When the Pawn...
When the Pawn... is the second studio album by American singer-songwriter Fiona Apple, released on November 9, 1999, through Epic Records.[1] The album's full title is a 90-word poem written by Apple herself: When the Pawn Hits the Conflicts He Thinks Like a King What He Knows Throws the Blows When He Goes to the Fight and He'll Win the Whole Thing 'Fore He Enters the Ring There's Nobody to Batter When Your Mind Is Your Might So When You Go Solo You Hold Your Own Hand and Remember That Depth Is the Greatest of Heights and If You Know Where You Stand Then You Know Where to Land and If You Fall It Won't Matter Cuz You'll Know That You're Right.[2] Entirely written by Apple, it was produced by Jon Brion and features her piano-driven compositions blended with orchestral arrangements, exploring themes of heartbreak, resilience, and personal turmoil.[2] The album consists of 10 tracks, including the singles "Paper Bag" and "Fast as You Can," which received significant radio play and charted on alternative rock formats.[1] "Fast as You Can" peaked at number 20 on the US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart, marking Apple's first entry on that ranking.[3] Commercially, When the Pawn... debuted at number 13 on the Billboard 200, selling 103,000 copies in its first week, and ultimately achieved platinum certification from the RIAA for one million units sold in the United States.[4] By 2009, US sales had reached approximately 913,000 copies according to Nielsen SoundScan.[5] Critically, the album was praised for Apple's mature songwriting, intricate instrumentation, and raw emotional delivery, with reviewers highlighting tracks like "A Mistake" and "Get Gone" for their intensity and wit.[6] Publications such as Entertainment Weekly awarded it an A grade, commending Brion's production and Apple's lyrical depth.[7] It earned a Grammy Award nomination for Best Alternative Music Album at the 43rd Annual Grammy Awards in 2001.[8] Over the years, When the Pawn... has been recognized as a landmark in Apple's discography, influencing subsequent alternative and indie artists with its blend of pop accessibility and confessional artistry.[9]Background
Conception
Following the commercial success of her debut album Tidal in 1996, which achieved multi-platinum status and established Fiona Apple as a rising star in alternative pop at the age of 18, she began work on her sophomore effort at 19, riding a wave of critical acclaim and industry expectations.[10][6] Apple's songwriting for the album drew heavily from her ongoing therapy experiences and the emotional turbulence of her personal life, including a tumultuous relationship with filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson that began around 1998 and infused the material with themes of vulnerability, self-doubt, and relational strain.[6][11] Having been in therapy since childhood to address issues like obsessive-compulsive disorder and family conflicts, Apple channeled these sessions into raw, introspective lyrics that explored heartbreak and psychological conflict, with the rocky dynamics of her romance providing specific inspiration for songs about unfulfilled love and emotional chaos.[6][11] In 1997 and 1998, Apple composed much of the album's material at the piano, often drawing from direct interpersonal exchanges; for instance, "Paper Bag" emerged from her reflections on self-deprecating comments made by romantic partners, capturing feelings of inadequacy in love, while "Fast as You Can" addressed the frantic pace of emotional avoidance during relational tension.[12] Building on their successful partnership for Tidal, Apple decided to reunite with producer Jon Brion, presenting him with nearly complete demos and instructing him to expand on the orchestral richness of her debut to better suit the album's intricate emotional layers.[6]Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording sessions for When the Pawn... spanned several months in 1999, primarily at Ocean Way Recording in Hollywood, with additional work conducted at Chateau Brion Studio, NRG Recording Studios, Andora Studios, and One on One South.[9][13] Under producer Jon Brion's guidance, the sessions followed an iterative structure that began with Apple laying down solo piano and vocal tracks to a click track, followed by Brion's overdubs of guitars, drums, keyboards, and other elements. This method inverted traditional band-first approaches, allowing Apple's core performances to anchor the arrangements; daily three-hour sessions enabled her to review and refine Brion's contributions each evening, fostering a collaborative evolution of the material. Apple entered the process with a folder of ten handwritten songs, which Brion expanded through experimentation, including trials with drummers Matt Chamberlain and Jim Keltner.[14] Apple's drive for precision presented challenges, requiring Brion to build deep trust to match her intuitive vision amid the pressure of following her debut album's success. The production prioritized a warm, organic tone via live band recordings and strategic overdubs, incorporating vintage instruments and analog techniques for depth.[14][9]Key collaborators
