Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago

Now Is the Time

Now Is the Time is a by saxophonist , released in 2011 by the French label Frémeaux & Associés as the second volume in the Intégrale Charlie Parker series. The three-disc set collects 44 recordings from Parker's studio and live sessions between November 1945 and December 1946, primarily featuring his quintet known as Charlie Parker's Reboppers, along with collaborations involving , Red Norvo, and other pioneers. Spanning labels like Savoy and Dial, the album documents Parker's pivotal role in developing bebop, including landmark tracks such as "Now's the Time," "Billie's Bounce," and "Ko-Ko." These performances highlight his innovative alto saxophone improvisation, rhythmic complexity, and the era's shift from swing to modern jazz, making the compilation a key resource for studying early bebop history.

Background

Early career context

Alanis Morissette began her performing career as a child in , singing at age 11 in hospitals and community centers alongside Dominic D'Arcy. At age 12, she appeared as an actress in a season of the children's TV series You Can't Do That on Television. At age 14 in 1988, she secured a publishing contract with MCA Publishing through John Alexander, which led to mentorship from Lindsay Morgan and Rich Dodson and paved the way for her recording deal with . Her debut album, Alanis, was released exclusively in Canada on April 6, 1991, by MCA Records Canada. Produced by Leslie Howe, the dance-pop record featured singles such as "Too Hot," which peaked at number 14 on the RPM Top Singles chart and reached the top ten on contemporary hit radio, and "Feel Your Love." The album achieved platinum certification in January 1992 after selling over 100,000 copies. In the early Canadian pop landscape, a thriving scene drew heavily from trends and influences like American acts such as , positioning Morissette as a rising artist. Her early work earned her the 1992 Juno Award for Most Promising Female Vocalist. This foundation in upbeat, synth-driven pop shaped her initial trajectory before a shift toward more introspective songwriting.

Album conception

Following the success of her debut album Alanis in , Morissette conceived Now Is the Time as a continuation of the style that had established her in market, while incorporating slightly more introspective and personal lyrics to reflect her evolving artistic voice. At the age of 17 during the initial development phase in early 1992, she drew from her own teenage experiences, including the complexities of relationships and self-discovery, to infuse the songwriting with greater emotional depth, marking a subtle shift from the lighter, more formulaic pop of her first record. This approach allowed her to explore themes of vulnerability and growth, as seen in tracks like "No Apologies," where she addressed internal conflicts and the pressures of youth. The album's creation was largely driven by contractual obligations to and producer , with whom Morissette had signed a five-album deal through his Ghettovale Productions in , requiring her to deliver a second project to fulfill the agreement before pursuing independent directions. Viewing Now Is the Time as a transitional effort, she aimed to meet these commitments while experimenting modestly with lyrical authenticity, recognizing it as her final release under the label that had shaped her early career. This sense of obligation underscored the project's role as a bridge, allowing her to honor prior successes without fully committing to the commercial pop mold long-term. Morissette's decision to retain Howe as producer ensured continuity in sound and production quality, building on the polished dance-pop aesthetics of her debut to maintain appeal among Canadian youth audiences, who had embraced her as a relatable teen idol. By sticking with the established team, including co-writer Serge Côté, she targeted a familiar demographic of adolescents navigating similar life stages, prioritizing a radio-friendly polish that aligned with the era's teen pop trends while hinting at her desire for deeper expression. This strategic choice helped the album achieve gold certification in Canada, shipping 50,000 units, though it ultimately served as a stepping stone to her later reinvention.

Recording and production

Studio sessions

The recording sessions for Now Is the Time took place from January to May 1992 at in , . Morissette collaborated closely with producer and Serge Côté on the album.

Production team

served as the primary producer, engineer, and mixer for Now Is the Time, produced for Ghetto Records at in . He also received co-writing credits on several tracks alongside Alanis and Serge Côté. Howe managed the final mixes. The album's visual presentation featured A&R direction by John Alexander, with design handled by Martin Soldat. Photography was provided by Dan Seguin for the cover and Andrew LeBlanc for additional interior shots.

