Ani D.

Discussion in 'The Whiners' started by Orsino2, Oct 11, 2004.

  1. Orsino2

    Orsino2 Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    Do you realize how much Ani Difranco kicks ass? She's awesome. And this doesn't really have to do with Chuck's sig... I've been listening to her stuff for a while now but I find myself discovering more and more of her songs... I've been to one of her concerts. I think my two favorite songs are Fuck You and Oragami.
     
  2. staples420

    staples420 Member

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    Ani is so amazing!

    I'm madly in love with her. :D
    She is my favorite musician by far. That's awesome that you've been to a concert, I haven't had the priveledge myself yet. I don't really have a favorite song of hers though, there are just way too many great ones. I guess a few of the are Out of Habit, Both Hands, Anticipate, Done Wrong, Self Evident, She Says, and Not a Pretty Girl.

    Glad to see that she's adored by others as well! :)
     
  3. wild.flower

    wild.flower Member

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    I love Ani!

    She kicks major ass! She has a way of making you feel like she's singing every song personally to you. It's incredible.

    Yeah, it is hard to pick a favorite song -- they're all amazing. But, I really like Origami and Shy.
     
  4. Orsino2

    Orsino2 Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    She's like Dave Matthewsesque... times a few billion, plus she isn't commercial like he is.
     
  5. soulrebel51

    soulrebel51 i's a folkie.

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    Ani....fucking rocks...no words can describe it. I just started listening to her recently, and this is the greatest music I've ever listened to. Jim Morrison has no comparison....my favorite songs are Self Evident, Origami, 32 Flavors, Both Hands, Imagine, Untouchable Face(or Fuck You, whatever ya wanna call it), Superhero, Out of Habit(I love this one), Napolean(this one too), I loved You so what, Gravel, As Is, Not A Pretty Girl, Out of Range, and Shy.....lol she kicks ass. I fuckin' love her.

    I was actually going to start a thread of her myself.:)
     
  6. Orsino2

    Orsino2 Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    Too bad, I already did. :)
     
  7. Orsino2

    Orsino2 Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    She changes her look and hair style around a lot though...
     
  8. soulrebel51

    soulrebel51 i's a folkie.

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    I noticed, its so fucking cool. Get on msn and I'll send you this kickass Ani wallpaper I made. Just ask Staples, it really kicks ass.
     
  9. Orsino2

    Orsino2 Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    Ooh goody, my MSN hasn't been working.
     
  10. Orsino2

    Orsino2 Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    Well, I guess it's working fine now... they shut down the network for repairing earlier.
     
  11. soulrebel51

    soulrebel51 i's a folkie.

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    Two or three days ago they shut it down for 'cleaning' or whatever the fuck they were doing, and thats when it stopped working. Its workin' now:)


    for all your guyses and girlses viewing enjoyment, here is the goddess of music herself, ani!

    [​IMG] [​IMG] [​IMG]
     
  12. sugarmaggie

    sugarmaggie ~Green Eyed Devil~

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    I love Ani..I got a chance to see her at Bonnaroo, and she was just magical.
     
  13. Orsino2

    Orsino2 Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    I never knew Ani Difranco played bonnaroo. Yay... I learn things on hipforums every day :D
     
  14. staples420

    staples420 Member

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    Definitely kickass!

    I'm using it as my background too! :D
     
  15. Orsino2

    Orsino2 Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    November 5, 1997

    Marcia Ann Gillespie
    Editor in Chief
    Ms. Magazine
    135 W. 50th Street
    16th Floor
    New York, NY 10020

    So I'm poring through the 25th anniversary issue of Ms. (on some
    airplane going somewhere in the amorphous blur that amounts to my
    life) and I'm finding it endlessly enlightening and stimulating as
    always, when, whaddaya know, I come across a little picture of little
    me. I was flattered to be included in that issue's "21 feminists for
    the 21st century" thingybob. I think ya'll are runnin the most bold
    and babe-olishious magazine around, after all.

    Problem is, I couldn't help but be a little weirded out by the
    paragraph next to my head that summed up her me-ness and my
    relationship to the feminist continuum. What got me was that it
    largely detailed my financial successes and sales statistics. My
    achievements were represented by the fact that I "make more money per
    album sold than Hootie and the Blowfish," and that my catalogue sales
    exceed 3/4 of a million. It was specified that I don't just have my
    own record company but my own "profitable" record company. Still, the
    ironic conclusion of the aforementioned blurb is a quote from me
    insisting "it's not about the money." Why then, I ask myself, must
    "the money" be the focus of so much of the media that surrounds me?
    Why can't I escape it, even in the hallowed pages of Ms.?

    Firstly, this "Hootie and the Blowfish" business was not my
    doing. The LA Times financial section wrote an article about my record
    label, Righteous Babe Records, in which they raved about the business
    savvy of a singer (me) who thwarted the corporate overhead by choosing
    to remain independent, thereby pocketing $4.25 per unit, as opposed to
    the $1.25 made by Hootie or the $2.00 made by Michael Jackson. This
    story was then picked up and reprinted by The New York Times, Forbes
    magazine, the Financial News Network, and (lo and behold) Ms.

    So here I am, publicly morphing into some kinda Fortune
    500-young-entrepreneur-from-hell, and all along I thought I was just a
    folksinger !

