“It’s a strange combination,” Alanis Morissette has said of herself. “I feel like I was born with my foot on the gas pedal and my other foot on the brake. I’m the girl who wants to jump off the cliff but I run down and make sure the water’s deep enough.” The best Alanis Morissette albums try to make sense of this contradiction. She’s brave, but she’s chickenshit – as she puts it herself on the song Hand In My Pocket.
Although she’s rightly lauded as perfecting purification rituals of revenge in her songs (“I think anger is pretty amazing,” she said in 2020), Morissette is a far deeper and broader artist, channelling more than simply one emotion. Through her catalogue she has also attempted to make sense of exploitation, recovery, family, discrimination and the power of calm. The best Alanis Morissette albums always contain a yang as well as a yin.
“Songwriting is an exercise in letting the unconscious out,” she has said. “I live my whole life, then I take ten minutes to write the story of it.”
Listen to the best of Alanis Morissette here, and check out the best Alanis Morissette albums, below.
11: ‘So-Called Chaos’ (2004)
Nearly ten years after Jagged Little Pill, Alanis Morissette’s cultural influence had been huge. Young artists such as Avril Lavigne were taking the Morissette blueprint, combining it with text-speak and forging a bold new rock sound. It’s for these reasons that So-Called Chaos sounds more dated today than many of the best Alanis Morissette albums. The essential Alanis spirit is still strong, but the album came at a time when Morissette’s musical children were taking her energy, and running fast with it.
Morissette didn’t deny the less complex nature of So-Called Chaos compared to her previous work. “I feel like there’s a simplification that has happened,” she said of the record. “Not only in my music but in my life over the past couple of years.” Nevertheless, So-Called Chaos still offers some real pearls: the title track is built on a harder musical bed than usual, with shades of industrial clatter; Eight Easy Steps, too, is an anthemic Morissette treat. Everything, the album’s lead single, and a litany of Morissette’s own contradictions, was in itself a healing act for the artist. “In loving all of those different parts [of myself],” she said, “I just became more peaceful because I’m not struggling against these parts anymore.”
Must hear: Eight Easy Steps