Willing to Fight: Ani Difranco Talks Providence and Progress

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Willing to Fight: Ani Difranco Talks Providence and Progress Willing to Fight: Ani DiFranco talks Providence and progress The summer I turned 22, I sent a letter to Ani DiFranco, who was just 23 herself and at the beginning of her career. In it, I shared with her how important her voice was to me and what a strong impact she and her music had on my coming of age. At the time, Ani had already self-produced an amazing five albums, one a year beginning when she was just 18. Twenty-six years and more than 20 albums later, Ani and her music have etched a permanent place in my identity. Like old friends, I frequently turn to her songs for comfort and joy. Imagine my elation when, in anticipation of Ani’s November 6 show at The Strand, I had the opportunity to interview this very woman who has played such a significant role in my life. Anyone who’s seen Ani perform live knows that she tells little stories throughout the performance, often sharing memories of the specific town or venue hosting her performance. So my first question for Ani was if she had any special Providence memories. Turns out that Ani loved Lupo’s just like the rest of us did: “I have a lot of Lupo’s memories, which is rare because my memory is one big blur in general, but I can remember a lot of moments. Like I remember being there once with Joe Henry opening, and I jumped up with him on his set. What I remember is coming off of crashing his set and having him say into the mic, ‘I thought I told her to wait in the car,’ which I love, but I don’t know. There’s just, yeah. I have fond memories of that place.” Keeping on the Providence theme, Ani and I talked about her song Providence (which is not about the city at all) featuring Prince on backup vocals. She told a great story about working with him: “You know, it was terrifying and thrilling. I mean I showed up at Paisley Park on his invitation with no idea what we were going to do. And I brought one of my cheap little guitars, because that’s what I play. And I sort of sat in the waiting room because he was working on something, and then he brought me in and what he had been working on was this solo piano ballad, and he wanted me to play guitar on it and he said, ‘It’s in G,’ and I’m pissing my pants because I’m self-taught. I don’t know G from Q. I’m like, ‘Oh no, this is where Prince finds out I can’t play.’ But somehow I recorded a lunk-headed four notes on his beautiful song. And that was how we met. And then — oh, I remember — we met the night before at my show in Minneapolis that he came to. And then he invited me to Paisley Park. And when we met, he said, ‘Will you play on my new album?’ or something. And I said, ‘Yeah, if you’ll play on mine,’ cheeky little folk singer that I was. So, yeah — just a thrill all the way around.” Because I deeply connect with Ani’s well-established progressive politics and activism, I felt inclined to ask her if she imagined 30 years ago when she began writing overtly political songs that we would still be addressing the same issues and fighting the same fights, with sometimes seemingly little change. Her initial response was that her nature is to live in the present, not imaging into the future – a trait she feels blessed to have. But then she did offer this bit of hope and encouragement, keeping true to her inspiring and positive presence: “I pull out songs from 30 years or whatever, at least 20 years ago that could be written tomorrow. And it can be disheartening, you know? But you just have to choose to look at all the good change that we’ve made, you know? It’s not a linear process, and it’s never a done deal. It’s like a ball that we roll uphill, you know? If we go slack for a moment, it rolls backward, as we’re seeing now. So you have to be ever vigilant, but I think even in that you can find joy and satisfaction.” Ani DiFranco performs at The Strand on Nov 6. For tickets, go to thestrandri.com.
Recommended publications
  • Ani Difranco – Revolutionary Love Biography
    Ani DiFranco – Revolutionary Love Biography The transcendent new album from Ani DiFranco, Revolutionary Love marks the latest proof of one of her most powerful gifts as an artist: a rare ability to give voice to our deepest frustrations and tensions, on both a personal and political level. “My songs have always reflected an acute connection between my personal life and the life of my society,” says the trailblazing musician and activist. “As I started to come out of dealing with years of personal hardship, I saw that my entire country was struggling with the same problems: the same themes of how much damage we do to each other and how much pain we’re carrying, and the same question of how to keep going when we’re so broken.” As her 22nd studio album in an iconic career—one that’s included winning a Grammy and countless other accolades, collaborating with legends like Prince, and breaking ground as one of the first artists to launch her own label, Righteous Babe Records— Revolutionary Love first began taking shape in the final weeks of winter 2020. After returning from a West Coast tour with a new batch of songs she’d written on the road, DiFranco laid down those tracks at her New Orleans home studio with bassist Todd Sickafoose and drummer Terence Higgins (her longtime touring bandmates), but then felt compelled to keep on writing. Before long, she’d amassed a body of work whose urgency felt undeniable. “I suddenly decided I need to push this record out by fall,” she recalls.
