|
ALANIS
MORISSETTE
SO-CALLED
CHAOS
Great
things
can
come
out
of
So-Called
Chaos.
On
her
latest
effort
So-Called
Chaos,
Morissette
sounds
paradoxically
like
a
woman
who
has
found
her
own
separate
peace
with
the
world.
A
deeply
thoughtful
individual
by
nature,
So-Called
Chaos
finds
her
in
life-affirming,
positive
place,
making
music
that
in
a
sense
sums
up
her
past
strengths
along
some
newfound
maturity
and
perspective.
“I
may
still
be
talking
about
things
in
my
life
that
were
challenging,”
she
explains,
“but
I’m
approaching
life
and
thereby
my
songs
with
less
blame.”
Since
emerging
in
1995,
ALANIS
MORISSETTE
has
become
one
of
the
premiere
singer/songwriters
in
contemporary
music.
Her
deeply
expressive
music
and
performances
have
earned
the
seven-time
Grammy
Award
winner
vast
critical
praise
and
a
dedicated
fan
base
that
extends
throughout
the
world.
She
wrote
and
produced
her
new
album
UNDER
RUG
SWEPT.

ALANIS
BIOGRAPHY
ALANIS’
groundbreaking
1995
debut
Jagged
Little
Pill
created
a
heavy
impact
on
listeners,
revealing
a
talented
young
artist
with
a
powerful
voice
and
challenging
vision.
The
monumental
success
of
Jagged
Little
Pill--which
featured
hits
"You
Oughta
Know,"
"Hand
In
My
Pocket,"
"Ironic"
and
"You
Learn"--kept
ALANIS
on
the
road
for
an
18-month
world
tour
between
1995
and
1996
that
started
in
clubs
and
ended
in
arenas.
"The
songs
on
Jagged
Little
Pill
are
tales
of
a
young
woman
determined
to
make
her
own
way,
inventing
herself
as
she
leaves
behind
childhood
indoctrination,
manipulative
lovers,
sleazy
business
associates
and,
finally,
her
own
self-doubt."
In
1998,
ALANIS
returned
with
the
release
of
Supposed
Former
Infatuation
Junkie,
which
featured
the
hits
"Thank
U,"
"Unsent"
and
"So
Pure."
Upon
the
album’s
completion,
ALANIS
said:
"I
see
every
recording
I’ve
done
as
a
snapshot
of
that
time
in
my
life.
I
feel
fulfilled
when
I
feel
the
songs
were
inspired
and
representative
of
myself
in
the
moment."
Supposed
Former
Infatuation
Junkie
was
a
worldwide
success,
reflecting
ALANIS’
expanded
musical
artistry.
"Artistically,
Alanis
Morissette
exceeds
our
highest
hopes
on
her
can’t-lose
new
album,
Supposed
Former
Infatuation
Junkie.
The
ambitious
collection
is
her
probing,
shrewd,
sensual
and
fearlessly
autobiographical
exploration
of
being
young
and
female
in
the
90’s."
In
1999,
ALANIS
produced
her
MTV
Unplugged
album,
intimately
re-working
her
material
and
introducing
some
unreleased
work
before
a
live
audience
at
New
York’s
Brooklyn
Academy
of
Music.
The
album,
which
featured
the
single
"That
I
Would
Be
Good,"
focused
on
her
penetrating
vocals
and
creative
arrangements,
becoming
a
fan
favorite.
"Just
when
it
seemed
that
this
mostly
acoustic
series
had
run
dry,
Morissette
jump-starts
it
with
a
marvelous
performance
that
finds
her
rethinking
her
songs
rather
than
just
replaying
them."
In
addition
to
her
musical
accomplishments,
ALANIS
has
also
expanded
her
career
by
directing
videos
(her
own
"So
Pure"
and
"Unsent")
and
acting
(the
film
"Dogma,"
HBO’s
"Sex
In
The
City"
and
the
off-Broadway
"Vagina
Monologues").
At
the
same
time,
ALANIS
has
remained
at
the
forefront
of
humanitarian
issues,
Internet
technology,
and
music
artists’
rights.
