Explain what you hate about Ani DiFranco.

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (144 of them)
I've never heard "Blood In The Boardroom" but I looked the lyrics up - they're brilliant! Because they're funny as well as (because they're) icky. Ani's political stuff is best when she gets the right balance between the bird's-eye narrator describing a situation from outside it, but simultaneously being located in it - "Tis Of Thee" and "Trickle Down" do this well on Up Up Up Up Up Up.

The Lex (The Lex), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 08:49 (nineteen years ago) link

one year passes...
I've been having a bit of Ani-flavoured couple of days, mainly her earlier stuff - Imperfectly, Puddle Dive, Out of Range. As usual I'm struck by the fact that with Ani what's actually interesting lyrically is not what she's singing about, but the clarity of her imagery. I love the lyrics from "Overlap":

"i search your profile for a translation
i study the conversation like a map
'cause i know there is strength
in the differences between us
and i know there is comfort
where we overlap

come here
stand in front of the light
stand still
so i can see your silhouette
i hope
that you have got all night
cause i'm not done looking yet

each one of us
wants a piece of the action
you can hear it in what we say
you can see it in what we do
we negotiate with chaos
for some sense of satisfaction
if you won't give it to me
at least give me a better view

come here
stand in front of the light
stand still
so i can see your silhouette
i hope
that you have got all night
cause i'm not done looking yet

i build each one of my songs out of glass
so you could see me inside them i suppose
or you could just leave the image of me
in the background i guess
and watch your own reflection superimposed

i build each one of my days out of hope
and i give that hope your name
and i don't know you that well
but it don't take much to tell
either you don't have the balls
or you don't feel the same

come here
stand in front of the light
stand still
so i can see your silhouette
i hope
that you have got all night
cause i'm not done looking yet"

I love how each verse introduces a slightly stronger note of doubt and bitterness into what is, musically and in its chorus, a very sweet love song. And again the the use of extended metaphors: the notion of glass houses used to imply both transparency and reflectivness.

It all probably comes across as deeply unimpressive to the non-fan...

Similarly I love the first stanza of "This Bouquet":

"Got a garden of song where I grow all my thoughts
Wish I could harvest one or two for some small talk
Seems like I'm starving for words whenever you're around
Nothing on my tongue, so much in the ground..."

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Sunday, 26 February 2006 14:12 (eighteen years ago) link

Overlap may well be her best. If you haven't yet, you should hear the version on Living in Clip.

gabbneb (gabbneb), Sunday, 26 February 2006 15:12 (eighteen years ago) link

Yeah a bit foolishly I never bought Living In Clip!

Part of what I've been thinking about was inspired by listening to Imperfectly, which is probably her most didactic album in terms of so many of the songs being almost straightforward statements of her politics etc. (see "In or Out", "Make Them Apologize", "The Waiting Song" etc.) and thinking "okay, so these lyrics are pretty didactic, but I still love them. What's wrong with didactic ultimately?

Like most things when talking about music you can dig deeper here, and say, "okay, so it's not a question of whether something is didactic or not, but whether it gets away with being so." And then you have to work out the ways in which the music is persuasive in making you either accept or look past or even enjoy the didacticism.

I think with Ani, or at least with her early stuff, it's precisely because you can tell that she's drawing no distinction between her personal songs and her political songs (I think I made this point upthread) that the rants lose their lecturing, hectoring quality - she's too personally caught up in what she's singing abou. So when she sings "cos the music business is still run by men/like every business of everything/but I can sing/like a son of a bitch/make 'em twitch around their eyes/make them apologize" it doesn't actually feel that different to elsewhere on the album where she sings, "oh it's good/good to see you again/good to meet your girlfriend/I'll try not to wonder where you are/when you go outside to kiss her/in the front seat of your car."

This becomes less true later on, perhaps "Fuel" was the first political song she did that felt more like propaganda than confession, even though I liked it a lot at the time. Now it reminds me a bit of Michael Franti's "Rock The Nation" or something.