    [Show full text]
  • This Machine Kills Fascists" : the Public Pedagogy of the American Folk Singer
    University of Louisville ThinkIR: The University of Louisville's Institutional Repository Electronic Theses and Dissertations 8-2016 "This machine kills fascists" : the public pedagogy of the American folk singer. Harley Ferris University of Louisville Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.library.louisville.edu/etd Part of the Rhetoric Commons Recommended Citation Ferris, Harley, ""This machine kills fascists" : the public pedagogy of the American folk singer." (2016). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. Paper 2485. https://doi.org/10.18297/etd/2485 This Doctoral Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by ThinkIR: The University of Louisville's Institutional Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ThinkIR: The University of Louisville's Institutional Repository. This title appears here courtesy of the author, who has retained all other copyrights. For more information, please contact [email protected]. “THIS MACHINE KILLS FASCISTS”: THE PUBLIC PEDAGOGY OF THE AMERICAN FOLK SINGER By Harley Ferris B.A., Jacksonville University, 2010 M.A., University of Louisville, 2012 A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of the College of Arts and Sciences of the University of Louisville in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English/Rhetoric and Composition Department of English University of Louisville Louisville, KY August 2016 “THIS MACHINE KILLS FASCISTS”: THE PUBLIC PEDAGOGY OF THE AMERICAN
    [Show full text]
  • Ani Difranco – Biography
    Ani DiFranco – Biography Widely considered a feminist icon, Grammy winner Ani DiFranco is the mother of the DIY movement, being one of the first artists to create her own record label in 1990. While she has been known as the “Little Folksinger,” her music has embraced punk, funk, hip hop, jazz, soul, electronica and even more distant sounds. Her collaborators have included everyone from Utah Phillips to legendary R&B saxophonist Maceo Parker to Prince. She has shared stages with Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Pete Seeger, Kris Kristofferson, Greg Brown, Billy Bragg, Michael Franti, Chuck D., and many more. Her most recent studio album Binary was released in June 2017 on Righteous Babe Records. Her memoir No Walls and the Recurring Dream was released in May 2019, and DiFranco released a No Walls Mixtape alongside the book, offering her take on songs related to the memoir. Over the years she's performed at countless benefit concerts, donated songs to many charity albums, and given time and energy to many progressive causes. She has learned from and demonstrated beside Gloria Steinem, Jesse Jackson and Dennis Kucinich. In 2004, she marched in the front row of the March for Women's Lives along with Margaret Cho, Janeane Garofalo, Whoopi Goldberg, and many others, later performing on the main stage. She has beaten the drum for voter registration and turnout with "Vote Dammit" tours in multiple presidential election years, including most recently in 2016. She's currently on the board of Roots of Music, an organization that provides at-risk youth with support and musical education in New Orleans, and the creative council of EMILY’s List, which helps elect pro-choice Democratic women to office.
    [Show full text]
  • Three Waves of Feminism
    01-Krolokke-4666.qxd 6/10/2005 2:21 PM Page 1 1 Three Waves of Feminism From Suffragettes to Grrls e now ask our readers to join us in an exploration of the history of W feminism or, rather, feminisms: How have they evolved in time and space? How have they framed feminist communication scholarship in terms of what we see as a significant interplay between theory and politics? And how have they raised questions of gender, power, and communication? We shall focus our journey on the modern feminist waves from the 19th to the 21st century and underscore continuities as well as disruptions. Our starting point is what most feminist scholars consider the “first wave.” First-wave feminism arose in the context of industrial society and liberal politics but is connected to both the liberal women’s rights movement and early socialist feminism in the late 19th and early 20th century in the United States and Europe. Concerned with access and equal opportunities for women, the first wave continued to influence feminism in both Western and Eastern societies throughout the 20th century. We then move on to the sec- ond wave of feminism, which emerged in the 1960s to 1970s in postwar Western welfare societies, when other “oppressed” groups such as Blacks and homosexuals were being defined and the New Left was on the rise. Second-wave feminism is closely linked to the radical voices of women’s empowerment and differential rights and, during the 1980s to 1990s, also to a crucial differentiation of second-wave feminism itself, initiated by women of color and third-world women.
