Reprieve (album)

Reprieve
Studio album by Ani DiFranco
Released August 8, 2006
Recorded 2005–2006
Genre Indie rock
Folk rock
Label Righteous Babe
Producer Ani DiFranco
Ani DiFranco chronology
Knuckle Down
(2005)
Reprieve
(2006)
Canon
(2007)

Reprieve is the fifteenth studio album by singer-songwriter Ani DiFranco, released on August 8, 2006.

Righteous Babe Records' website notes that only DiFranco's bassist Todd Sickafoose, who had accompanied her on her recent tours, would be performing on the album. The album has a dark, mournful, mellow sound reminiscent of 1999's To the Teeth and 2004's Educated Guess and features experimental arrangements with synthesizers, electronics and tape manipulation.

As the recording of the album was briefly interrupted due to the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, the album has a heavily political and vaguely conceptual undercurrent that "paints a haunting portrait of New Orleans as the water retreats and the natives continue to rebuild their lives."[1]

The album cover was inspired by a picture of a real tree in Nagasaki which was partially destroyed by the atomic bomb. While the city around it lay in ruin, this one tree stood, half of it destroyed, the other untouched. DiFranco also references the eucalyptus tree in the title track about the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

While the official release date of Reprieve was August 8, the album was made available for purchase on the iTunes Music Store between June 24 and June 27, 2006, possibly in error, as the album date on the site was listed as 2002.

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Ani DiFranco. 

No. Title Length
1. "Hypnotized"   4:11
2. "Subconscious"   3:32
3. "In the Margins"   3:13
4. "Nicotine"   4:06
5. "Decree"   3:43
6. "78% H2O"   3:30
7. "Millennium Theater"   3:14
8. "Half-Assed"   3:30
9. "Reprieve"   2:45
10. "A Spade"   4:24
11. "Unrequited"   4:06
12. "Shroud"   4:48
13. "Reprise"   1:34

Personnel

Production

Reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic(74/100)[2]
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[3]
Down Beat[4]
Entertainment WeeklyA[5]
musicOMH[6]
NOW[2]
Paste[2]
PopMatters(7/10)[7]
Slant[8]
Spin(6/10)[2]
Uncut[4]

The album so far has a score of 74 out of 100 from Metacritic based on "generally favorable reviews".[2] No Depression gave it a positive review and said of DiFranco: "Her acoustic guitar playing is mesmerizing, as usual, but her melodic fills on electric guitar and keyboards, along with her percussion work, brings some color to this group of songs."[9] Billboard also gave the album a positive review and said it was "more languid than earlier efforts without sacrificing the urgency of [DiFranco's] patented guitar pluck-strum."[2] E! Online gave it a B− and called it "an arresting mix of the singer's political and personal strife set to a jazzy backbeat."[2]

Other reviews are pretty average: The New York Times gave it an average review and said of DiFranco: "Subtle sounds -- acoustic instruments, electronic tones, environmental noises, distorted echoes -- well up around her, and they open up pockets of shadow around her usual pinpoint clarity. Now the atmosphere is as important as the words."[10]

Charts

Album

Year Chart Position
2006 The Billboard 200 46
2006 Top Independent Albums 3

References

External links

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