John Watt
Member
"You Oughta Know" was a pop-rock recording that climbed the charts almost explosively,
the combination of anger, sexual content, and what was seen as empowerment for women,
being a very potent brew for North American audiences at that time.
Alanis was born in Ottawa, Canada, and performed as a teenager for a popular television show.
She had two dance albums out as a result of that business.
After the show was over, she says she went to visit her parents where she had a nervous breakdown.
After getting it back together and deciding what she wanted to be as a new recording artist,
she moved to Toronto where she put an ad in the Toronto Star,
saying a singer-songwriter is looking for a song-writing partner.
If I was still living in Toronto as a player with the same entertainers agency,
I might have been one of the over 150 musicians she said she auditioned.
She wasn't happy and decided to move to L.A. where she met Glen Ballard,
a songwriter who had worked with bands like the Eagles and other top acts.
They came up with an albums worth of songs and the recording contract to put them out.
Howard Stern is saying a local D.J. broke her song and it created over-night line-ups to see her.
That's not true, even if this D.J. was playing it.
Her new career was managed right from the start, seeing her as a definite rock star in waiting.
The video for "You Oughta Know" really doesn't show her face, almost a hard rock sound.
Her second hit song really didn't show her face in the video either, teasing audiences.
Her third hit song had a video where, through the special effects of digital use,
she played three of herself driving in a car in the winter, in broad daylight.
Some people would say she gave great face. Know everybody knew.
What I like most about this modern appearance, over ten years after the song came out,
is how good she looks and how great she sounds, as a long-time vocalist and stage artist.
For sure, two acoustic guitarists aren't going to be able to recreate the original recording,
especially when the guitarist on the left is missing an A string, the reason not obvious to me.
Now, Alanis gets called a mezzo-soprano,
but anyone familiar with vocal technique can see she kept her own teenage style,
singing more from the back of her throat with her tongue at the bottom of her mouth,
what only can limit vocal abilities and volume control.
That's why she's jerking her head back to hit some notes.
the combination of anger, sexual content, and what was seen as empowerment for women,
being a very potent brew for North American audiences at that time.
Alanis was born in Ottawa, Canada, and performed as a teenager for a popular television show.
She had two dance albums out as a result of that business.
After the show was over, she says she went to visit her parents where she had a nervous breakdown.
After getting it back together and deciding what she wanted to be as a new recording artist,
she moved to Toronto where she put an ad in the Toronto Star,
saying a singer-songwriter is looking for a song-writing partner.
If I was still living in Toronto as a player with the same entertainers agency,
I might have been one of the over 150 musicians she said she auditioned.
She wasn't happy and decided to move to L.A. where she met Glen Ballard,
a songwriter who had worked with bands like the Eagles and other top acts.
They came up with an albums worth of songs and the recording contract to put them out.
Howard Stern is saying a local D.J. broke her song and it created over-night line-ups to see her.
That's not true, even if this D.J. was playing it.
Her new career was managed right from the start, seeing her as a definite rock star in waiting.
The video for "You Oughta Know" really doesn't show her face, almost a hard rock sound.
Her second hit song really didn't show her face in the video either, teasing audiences.
Her third hit song had a video where, through the special effects of digital use,
she played three of herself driving in a car in the winter, in broad daylight.
Some people would say she gave great face. Know everybody knew.
What I like most about this modern appearance, over ten years after the song came out,
is how good she looks and how great she sounds, as a long-time vocalist and stage artist.
For sure, two acoustic guitarists aren't going to be able to recreate the original recording,
especially when the guitarist on the left is missing an A string, the reason not obvious to me.
Now, Alanis gets called a mezzo-soprano,
but anyone familiar with vocal technique can see she kept her own teenage style,
singing more from the back of her throat with her tongue at the bottom of her mouth,
what only can limit vocal abilities and volume control.
That's why she's jerking her head back to hit some notes.