    [Show full text]
  • Endthewarondrugs
    #EndTheWarOnDrugs April 9, 2013 President Barack H. Obama The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W. Washington, DC 20500 Dear Mr. President, Your hard work and leadership on issues affecting the unrepresented classes of people in our nation have served as an inspiration to many of us who hope for brighter futures for all Americans. In that spirit, we believe the time is right to further the work you have done around revising our national policies on the criminal justice system and continue moving from a suppression-based model to one that focuses on intervention and rehabilitation. We are proud of your accomplishments around these issues, specifically your leadership on gun control, your investments in "problem solving courts," your creation of the Federal Interagency Reentry Council, your launching the National Forum on Youth Violence Prevention and your prosecution of a record number of hate crimes in 2011 and 2012. We certainly hope that this type of leadership is appreciated by all members of Congress, regardless of political affiliation, and you are joined by members of all parties in your pursuit of a more perfected union. Mr. President, it is evident that you have demonstrated a commitment to pursue alternatives to the enforcement-only "War on Drugs" approach and address the increased incarceration rates for non-violent crimes. Your administration has moved in the right direction by committing increased funds to drug prevention and treatment programs and supporting state and local re-entry grants. We encourage you to continue your efforts to revamp the policies of the last 30 years that have seen the prison population skyrocket.
    [Show full text]
  • Ani Difranco's Musical Structuring of Subjectivity and Pleasure in Dilate
    Dilating on Life: Ani DiFranco's Musical Structuring of Subjectivity and Pleasure in Dilate. by Adelia Honeywood Harrison B.M., The Eastman School of Music of the University of Rochester, 1993. A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS in THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES (Department of Music; Historical Musicology) We accept thi^thesis as conforming to the required standard THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA April 2000 © Adelia Honeywood Harrison, 2000 In presenting this thesis in partial fulfilment of the requirements for an advanced degree at the University of British Columbia, I agree that the Library shall make it freely available for reference and study. I further agree that permission for extensive copying of this thesis for scholarly purposes may be granted by the head of my department or by his or her representatives. It is understood that copying or publication of this thesis for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. Department of The University of British Columbia Vancouver, Canada Date Agrii atJmn DE-6 (2/88) Abstract The experience of subjectivity provided by an art form can consist of the sense of "recognizing ourselves, our feelings, our bodies, our beliefs, or our social positions" in the art work (Middleton, 1990). For fans of guitarist-singer-songwriter Ani DiFranco, the identification with a subjective reality experienced in her music is powerful and pleasurable enough to inspire them with ardent devotion. Ani DiFranco's influence may not be simply reduced to her media image as a bisexual feminist, with fanatically obsessive and possessive fans, who has achieved stunning financial success completely independent of any major recording label.
