Fiona Apple McAfee-Maggart (conceived September 13, 1977) is an American artist musician. She has set five collections free from 1996 to 2020, which have all arrived at the best 20 on the U.S. Board 200 chart.[7] Apple has gotten various honors and selections, including three Grammy Grants, two MTV Video Music Grants, and a Bulletin Music Grant.
The most youthful girl of the entertainer Brandon Maggart, Apple was brought into the world in New York City and was raised shifting back and forth between her mom's home in New York and her dad's in Los Angeles. Traditionally prepared on piano as a youngster, she started creating her own tunes when she was eight years of age. Her presentation collection, Flowing, containing tunes composed when she was 15 (Never Is a Commitment) and 17, was delivered in 1996 and got a Grammy Grant for Best Female Vocal Stone Execution for the single "Criminal". She followed with When the Pawn... (1999), created by Jon Brion, which was additionally fundamentally and monetarily effective and was guaranteed Platinum.
For her third collection, Unprecedented Machine (2005), Apple again worked together with Brion and started keep the collection in 2002. Nonetheless, Apple was supposedly discontent with the creation and picked not to deliver the record, driving fans to fight Epic Records, incorrectly accepting that the mark was keeping its delivery. The collection was ultimately re-delivered without Brion and delivered in October 2005. The collection was guaranteed Gold, and selected for a Grammy Grant for Best Pop Vocal Collection. In 2012, she delivered her fourth studio collection, The Idler Wheel..., which got basic recognition and was trailed by a visit through the US and was designated for the Grammy Grant for Best Elective Music Collection in 2013. Apple's fifth studio collection, Bring the Bolt Cutters, was delivered in 2020 to widespread approval, procuring two Grammy Grants: Best Elective Music Collection and Best Stone Execution for the lead single "Shameika".
Fiona Apple has shared another melody, and it shows up with the season finale of Amazon Studios' series The Ruler of the Rings: The Rings of Force. With music by Bear McCreary, it's named "Where the Shadows Untruth," and it's adjusted from a J.R.R. Tolkien sonnet that showed up in the first books. Tune in beneath. (Pitchfork procures a commission from buys made through member joins on our site.)
Since delivering Bring the Bolt Cutters in April 2020, Apple has loaned her voice to a few additional imaginative and political undertakings. She's pushed for regenerative opportunity, court straightforwardness bills, casting a ballot, and Native land affirmation. In July, she rejoined her companions in the Watkins Family Hour partner for an interpretation of the country exemplary "(Recall Me) I'm the Person Who Loves You," in the wake of covering Sharon Van Etten's "Affection More" last year. She likewise contributed a tune to Apple television's Focal Park series and showed up as a visitor on Bounce Dylan's 2020 collection Unpleasant and Unruly Ways. Get the Bolt Cutters procured Apple the Grammy Grant for Best Elective Music Collection, with "Shameika" bringing back home the prize for Best Stone Execution.
Find out about Fiona Apple's Flowing and When the Pawn… on Pitchfork's rundown of "The 150 Best Collections of the 1990s," and get "Rest to Dream," "Paper Pack," and "Criminal" on Pitchfork's rundown of "The 250 Best Melodies of the 1990s."