Due to the nature of my IRL job in health care, I regularly interact with teenagers – most of whom lead me to believe that they’re experiencing a reality to which I cannot possibly relate. Yet, even in 2024, one thing appears to remain true as it was 30 years prior, when I was just barely a teen: most teenagers have no real concept of age. In the past several months, I’ve been estimated to be anywhere between 24 and 55 years old.
It’s not their fault; the profound physical and emotional growth that occurs within the span of even a few months means that an 11th grader might seem like an alien to someone in 8th grade. And once you get past that immediate peer group, there’s this undifferentiated block of human beings that are simply “adults.” Teachers or dentists or family friends or even celebrities and athletes might be 26 or 35 or 43, but because they have some degree of authority, in reality they’re “adults” and therefore “old.” They might appear to be younger or older olds, but still – old.
I say all this to preface the dull fact that Sarah McLachlan was 26 when she released Fumbling Towards Ecstasy, currently being celebrated with a robust 30-year anniversary tour. To put things into perspective, here’s a list of musicians who are 26 years old right now: Faye Webster, Sexyy Red, Jack Harlow, FINNEAS. She was born in 1968, a year after Scott Weiland, Kurt Cobain, and Billy Corgan, the artists who were largely responsible for shaping my worldview as a 14-year-old boy while Fumbling climbed the charts – one that required music to give form to the confusion, inarticulate anger, bafflement towards the opposite sex and particularly in the case of Smashing Pumpkins, lurking belief that everyone had a sinister plot to prevent me from my destiny. It’s actually somewhat miraculous that “Possession” and “Good Enough” managed to pierce through that thicket of adolescent angst.
While I lacked the language to explain things in critical terms at the time, Fumbling Towards Ecstasy didn’t quite scan as “alternative” despite the fact that it was being played on the alternative radio station – the guitars weren’t loud and, compared to similarly positioned female artists like Bjork or Tori Amos, her voice was conventionally beautiful. Nonetheless, it felt slicker and more seductive than the more overtly “adult” music that jockeyed for position against Nirvana and Snoop Dogg on MTV, like Richard Marx or Eric Clapton or Boyz II Men. Fumbling Towards Ecstasy might’ve been younger adult music, but adult all the same.
Fortunately, radio executives had a name for that sort of thing: “Hot Adult Contemporary,” or, oxymoronically, “Hot AC.” The midpoint between Top 40 pop and straight-up “Adult Contemporary,” this format included the likes of Sheryl Crow, John Mellencamp (especially his cover of “Wild Night” with Meshell Ndegeocello), Melissa Etheredge, and Seal in 1994. By the time Surfacing emerged in 1997, there was a more accurate and more attractive name for what Sarah McLachlan was doing: “Adult Alternative Airplay.”
The first AAA chart was published by Billboard in 1996 and topped by “The World I Know,” a Collective Soul power ballad that would be used to sell trucks 15 years later. Surfacing’s opening track “Building A Mystery” would hold that same spot for ten weeks throughout the next year. Thus began Sarah McLachlan’s ascent from semi-stardom to the sort of strange ubiquity that comes when your album sells 16 million copies worldwide without making you a celebrity – in 2001, “Building A Mystery” was the first song played publicly on an iPod. Darryl McDaniels, aka “D.M.C.” of Run-DMC, claims that “Angel” pulled him from the brink of suicide. When I mentioned that I was going to a Sarah McLachlan concert to any of my friends between the ages of 35 and 45, they did not bring up “I Will Remember You” or “Ice Cream” or “Sweet Surrender”; they all seemed to know her from those monumentally sad ASPCA commercials. As the writer Jia Tolentino pointed out in 2022, the name Sarah McLachlan had a tendency to “reflexively summon an image constellation of tremendous adult-contemporary mauveness — shelter cats, hemp skirts, Lilith Fair corsetry.”
Mind you, this quote is pulled from Tolentino’s blurb for Fumbling Towards Ecstasy on Pitchfork’s revamped The 150 Best Albums of the 1990s list; one that was seemingly created for the sole purpose of upending a 40-something male’s ideas about what music from their youth was going to matter in the future. As if to drive that point home as strongly as possible, Fumbling Towards Ecstasy slotted at #119, directly ahead of Rage Against The Machine (as well as previously unimpeachable indie rock standards like Bee Thousand and The Lonesome Crowded West, which hung out in the 120s).
Even as someone who has stumped for Sarah McLachlan for most of my adult life, I’d love to tell you I was ahead of the curve on her reappraisal in ways that would bolster my reputation as a music critic. But nah, I’ll simply say that Fumbling Towards Ecstasy is one of the few albums that I only got once I listened to it while high.