Beyond
working
on
her
album
UNDER
RUG
SWEPT,
ALANIS
has
kept
busy
in
2001
playing
various
benefits,
including
the
televised
John
Lennon
tribute
from
New
York
City
(raising
funds
to
support
gun
control
and
assist
victims
of
the
September
11
attacks);
Toronto’s
Music
Without
Borders
event
(generating
money
for
the
United
Nations
Donor
Alert
Appeal,
aiding
refugees
of
the
conflict
in
Afghanistan);
and
Seattle’s
Groundworks
(benefiting
the
organization
Act
To
Reduce
Hunger).
In
December
2001,
ALANIS
was
honored
by
the
Friends
of
The
United
Nations
with
a
Global
Tolerance
Award
in
New
York
City
for
making
outstanding
contributions
to
promote
tolerance
through
the
arts
in
addition
to
her
work
on
behalf
of
tolerance
in
her
personal
life
and
activities.
The
presentation,
which
coincided
with
the
U.N.’s
Human
Rights
Day,
took
place
at
the
United
Nations
and
was
attended
by
senior
U.N.
personnel,
members
of
the
diplomatic
community
and
key
representatives
of
the
private
and
civil
society
sectors.
With
over
40
million
albums
sold
worldwide,
ALANIS’
universal
appeal
has
led
to
a
unique
connection
with
fans
and
extensive
overseas
touring.
During
her
precedent-setting
summer
2000
trek
through
the
Middle
East
and
Eastern
Europe,
ALANIS
documented
visits
and
performances
in
15
countries
(including
Lebanon,
Croatia
and
Turkey)
over
the
Internet.
In
most
regions,
a
young
ambassador
escorted
ALANIS
beyond
the
usual
tourist
attractions
to
see
historical,
cultural
and
political
sites
while
sharing
native
customs
and
beliefs.
ALANIS
wrapped
up
the
tour
with
a
special
acoustic
performance
and
question-and-answer
session
at
the
Museum
of
Tolerance
in
Los
Angeles,
which
is
dedicated
to
teaching
youth
the
importance
of
accepting
diversity
and
sharing
cultures.
Earlier
that
same
year,
ALANIS
performed
in
Rome
for
Pope
John
Paul
II
and
300,000
youth
at
The
Great
Jubilee
Concert
For
A
Debt-Free
World
(to
bring
attention
to
the
world’s
poorest
nations
and
the
need
for
social
justice).
ALANIS’
worldwide
travels
also
brought
her
to
Cuba
in
1998
on
a
cultural
exchange
journey
whereby
North
American
artists
had
the
chance
to
meet
the
people,
including
students,
of
that
country.
ALANIS
recently
expressed
her
hope
for
a
better
world
when
she
shared
her
song
"Utopia"
(written
in
early
January
2001)--from
Under
Rug
Swept--on
her
website
in
the
wake
of
the
September
11
attacks.
In
her
own
words,
ALANIS
"just
wanted
to
share
as
much
comfort
as
I
possibly
could
through
the
context
of
music."
Entertainment
Weekly’s
Beth
Johnson
described
"Utopia,"
noting:
"Atop
a
gentle
mandolin,
calming
strings,
and
angelic
harmonies,
she
softly
croons
her
wish
list
for
a
perfect
world,
a
place
‘without
guilt,
without
fear…with
room
for
every
emotion.’"

ALANIS
MORISSETTE
SOME
BACKGROUND
- Since
emerging
in
1995,
ALANIS
MORISSETTE
has
become
one
of
the
premiere
singer-songwriter-musicians
in
contemporary
music.
Her
deeply
expressive
music
and
performances
have
earned
the
seven-time
Grammy
Award
winner
vast
critical
praise
and
a
dedicated
fanbase
that
extends
throughout
the
world,
with
album
sales
exceeding
40
million.
- ALANIS’
groundbreaking
1995
Maverick
debut
jagged
little
pill
heavily
impacted
listeners,
revealing
a
talented
young
artist
with
a
powerful
voice
and
challenging
vision.
The
monumental
success
of
jagged
little
pill--which
featured
hits
“You
Oughta
Know,”
“Hand
In
My
Pocket,”
“Ironic”
and
“You
Learn”--kept
ALANIS
on
the
road
for
an
18-month
world
tour
between
1995
and
1996
that
started
in
clubs
and
ended
in
arenas.
The
album
earned
ALANIS
four
Grammy
Awards:
“Album
of
the
Year,”
“Best
Female
Rock
Vocal
Performance
(‘You
Oughta
Know’),”
“Best
Rock
Song
(‘You
Oughta
Know’)”
and
“Best
Rock
Album”
in
addition
to
a
“Best
Video/Long
Form”
Grammy
Award
in
1997
for
co-directing
the
jagged
little
pill,
LIVE!
home
video.