Jon Brion served as the primary producer for When the Pawn..., overseeing the album's intricate orchestration and arrangements that blended orchestral elements with pop structures to enhance Fiona Apple's piano-driven compositions.[6] His contributions included layering strings, brass, and unconventional instrumentation, creating a richly textured sound that amplified the emotional depth of the tracks.[15] Brion also performed on multiple instruments throughout the album.[2] Drummer Matt Chamberlain brought dynamic and versatile rhythms to several songs, notably powering the upbeat drive of "Fast as You Can" (track 7) and the swinging groove of "Paper Bag" (track 5), contributing to the album's rhythmic variety and energy.[16] His performances on percussion across tracks 1–5 and 7–9 helped anchor Brion's elaborate arrangements with a sense of propulsion and immediacy.[17] Other key contributors included multi-instrumentalist Patrick Warren on keyboards and Chamberlin, adding atmospheric textures during the recording sessions at Ocean Way in Hollywood, where improvisational elements informed the collaborative dynamics.[2] Fiona Apple maintained strong leadership throughout production, providing direct input on arrangements and exercising veto power over mixes to preserve her artistic vision, ensuring the final product aligned closely with her intentions.[14]Composition
Musical style
When the Pawn... blends elements of alternative rock, chamber pop, and jazz, creating a sound that is both introspective and dynamic. The album's genre influences draw from piano-driven singer-songwriter traditions while incorporating art pop's experimental edges and jazz's rhythmic nuances, resulting in a plush, moody atmosphere that emphasizes emotional depth over straightforward pop structures.[9][6] Producer Jon Brion's contributions help unify these diverse styles into a cohesive, darkly romantic texture, avoiding clichés through intricate layering that enhances the album's intimate yet expansive feel.[6] Central to the album's sonic identity is Fiona Apple's prominent piano playing, which serves as the rhythmic and melodic foundation across tracks, often contrasted with orchestral elements like swelling strings and brass for cinematic swells. Instrumentation includes smoky guitars, funk-infused drums, hazy synths, upright bass, and unconventional percussion such as brushed snares, adding textural variety and a sense of propulsion. Brion's arrangements introduce rock grooves that lighten the compositions, juxtaposing Apple's raw, throaty vocals with lush, traditionalist jazz undertones to create a muscular evolution from her debut.[18][19][15] Specific tracks highlight the album's stylistic range: "Paper Bag" features jazzy swing rhythms with light, high-pitched piano chords evoking a laid-back R&B-soul vibe, while "Fast as You Can" delivers aggressive rock energy through driving beats and viper-like guitar stabs. In contrast, "Love Ridden" leans into balladry with sparse piano and looming strings, building to emotional swells that underscore the album's plush moodiness. These production choices by Brion emphasize orchestral drama against Apple's vocal intensity, fostering a sound that feels both personal and grandly arranged.[20][21][22]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of When the Pawn... delve deeply into themes of vulnerability, self-doubt, tumultuous relationships, feminist empowerment, and mental health struggles, often drawing from Fiona Apple's personal experiences to create a confessional narrative.[9] Apple has described her songwriting as an unflinching exploration of emotional rawness, a sentiment that permeates tracks reflecting her battles with insecurity and relational turmoil.[9] These themes are framed through a feminist lens, emphasizing agency amid pain, as seen in songs that critique toxic dynamics and assert self-awareness.[23] Apple's lyrical style is poetic and introspective, blending dense wordplay with raw confessionals that evoke literary depth. Her use of metaphor and double entendres adds layers of ambiguity, such as in "Get Gone," where phrases like "get gone" play on departure from a relationship while hinting at ecstatic release, underscoring the complexity of desire and rejection.[9] This approach avoids straightforward storytelling, instead weaving emotional ambiguity to mirror the messiness of human connections.[9] Specific songs highlight these elements vividly. In "Criminal," Apple grapples with guilt and seductive complicity in a flawed romance, portraying herself as both perpetrator and victim in a cycle of self-sabotage that ties into broader mental health struggles.[23] "I Know" captures paranoia and self-doubt, with lyrics that dissect obsessive thoughts in love.[9] Overall, the album's words form a therapeutic outlet, transforming private anguish into universal commentary on resilience and emotional truth.[15]Release and promotion
