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Ani
DiFranco
Revelling/Reckoning
label: righteous babe
released: 04.10.01
our score: 4.5 out of 5.0
buy
it: here
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A Girl
and Her Guitar
by:
matt
halverson
Unless you
want to hear yourself on Ani DiFranco's next record-and at her
current pace, there'll be another one sometime next year-be careful
when leaving messages on her answering machine. The righteous
babe from Buffalo is not above giving her friends surprise cameos
in her newest collection of songs, regardless of how inane their
messages may be ("Wow, I think I exploded your machine playing
kazoo into it!"). Which is not to say Revelling/Reckoning,
her multi-layered double album and twelfth release in eleven years
(not counting last fall's Swing Set EP) is trite or easy with
the gimmicks. To the contrary, its complexity and scope prove
that the hardest working woman in music has a whole lot of good
stuff to say.
Though released
as a set-in quite a nifty little package, might I add-Revelling/Reckoning
is really two vastly different recordings that show DiFranco experimenting
with new musical styles on the former and revisiting her trademark
folk sound on the latter. Revelling begins with an "I
love you," and Reckoning concludes with a similar
expression of admiration, but together they hit every other emotion
possible-sometimes in the same song. "Garden of Simple"
may start out lightly ("Some crazy fucker carved a sculpture
out of butter / and propped it up in the middle of the bonanza
breakfast bar), but before long it opens up to reveal a tender
tale of love's labors lost.
Beginning
with the release of Little
Plastic Castle in '98, DiFranco has become increasingly
experimental, adding horns, accordions and even a touch of hip-hop
sensibility to her sound. She continues to jazz things up on Revelling,
from the funk of "O.K." to the choppy scat rap of "What
How When Where (Why Who)," proving she's hardly afraid to
mix it up. If she had a hard time traveling these new roads, it
would be easy to say she should stick with what works, but she
rarely falters in her new incarnation. Add a couple spoken-word
tracks and a few instrumentals, and you've got well-rounded album.
But we're only halfway done.
Reckoning,
as it's name might suggest, takes on a much more subdued tone,
reminiscent of the "old" Ani. The songs on the album's
second half drift up in clouds of blue cigarette smoke and smell
slightly of stale beer, distinct reminders of the seedy clubs
in which DiFranco undoubtedly toiled for years as a struggling
folk singer. Most find her lightly strumming her acoustic guitar
alone while weaving bittersweet stories that may or may not have
actually happened. Even with a band to back her up on "So
What" (which sounds remotely like To the Teeth's "Soft
Shoulder") she is the center of the music.
It would be
a mistake to say DiFranco's softened over the years, but she has
undoubtedly left her brash, in-your-face attitude behind. She
told us she wasn't angry anymore on 1999's Up
Up Up Up Up Up, and to be honest, I didn't believe her
at the time, but she certainly has mellowed. She still finds a
way to question authority ("Tamburitza Lingua") and
make us confront our prejudice ("Subdivision"), but
it's with a pleading "Why?" instead of an angry "Change
NOW!"
With the rate
at which DiFranco releases albums, it might be easy to think she
sacrifices quality for quantity. Instead of putting out one semi-good
album every year, why not one good one every couple years, right?
Wrong. As her work ethic shows, the little folk singer lives to
make music, and the quality of all 29 tracks on Revelling/Reckoning
proves that some artists don't need four years to put their heart
in to a truly memorable recording.
And Ani does
it once a year.

If you
liked Revelling/Reckoning...
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Tracklist:
Disc
1:
1. Ain't That The Way
2. O.K.
3. Garden of Simple
4. Tamburitza Lingua
5. Marrow
6. Heartbreak Even
7. Harvest
8. Kazoointoit
9. Whatsall Is Nice
10. What How When Where (Why Who)
11. Fierce Flawless
12. Rock Paper Scissors
13. Beautiful Night
Disc
2:
1. Your Next Bold Move
2. This Box Contains...
3. Reckoning
4. So What
5. Prison Prism
6. Imagine That
7. Flood Waters
8. Grey
9. Subdivision
10. Old Old Song
11. Sick of Me
12. Don't Nobody Know
13. School Night
14. That Was My Love
15. Revelling
16. In Here
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