“The
songs
on
jagged
little
pill
are
tales
of
a
young
woman
determined
to
make
her
own
way,
inventing
herself
as
she
leaves
behind
childhood
indoctrination,
manipulative
lovers,
sleazy
business
associates
and,
finally,
her
own
self-doubt.”
--Jon
Pareles,
New
York
Times,
August
1995
- In
1998,
ALANIS
wrote
and
co-produced
the
song
“Uninvited”
for
the
The
City
Of
Angels
soundtrack.
The
song
featured
a
22-piece
string
section
and
earned
ALANIS
two
Grammy
Awards:
“Best
Female
Rock
Vocal
Performance”
and
“Best
Rock
Song.”
- ALANIS
returned
in
1998
with
the
release
of
Supposed
Former
Infatuation
Junkie,
which
featured
the
hits
“Thank
U,”
“Unsent”
and
“So
Pure.”
Upon
the
album’s
completion,
ALANIS
said:
“I
see
every
recording
I’ve
done
as
a
snapshot
of
that
time
in
my
life.
I
feel
fulfilled
when
I
feel
the
songs
were
inspired
and
representative
of
myself
in
the
moment.”
Supposed
Former
Infatuation
Junkie
was
a
worldwide
success,
reflecting
ALANIS’
expanded
musical
artistry.
“Artistically,
Alanis
Morissette
exceeds
our
highest
hopes
on
her
can’t-lose
new
album,
Supposed
Former
Infatuation
Junkie.
The
ambitious
collection
is
her
probing,
shrewd,
sensual
and
fearlessly
autobiographical
exploration
of
being
young
and
female
in
the
90’s.”
--Edna
Gundersen,
USA
Today,
October
30,
1998
- In
1999,
ALANIS
produced
her
MTV
Unplugged
album,
intimately
re-working
her
material
and
introducing
some
unreleased
work
before
a
live
audience
at
New
York’s
Brooklyn
Academy
of
Music.
The
album,
which
featured
the
single
“That
I
Would
Be
Good,”
focused
on
her
penetrating
vocals
and
creative
arrangements,
becoming
a
fan
favorite.
“Just
when
it
seemed
that
this
mostly
acoustic
series
had
run
dry,
Morissette
jump-starts
it
with
a
marvelous
performance
that
finds
her
rethinking
her
songs
rather
than
just
replaying
them.”
--Robert
Hilburn,
LOS
ANGELES
TIMES,
November
21,
1999
- ALANIS
wrote
and
produced
UNDER
RUG
SWEPT
in
2002,
creating
songs
by
playing
acoustic
and
electric
guitars
and
keyboards
while
writing
in
a
stream-of-consciousness
accelerated
way.
In
her
Boston
Herald
review
(February
26,
2002),
Sarah
Rodman
called
the
single
“Hands
Clean”
“a
perfect
Morissette
tune…sung
with
the
kind
of
wry
clearheadedness
at
which
she
excels.”
“There’s
been
plenty
of
whining
about
pop’s
current
trend
to
indulge
style
over
substance,
but
Alanis
Morissette
quells
the
where-has-all-the-good-music-gone
bellyaching
with
a
smart,
musically
eclectic
disc.”
--Dan
Aquilante,
NEW
YORK
POST,
2/26/02
- In
late
2002,
ALANIS
issued
FEAST
ON
SCRAPS:
INSIDE
UNDER
RUG
SWEPT.
This
special
DVD
and
CD
package
was
highlighted
by
a
full
concert
from
Rotterdam,
Netherlands
and
eight
unreleased
songs
from
sessions
for
UNDER
RUG
SWEPT,
plus
an
acoustic
version
of
that
album’s
hit
single
“Hands
Clean.”
The
DVD
also
featured
exclusive
behind-the-scenes
footage
from
the
making
of
UNDER
RUG
SWEPT
and
rare
home
videos.
“Morissette
matters
most
when
resisting
the
demons
of
society
and
herself,
as
she
does
erupting
on
the
frantic
‘Sister
Blister’
or
the
big,
windy
‘Fear
of
Bliss’…’Simple
Together’
is
delicate
and
true,
transforming
this
two-disc
collection
into
more
than
curious
leftovers
from
Under
Rug
Swept.
Add
a
DVD
disc
and
you
have
odds
and
sods
for
true
believers
and
the
rest
of
us.’
--Steve
Appleford,
LOS
ANGELES
TIMES,
12/15/02
·
At
the
same
time,
ALANIS
has
remained
at
the
forefront
of
humanitarian
issues,
Internet
technology,
and
music
artists’
rights.
She’s
also
contributed
to
the
literary
world,
writing
the
forward
to
the
book
“Conversations
With
God
For
Teens”
(by
Neale
Donald
Walsch).
Additionally,
she
has
written
articles
from
various
magazines
on
a
range
of
women's
issues.
ALANIS’
universal
appeal
has
led
to
a
unique
connection
with
fans
and
extensive
worldwide
touring.
During
her
precedent-setting
summer
2000
trek
through
the
Middle
East
and
Eastern
Europe,
ALANIS
documented
visits
and
performances
in
15
countries
(including
Lebanon,
Croatia
and
Turkey)
over
the
Internet.
In
most
regions,
a
young
ambassador
escorted
ALANIS
beyond
the
usual
tourist
attractions
to
see
historical,
cultural
and
political
sites
while
sharing
native
customs
and
beliefs.
ALANIS
wrapped
up
that
tour
with
a
special
acoustic
performance
and
question-and-answer
session
at
the
Museum
of
Tolerance
in
Los
Angeles,
which
is
dedicated
to
teaching
youth
the
importance
of
accepting
diversity
and
sharing
cultures.
Earlier
that
same
year,
ALANIS
performed
in
Rome
for
Pope
John
Paul
II
and
300,000
youth
at
The
Great
Jubilee
Concert
For
A
Debt-Free
World
(to
bring
attention
to
the
world’s
poorest
nations
and
the
need
for
social
justice).
ALANIS’
worldwide
travels
also
brought
her
to
Cuba
in
1998
on
a
cultural
exchange
journey
whereby
North
American
artists
had
the
chance
to
meet
the
people,
including
students,
of
that
country.
ALANIS
MORISSETTE
SO-CALLED
CHAOS
Great
things
can
come
out
of
So-Called
Chaos.
When
Alanis
Morissette
first
burst
upon
the
global
music
scene
in
the
mid-Nineties,
she
created
a
truly
massive
commotion.
She
did
so
by
dramatically
reinventing
the
role
of
confessional
singer-songwriter
for
a
whole
new
generation
of
music
lovers.
On
many
levels--sonic,
psychic,
commercial,
and
cultural--the
impact
of
Morissette’s
1995
album
Jagged
Little
Pill
was
tremendous.
The
album--produced
with
Morissette’s
collaborator
Glen
Ballard--sold
more
than
thirty
million
copies
around
the
world
and
became
one
of
the
most
successful
recordings
in
music
history.
That
success
quickly
transformed
Morissette--previously
a
moderately
known
singer
and
actress
in
her
native
Canada--into
perhaps
the
most
talked-about
artist
in
the
world.
With
just
one
album
of
deeply
felt
songs
intimately
chronicling
her
own
often-bumpy
ride
into
adulthood,
Morissette
became,
at
age
21,
a
global
superstar
and
a
spokesperson
for
her
generation.
Before
long,
Morissette
also
established
herself
as
a
live
performer
of
rare
intensity,
and
earned
the
respect
of
fans
wherever
she
performed.
In
1996,
she
received
Grammys
for
Album
of
the
Year
and
Rock
Album,
as
well
as
Female
Rock
Vocal
Performance
and
Rock
Song
of
the
Year
for
“You
Oughta
Know,”
the
explosive
song
of
love
and
rage
that
helped
kick
off
the
commotion
in
the
first
place.
In
the
years
that
have
followed
that
initial
breakthrough,
Morissette
has
continued
to
bravely
and
unflinchingly
chronicle
her
own
journey
in
powerful
ways
on
1998’s
Supposed
Former
Infatuation
Junkie,
1999’s
Unplugged,
2002’s
Under
Rug
Swept
and
that
same
year’s
CD/DVD
offering
Feast
on
Scraps.
Along
the
way,
she’s
also
found
time
to
act,
on
the
big
screen
(a
memorable
role
as
God
in
Kevin
Smith’s
film
Dogma
and
the
upcoming
musical
De-Lovely),
in
acclaimed
TV
shows
(“Sex
And
The
City,”
“Curb
Your
Enthusiasm”)
and
off-Broadway
(“Vagina
Monologues,”
“The
Exonerated”).
And
in
recent
years,
Morissette
has
also
taken
on
considerable
charitable
and
civic-minded
work
in
her
impressive
attempt
to
raise
consciousness
as
well
as
funds
for
assorted
good
causes.
On
her
latest
effort
So-Called
Chaos,
Morissette
sounds
paradoxically
like
a
woman
who
has
found
her
own
separate
peace
with
the
world.
A
deeply
thoughtful
individual
by
nature,
So-Called
Chaos
finds
her
in
life-affirming,
positive
place,
making
music
that
in
a
sense
sums
up
her
past
strengths
along
some
newfound
maturity
and
perspective.
“I
may
still
be
talking
about
things
in
my
life
that
were
challenging,”
she
explains,
“but
I’m
approaching
life
and
thereby
my
songs
with
less
blame.”
Morissette’s
previous
studio
album
Under
Rug
Swept,
which
featured
the
riveting
hit
“Hands
Clean,”
found
the
singer-songwriter
taking
the
production
reins
and
delivering
arguably
her
most
accomplished
album
up
until
that
point.
This
time
around,
Morissette
chose
to
share
the
responsibilities
behind
the
board
and
the
results
are
extremely
impressive.
She
sets
her
free-flowing
vocals,
luminescent
melodies
and
fervent
introspection
in
a
seamless
mix
of
rock,
pop,
folk,
electronic
and
Eastern
stylings.
“I
had
spent
a
few
years
rising
to
my
own
occasion
in
terms
of
wanting
to
see,
out
of
curiosity,
what
producing
a
record
on
my
own
would
be
like,”
Morissette
explains.
“Then
once
I
tasted
what
that
was
like,
I
realized
my
favorite
aspect
of
making
a
record
was
the
writing
of
it.’
And
so
for
So-Called
Chaos,
Morissette
returned
to
a
more
collaborative
recording
approach.
“This
way
was
so
much
more
relaxing
for
me,”
she
explains.
“I
actually
wound
up
doing
the
first
phase
of
the
recording
and
producing
with
my
friend
Tim
Thorney
whom
I’ve
known
since
I
lived
in
Toronto
as
a
teenager.
Then
after
we
did
that
initial
phase
of
recording,
John
Shanks
came
in
and
offered
his
objective
take
on
things.
We
wound
up
being
a
team,
with
John
and
Tim
and
I
doing
it
together
in
different
phases.”
The
sessions
for
So-Called
Chaos--held
primarily
at
Groove
Masters
studio
in
Santa
Monica,
California--featured
performances
from
Morissette’s
touring
band
(guitarists
David
Levita
and
Jason
Orme;
bassist
Eric
Avery;
keyboardist
Zac
Rae;
and
drummer
Blair
Sinta)
as
well
as
some
favorite
associates
of
Shanks,
including
drummer
Kenny
Aronoff.
The
resulting
album
is
a
set
of
Morissette’s
most
adult
and
compelling
songs,
compositions
that
more
than
ever
explore
life’s
emotional
dualities.
“I
do
tend
to
explore
both
sides
of
an
argument
on
some
of
the
songs
here,”
she
confesses.
“Either
that
interests
me
as
a
person
and
a
writer
or
I’m
a
schizophrenic.
Of
course,
both
may
be
true.”
Of
the
opening
“Eight
Easy
Steps,”
Morissette
says,
“it’s
my
taking
responsibility
and
busting
my
own
chops
at
the
same
time--essentially
finding
the
gifts
in
all
the
struggles
that
I’ve
been
through.
Until
I
found
the
gifts
of
my
struggles,
I
would
still
be
stuck
in
that
resentful
place,
that
victim
place.
But
as
soon
as
I
found
the
good
that
came
of
those
circumstances,
I
could
actually
enjoy
them
for
what
they
were,
and
bless
them
as
opposed
to
feeling
wounded
by
them
for
the
rest
of
my
life.
The
song
is
my
way
of
looking
at
it
all
objectively,
and
then
also
just
making
fun
of
myself.”
According
to
Morissette,
the
gorgeous
“Out
is
Through”
was
written
“with
a
little
resignation
on
my
part.
