Fast as You Can explained

Fast as You Can
Cover:FionaAppleFastAsYouCan.png
Type:single
Artist:Fiona Apple
Album:When the Pawn...
B-Side:Across the Universe
Genre:Jazz fusion[1]
Length:4:40
Label:
Producer:Jon Brion
Prev Title:Across the Universe
Prev Year:1998
Next Title:Paper Bag
Next Year:2000

"Fast as You Can" is a song written by Fiona Apple, and produced by Jon Brion for her second album, When the Pawn.... It was released as the album's lead single in the United States on October 5, 1999, and in the United Kingdom on February 14, 2000. It became one of Apple's most successful singles in both countries, and its music video, directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, was well received.

Background and style

Apple said that with the song, she wanted to explore different moods and the "ups and downs" of a relationship. "When you get to the middle [of the song], that spell of confusion takes you out of the element for a minute, which is, of course, what happens emotionally. But the beat never changes."[2] Apple said the song is "really just thoughts that were running through my head that were in that rhythm".[3]

Jon Brion said he knew "exactly" what he wanted the song to sound like. "I knew I wanted it to be Matt Chamberlain on drums", he said. "He can play all this beautiful machine-influenced stuff, but with human feel." Brion played a "very busy bass line idea" for Apple on a keyboard in his kitchen, combining the line with a "groove" in the style of Chamberlain's work. Apple became excited and said, "That's great! That feels exactly like it!" Brion and Apple stressed in interviews that it was Apple, and not Brion, who created the time-changes and structure in the song were already present when he worked on it.[4] "All I did was to heighten pre-existing things", Brion said. "In terms of the color changes, I am coordinating all of those, but the rhythms are absolutely Fiona's."[5]

The Philadelphia Inquirer described the song as "slightly off-kilter, perpetually destabilized ... an intricate suite of shifting moods that starts as a '60s soul-jazz stomp, then is connected by a rueful ballad interlude to a sauntering triple-meter chorus."[2] The New York Times wrote that it "signals its mood swings - love me, fight me, don't go, get out while you can - with tempo changes and unlikely interludes, from a blunt hip-hop drumbeat to [flute-like] 'Strawberry Fields' keyboards."[6] Newsweek characterized the song as "galloping" and "syncopated",[7] and Spin magazine called it "skittery".[8]

The cover of the promo CD for the single in the US was drawn by Apple.[9]

Chart performance

The single debuted on the US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart in late October, receiving minimal radio airplay until When the Pawn made a strong debut on the Billboard 200 albums chart.[8] It subsequently rose to number 20 on the Modern Rock Tracks chart in mid-December, remaining on the chart for 12 weeks. On the Adult Top 40 chart, on which it debuted in early December, "Fast as You Can" peaked at number 29 and stayed on the chart until early February 2000. The song became a top-10 hit on the Triple-A chart, peaking at number eight in January 2000. It failed to appear on the Billboard Hot 100 but became Apple's first—and, currently, only—single to reach the top 40 in the United Kingdom, where it was released on February 14 and peaked at number 33. In Ireland, the song reached number 49. "Fast as You Can" also reached number 62 in Australia's annual Triple J Hottest 100 poll.[10]

Music video

The single's music video was directed by Apple's then-boyfriend, film director Paul Thomas Anderson, who directed the video for Apple's previous single, "Across the Universe" (1998). Anderson shot the video in Pasadena, California[11] with the crew he uses during the production of his films. "[I]t's all really fun", Apple said of the video. "I don't have to wear any makeup or anybody else's clothes - no negligees!"[12] The video was photographed by Robert Elswit and edited by Dylan Tichenor, and it premiered on MTV and VH1 the week ending on September 19, 1999.[13] [14] In the video Apple is seen singing the song in and around a house, inside a garage, at a subway station and on a subway train. The video was filmed with a vintage hand-cranked camera, which is why Apple's mouth does not match the lyrics she sings. Throughout the video there are changes from black-and-white to colour and from fullscreen aspect ratio to widescreen. It was nominated for a 2000 Billboard Music Award for "Best Pop Clip of the Year",[15] with media sources describing it as "quirky",[16] "simple, improvised",[8] "playful and inventive".[7]

Track listings

UK CD1[17]

  1. "Fast as You Can" (radio edit) – 3:46
  2. "Never Is a Promise" (live) – 6:25
  3. "Across the Universe" – 5:06

UK CD2[18]