Music and songwriting

Musical style

"Now's the Time" is a foundational composition structured as a 12-bar in , exemplifying the genre's emphasis on fast tempos, complex improvisation, and rhythmic innovation. The piece features a simple, riff-based head or main theme that serves as a launching point for solos, highlighting Parker's melody over the classic I-IV-V typical of blues forms. This structure allows for virtuosic improvisation, blending swing-era blues roots with bebop's harmonic and melodic advancements, such as chromatic passing tones and syncopated rhythms. The recording captures the quintet's tight interplay, with Parker's inventive lines driving the energetic, up-tempo feel around 200 beats per minute, supported by walking bass lines and swinging drums that underscore the genre's democratic soloing approach.

Lyrical themes

As an , "Now's the Time" contains no lyrics. The composition's title evokes a sense of immediacy and opportunity, reflecting the era's innovative spirit, but its expressive power lies in the improvisational narratives created by performers during solos.

Release and promotion

Singles and marketing

The release strategy for Now Is the Time centered on a staggered rollout of four singles in , each accompanied by radio promotion and designed to appeal to teenage listeners through relatable themes of emotion and personal growth. The , "An Emotion Away," was issued on November 25, 1992, followed by "No Apologies" on February 3, 1993, "Real World" on May 31, 1993, and "(Change Is) Never a Waste of Time" on September 21, 1993. These tracks received on Canadian radio stations, leveraging Morissette's established presence as pop artist to build momentum for the album. Promotional efforts emphasized grassroots engagement tailored to youth audiences, including radio tours across and live performances at retail outlets such as stores. Morissette made television appearances on MuchMusic, Canada's premier music video channel, to showcase the singles' videos, which featured straightforward performance styles and narrative elements resonating with adolescents. In-store promotions were coordinated with Canada's roster of emerging youth-oriented pop acts, fostering within the label's teen-focused catalog. The album's packaging reinforced Morissette's positioning as an accessible , featuring a vibrant cover image of the artist in casual attire and a 16-page with photographs, full , and credits that underscored her evolving role as a co-writer on all tracks. The highlighted her maturation as a songwriter, noting contributions that reflected deeper compared to her debut.

Commercial performance

Now Is the Time achieved certification as Gold from , signifying 50,000 units shipped, through consistent sales within the market. The album's release was restricted to , resulting in total sales estimated below 100,000 units, attributable to its targeted style and absence of global distribution. Its singles demonstrated limited chart performance; "No Apologies" reached a peak of #14 on the RPM Top Singles chart, and "Real World" attained #84 on the RPM Top Singles chart. Promotional efforts included the single "An Emotion Away," which supported regional marketing but did not significantly boost overall figures.

Reception

Initial critical response

Upon its release in Canada in October 1992, Now Is the Time received mixed reviews from critics, who often viewed it as a continuation of Morissette's early teen pop phase with limited artistic depth. Time magazine described the album as "uninspired," highlighting wistful moments such as the track "Rain," while critiquing its overall faux-Madonna style that echoed contemporary dance-pop trends. The Kansas City Star characterized it as a "lightweight" teen pop effort, emphasizing its accessible but superficial appeal in the 1992 pop landscape. Similarly, Rock and Roll Rarity pointed to the album's formulaic production and slick arrangements in the style of Paula Abdul and Janet Jackson, amid awkward lyrics.