Commercial release
When the Pawn... was released on November 9, 1999, by Clean Slate/Epic Records in the United States.[24][25] The album was initially issued in CD and cassette formats, with the cover artwork depicting Fiona Apple in a dramatic standing pose against a stark background. Limited vinyl pressings were not available until a 2020 reissue.[26][27] As a follow-up to the multi-platinum success of her debut Tidal, Epic Records—under Sony Music—invested in a significant marketing push, emphasizing broad U.S. distribution through major retail channels before an international rollout in early 2000.[25][9]Marketing and singles
The marketing strategy for When the Pawn... faced unique challenges due to the album's full title—a 90-word poem spanning 444 characters—which set a Guinness World Record for the longest album title at the time and proved difficult to accommodate in advertisements, album spines, and promotional materials. Epic Records typically shortened it to When the Pawn... for practicality in marketing efforts. The lead single, "Fast as You Can," was released on October 5, 1999, shortly before the album's launch, to build anticipation. Its music video, directed by Fiona Apple's then-boyfriend Paul Thomas Anderson, employed experimental techniques including a vintage hand-cranked camera with multiple lenses for a distinctive, dreamlike visual style.[28] Subsequent singles included "Limp," released on February 15, 2000, and "Paper Bag," released in June 2000, both accompanied by music videos directed by Anderson. The "Limp" video featured surreal, narrative-driven imagery, while "Paper Bag" paid homage to 1940s musicals with choreographed dancers and stylized sets.[28][29] Promotional activities encompassed television appearances, such as Apple's performance of "Limp" on Saturday Night Live on February 19, 2000, hosted by Ben Affleck, which highlighted her live piano-driven delivery and helped sustain media buzz.[30] Apple also supported the album with a dedicated tour in 2000, performing tracks like "Fast as You Can" and "Paper Bag" across North American venues to connect with fans through intimate, jazz-influenced sets.[31]Commercial performance
Chart positions
Upon its release in November 1999, When the Pawn... achieved moderate commercial success on various international charts, reflecting Fiona Apple's growing but niche appeal following her debut album Tidal. The album debuted and peaked at number 13 on the US Billboard 200 in December 1999, selling 103,000 copies in its first week, marking her highest charting position to date at the time and spending a total of 18 weeks on the chart.[32] It also appeared on year-end tallies, ranking number 169 on the 2000 Billboard 200.[33] Internationally, the album had more limited impact. In the United Kingdom, it reached a peak of number 46 on the Official Albums Chart and spent two weeks in the top 200.[34] In Australia, it peaked at number 54 on the ARIA Albums Chart.[35]| Chart (1999–2000) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Australian Albums (ARIA) | 54 |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 46 |
| US Billboard 200 | 13 |
Sales and certifications
When the Pawn... has sold over 1 million copies worldwide. In the United States, sales reached approximately 913,000 copies by 2009 according to Nielsen SoundScan, with stronger performance in North America compared to Europe, where it achieved modest chart placements but limited sales.[5] The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) certified the album Gold on February 7, 2000, recognizing shipments of 500,000 units, and Platinum on March 26, 2020, for 1,000,000 units (including streaming equivalents).[39][40] Sales received a boost from streaming in the post-2020 era, contributing to renewed interest and equivalent unit certifications.[41] The album's commercial performance allowed it to recover its production budget—reportedly elevated due to extended studio sessions—and satisfied Epic Records, affirming Apple's viability as an artist despite creative risks.