    Ok, it's true. I do make a much larger profit (percentage-wise)
    than the Hootster. What's even more astounding is that there are
    thousands of musicians out there who make an even higher profit
    percentage than me! How many local, musicians are there in your
    community who play gigs in bars and coffee shops about town? I bet
    lots of them have made cassettes or CDS which they'll happily sell to
    you with a personal smile from the edge of the stage or back at the
    bar after their set. Would you believe these shrewd, profit-minded
    wheeler-dealers are pocketing a whopping _100%_ of the profits on the
    sales of those puppies?! Wait till the Financial News Network gets a
    whiff of _them_!

    I sell approximately 2.5% of the albums that a Joan Jewelanis
    Morrisette sells and get about .05% of the airplay royalties, so
    obviously if it all comes down to dollars and cents, I've led a wholly
    unremarkable life. Yet I choose relative statistical mediocrity over
    fame and fortune because I have a bigger purpose in mind. Imagine how
    strange it must be for a girl who has spent 10 years fighting as hard
    as she could against the lure of the corporate carrot and the almighty
    forces of capital, only to be eventually recognized by the power
    structure as a business pioneer.

    I have indeed sold enough records to open a small office on the
    half-abandoned main street in the dilapidated urban center of my
    hometown, Buffalo, N.Y. I am able to hire 15 or so folks to run and
    constantly reinvent the place while I drive around and play music for
    people. I am able to give stimulating business to local printers and
    manufacturers and to employ the services of independent distributors,
    promoters, booking agents and publicists. I was able to quit my day
    job and devote myself to what I love.

    And yes, we are enjoying modest profits these days, affording us
    the opportunity to reinvest in innumerable political and artistic
    endeavors. RBR is no Warner Bros. But it is a going concern, and for
    me, it is a vehicle for redefining the relationship between art and
    commerce in my own life. It is a record company which is the product
    not just of my own imagination, but that of my friend and manager Scot
    Fisher and of all the people who work there. People who incorporate
    and coordinate politics, art and media every day into a
    people-friendly, sub-corporate, woman-informed, queer-happy small
    business that puts music before rock stardom and ideology before
    profit.

    And me. I'm just a folksinger, not an entrepreneur. My hope is
    that my music and poetry will be enjoyable and/or meaningful to
    someone, somewhere, not that I maximize my profit margins. It was 15
    years and 11 albums getting to this place of notoriety and, if
    anything, I think I was happier way back when. Not that I regret any
    of my decisions, mind you. I'm glad I didn't sign on to the corporate
    army. I mourn the commodification and homogenization of music by the
    music industry, and I fear the manufacture of consent by the
    corporately-controlled media. Last thing I want to do is feed the
    machine.

    I was recently mortified while waiting in the dressing room
    before one of my own shows. Some putz suddenly takes the stage to
    announce me and exclaim excitedly that this was my "largest sold-out
    crowd to date!" "Oh, really?," I'm thinking to myself, "that's
    interesting...too bad it's not the point." All of my achievements are
    artistic, as are all of my failures.

    That's just the way I see it. Statistical plateau or no. I'll
    bust ass for 60 people, or 6,000, watch me.

    I have so much respect for Ms. magazine. If I couldn't pick it
    up at newsstands my brain probably would've atrophied by now on some
    trans-Atlantic flight and I would be lying limp and twitchy in a bed
    of constant travel, staring blankly into the abyss of the gossip
    magazines. Ms. is a structure of media wherein women are able to
    define themselves, and articulate for themselves those definitions.
    We wouldn't point to 21 of the feminists moving into the 21st century
    and define them in terms of "Here's Becky Ballbuster from Iowa City,
    she's got a great ass and a cute little button nose..." No ma'am.
    We've gone beyond the limited perceptions of sexism and so we should
    move beyond the language and perspective of the corporate patriarchy.
    The Financial News Network may be ultimately impressed with me now
    that I've proven to them that there's a life beyond the auspices of
    papa Sony, but do I really have to prove this to _you_?

    We have the ability and the opportunity to recognize women not
    just for the financial successes of their work but for the work
    itself. We have the facility to judge each other by entirely
    different criteria than those is imposed upon us by the superstructure
    of society. We have a view which reaches beyond profit margins into
    poetry, and a vocabulary to articulate the difference.

    Thanks for including me, Ms., really. But just promise me one
    thing; if I drop dead tomorrow, tell me my grave stone won't read:

    ani d.
    CEO.

    Please let it read:

    songwriter
    musicmaker
    storyteller
    freak.


    -Ani DiFranco
     
  16. loveflower

    loveflower Senior Member

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    I'll have to check her out- you guys all seem to love her music! She sounds pretty cool
     
  17. staples420

    staples420 Member

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    I didn't know she played bonnaroo either..

    Hey, we have the same lyrics in our sig, lol. :D
    I love 'the Story', it's a great song.. like most of Ani's songs.
     
  18. Orsino2

    Orsino2 Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    Yes, 'tis great.
     
  19. sugarmaggie

    sugarmaggie ~Green Eyed Devil~

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    Yeah...she played at Bonnaroo on Friday June 11th. There were just so many people who played there that didn't get the recognition they should have. They had so many stages it was hard to see everyone you wanted to. I was glad to have caught her set though...it was really good.
     
  20. duckandmiss

    duckandmiss Pastafarian

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    Not to rain on the glory parade. But I saw her live at the folk fest last year, and I thought she was terrible. All of the songs seem to me to have the same litle tricks in them. Her rythmn on her guitar is consistently similar on many songs and he quality of voice and tone of singing is as well, making or some boring folk music. I tried again once to listen to her on cd and I was still dissapointed.

    Have fun with her though, you like what you like.
     
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