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Biography
Unapologetically original. Unabashedly in your face. Avril Lavigne's 2002 debut Let Go gave young women a defiant voice and set it to music they could rock out to. Fourteen million albums and eight Grammy nominations later, the Canadian chanteuse returns with Under My Skin but if you're expecting a whole lot of the same, you've got another thing coming. This is not a girl who rests on her laurels. Under My Skin opens with the dramatic
tracks "Take Me Away" and "Together," which set the
scene for the kick-ass guitars and radio-ready chorus of "Don't
Tell Me," a song of willful female empowerment that picks up where
"Complicated" left off. From there it's a one-two punch of
three-chord guitar licks ("He Wasn't") and head-bopping
optimism ("Who Knows") alongside swirling, brooding melodies
("Freak Out") and moody tracks ("Forgotten,"
"Nobody's Home") that reveal a darker side of Avril Lavigne. No photos, no interviews, no pressure.
Eventually they recorded most of the songs in Raine's studio, and those
songs appear unaltered on Under My Skin. The rest of the tracks,
co-written with her guitarist Evan Taubenfeld (and one track with former
Evanescence guitarist Ben Moody), were cut just up the road. "I was
involved in every aspect of making this record. I'm very hands-on,"
she says. "I knew how I wanted the drums, the guitar tones, and the
structures to be. I understand the whole process so much better this
time because I've been through it. I'm really picky with my sound." I'm a hopeless romantic, and surprisingly
old-fashioned," Avril laughs. "That's why I wrote a song about
not giving it up to just any guy ["Don't Tell Me"]."
Girly quirks aside, Avril's anxious to get the show on the road.
"It feels so good to be singing new songs," she says. "I
feel refreshed and I'm looking forward to the next thing." Next album: One source reports that Lavigne will release a new album some time in Spring 2006. Avril's band: Lavigne's current band consists of the following: Devin Bronson (lead guitar), Craig Wood (rhythm guitar), Charlie Moniz (bass) and Matt Brann (drums). Departed members from Lavigne's band consist of the following: Evan Taubenfeld (lead guitar, 2002–04), Mark Spicoluk (bass, 2002) and Jesse Colburn (rhythm guitar, 2002–03). Criticism: Some members of the old school, hardcore punk community have an intense dislike for Lavigne and her style of music, which they believe waters down what punk is really all about. Comments she has made, showing a lack of knowledge/interest in the seventies punk movement and the luminaries of that movement, has led some to label her a poseur. Her music is also highly apolitical, and commercial in nature, leading to sell-out accusations. Punk'd: Lavigne became the victim of Punk'd when Ashton Kutcher and his crew members convinced her that she'd blown up a car and a bike. Lavigne parked her car in a garage, and as soon as she and a friend had left, Kutcher and his team posted a fake reserved sign and sent another car to block Lavigne's car before she returned. After complaining to an attendant about being stuck in her spot, Lavigne was asked by him to help remove the car, but chaos soon ensued when the car rolled out of everybody's control and crashed into a transformer. The transformer exploded, destroying all the bikes that were parked in the garage. Lavigne fought back tears as the owners of the bike and a car screamed at her in disgust, and she attacked Kutcher when he appeared from behind the scenes. |
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