[42]Critical reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in November 1999, When the Pawn... received widespread critical acclaim for its artistic advancement over Fiona Apple's debut album Tidal, with reviewers highlighting her increased maturity and emotional depth. Rolling Stone awarded the album four out of five stars, with critic David Fricke praising Apple's "deeper, more fiercely swinging voice" that pushes melodies toward genuine emotion, describing the record as "richer, deeper and stronger than Tidal, in every way."[43] Similarly, Spin magazine gave it a 9 out of 10, commending the lyrical depth and Apple's portrayal of herself as both victim and provocateur in a "therapy session set to music," emphasizing the album's bold exploration of personal turmoil.[44] Other positive responses echoed this sentiment; Entertainment Weekly assigned an A grade, lauding the "searing honesty" in tracks like "Paper Bag," while Q magazine rated it four out of five stars for its "witty, literate" lyrics that balanced confession with cleverness.[45] However, some reviews were mixed, critiquing elements of overproduction and accessibility. In the Village Voice, Robert Christgau gave the album an A- in his Consumer Guide, acknowledging its ambition and maturity but finding it "more self-conscious and less fun" than Tidal, with dense arrangements occasionally overshadowing the emotional core. NME offered a middling 5 out of 10, arguing the elaborate production sometimes hindered the songs' raw appeal, making them feel less immediate for casual listeners. The original Pitchfork review scored it 8.0 out of 10, appreciating the emotional honesty but questioning the album's occasional opacity in blending jazz-inflected complexity with pop structures.[19] Aggregating 17 reviews, Metacritic reported an average score of 79 out of 100, reflecting broad consensus on the album's emotional honesty and Apple's lyrical prowess, though debates persisted over its accessibility compared to the more straightforward Tidal. Critics generally agreed that When the Pawn... marked a pivotal step in Apple's development, prioritizing introspective intensity over commercial polish.[46]Retrospective appraisals
In the decades following its 1999 release, When the Pawn... has garnered heightened acclaim in retrospective reviews and rankings, often celebrated for its prescience and emotional intensity. Pitchfork's 2019 reappraisal awarded the album a 9.4 out of 10, lauding its "diamond-sharp writing that mines the depths of her psyche and emotion" and positioning it as a cornerstone of Apple's oeuvre.[6] Slant Magazine ranked it number 79 on their 2011 list of the 100 best albums of the 1990s, highlighting its raw bitterness and captivating self-examination.[47] Similarly, Rolling Stone placed it at number 108 on their 2020 edition of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, emphasizing Apple's ability to transform personal demons into songs of anger and resilience. In the #MeToo era, the album has undergone feminist rereadings that underscore its unflinching portrayal of relational power dynamics, misogyny, and female rage, themes once dismissed as overly confessional but now viewed as prophetic. Critics have noted how tracks like "Fast as You Can" and "Paper Bag" capture the complexities of emotional manipulation and self-worth, resonating with contemporary discussions of women's experiences in patriarchal structures.[48] A 2020 New Yorker profile contextualized Apple's early work, including When the Pawn..., within the era's emphasis on female bonding and reevaluating past traumas through fresh perspectives.[11] Fiona Apple has reflected on the album's personal stakes in subsequent interviews, describing its creation as a confrontation with industry skepticism and her own vulnerabilities, which amplified its raw authenticity.[9] Despite initial commercial and critical overshadowing by Apple's later releases like Fetch the Bolt Cutters, When the Pawn... has experienced rediscovery in the streaming era, with anniversary retrospectives in 2023 and 2024 affirming its enduring appeal among younger listeners.[49] As of 2025, critics continue to acclaim its influence on indie pop, crediting it with shaping a generation of female singer-songwriters through its blend of jazz-inflected piano, hip-hop rhythms, and introspective lyricism.[50]Track listing
All tracks are written by Fiona Apple.[2]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "On the Bound" | 5:23 |
| 2 | "To Your Love" | 3:40 |
| 3 | "Limp" | 3:31 |
| 4 | "Love Ridden" | 3:22 |
| 5 | "Paper Bag" | 3:40 |
| 6 | "A Mistake" | 4:58 |
| 7 | "Fast as You Can" | 4:40 |
| 8 | "The Way Things Are" | 4:18 |
| 9 | "Get Gone" | 4:10 |
| 10 | "I Know" | 4:57 |