Fiona Apple – Shadowboxer

What Is It?

The song Shadowboxer by the American musician Fiona Apple from her 1996 music album Tidal:

Fiona Apple – Shadowboxer (Official HD Video)
Fiona Apple – Shadowboxer (In Session at W54th)
Fiona Apple – Shadowboxer (1996)

Here is how Wikipedia describes this song:

“Shadowboxer” is a song written and performed by American alternative singer-songwriter Fiona Apple.

It was released on July 1, 1996 by Work Records and Columbia Records as her debut single from her debut studio album, Tidal.

Background and release
Apple recorded the song with collaborator Jon Brion in 1995 immediately after being signed to a record deal with Sony Music Entertainment.

Its lyrical content mainly explores the themes of the dangers of desire and vulnerability.[1]

It was then released as her debut and lead single from her forthcoming debut studio album on July 1, 1996.

A music video of the song directed by Jim Gable was released.

Apple performed “Shadowboxer” in various events, most notably during the 22nd season of Saturday Night Live[2] and on the television special MTV Unplugged: Fiona Apple.[3]

Music video
Shot entirely in black-and-white, this takes place in a recording studio, with scenes of her playing the piano and in Fostex T20RP headphones singing in front of a microphone.[4]

Chart performance
The song charted inside the Top 40 of two different Billboard charts.

It spent six weeks on the Alternative Songs chart, peaking at number 34.[5]

It fared much better on the Adult Pop Songs, peaking at number 32 and spent over 15 weeks on the chart.[5]

Critical reception
“Shadowboxer” has received critical acclaim from music critics, with many of them comparing Apple’s voice to Nina Simone and her lyrical talent to Carole King.[6]

Steven Mirkin of Entertainment Weekly gave the song an A−, he wrote, “Singing to a former lover, her slurred, smoky vocals float above a loping, gospel-tinged piano, vibes, and string arrangement, making her “Shadowboxer” sound like Nina Simone covering early Elton John.

Although she’s only 18, she has the poise of a seasoned singer.”[7]

Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic described the song as “haunting”, remarking that while “it strives to say something deep and important, much of the lyrics settle for clichés.”[8]

Here are the descriptions for the videos above:

Official HD video for “Shadowboxer” by Fiona Apple
More Christmas hits here: https://LegacyRecordings.lnk.to/xmas_pl

Listen to more Fiona Apple: https://FionaApple.lnk.to/listenYD
Subscribe on YouTube: https://FionaApple.lnk.to/subscribeYD

Follow Fiona Apple:
Facebook: https://FionaApple.lnk.to/followFI
Spotify: https://FionaApple.lnk.to/followS

#Shadowboxer #FionaApple #HD #Remastered

Lyrics:
Once my lover
Now my friend
What a cruel thing
To pretend
What a cunning way
To condescend
Once my lover and
Now my friend
Oh, you creep up
Like the clouds
And you set my soul at ease
Then you let
Your love abound
And you bring me
To my knees
Oh, it’s evil, babe
The way you let
Your grace enrapture me
When will you know
I’d be insane
To ever let that
Dirty game recapture me

Music

SONG: Shadowboxer

ARTIST: Fiona Apple

LICENSES: SME (on behalf of Sony BMG Music Entertainment); LatinAutorPerf, ASCAP, Abramus Digital, Audiam (Publishing), LatinAutor, Polaris Hub AB, and 11 Music Rights Societies

1997-11-22

Paris

Tidal

What Is It?

The YouTube playlist below is of the 1996 music album Tidal by the American musician Fiona Apple.

Tidal

Here is how Wikipedia describes this music album:

Tidal is the debut studio album by American singer-songwriter Fiona Apple, released on July 23, 1996 by The WORK Group. Tidal produced six singles: “Shadowboxer”, “Slow Like Honey”, [1] “Sleep to Dream”, “The First Taste”, “Criminal” and “Never Is a Promise”. “Criminal”, the album’s most popular single, won a Grammy Award for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance in 1998. In 2017, Tidal got its first vinyl run as a Vinyl Me, Please exclusive “Record of the Month”.[2]

“When I did Tidal,” Apple said in 2000, “it was more for the sake of proving myself; telling people from my past something. And to also try to get friends for the future.”[13]

Tidal was received well by critics,[14] with Jenny Eliscu of Rolling Stone and Richard Harrington of The Washington Post describing it as a mature effort comparable to the work of singer/songwriters Alanis Morissette and Tori Amos.[12][14] In 2010, Rolling Stone ranked the album at number 83 among the 100 greatest albums of the 1990s.[15] The following year, Slant Magazine placed it at number 74.[16] The album is featured in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[17]

As of July 2016, the album has sold 2.9 million copies in the United States.[18]

Fiona Apple – The Child Is Gone

The Child Is Gone

What Is It?

The YouTube video The Child Is Gone by the YouTube channel Fiona Apple, which is of the song The Child Is Gone, by the musician Fiona Apple, from her 1996 music album Tidal.

Here is the description for the video above:

Provided to YouTube by Clean Slate/Work

The Child Is Gone · Fiona Apple

Tidal

℗ 1996 Epic Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment

Released on: 1996-07-23

Composer, Lyricist: F. Apple
Harp, Keyboards: Jon Brion
Drums: Matt Chamberlain
Steel Guitar: Greg Leisz
Bass: Dan Rothchild
Synthesizer: Patrick Warren
Producer: Andrew Slater
Mixing Engineer, Recording Engineer: Mark Endert
Unknown: Claude Achille
Unknown: Brian Scheubel
Unknown: Jim Wirt
Unknown: Niko Bolas
Assistant Engineer: Troy Gonzales
Assistant Engineer: Al Sanderson
Assistant Engineer: Tom Banghart
Mastering Engineer: Ted Jensen
Coordinator: Valerie Pack

Auto-generated by YouTube.

Fiona Apple – Carrion

What Is It?

The YouTube video Carrion by the YouTube channel Fiona Apple, which is of the song Carrion from the 1996 music album Tidal by the musician Fiona Apple:

Carrion

Here is the description for this video:

Provided to YouTube by Clean Slate/Work

Carrion · Fiona Apple

Tidal

℗ 1996 Epic Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment

Released on: 1996-07-23

Guitar, Harp, Synthesizer, Vibraphone: Jon Brion
Drums, Percussion: Matt Chamberlain
Bass: Dan Rothchild
Synthesizer: Patrick Warren
Producer: Andrew Slater
Mixing Engineer, Recording Engineer: Mark Endert
Unknown: Claude Achille
Unknown: Brian Scheubel
Unknown: Jim Wirt
Unknown: Niko Bolas
Assistant Engineer: Troy Gonzales
Assistant Engineer: Al Sanderson
Assistant Engineer: Tom Banghart
Mastering Engineer: Ted Jensen
Coordinator: Valerie Pack

Auto-generated by YouTube.

Fetch The Bolt Cutters

Fetch The Bolt Cutters
Source: Amazon

What is it?

The 2020 music album Fetch The Bolt Cutters by the American musician Fiona Apple.

Music Album

%d bloggers like this: