Fiona Apple gave her first interview in a very long time back in September, where she gave an update on her long-anticipated follow-up to 2012’s incredible The Idler Wheel…. “I’m hoping for early 2020 ...
Recorded in the year after the release of her debut album Tidal, and a few months after her iconic “this world is bullshit” speech while accepting the MTV VMA for Best New Artist in August of 1997, ...
Fiona Apple had a clear vision of what she wanted to say and who she wanted to be on this seminal debut, which expanded the ...
There is a certain masochism to being a diehard Fiona Apple fan. It means learning to love at a different tempo than the fans of other musicians; it requires a three-to-seven-year commitment to a ...
Fiona Apple’s third album, Extraordinary Machine, looked like it was headed for the pop scrapheap. Completed in May of 2003, it was rejected by her label, Epic Records, on the grounds that the songs ...
It would be easy to worry about Fiona Apple. With her fair skin, small physique and crystal green eyes, she often looks a little scared or melancholic in photographs. In person, she's self-assured.
Seldom seen on social media, Fiona Apple appears warm, answering questions via a Tumblr fan page as part of her occasional “Happy Sunday” videos, which she films when not court watching. In response ...
Fiona Apple is an artist who is incredibly hard to write about, especially when it comes to penning a review. Due to her startlingly honest lyrics, emotive voice, and jazz-piano flourishes, she's ...
For the last seven years, Fiona Apple has been a homebody. But with her first album and tour since 2005, all that is about to change By Jenny Eliscu A few days after her Billboard interview, Fiona ...
In September of 1996, New York Times music critic Jon Pareles reviewed a Fiona Apple show at the Fez, a now-defunct club in the Bowery. Like most other critics at the time, he found it remarkable how ...