Retrospective assessments

In the years following Alanis Morissette's breakthrough with Jagged Little Pill, retrospective assessments have positioned Now Is the Time (1992) as a pivotal transitional album in her career, bridging her initial foray into teen-oriented dance-pop with the raw, introspective songwriting that defined her later success. Critics have noted its shift toward more ballad-driven material and thoughtful lyrics, viewing it as an early indicator of Morissette's emerging ability to grapple with personal maturity and emotional depth. For instance, music guides describe the record as reflecting "a young artist grappling with maturity, hinting at the confessional style that would explode later," while highlighting its status as a "hidden gem" for dedicated listeners. This reevaluation often emphasizes the album's role in showcasing Morissette's vocal versatility and youthful energy within the constraints of early pop production, contrasting sharply with the angst-ridden alt-rock of her international phase. Outlets like have acknowledged its "slick early ’90s dance " appeal, likening its tasteful aesthetic to early , though critiquing it as somewhat "tame and dated" in hindsight. Such views frame Now Is the Time not as an embarrassment but as a necessary stepping stone, where tracks explore optimism and relational themes with a lightness absent from her post-1995 output. Academic analyses further contextualize the album within 1990s teen pop's broader landscape, portraying Morissette as a rare example of an artist who successfully evolved beyond youthful formulas into sustained relevance. A University of Memphis thesis on her career evolution argues that her early works, including Now Is the Time, depict "stages in her life," enabling fans to trace her growth from a manufactured teen persona to authentic maturity, ultimately selling over 40 million albums worldwide. This perspective underscores the album's emblematic function in illustrating how teen pop could serve as a developmental platform for artists navigating fame's pressures.

Legacy

Market withdrawal

Following the international breakthrough of in 1995, executives at Maverick Records, Morissette's newly signed U.S. label, requested that her former label, , withdraw Now Is the Time from circulation. This decision aimed to rebrand Morissette as an artist and strategically distance her public image from the roots of her early Canadian releases. MCA Records complied with the request by immediately halting production and distribution of the album, which quickly rendered physical copies scarce in the market. Digital availability remains restricted as of 2025, with the album accessible primarily through secondhand markets and unofficial fan-preserved copies. Morissette has reflected positively on her career reinvention following the early phase, viewing it as enabling her artistic evolution, though she has expressed frustration with the exploitative aspects of her initial recording experiences.

Cultural reappraisal

Now Is the Time stands as a significant artifact in Alanis Morissette's early career, encapsulating her initial foray into as a teenager and serving as a point of contrast to her later persona. This album, along with her 1991 debut Alanis, reflects the commercial teen-oriented sound imposed by industry pressures during her formative years in , where adult producers shaped her image and output toward superficial dance tracks modeled after artists like and . Scholarly analyses of Morissette's trajectory highlight how these early works illustrate broader patterns of genre shifts among female artists, transitioning from polished pop accessibility to raw, confessional expression amid personal and cultural changes in the music landscape. The album's stylistic divergence from Morissette's post-1995 output contributed to its exclusion from major compilations, such as the 2005 greatest hits collection The Collection, which focused exclusively on her Maverick Records era beginning with . This omission stemmed from deliberate efforts to distance her established identity from the dance-pop roots, as the early Canada releases were pulled from circulation around the time of 's success to avoid associations with her prior "dance-pop singer" image. Fan enthusiasm has nonetheless preserved access to the album through secondhand markets and unofficial reissues, particularly in the , when collectors and enthusiasts digitized and shared rare copies amid ongoing interest in her . In recent reflections, Morissette has acknowledged the album's role in her artistic development, viewing it through the lens of youthful experimentation that laid groundwork for the themes dominating her later work, despite the exploitative conditions of her early recording experiences. This reappraisal underscores Now Is the Time's place in discussions of artist evolution, where early commercial constraints give way to authentic self-expression, influencing examinations of musicians navigating expectations.

Track listing and credits

Track listing

All tracks are written by , , and Serge Côté.
No.TitleLength
1."Real World"4:57
2."An Emotion Away"4:14
3.""3:52
4.""4:45
5."No Apologies"5:02
6."Can't Deny"3:55
7."When We Meet Again"4:10
8."Give What You Got"4:56
9."(Change Is) Never a Waste of Time"4:40
10.""4:14
Total length: 44:45. The original Canadian release was issued on cassette and CD formats with no bonus tracks.