I don't think that this early entanglement of personal and political goes all the way in explaining why Ani's lyrics work for me, but it's a big part of it. Another part of it that, because so much of the politics is expressed through stories or vignettes or very carefully constructed metaphors, you get these very specific and at times quite layered "political" statements - like, the fact that people call "In Or Out" her "lesbian" song seems so off the mark to me, and perhaps even ironic, when it is in fact skewering the possessive chauvinism that straight men and lesbian women feel towards her.

More generally though, I guess a lot of my liking this stuff comes down to getting into Ani when I was 14 and thus almost having a contractual agreement with her music that I'll at least give it a chance to win me over.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Sunday, 26 February 2006 22:42 (eighteen years ago) link

Listening to her later albums: To The Teeth is much much better than I remember it being, Little Plastic Castles a little bit worse, and Up Up Up Up Up Up quite a bit worse. But yeah, I really underrated To The Teeth massively.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Monday, 27 February 2006 09:26 (eighteen years ago) link

"yeah the vocal affect gets to me/stands in the way of my hearing more.
-- J0hn Darn1elle (edito...), November 10th, 2003."

is this a joke?
No disrespect intended, it's just a funny agreement from someone whose vocal affect could also be deemed unique in this way.

Her vocals never really bothered me. I think what drew me to her work was a combo of the prose and instrumental precision. Excellent on the acoustic.
And, I really do think she has some great lines, but those, also, can at times be hit or miss. There are certain vulgarities she fits into her verses that make me wonder, why. Just. Why? ("but you can't will yourself happy/you can't will your cunt wet." Really, did she HAVE to? The tune is grating along just fine and then I realize, ehh, I just can't belt along any more.)

"More generally though, I guess a lot of my liking this stuff comes down to getting into Ani when I was 14 and thus almost having a contractual agreement with her music that I'll at least give it a chance to win me over."

I might say this is part of the reason that I genuinely do still enjoy her music. I've been an Ani fan ever since I heard the live track "Gravel," and only an amateur on the guitar, I could not for the life of me figure out how she was playing like that. Maybe it's the curiosity as to if she can continue to impress on that level.

mox twelve (Mox twleve), Monday, 27 February 2006 16:30 (eighteen years ago) link

As far as I'm concerned, she is responsible for two Unforgivable™ offenses:

1. Her hair
2. The mispronunciation of her own first name. There are few things more obnoxious than having an Ani fan lecture you about how it's pronounced "Aah-nee", and not Annie.

Okeigh, Monday, 27 February 2006 17:04 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm neither fan nor hater, but I feel compelled to weigh in since my wife was obsessed with Ani from '94 to '99 (which means I underwent a prolonged + forced exposure to her music).

Most of the negatives about Ani have been cited here; annoying vocal stylings, a lyrical persona bordering on the narcissistic, jam band/world music/fake funk moves, slam-poetry-style wordsmithing, heavy-handed political posturing. What redeems her is strong songwriting and a body of work that's nothing to sneeze at; her first 6-7 albums are pretty consistent. As a non-fan, I think her best is '94's Out of Range, though Living in Clip is the perfect primer/crash course/compilation for that period.

Those who hate her voice should check out the self-titled first album. Stripped-down production, her vocals are straightforward - this was before her goofy melisma went into overdrive. And it's arguable that she never wrote anything as good as the first track, "Both Hands," a perfect little jewel of a song (avoid the pretentiously overblown version on Living In Clip - a portentous sign of the beginning of the end).

The earlier material derived a lot of its crackle from the tension between Ani and her drummer, Andy Stochansky. Clearly it's always been The Ani DiFranco Show, but when Andy left in '98 things declined in intensity. I saw them (w/ Sara Lee on bass) do a version of "Shy" in '97 in Nashville that was so urgently desperate it was frightening. There's always been something a little punky about Ani that separated her (at least in my mind) from Dave Matthews and others of his ilk.