    [Show full text]
  • Mustang Daily, October 6, 2006
    1916 C] TODAY’S WEATHER Controversial Shotwell, Poly football team to High 68 musician releases new album face UC Davis Low 48 IN SPOTLIGHT, 8 IN GAME DAY, 3-6 Volume LXX, Number 21 Friday, October 6, 2006 www.niiistangdaily.net Engineers discuss power of the sun Nicole Small to speak after the film and answer bility,” said attendee Kelly Seiler. MUSIANt. DAIIY questions. The (?al Poly movie pre­ The fifth year electrical engineer­ miere event took place in the Fisher ing student spoke about how some­ Many great minds have studied it. Science building Oct. 4 as part of the thing as simple as a redesigned light -J It powers our cell phones and terror­ Institute of Electrical and Electmnics bulb, light emitting diodes (LED) that ;•***♦# ist cannot touch it. C!ive up? It’s the Engineers (IEEE) monthly meetings uses half the w.ittage of a regular light sunlight. series. Annind lOU people attended. bulb, helps the save energy. The movement is on to equip The .S6-minute documentary The element silicon has replaced cities with the ability to operate using covered early light theories and dis­ the old energy resource coal. their own generated electricity. cussed the latest in solar technology Perlin said that within the last 10 Professor David Braun invited John used in the United States and abroad. years silicon has seen a .50 to 40 per­ NICK CAMACHO Ml'SIANc. [MII V Perlin from the Universiry of Santa “1 always felt that solar power could cent increase in demand. John Perlin, a professor at UC Santa Barbara, co-produced his docu­ Barbara physics department and co­ help the environment if technologs’ “The beauty of silicon is that it’s mentary on solar power which was shown Wednesday night.
    [Show full text]
  • Anaïs Mitchell
    Singer-songwriter, Playwright, Creator ANAÏS MITCHELL is a Vermont and Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter, and the Tony and Grammy award-winning creator of the Broadway musical Hadestown for which she wrote the book, music and lyrics. Hadestown won 8 Tony Awards overall including Best Musical as well as the Grammy for Best Musical Theater Album. Mitchell was named to TIME’s prestigious TIME100 list in 2020, and her first book, ‘Working on a Song – The Lyrics of Hadestown’ was published by Penguin/Plume in the same year. Dubbed by NPR as “one of the greatest songwriters of her generation”, Mitchell comes from the world of narrative folksong, poetry and balladry. Her recordings include the original studio album of Hadestown (2010, featuring Justin Vernon and Ani Difranco) and Young Man in America (2012), along with reinterpretations of traditional music including Child Ballads (2013, with Jefferson Hamer) and Bonny Light Horseman (2020, as Bonny Light Horseman, which received two Grammy nominations). She has headlined worldwide and supported tours for Bon Iver, Josh Ritter and Punch Brothers, and her music has featured in year-end best lists including NPR, Wall Street Journal, MOJO, Uncut, The Guardian, Sunday Times and The Observer. If there's a common thread in Mitchell's work it's that she's as interested in the world around her as the one inside her. As the New York Times wrote, “Ms Mitchell’s songs address contemporary angst with uncanny vision….a formidable songwriting talent”. “The most engaging, and in some ways, most original artist working in the field of new American folk music” - Independent on Sunday “One of the greatest songwriters of her generation” - NPR “A national treasure, one of our great modern singer-songwriters” - Time Out “Ms.
    [Show full text]
  • Ani Difranco- (Folk Singer and Political Activist from Buffalo, USA) Democrat
    Kate Grarock Essay STS300, “The environmental context” Autumn session, 2005 Science, Technology & Society University of Wollongong Major Essay Criteria: Dialogue between two people addressing an environmental issue. Characters: Ani DiFranco- (Folk singer and political activist from Buffalo, USA) Democrat. George W. Bush- (president of the USA) Capitalist, or as seen by DiFranco-Crony capitalist. Major Topics: Global warming, suppression of environmental science and technological choice Total Dialogue Word count: 2198 1 Enter a exhausted George Bush: after a day of riding around in his pickup truck and chasing armadillos with his two dogs1 on his ranch in Texas. Bush walks out onto the porch and eases back in his ol’ rocking chair. The radio is playing in the background on a non-commercial radio station. Bush: What’s this crap Jenna’s2 listening to these days? Despite his distaste to the radio station, the day had taken its toll as his eyes grow heavy and he drifts off to sleep. On the radio a song buy Ani DiFranco is playing, she sings: DiFranco: Coming of age during the plague of Reagan and Bush watching capitalism gun down democracy it had this funny effect on me, I guess… and the mighty multinationals have monopolised the oxygen, so it’s as easy as breathing for us all to participate.3 [Bush moves in his chair as DiFranco’s words penetrate his subconscious] Bush: Mmmmm, conservation good. Mmmmm, my energy plan good.4 DiFranco: What crap are you going on about?…. Hello…Hello. [DiFranco leans over and knocks on Bush’s head] DiFranco: Knock, knock…Hello, anybody home…Earth to Gorge.
