
#pascal barks#music#fiona apple#the idler wheel is wiser than the driver of the screw and whipping cords will serve you more than ropes will ever do
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went on a wet ass walk
high of 13 today????? hello????
#THE MISTā¦.#also all the snow melted#roughly the length of uhhh that one fiona apple album iām obsessed with#the idler wheel is wiser than the driver of the screw and whipping cords will serve you more than ropes will ever do. or whatever i had to#look it up like 3 times
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babe are you okay? you're playing fiona apple's The Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do (2012) on repeat again......
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The Long and Winding Road That Leads to Fiona Apple
By Tyler Coates 2012-05-31
āThe past is never dead. Itās not even past.ā So goes the oft-quoted line from William Faulknerās Requiem for a Nun. Time is circular, and our relationship with our own personal histories is ever changing. This is a concept with which the enigmatic Fiona Apple is deeply familiar.
The 34-year-old singer-songwriter is about to release her fourth albumāthe first in seven yearsāaptly titled The Idler Wheel is wiser than the Driver of the Screw, and Whipping Cords will serve you more than Ropes will ever do. The spinning wheel of time cranks back and forth for Apple, who continues to re-examine her past while trying to keep up with the present. Like most artists, however, Apple finds that her fans cherish the past more than she does.
In 2000, a 16-year-old fan named Bill Magee approached Apple after a show in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania with a request: he told her he was a member of his high schoolās gay-straight alliance and hoped that Apple could write a few words of support. ā[I] was much more interested in interacting with a celebrity than building an alliance between gays and straights,ā he admitted on his blog 12 years later where he posted a scanned image of the letter he received less than a week after requesting her response.
Apple wrote: āAll I know is I want my friends to be good people, and when my friends fall in love, I want them to fall in love with other good people. How can you go wrong with two people in love? If a good boy loves a good girl, good. If a good boy loves another good boy, good. And if a good girl loves the goodness in good boys and good girls, then all you have is more goodness, and goodness has nothing to do with sexual orientation.ā
āMy brother was the one who told me about it,ā Apple tells me just weeks after Magee posted the letter on his Tumblr, which was then picked up by various sites like Jezebel and Pitchfork. āI was like, āA letter I wrote to someone when I was 22 has made its way online?ā Thatās the scariest thing I could possibly hear in my life. And the subject matter was so importantāI know how Iāve always felt so I knew it wasnāt going to be a bad letter, but I was like, āWhat did I say?!āā
The letterās sudden popularity online is indicative of how much has changed since Apple released her debut album, Tidal, in 1996.
For starters, she was then a 19-year-old singer-songwriter signed to a major record label and churning out emotional and dark odes at a time when her contemporaries were singing bubblegum-pop love songs.
She made headlines after appearing in the video for āCriminal.ā Shot in a seedy apartment, the video featured a scantily clad and emaciated Apple, sparking criticisms of the exploitive quality of the images (and suggesting that she had an eating disorder). In 1997, when accepting her award for Best New Artist at the MTV Video Music Awards, Apple infamously shouted into the microphone, āThis world is bullshit, and you shouldnāt model your life on what we think is cool, and what weāre wearing and what weāre saying.ā
While the speech was replayed and parodied on TV for years following, Apple was lucky enough to have said those words before the days of blogging and YouTube; had she given the speech 15 years later, it may have turned into a career-damaging viral video and sparked a few thousand snarky tweets.
She also has the luxury of being a successful artist who doesnāt need to promote herself online. āThey want me to tweet now, but I donāt,ā Apple tells me of her label reps. āIt doesnāt feel natural to me. But I do find it actually more interesting to see people posting ridiculously mundane shit. I like to hear about what people had for breakfast or what they did all day. Itās interesting because I donāt know how other people live.ā
While Apple is hardly a recluse, sheās made few public appearances in the seven years since the release of her third album, Extraordinary Machine. The excitement following the announcement by Epic Records of the late-June release of The Idler Wheel speaks to the loyalty of her fan base. (And as for that long-winded title, itās a callback to the much-maligned 90-word title of her acclaimed sophomore effort, universally shortened to When the Pawnā¦)
The Idler Wheel does not deviate from the familiar sounds of Appleās earlier records; the songs are still layered with complex instrumentation, and her reverberant voice still takes center stage in each tune.
