Ani DiFranco - Not a Pretty Girl

10




Album Details

Title: Not a Pretty Girl
Artist: Ani DiFranco
Release Date: 7/18/1995
Re-Released On: 6/30/2009
Label: Righteous Babe Records
Duration: 56:55
UPCs: 748731700720, 5060031120721
Genre: Rock
Styles: Urban Folk, Alternative Pop/Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock, Anti-Folk, Alternative Folk
Moods: Bittersweet, Earnest, Poignant, Brash, Earthy, Gutsy, Literate, Passionate, Reflective, Wistful, Cathartic, Confident, Confrontational, Energetic, Intimate, Melancholy, Organic, Plaintive, Provocative, Street-Smart, Acerbic, Brooding, Intense
Total Copies: 11
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Worthy
  2. Tiptoe
  3. Cradle and All
  4. Shy
  5. Sorry I Am
  6. Light of Some Kind
  7. Not a Pretty Girl
  8. The Million You Never Made
  9. Hour Follows Hour
  10. 32 Flavors
  11. Asking Too Much
  12. This Bouquet
  13. Crime for Crime
  14. Coming Up
  15. 32 Flavors [Live][*]

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2009CDRighteous Babe Records007
1995CDRighteous Babe Records7

Similar CDs

Album Review

On her relatively spare sixth album (which features only one other musician, percussionist/vocalist Andy Stochansky, and, on one song, singer Kate Fenner), Ani DiFranco takes on a few expected topics, such as abortion ("Tiptoe"), capital punishment ("Crime for Crime"), and why she isn't on a major label ("The Million You Never Made"). But much of the disc is given over to introspective ruminations on personal life and love. As usual, the singer is not shy (despite a song of that title) about offering criticism of the person or persons she's addressing, but she is also self-critical and even, on "Sorry I Am," apologetic. The songs do not add up to the complete story of a relationship, but there are some deeply felt portraits here, especially "Light of Some Kind," in which the singer seems to be confessing to a man that she has been unfaithful to him with a woman. As usual, the imagery is urban and gritty; DiFranco is the kind of writer who likes to tell you that she's got last night's underwear in her back pocket as she rides home on the subway on the afternoon following an assignation. But the sometimes messy details are in the service of her view of reality, an unflinching one in which everything can be faced, even the songwriter's emotional torment. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Ani DiFrancoProducer, Vocals, Guitar
Ed StoneEngineer