Extraordinary Machine Fiona Apple

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DualDisc - CD/DVD

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CD$8.99
 
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Track List
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Extraordinary Machine

Disc 1
1LISTENExtraordinary Machine 3:44
2LISTENGet Him Back 5:26
3LISTENO' Sailor 5:37
4LISTENBetter Version of Me 3:01
5LISTENTymps (The Sick in the Head Song) 4:05
6LISTENParting Gift 3:36
7LISTENWindow 5:33
8LISTENOh Well 3:42
9LISTENPlease Please Please 3:35
10LISTENRed Red Red 4:08
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Disc 2
1Extraordinary Machine DVD
2Get Him Back DVD
3O' Sailor DVD
4Better Version of Me DVD
5Tymps (The Sick in the Head Song) DVD
6Parting Gift DVD
7Window DVD
8Oh Well DVD
9Please Please Please DVD
10Red Red Red DVD
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Special Features:

The DVD side of this DualDisc release features the entire album in LPCM stereo; brand-new videos for "Not About Love" and "Tymps (The Sick in the Head Song)"; three songs filmed at the Los Angeles club Largo; an interview and other behind-the-scenes footage; and the video for "Parting Gift."

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

The story of Fiona Apple's Extraordinary Machine is one of rock's great David vs. Goliath tales, rife with corporate machinations, artistic ground-holding, and more he-said-she-said whispers than a Tinseltown divorce. Well, more than two years after it was initially slated to be released -- and a full six years since Apple's last offering -- Extraordinary Machine has finally kicked into gear, with absorbing results. The 11-song disc has been tweaked considerably -- fans who heard the leaked material that circulated on the Internet in the year prior to this release might not recognize wide swaths -- but Apple's iconoclastic vision remains unbowed. That's evident in the seething delivery she affords "Red Red Red," one of her patented slash-and-burn jilted-lover laments, as well as in the stark piano ballad "Parting Gift." Apple makes some concessions to mainstream tastes here -- "Tymps" is built on a hip-hop beat that the Black Eyed Peas could easily turn into a soft drink commercial -- but for the most part, Extraordinary Machine is enticingly difficult to pin down. The disc's title track, with its quizzical bassoon blurts and teasing string interjections, has a good bit of Broadway in its blood, a vibe that Apple matches with her clipped, theatrical delivery. She takes a similar approach on "Get Him Back," a finger-popping beatnik torch song that warns potential suitors about her willingness to "kill what [she] cannot catch." The old saying goes that you can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar, but as Apple proves on this disc, you can entrap even more with a combination of the two. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 6Reviews: 2

I Like Applesby Anonymous

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November 06, 2007: Do you like apples? I got her number. How do you like dem apples? Her number being number 1. One of the great hidden tracks "How to Pear a Grapefruit" is ripe with appeal. Make sure you read her lyric sheet because there's a hidden message just for you. In fact, anything that is the color red is capable of capturing your thoughts and transmitting them into her sung words through speakers. Just be cautious not to turn up the volume too high or you'll get a feedback loop. This artifact isn't present through headphones. I believe the extended DVD version fixed the problem and with that you can turn it up to twelve - the new eleven. Feedback loop is replaced by visual rainbows of never before seen colors. Like "Paper Bag" don't play it while driving.

She's Back!by Anonymous

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October 06, 2005: An excellent album from one of our best musical treasures! Fiona doesn't try to sound like anyone but herself, and here, with Elizondo's stellar production, Fiona shines shines shines! More fun and accesible than "When the Pawn..." "Extraordinary Machine" gives us the wonderful vocals and quirky, bright song-writing that made us notice Fiona's debut album. Only now she is more deft, more skilled - her voice at times harkening to early Bjork in the midst of the well produced yet clean and minimal orchestration. Plus the dualdisc is packed with so many extras it's as though we're placing a retrospective on her career. With songs and performances like this though, Fiona's career will undoubtedly last many, many years to come.