    [Show full text]
  • Plan B Becoming More Prevalent Eastern the Morning Plan B Is a Take Home Package Asseses Students Receive Which Contains After Pill Has Four Pills, Shrader Said
    Eastern Illinois University The Keep February 2005 2-3-2005 Daily Eastern News: February 03, 2005 Eastern Illinois University Follow this and additional works at: http://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_2005_feb Recommended Citation Eastern Illinois University, "Daily Eastern News: February 03, 2005" (2005). February. 3. http://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_2005_feb/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the 2005 at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in February by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. “Tell the truth and don’t be afraid.” INSERT N ‘Our past your future’ Verge: page 1B THURSDAY FEBRUARY 3 2005 VOLUME 89, ISSUE 92 thedailyeasternnews.com Eastern Illinois University, Charleston Plan B becoming more prevalent Eastern The morning Plan B is a take home package asseses students receive which contains after pill has four pills, Shrader said. Women are instructed to take two pills and wait been more 12 hours to take the next two. financial She said the pills are a dosage of popular at hormones that keep the fertilized egg from attaching itself to the wall aid money Eastern of the uterus. They do not prevent the egg from being fertilized, only The number of BY MEGAN JURINEK from being implanted. If the egg is CAMPUS REPORTER not implanted, it will not survive. students on There is a $20 charge for the pills The morning after pill, also and they need to be administered financial aid is known as Plan B, is on the rise at within 72 hours of exposure.
    [Show full text]
  • When the President Talks to God: a Rhetorical Criticism of Anti-Bush Protest Music
    WHEN THE PRESIDENT TALKS TO GOD: A RHETORICAL CRITICISM OF ANTI-BUSH PROTEST MUSIC Megan O'Byrne A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS December 2008 Committee: Michael L. Butterworth, Advisor Lara Martin Lengel Ellen W. Gorsevski ii ABSTRACT Michael L. Butterworth, Advisor Anti-war protest music has re-emerged onto the American songscape since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and the resulting military conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. This study works to explicate the ways in which protest music functions in the resultant culture of war. Protest music, as it reflects and creates culture, represents one possible site of productive change. Chapter 1 examines Ani DiFranco’s song “Self Evident” which was written as an immediate reaction to 9/11. Throughout this chapter I argue that protest music has the potential to work as a vehicle for consciousness raising. In Chapter 2 I consider the constitutive elements in the Bright Eyes song “When the President Talks to God.” Performed on The Tonight Show in May 2005, this song represents one of the first performances of dissent on national television after 9/11. This chapter also examines the limitations of Charland’s conception of the constituted public as it pertains to diverse and heterogeneous audiences. Ultimately, I argue that consciousness raising through music has the potential to bring listeners into the constituted subject position of those who dissent against war. iii Dedicated to the memory of Dr. Lewis (Lee) Snyder in whose shadow I will always walk.
    [Show full text]
  • The BG News April 13, 2001
    Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 4-13-2001 The BG News April 13, 2001 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News April 13, 2001" (2001). BG News (Student Newspaper). 6798. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/6798 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. State University FRIDAY April 13, 2001 CONCERT: PARTLY CLOUDY NOW takes a look at HIGH: 59 | LOW 39 UAO bringing Roots and www.bgnews.com Run DMC to U.; PAGE 6 independent student press VOLUME 90 ISSUE 140 Improv AL-MAR LANES LOCAL BUSINESS REBUILDS Importance to showcase ofLatinos on campus inLXS. ByJetf McGinms ENTERTAINMENT REPORTER growing The game is called "Freeze." In it, two actors stand on stage and By Kimberty Dupps begin to act out a scene suggested STAFF REPORTER by the audience. Then, one of the The year 2000 not only illustrat- other actors watching yells out ed the increasing complexity of "Freeze!" The two onstage stop in Americans with threats of Y2K, place, and the actor who stopped but showed the increasing com- them comes in, taps one of the plexity of latinos in the United players out and takes his place.
    [Show full text]