And yeah, she's got a way with words. Here are a few of hers that stuck with me:

In each other's shadows
we grew less and less tall
and eventually our theories
couldn't explain it all
I'm recording our history
now on the bedroom wall
and eventually
the landlord will come
and paint over it all
-Both Hands

I was 11 years old
he was as old as my dad
and he took something from me
I didn't even know that I had
- Letter To A John

One thing I find interesting about Ani DiFranco's career is how it demonstrates the speciousness of the "selling out" concept. Musicians don't sell out as much as they burn out, as inspiration provides diminishing returns over the course of a career. This naturally-occurring process is usually mirrored by an increase in popularity and an affiliation with larger labels that is mistaken for a cause-and-effect relationship. Ani's independence did little to prevent an eventual aesthetic decline. Even my wife, the self-described "Ani nut," finds the post-Little Plastic Castle material slow-going.

Edward III (edward iii), Monday, 27 February 2006 19:43 (eighteen years ago) link

her dreads.
her acoustic guitar.
her voice.
her presentation.
her subject matter.
her persona.
her fans.

Cameron Octigan (Cameron Octigan), Monday, 27 February 2006 20:01 (eighteen years ago) link

"her dreads.
her acoustic guitar.
her voice.
her presentation.
her subject matter.
her persona.
her fans.
-- Cameron Octigan (jcoctiga...), February 27th, 2006"

this is the pinnacle of eloquence and you hit every annoying notion that represents "Ani-dom" to me!!!
WELL DONE!!!!
and let's face it, it's ALL about the fans near fanatical defense of everything she's ever done that put most people off...as is the case w/ most band, innit?

eedd, Monday, 27 February 2006 20:28 (eighteen years ago) link

three months pass...
her fans worship her in a way that's worse than pretty much any other well-known artist i can think of. i can understand the appeal - she's the most outspoken lesbian feminist musician i can think of, and she ain't even a lesbian. but your typical feminist, lefty gal, gay or straight, can empathize with her lyrical content in a huge way, that is undoubtedly extremely validating on both a personal and political level. which is not a bad thing - they just take it to the point where ani's word is god(dess).

and hey, i'd know - my ani obsessive phase began my freshman year of high school and ended my freshman year of college, when i replaced her with sleater-kinney and le tigre and the slits and bratmobile for my feminist girlpunk jollies.

but her good stuff (imperfectly, out of range, dilate, to the teeth, parts of little plastic castle) is some of the best, most tough and smart and sensitive songwriting i've ever heard. i've finally come round to liking her again, and i must say, dilate still remains one of the most heartbreaking relationship albums, right up there with "blood on the tracks" and "the meadowlands". i really don't like her warbly ness and weird vocal tics, but when she's just singing - angry or sad - it's very powerful stuff.

and she is an absolutely brilliant guitar player. her fingers must be made of some space age material that never scuffs or anything. seriously.

like someone said in a previous post - she just needs an editor, or at least shouldn't record and release what seems like every single song she ever writes. her last few albums have been depressingly mediocre.

Emily B (Emily B), Thursday, 1 June 2006 00:50 (seventeen years ago) link

her fingers must be made of some space age material that never scuffs or anything.

She uses some kind of false press-on fingernails (reinforced w/ glue and/or tape) for picking IIRC.

Marmotdeth (marmotwolof), Thursday, 1 June 2006 01:12 (seventeen years ago) link

Sure, she's always gotten on my nerves, but I've always assumed it was like Chris Rock's response when he hears old white guys say, *I don't like this rap music*. IT'S NOT FOR YOU MAN. You're not suppose to like it.

ended my freshman year of college, when i replaced her with sleater-kinney and le tigre and the slits and bratmobile for my feminist girlpunk jollies.

Also, she seems to be a gateway artist: a bit eccentric while still accessible, but mostly a bag of stems and seeds, hooking nascent music nerds and guiding them towards the uncut stuff. Like Jane's Addiction. Is there a thread on bands like that?

bendy (bendy), Thursday, 1 June 2006 10:02 (seventeen years ago) link

Her singing. That's really it. She seems like an amazing person, but goddamn, take a breath.

Dan Heilman (The Deacon), Thursday, 1 June 2006 13:09 (seventeen years ago) link

i always admired her politics, but her music always made me cringe. very slick and lifeless. if rush was a female vocalist who played acoustic guitar, they'd be ani difranco.

i used to admire the way she approached her career (diy, yadda yadda yadda) until i found out that her parents hired a harvard mba (at a cost of $30k/year) to manage her career when she was starting out.

Lawrence the Looter (Lawrence the Looter), Thursday, 1 June 2006 13:23 (seventeen years ago) link

I didn't know that but if true it actually makes me more interested in the whole diy story rather than less (it's generally been the least interesting side of her persona for me). What a clever thing to do! Although I wonder exactly what commercial secrets a harvard mba could provide to ensure that touring and selling tapes from a carboot would be extra-specially lucrative...

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 1 June 2006 13:29 (seventeen years ago) link

her fingers must be made of some space age material that never scuffs or anything.

Not as indestructible as you might think - she had to cancel a tour recently to recover from some nerve damage issues with her hands. One of those "take a break or you'll never play again" things...

Edward III (edward iii), Thursday, 1 June 2006 14:02 (seventeen years ago) link

I love that her space in Buffalo (a big-ass church she rebuilt) rents out space to Hallwalls, who constantly bring in all kinds of incredible improv and free jazz guys who don't even make it to Toronto. They put on some good art too.

I've barely heard her music, aside from like one or two songs someone brought into an undergrad Music & Gender course I took. If it garners comparisons to Rush and Ali Farka Toure it's probably worth hearing though.

Sundar (sundar), Thursday, 1 June 2006 16:36 (seventeen years ago) link

very slick and lifeless. if rush was a female vocalist who played acoustic guitar, they'd be ani difranco.

i used to admire the way she approached her career (diy, yadda yadda yadda) until i found out that her parents hired a harvard mba (at a cost of $30k/year) to manage her career when she was starting out.

a) Rush is not lifeless. at all.
b) Difranco's pre-fame records, of which there are many, are basically home recordings -- vocals and guitar -- and are the polar opposite of "slick"
c) the harvard mba thing sounds spurious, at best


erklie (erklie), Thursday, 1 June 2006 17:29 (seventeen years ago) link

I have nothing whatsoever against Ani or her music. I own Up Up Up Up Up Up, and I think "Angry Anymore" and "Everest" are two of the best examples of storytelling lyrics I can name.

What irks me is the seemingly endless parade of Ani wannabes, and lest you think I'm dealing in strawmen here, I sat through more than my fair share of them during my open mic-attending college days. All of the fire, twice the passion, but not a single coherent statement, engaging lyric, or memorable melody in the bunch.

I also have a funny story involving her ex-drummer, but that's another rant for another time.

Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), Thursday, 1 June 2006 18:51 (seventeen years ago) link

a) Rush is not lifeless. at all.

This is the red light.

Nathalie (stevie nixed), Thursday, 1 June 2006 19:00 (seventeen years ago) link

When I was in high school, I had a huge crush on a girl with a shaved head and we listened to Ani DiFranco bootlegs from the Living in Clip tour behind a schoolbus, each of us with one headphone.
But as I got older, I found more stuff that I liked more and Ani got blander... and I hate that fake jazz bullshit. Now my mom listens to her all the time, and I roll my eyes.

And while it's unfair to blame a musician for their imitators, gawd she has the worst.

js (honestengine), Thursday, 1 June 2006 19:04 (seventeen years ago) link

four years pass...

I haven't listened to ani in literally years but for some reason I've had a couple of her songs running through my head the last couple days. I spent a while being really into the stuff she realeased in the late 90s and as annoying as I eventually grew to find her whole shtick, she's a talented woman. Also, seeing her play this in NM in 1998 was one of the two times I've cried at concerts. It was incredible.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwEI6UNMkag&feature=related

\(^o\) (/o^)/ (ENBB), Friday, 29 April 2011 22:51 (twelve years ago) link

two years pass...

so cleaning out my section of the office I found an unopened promo copy of Evolve beneath a pile of folders.