I
can
conceptually
and
intellectually
say
I’m
up
for
the
really
courageous
work
that
it
takes
to
make
a
romantic
relationship
work.
And
at
the
same
time
I
would
often
find
myself
sabotaging
things
and
creating
a
relationship’s
end,
while
thinking
that
it
was
circumstantial.
Really
it
was
just
part
of
me
that
wasn’t
really
ready
myself.
This
song
is
my
way
of
saying
I’m
ready
to
actually
walk
my
walk
now.”
Another
song
of
self-analysis,
“Excuses”
is
for
Morissette,
“me
bringing
into
the
light
certain
negative
and
unconscious
thoughts
that
were
running
my
life.
I
think
that’s
one
of
the
biggest
responsibility-taking
songs.
And
it’s
also
potentially
one
of
the
most
embarrassing
songs
too,
because
it’s
pretty
transparent
in
terms
of
some
of
the
uglier
thoughts
that
were
really
driving
the
car
for
a
while.”
Far
more
pleasant
and
romantic
thoughts
pervade
“Knees
of
My
Bees,”
a
lovely
and
playful
love
song.
“I
wanted
to
find
a
way
to
express
how
infatuated
and
how
in
love
with
my
boyfriend
I
was,”
she
reveals.
“The
title
was
something
I
actually
said
to
him
several
times
in
conversation--`You
make
the
knees
of
my
bees
weak.’…
so
that
line
is
very
precious
to
me”.
Another
lyricist
might
simply
call
their
beloved
“the
bee’s
knees,”
but
characteristically,
Morissette
finds
a
way
to
make
the
language
of
love
feel
fresh.
“I
think
part
of
the
reason
I
like
playing
with
phrases
is
because
the
English
language
bores
me
a
little
bit,”
she
explains.
“Obviously,
everything
has
been
said
before
backwards
and
forwards
millions
of
times,
so
I
want
to
play
with
it
in
the
same
way
that
someone
would
play
with
paints.”
The
wordplay
is
a
tad
more
formal
for
“Doth
I
Protest
Too
Much.”
As
Morissette
explains,
“It’s
hard
for
me
not
to
notice
in
myself--and
in
others—is
that
that
which
we
protest
very
much
about
is
often
the
exact
thing
that
we
would
benefit
from
truly
admitting
and
surrendering
to.
So
if
I’m
really
trying
hard
to
convince
someone
that
I
am
not
scared,
you
can
know
that
it
means
that
I’m
exactly
scared.
And
that
song
is
my
humorously
outing
myself
or
busting
myself
again.”
“Not
All
Me”
was
written
in
the
middle
of
what
Morissette
calls
“a
very
conflicted
time
for
me
in
a
relationship.
I’ve
been
really
tolerant
and
patient
most
of
my
life
with
people
being
angry
and
projecting
a
lot
of
their
anger
onto
me.
I
just
started
reaching
a
point
where
I
thought
it
would
benefit
me--and
the
relationship--to
set
my
limit
or
boundaries
with
that.
Basically
the
song
is
about
asking
the
other
person
to
take
responsibility
for
their
part
in
a
very
firm
yet
kind
way.”
The
title
track
to
So-Called
Chaos
is
a
song
about
the
biggest
of
pictures.
“With
the
low
level
of
consciousness
that
we’re
at
on
this
planet,
we
are
in
need
of
police
and
arbitrators,
laws
and
rules.
My
thought
in
`So-Called
Chaos’
was
that
if
our
consciousness
was
raised,
we
wouldn’t
need
all
that.
We
wouldn’t
need
to
be
regulated
from
the
outside--we’d
be
able
to
be
regulated
from
the
inside
based
on
a
respect
of
life
and
knowing
that
we’re
all
connected.
That
song
is
me
pointing
towards
that
in
a
three-minute
way.”
“This
Grudge”
is
about
mystery
of
the
concept
of
forgiveness.
“It’s
always
been
such
a
popular
little
word,
and
always
so
confusing
to
me,”
Morissette
admits.
“I
conceptually
understood
what
forgiveness
meant,
but
I
didn’t
know
how
the
fuck
to
really
do
it.
Forgiveness
sounds
like
such
a
great
concept
on
paper,
yet
when
I
would
try
to
go
do
it,
I
felt
like
it
was
just
saying
the
words
and
not
experiencing
it
with
this
person.
