11 Jan 2008

Exclusive Review: Alanis Morissette's Bold New 'Flavors'

A few weeks ago I got a call from one of my producers Guy Sigsworth saying that he'd nearly finished the project he, and his colleague Andy Page, have been working on for the majority of 2007 - the brand new Alanis Morissette album 'Flavors of Entanglement'.

Guy asked if I would pop over to his studio to have an album playback
and share my thoughts. I was really excited, partly because I didn't
really know what to expect.

When 'Jagged Little Pill' came out in 1995 I was 14, and it swiftly became one of the most important albums for me alongside Joni Mitchell's 'Blue' and Tori Amos' 'Little Earthquakes'. I loved their honesty, their melodies and their strength. Skip forward to Autumn 2006 and I was working with Guy on 'Winter's Coming', the closing song for my debut Temposhark album. Alanis had just approached him to see if he'd be interested in collaborating.

One year on, I arrive at Guy's studio in West London. He reminds me that by now they've produced and co-written well over twenty songs! In this one afternoon I hear 22 songs in total, and as each song went by, it was like falling in love with Alanis all over again.

Four highlights for me were 'Citizen Of The Planet' which starts off with intriguing lyrics that twist and turn around a captivating melody before hurtling into one of the best choruses of her career - it's just MASSIVE and her voice cuts right through you... Another gem called 'Madness' is spell binding in its beauty, and actually a really long song at over six minutes if I remember correctly, but unusually it didn't feel long at all! I could've listened to that one over and over again...

'Straitjacket' is another powerful track that has stuck in my head, with genius lyrics and great melodic hooks... whilst my favourite of all the songs is called 'Torch'. It's just the most touching, almost devastating, dedication to the end of a relationship and the things you miss most about your day-to-day life with a partner.

And it was on hearing 'Torch', that I remembered why Alanis is such an
important voice. She is so good at channelling her subconscious, those
true thoughts most people hide. She can take those deeply private
emotions and translate them in a simple, easy-to-relate-to way; putting
into words what so many of us feel. This new collection of songs takes
you on a serious emotional journey, across many highs and lows, and is
possibly her best song writing since 'Jagged Little Pill' and 'Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie'. It's just so
easy to connect with - the end of a relationship, the value of
childhood friends, complicated family ties and all kinds of emotional
'entanglements'.

Robert's review of Alanis continues after the jump!