  1. "Fast as You Can" – 4:38
  2. "Sleep to Dream" – 4:08
  3. "I Know" – 4:57

UK cassette single[19]

  1. "Fast as You Can" – 4:38
  2. "Never Is a Promise" (live) – 6:25

European CD single[20]

  1. "Fast as You Can" (radio edit) – 3:46
  2. "Across the Universe" (remix) – 3:43

European maxi-CD single[21]

  1. "Fast as You Can" (radio edit) – 3:46
  2. "Across the Universe" (remix) – 3:43
  3. "Never Is a Promise" (live) – 6:25

Japanese CD single[22]

  1. "Fast as You Can" (radio edit) – 3:47
  2. "Limp" – 3:30
  3. "Fast as You Can" (album version) – 4:39

Personnel

Charts

Year-end charts

Release history

RegionDateFormat(s)Label(s)
United StatesOctober 5, 1999Alternative radio[24]
October 26, 1999Contemporary hit radio[25]
JapanNovember 20, 1999CD[26]
United KingdomFebruary 14, 2000Columbia[27]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Song Review by Matthew Greenwald . Allmusic . May 7, 2016.
  2. Moon, Tom. "Fiona Apple has a new album to promote - and an image she'd like to change". The Philadelphia Inquirer. November 8, 1999. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
  3. http://www.neverisapromise.com/articles/vh1oct99.htm "Fiona Apple Has A Lot Of Explaining To Do"
  4. Graff, Gary. "Sound Off - Fiona Apple". Wall of Sound. November 1999. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
  5. Zollo, Paul. "Producer's Corner - Jon Brion". Performing Songwriter. July/August 2000. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
  6. Pareles, Jon. "Fiona Apple's Angst, Bravado and 90-Word Title". The New York Times. November 7, 1999. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
  7. Giles, Jeff. "Happily Ever Apple". Newsweek. November 8, 1999. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
  8. Light, Alan. "Girl On A Wire". Spin. February 2000. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
  9. Unknown (1999). In "Fast as You Can" [promo CD liner notes]. United States: Clean Slate Records/Epic Records. ESK46302.
  10. http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/hottest100/history/2000.htm "Hottest 100 2000."
  11. Corrigan, Susan. "Golden Delicious". i-D. March 2000. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
  12. Harrington, Richard. "Fiona Apple: The Time Is Ripe". The Washington Post. November 28, 1999. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
  13. http://www.mvdbase.com/video.php?id=1624 "Fiona Apple - Fast as you can"
  14. Web site: October 9, 1999 . Video Monitor . January 29, 2023 . Billboard.
  15. Vineyard, Jennifer. "D'Angelo, Billy Gilman Top Billboard Music Video Awards Nominees". Rolling Stone. November 1, 2000. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
  16. Gardner, Elysa. "Fiona's fresh spin on life, love and 'the business'". USA Today. November 30, 1999. Retrieved December 15, 2006.
  17. Fast as You Can. Fiona Apple. 2000. UK CD1 liner notes. Columbia Records. 668996 2.
  18. Fast as You Can. Fiona Apple. 2000. UK CD2 liner notes. Columbia Records. 668996 5.
  19. Fast as You Can. Fiona Apple. 2000. UK cassette single sleeve. Columbia Records. 668996 4.
  20. Fast as You Can. Fiona Apple. 2000. European CD single liner notes. Epic Records, Clean Slate. EPC 668180 1.
  21. Fast as You Can. Fiona Apple. 2000. European maxi-CD single liner notes. Epic Records, Clean Slate. EPC 6681802.
  22. Fast as You Can. Fiona Apple. 1999. Japanese CD single liner notes. SME Records, Clean Slate. SRCS 2179.
  23. The Best of 2000: Most Played Triple-A Songs. Airplay Monitor. 8. 51. 44. December 22, 2000.
  24. Going for Adds. Radio & Records. 1319. 121. October 1, 1999. July 28, 2021.
  25. Gavin Top 40/Rhythm Crossover: Impact Dates. Gavin Report. 2277. 14. October 25, 1999.
  26. Web site: フィオナ・アップル. Fiona Apple. Sony Music Entertainment Japan. https://web.archive.org/web/20071231183031/http://www.sonymusic.co.jp/Music/International/Arch/SR/FionaApple/index.html. December 31, 2007. August 25, 2023.
  27. New Releases – For Week Starting 14 February, 2000: Singles. Music Week. 31. February 12, 2000. July 28, 2021.