Personnel

Vocals
Alanis Morissette performed lead vocals on all tracks.
Production and Engineering
Leslie Howe served as the producer, mixer, and engineer for the album, also contributing keyboards and programming for the instrumentation. The album features no additional session musicians, with Howe handling most elements through synthesizers and programming.
Additional Credits
  • Cover photography: Dan Seguin
  • Additional photography: Andrew LeBlanc
  • Design: Martin Solort
  • A&R direction: John Alexander

References

  1. [1]
    Now's The Time - Learn Jazz Standards
    Mar 27, 2012 · Learn and practice Now's The Time and start improvising over this jazz standard with confidence. “Now's The Time” is a blues in F written by Charlie Parker.Missing: key structure
  2. [2]
    Now's The Time - Jazz Standard Repertoire
    Now's The Time. Oscar Peterson Trio. 02:34 ; Now's The Time. Charlie Parker Quartet. 03:01 ; Now's the Time. John Lewis. 03:48 ; Now Is The Time. Bud Powell. 04:32.
  3. [3]
    10 Essential Charlie Parker Recordings - Jazz Views
    Jun 27, 2024 · Charlie Parker's Reboppers (Savoy). Billie's Bounce / Now's The Time / Thriving from a Riff (Anthropology) / Ko-Ko Recorded November 26, 1945.
  4. [4]
    Charlie Parker, the Birth of Bebop, and America's Greatest ...
    Aug 24, 2020 · He has three of the medium's all-time key compositions (“Billie's Bounce,” “Now's the Time,” and “Ko-Ko”) at the ready, he has perfected how ...
  5. [5]
    Jazz Standards Songs and Instrumentals (Now's the Time)
    Now is the Time. Rank, 354. Written by, Charlie Parker. Here are the top ten... Year, Rank, Title. 1930, 1, “Body and Soul”. 1939, 2, “All the Things You Are”.
  6. [6]
    Alanis Morissette | The Canadian Encyclopedia
    Oct 5, 2008 · At age 12, she acted in a season of the Nickelodeon children's TV series You Can't Do That on Television. Morissette independently released her ...
  7. [7]
    Alanis (1991) - Alanis Morissette Archives
    Alanis is the debut studio album by Alanis Morissette, exclusively released in Canada on April 6, 1991 by MCA Records Canada.
  8. [8]
    Alanis in Chains | Hazlitt
    Jun 9, 2015 · ... The Words and Music of Alanis Morissette. And vice versa. “Without him she was probably just going to keep singing the national anthem,” she ...
  9. [9]
    The Words and Music of Alanis Morissette: : The Praeger Singer ...
    Constructing Alanis as the Virgin-Vixen Alanis (1991) Fulfilling Contractual Obligations with a Second Album Now Is the Time (1992) Awards and Commercial ...
  10. [10]
    Now is the Time - Alanis Morissette Archives
    The album, which fulfilled her contractual obligations with the record label, was recorded with producer Leslie Howe, serving the same role he did in 1991's ...
  11. [11]
    Alanis Morissette - Now Is The TIme (1992) - On this day in pop
    Oct 18, 2022 · Now Is The Time was her second pre-Jagged Little Pill album and even this represents a lyrical maturity and musical progression over her debut.
  12. [12]
    Alanis - Now Is The Time
    ### Summary of Recording Details for *Now Is the Time* by Alanis
  13. [13]
  14. [14]
    Alanis - Now Is The Time
    ### Credits Summary for *Now Is The Time* by Alanis Morissette
  15. [15]
    Alanis - Now Is The Time
    ### Credits Summary
  16. [16]
    Alanis Morissette - Trouser Press
    Quaint in its obviousness but not altogether horrible, Now Is the Time (also produced by Howe) begins with the announcement, “We play the game with ...
  17. [17]
    Every Alanis Morissette Album, Ranked - SPIN