The album was produced nearly in secret over the last few yearsāa surprising move from an established artist with the resources of a major label at her disposal. But Apple explains that her experience with the label system is what allowed her to feel free to work on her own. āIt was very casual, and I wasnāt fully admitting that I was making an album,ā she says. āI got to use the time in the studio to inspire me to finish other things rather than feel like I was finishing homework to hand in. It wasnāt a lot of pressure. And the record company didnāt know I was doing it, so nobody was looking over my shoulder.ā
Most might take that mentality as a reaction to the restrictions of her record label, especially after the drama surrounding the release of Extraordinary Machine. After collaborating with Jon Brion (who produced When the Pawn) to create an early version of the third album in 2002, Apple then decided to rework all but two of the songs with producer Mike Elizondo.
The original version of the album leaked online, and Brion suggested in interviews that Appleās label had rejected the demo and forced her to rerecord the songs (a claim that Apple later denied). Still, it incited an uproar among her fans. An online-based movement called Free Fiona organized demonstrations outside of the Sony headquarters in New York, and protestors sent apples to the labelās executives.
The final version of the album was released in 2005 and received positive reviews and earned Apple a Grammy nomination. āI ran into the guy who started Free Fiona after a show in Chicago,ā she tells me. āHe apologized to me! They didnāt get the story quite right, but they did help me get my album out. I felt so bad that he had spent all this time thinking I was pissed at himāI had a physical urge to get down on the floor and kiss his shoes!ā
Itās an intense reaction (she admits she didnāt bow to her fan because āit would be weird if I did thatā), but Apple is still a very intense person. Dressed in a flowing skirt paired with several layers of spaghetti-strapped tank tops that reveal her slender frame (which seems healthier than in her early days, giving the impression that she must spend most of her downtime on a yoga mat), Apple fidgets in her seat during our conversation, often giving off an infectious giggle.
But she is surprisingly comfortable to talk to, not much like the somber young woman who sang of heartbreak and disappointment. āI donāt think Iāll ever have an idea of what I look like to the rest of the world,ā she replies when I ask if she ever worries that her lyrics, which are sometimes in stark contrast to the up-tempo, progressive sounds of her songsā instrumentations, give off the wrong impression of her personality. āItās all your own perception. I could easily be concerned with how Iām taken and then have all the good stuff filtered through to me and choose to believe that. For the rest of my life itād be the truth for me, but not the whole truth.ā
Born Fiona Apple McAfee Maggart in New York City to Brandon Maggart and Diane McAfee, Appleās musical destiny was settled at birth. The McAfee-Maggarts are, while not reaching Barrymore-level name recognition, an entertainment family; Appleās father was nominated for a Tony for his performance in the Broadway musical Applause, both her mother and sister are singers, and her half-brothers work in the film industryāone an actor and the other a director.
Sheās a third-generation performer, as her grandmother was a dancer in musical revues and her grandfather a Big Band-era musician. While Appleās auspicious introduction to the pop world had critics calling her a prodigy, she crafted her early songs as a cathartic necessity. (āSullen Girlā from Tidal, in particular, is about her rape at the age of 12.) āOver the years itās transferred more into a craft,ā she says. āI use myself as material because thatās what Iāve got. But these days I write less than half of my songs to get myself through things. I have to find other things to be meaningfulā otherwise Iād just be miserable all the time.ā
Her songs are still extremely autobiographical, which is perhaps their charm. Following in the footsteps of other singer-songwriters, especially women who emerged in the early ā90s and expressed their emotions in particularly vulnerable ways, Appleās openness has always had an empowering appeal. Her songs seem to suggest that feeling a variety of emotionsāsadness, glee, despair, insanityāis not only normal, but, like those self-reflective musicians before her, she also gives permission to her listeners to feel the same way.
