Such Pretty Forks in the Road is the ninth (and seventh international) studio album by Canadian-American singer-songwriter
Alanis Morissette, released on July 31, 2020, through Epiphany Music and
Thirty Tigers in North America, and by
RCA and
Sony Music in Europe.[7] It is Morissette's first studio album in eight years, following 2012's Havoc and Bright Lights.[8]
The title of the album comes from the lyric line of the first track, "Smiling".
Background
Morissette had been working on the album since at least mid-2017. In August 2017 on
Anna Faris' podcast Unqualified, Morissette revealed the name of a new song called "Reckoning". She described this song as "patriarchy falling down", and said it was in reference to her day in court in regards to the trial in which others were accused of embezzling from her.[14][15] In early October 2017, on her own podcast Conversation with Alanis Morissette, she detailed a new song called "Diagnosis",[16] in which she describes
postpartum depression and how she felt better when she knew what was going on with herself. Later that month at the tribute concert
Linkin Park and Friends: Celebrate Life in Honor of Chester Bennington, Morissette was invited as a guest to perform "
Castle of Glass" and a new song of hers called "Rest". She said that she had been working with
Mike Farrell and writing new demos.
In March 2018, Morissette previewed another new song from the album called "Ablaze", dedicated to her children.[17] In August 2018 on
Laura Whitmore's Sunday Session on
BBC Radio 5 Live, she stated that the new album would be a "piano record", and that "Rest" would make the final cut.[18] In October 2018, Morissette said that 23 songs would be on the new album when replying to fans.[19]
In August 2019, Morissette revealed that she was working with
Alex Hope and
Catherine Marks on her as-of-then untitled record.[20] She announced the album in December 2019, also debuting "Reasons I Drink" and the song "Smiling" during a performance at the
Apollo Theater in
New York City on 2 December, the latter of which was described as "sanguine" by Suzy Exposito of Rolling Stone.[21]
On April 16, 2020, Morissette announced that the album would be postponed to a later date from its initial release date of May 1, 2020, due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, and announced that "Diagnosis", a track about Morissette's experiences with post-partum depression, would be released as the third single on April 24, 2020.[22]
Promotion
Morissette was scheduled to embark on a world tour for the 25th anniversary of her 1995 album Jagged Little Pill in June 2020, during which she would perform songs from her entire career, including songs from Such Pretty Forks in the Road. As of May 2020 the tour has been postponed to 2021 following concerns of the
COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.[23]
Such Pretty Forks in the Road received positive reviews from music critics. At
Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received a
weighted average score of 71, based on 12 reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews".[24]
In addition to the
Juno AwardAdult contemporary Album of the year, which she won, Morissette was also nominated as
Songwriter of the Year.[12]
Commercial performance
Such Pretty Forks in the Road debuted at number 16 on the US
Billboard 200 chart, earning 23,000
album-equivalent units (of which 20,000 copies were pure album sales) in its first week.[11] The album also debuted at number one on the US
Top Rock Albums chart, becoming her second number one album on that chart.[11] Additionally, Such Pretty Forks in the Road debuted at number two on the US Billboard's
Independent Albums chart.[35]
The album reached number 8 on the
UK Albums Chart, her highest entry there since So Called Chaos which reached the same position in 2004.
Such Pretty Forks in the Mix is a
remixextended play released on December 11, 2020, by Epiphany Music and He.She.They. Records with distribution from
Thirty Tigers. The EP features remixes from songs from Morissette's ninth studio album, Such Pretty Forks in the Road, by
trans-inclusive female artists, as well as two performances recorded in March 2020 and taken from her live album Live at London's O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire, 2020. A portion of the proceeds went to Safe Place International, an organization helping
LGBT refugeesin Turkey and
Greece.[36]