    Jun 9, 2025 · Now is the Time is definitely the weaker of mononym-era Alanis's two albums, though, pushing listlessly towards a more tasteful aesthetic ...
  18. [18]
    How Alanis Morissette created her biggest hit - MusicRadar
    May 20, 2025 · In the process, it turned Morissette into a mid-90s rock/pop phenomenon. ... Second album Now Is The Time was a ballad-driven record, but ...
  19. [19]
    [PDF] From Persona to Personality: The Evolution of Alanis Morissette
    Morissette's second album, Now Is the Time, is evidence of her artistic desires and the forces holding them back. While the lyrics occasionally get more.Missing: conception | Show results with:conception
  20. [20]
    Alanis Morissette – An Emotion Away
    ### Summary of Lyrical Theme: Vulnerability in Relationships
  21. [21]
    Alanis Morissette – No Apologies
    ### Summary of Lyrical Theme: Unapologetic Self-Expression
  22. [22]
    Alanis Morissette – Real World
    ### Summary of Lyrical Theme: Transitioning from Adolescence to Adulthood in "Real World" by Alanis Morissette
  23. [23]
    Why Alanis Morissette still matters 30 years later | Culture
    Feb 14, 2025 · The following year, she released Now Is The Time, in which she gravitated a little more towards ballads. Her lyrics had more content ...
  24. [24]
    Alanis Morissette
    ### Summary of Now Is the Time Album Recording by Alanis Morissette
  25. [25]
    Alanis Morissette Setlist at HMV Records, Calgary
    Get the Alanis Morissette Setlist of the concert at HMV Records, Calgary, AB, Canada on November 14, 1992 and other Alanis Morissette Setlists for free on ...Missing: radio | Show results with:radio
  26. [26]
    Alanis Morissette | Canadian Music Blog
    Aug 2, 2011 · Now is the Time followed in 1992 and, though its three singles fared ... It sold 7 million copies worldwide and was certified 4x Platinum at home.
  27. [27]
    Music: Alanis Morissette: Confessional Immediacy - Time Magazine
    Nov 2, 1998 · After her uninspired 1992 follow-up, Now Is the Time, which included a wistful song about standing in the rain outside a Rod Stewart concert, ...
  28. [28]
    Alanis Morissette - Rarebird's
    Reviews of Alanis Morissette pop recordings. ... Alanis "Now Is The Time" (MCA Canada MCAD-10731) 1992. Alanis Morissette's ...
  29. [29]
    Alanis Morissette Albums In Order Of Release
    Sep 4, 2025 · This album reflects a young artist grappling with maturity, hinting at the confessional style that would explode later. It's a hidden gem ...
  30. [30]
    From Persona to Personality: The Evolution of Alanis Morissette
    This document explores the life of Alanis Morissette by analyzing both the singer and her songs. It examines her ability to express emotion through transforming ...Missing: analysis 1990s development
  31. [31]
    Shhh! Albums artists don't want you to hear - The Today Show
    Jul 5, 2009 · “Alanis” and “Now is the Time,” Alanis Morissette. It was a different ... pull these two early 1990s releases from circulation. Whatever ...
  32. [32]
    The (totally unironic) oral history of Alanis Morissette's 'Jagged Little Pill'
    ### Summary of Alanis Morissette's Early Albums and Jagged Little Pill
  33. [33]
    Alanis Morissette Is Authentically Herself | ELLE Canada Magazine
    Aug 18, 2025 · She released her first two dance-poppy albums in Canada only—1991's Alanis and 1992's Now Is the Time—but they didn't reflect who she wanted to ...
  34. [34]
    Alanis Morissette - Now Is the Time Lyrics and Tracklist - Genius
    Aug 1, 1992 · Now Is the Time is the second album by Canadian-American singer-songwriter Alanis Morissette, released on August 1, 1992, via MCA Records.
  35. [35]