Even for Apple, her older songs are relics of another time, and she now makes them applicable to her life in the present. āThey all kind of become poems after a while,ā she says. āYou can take your own meaning out of them. Itās been a very long time [since my first albums], and I can apply those songs to other situations that are more current in my life.ā She admits she has changed greatly since she started writing songs in her late teenage years, especially when it comes to how she portrays herself. āI donāt feel comfortable singing the songs that I wrote. I used to blame other people and not take responsibility. I thought I was a total victim trying to look strong.ā
And she is much harder on herself in the songs on The Idler Wheel than she ever was before. Sure, she admitted to being ācareless with a delicate manā in āCriminal,ā arguably her most famous song, and in When the Pawnās āMistakeā she sang, āDo I wanna do right, of course but / Do I really wanna feel Iām forced to / Answer you, hell no.ā
On The Idler Wheel, Apple examines her own solitude and neuroses as well as their effect on her relationships with others. āI can love the same man, in the same bed, in the same city,ā she sings on āLeft Alone,ā āBut not in the same room, itās a pity.ā On āJonathan,ā a somber love song layered with robotic, mechanical sounds thatās presumably about her ex-boyfriend, author and Bored to Death creator Jonathan Ames, she urges, āDonāt make me explain / Just tolerate my little fist / Tugging at your forest-chest / I donāt want to talk about anything.ā
But performing, as a central requirement of her career, still takes precedence. āSome nights Iām very, very nervous, and some nights Iām not at all,ā she tells me. āI think, āThis is ridiculous. Iām not a person who does a show, Iām a person who should be on a couch watching TV.ā But then itās like I get knocked into another state of consciousness, and then Iām left behind, and the person thatās doing the show is there and thereās nothing else in the world existing other than the note sheās singing. Itās such a joy to do, but I forget about it until Iām on the stage.ā
Apple has lived in los Angeles since Tidalās release in 1996, although she admits that sheās ānot an L.A. girl.ā āI was supposed to stay in New York,ā she tells me. āI remember being 17 and asking if I could record in New York. How did I end up here? Itās 15 years laterā¦ How did that happen?ā Apple doesnāt seem to process time like other people. When I ask when she began recording The Idler Wheel and when she knew it was ready, she has a complicated answer. āIt must have started in 2008. Or 2009. I donāt know! I have no idea. Itās weird to think that there was 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011.ā Her big blue eyes suddenly look to her right as she furrows her brow. āWhereāve I been? What was I doing? What was that year about?ā
Maybe the solitary nature of living in L.A. contributes to her aloof tendencies. āIām not a social creature,ā she says, āI donāt go to parties all the time because Iād probably just wonder why Iām there in the first place.ā Her preference for being alone may also stem from the kind of personal criticisms that people tend to throw at female musicians. āIāve gotten so used to being misunderstood. Nobodyās ever really said anything bad about my music, but when Iāve had albums come out there are always people making fun of me. āOh, sheās back?āā She didnāt even expect the comments (mostly online) when the full title of The Idler Wheel was announced. āI didnāt stop to think that anyone would call it ridiculous, but people did. I thought, āAhhh. My old friends.ā Iām not sure whatās ridiculous about it, but thatās what theyāve got to say.ā
I cautiously mention the infamous acceptance speech from the VMAs, a moment early in her career that defined the public persona of Fiona Apple as an angry, ungracious woman. āIāve never been ashamed of that,ā she replies immediately. It was the first moment, she says, in which she felt like she could speak upāto break free from the shyness that defined her childhood and early teenage years. āI genuinely, naĆÆvely thought that I was going to put out a record and that was going to make me have friends. I expected to give it to people and they would understand me; no one would say to me, āWe donāt want to be your friend because youāre too intense or too sad all the time.āā It wasnāt necessarily the case.
āDo you still think the world is bullshit?ā I ask when we talk about the VMAs. She laughs. āItās not the world!ā she exclaims. āOf course people think that āthe worldā is the whole world. I felt that I had finally gotten into the popular crowd, and I thought, āIs this what Iāve been doing this for?ā I felt like I was back in the cafeteria in high school and still couldnāt speak up for myself.ā
These days, Apple spends more time focusing on her own art rather than the reactions to it. With age has come calm and decreasing desire to pay attention to her detractors. āIāve decided it takes too much energy to try to avoid it,ā she tells me, brushing aside her freshly dyed crimson hair. āIām not going to hide from the world.ā
Source Archive.org:
https://web.archive.org/web/20120603033544/http://www.blackbookmag.com/music/the-long-and-winding-road-that-leads-to-fiona-apple-1.49114
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#regret#fiona apple#the idler wheel#the idler wheel is wiser than the driver of the screw and whipping cords will serve you more than ropes will ever do#music
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āļ½”š¦¹Ā°āĖļ½”ā the idler wheel is wiser than the driver of the screw and whipping cords will serve you more than ropes will ever do āļ½”š¦¹Ā°āĖļ½”ā
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.ā¢Ā°šĀ°ā¢.
the idler wheel is wiser than the driver of the screw and whipping cords will serve you more than the ropes will ever do
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#aesthetic#girlblogging#girlblog#girlblogger#books#cd#vinyl#fiona apple#apple#music#music collection#the idler wheel
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