A dozen years after the breakthrough debut of Jagged Little pill, Alanis Morissette remains not only an enduringly popular artist, but one whose success stems from a fierce commitment to authenticity and vulnerability. Both of these traits enable her to climb to new ground with Flavors of Entanglement.
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In the '90s, you could dominate the world with one album (see: Garbage, Bush, Alanis), then be relegated to obscurity. The former You Can't Do That on Television star popped up as God in Kevin Smith's Dogma and issued a gleefully insane video cover of Fergie's "My Humps," but otherwise hasn't been charting much of late. Now, indulging in the tasteful lite-pop of "Underneath," she'll hit the road with fellow late '90s superstars Matchbox Twenty.