That
song
is
really
just
allowing
me
to
show
my
readiness
to
truly
forgive.”
“These
are
by
far
my
scariest
and
darkest
shadows,”
Morissette
says
of
“Spineless,”
a
song
exploring
the
fear
of
weakness.
“I’ve
been
so
afraid
of
being
the
things
I
sing
about
in
this
song.
The
gift
of
my
terror
of
being
a
disempowered
female
is
that
it
led
me
to
become
a
forthright
and
courageous
feminist
and
activist.
Part
of
what
made
me
so
compulsive
about
being
so
strong
is
that
I’m
terrified
of
being
weak,
of
being
the
other
archetype
for
women—mute
and
meek.
I
felt
like
at
least
singing
about
it
started
me
down
the
path
of
being
able
to
integrate
those
parts
of
me
so
that
they
don’t
run
my
life,
that
I’m
not
compulsively
strong
all
the
time,
that
I
can
balance
a
softness
and
vulnerability
with
my
strength
and
empowerment.”
Finally,
there
is
“Everything”--the
first
single
from
So-Called
Chaos
and
a
song
that
offers
the
same
grand
expansiveness
of
another
of
Morissette’s
past
classics,
the
Grammy-winning
“Uninvited”
from
the
City
of
Angels
soundtrack.
“That
song
is
basically
the
crux
of
my
own
inner
work
and
training
over
the
last
couple
of
years
where
my
goal
is
not
so
much
to
be
good,
as
much
as
it
is
to
be
whole.
That’s
my
goal--
to
be
all
these
parts
of
myself.
I
remember
as
a
young
girl
all
the
way
up
till
today,
I
would
always
write
in
my
journal,
`All
parts,’
`All
parts,’
`All
parts.’
My
fantasy--my
highest
vision--was
that
at
some
point
in
my
life
not
only
would
I
feel
all
parts
of
myself
were
accepted
by
other
people,
but
that
I
would
accept
those
parts.
So
this
song
is
my
chronicling
my
ongoing
journey
toward
wholeness.
And
in
that
way
it
is
the
ultimate
love
song.
It’s
the
ultimate
love
song
to
someone
else,
and
it’s
the
ultimate
love
song
to
myself.
To
even
play
it
back,
it
just
shifts
my
cells.
Morissette
is
excited
to
take
the
songs
from
So-Called
Chaos
on
the
road
and
shift
some
cells
for
audiences
too.
“I
am
beside
myself
with
anticipation
to
tour,”
she
says.
“I’m
really
excited
to
travel
the
world
even
more
than
I
have
over
the
last
couple
of
years.
In
keeping
with
wanting
my
life
to
be
a
little
bit
more
balanced,
I’d
love
to
make
it
that
I’m
touring
whether
I
have
a
record
out
or
not,
and
the
tours
themselves
won’t
be
breakneck
year-and-a-half
tours.
I
choose
to
balance
everything
out
a
little
bit
more.
“We
also
recorded
14
acoustic
songs
from
the
last
five
records--including
this
one--with
the
intention
of
releasing
that
mid
year.
I
am
inspired
to
balance
my
energy
expenditure
and
my
energy
rejuventation,
regardless
of
what
it
is
that
I’m
doing
with
my
days.”
At
the
heart
of
So-Called
Chaos
is
a
woman
coming
to
terms
with
who
she
is
an
artist
and
as
a
person.
It’s
an
album
that
powerfully
documents
a
woman
driven
to
ask
big
questions.
“For
me,
one
big
question
is,
‘What
is
my
life’s
purpose?’
And
that
begs
a
second
question:
‘Is
what
I
am
doing
every
day
in
alignment
with
that
purpose?’
My
life
purpose
is
to
inspire
courage
and
compassion
and
the
raising
of
consciousness
on
this
planet,
so
then
every
little
thing
that
I
do,
whether
it’s
a
conversation
I
have,
or
a
relationship
that
I
nurture,
a
tour
that
I
go
on
or
a
song
that
I
write---it
serves
me
to
see
how
in
alignment
it
is
with
my
purpose.
My
choices
are
a
lot
easier
to
make
when
I
have
my
purpose
to
reference.”
So-Called
Chaos
is
music
that
comes
from
a
woman
with
great
talent
and
an
even
greater
sense
of
purpose.
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