Ani DiFranco began recording and self-releasing her music as a 20 year old in Buffalo, New York in 1990. 34 years later she is widely considered to be a feminist icon. But in many ways she emerged iconic, fully formed and fearless.
A facile lyricist with a biting honesty, she played guitar with a virtuosic, rhythmic style. And she was ahead of her time as an independent artist who owned all her own masters and controlled most of the major aspects of her career. She’s sometimes called the mother of the DIY movement.
DiFranco has released all of her albums (over twenty) on her Righteous Babe record label. The label has also put out projects for other distinguished singer songwriters including Andrew Bird, Utah Phillips, Arto Lindsay, and Anaïs Mitchell whose own Hadestown project was first released as an album on Righteous Babe before being transformed into the Broadway hit that it is today.
Ani Difranco’s most recent studio album Revolutionary Love came out in 2021. In 2022 she published a picture book for children called The Knowing which she described as “an Ani DiFranco-style lullaby, inviting young readers to ponder the distinction between outer forms of identity and the inner light of consciousness.” And she will join the cast of Hadestown on Broadway in February, playing the role of Persephone, a part she sang on Anais Mitchell’s original Righteous Babe recording in 2010. So it’s both her broadway debut and a fill circle moment.
In recent years Righteous Babe has released anniversary editions of Ani’s early recordings. In 2022 she revisited the 1998 album Little Plastic Castle, sharing anecdotes and memories of the making of it on social media, and playing some of the songs live. Her memoir, No Walls and the Recurring Dream, was published in 2019.
Here she talks about how she sees her work today (“my job is connecting with people”), her early career (“it was relentless”), avoiding being labeled or boxed in (“I feel like a survivor of labels”), her idea of success (“successful artists are not necessarily the best selling”), raising children in an era of performative identity, practicing revolutionary love and why it’s easier to tell the truth than to hide yourself.
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0:00 Intro
12:00 Interview
51: On Prince (Paul Peterson, Ricky Peterson, Monte Moir)
50th Episode Special: Leo Sidran (podcast host, musician)
Ep. 49: Marc Webb (Director)
48: Gabriela Quintero (Rodrigo y Gabriela)
Butch Vig: Record Producer on working w/ Nirvana, Garbage, and the art of communication
Ep. 46: How to Get Nominated for a Grammy
Ep. 45 Jorge Drexler - Uruguayan songwriter on process, identity and empathy
44: Dave King "Commitment is an incredible thing"
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42: Becca Stevens "I'm an emotional perfectionist"
41: Creed Taylor, Record producer at the crossroad of history and good taste
40: Howard Levy, Harmonica Player on How Rhythm, Melody, & Light are all the same thing
39: Musicians behind Late Show with Stephen Colbert
38: Addicted To Living In the Present Moment - The Trade Winds project
37: Inspiration Comes from Life at the Newport Jazz Festival
36: George Wein at 90 - Looking forward to the future
35: Welcome to Copenhagen
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33: Tommy LiPuma with Al Schmitt, Steve Gadd, Larry Goldings, Jacob Collier and Dean Parks
32: Sachal "I have a power to make my words count"
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