Tim says it's bleh. Should I try it?

first I think it's time I kick a little verse! (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 29 July 2013 13:36 (ten years ago) link

Ask John maybe, I got rid of that one years ago.

Knuckle Down from a few years afterwards was great though.

Tim F, Monday, 29 July 2013 16:07 (ten years ago) link

one year passes...

boy Jon Hassell sounds great on "Pulse."

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 26 March 2015 23:59 (nine years ago) link

two years pass...

It seems like she was popular because she presented a confident image and said what a lot of young women needed/wanted to hear. As a songwriter and performer I find her abysmal -- obvious, didactic lyrics with awkward phrasing, worst guitar tone I can imagine, not catchy

IF (Terrorist) Yes, Explain (man alive), Tuesday, 10 October 2017 18:44 (six years ago) link

good to know dude

brimstead, Tuesday, 10 October 2017 19:00 (six years ago) link

Casual fan here, albeit one who hasn't heard anything she's put out since around the turn of the millennium, but there there is a certain type of gay guy who is obsessed with her that was a bit annoyingly overrepresented in my social circle for a while.

iCloudius (cryptosicko), Tuesday, 10 October 2017 19:36 (six years ago) link

Ani's in that select group of people I hate but have no desire to slag in public

rip van wanko, Tuesday, 10 October 2017 19:38 (six years ago) link

(i do not consider hurting's post a slag btw)

rip van wanko, Tuesday, 10 October 2017 19:40 (six years ago) link

three years pass...

the new album is great

uberweiss, Wednesday, 24 March 2021 21:50 (three years ago) link

The first half sounds like she has been listening to D'Angelo.

Agree this is great, trying to decide whether it's her best since Knuckle Down or Red Letter Year or Allergic to Water (though really the albums after Knuckle Down tend to blur together for me).

Tim F, Thursday, 25 March 2021 00:35 (three years ago) link

Am I inventing this memory or did she complain that Eno “stole” her observation that the Eventide H3000 Ultra Harmonizer sounds great when you overdrive it?

I can’t find it anywhere on the internet right now. And yeah, dudes take credit for women’s ideas all the time. But even still, this is some weak sauce.

Naive Teen Idol, Thursday, 25 March 2021 01:41 (three years ago) link

"shrinking violet" is achingly perfect. it's like "if i believe you" (the 1975) mixed with "tolerate it" (taylor swift)

There's nothing I can say
Beyond this whispered wish
Your anger has a hunger, mister
And I'm its favourite dish
There's nothing I can say
So I don't make a sound
I just wipe the counter and I
I keep my head down

überweiss, Friday, 26 March 2021 16:10 (three years ago) link

The last Secondary English Curriculum I used incorporated the lyrics of her song “Amendment” and asked students to analyze the language she employed. I got more out of it than the kids, but they’re apathetic to everything

beamish13, Friday, 26 March 2021 18:52 (three years ago) link

Gotta say I did not expect to see much Ani love on ilm, but heartened nonetheless. I listened to her a ton in college, then fell away for a bit but have been paying more attention to her recent stuff. Hoping to get my copy this weekend.

soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Friday, 26 March 2021 19:03 (three years ago) link


"shrinking violet" is achingly perfect. it's like "if i believe you" (the 1975) mixed with "tolerate it" (taylor swift)

OTM but also lol at this Beatlejuice-like attempt to manifest Brad in this thread.

Tim F, Friday, 26 March 2021 22:28 (three years ago) link

two years pass...

I realized that I hated my roommate 26 years ago when he asked me if I liked Annie. Me thinking Annie Lennox replied, “Oh my God I totally love her!” and then he started playing Ani Difranco… 🤢

Ani Difranco has no redeeming qualities to my ears. Sorry to those who like her but fingers on a chalkboard are more appealing than her incessant whining and dreadful stream of consciousness word vomit.

Mbaby, Saturday, 15 April 2023 21:04 (one year ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.