![]() Still, a lot can go on without leaving home. (Her song “Largo” still plays on the club’s Web site.) She’d cancelled her most recent tour, in 2012, when Janet, a pit bull she had adopted when she was twenty-two, was dying. ![]() Five years ago, Apple stopped going to Largo, the Los Angeles venue where, since the late nineties, she’d regularly performed her thorny, emotionally revelatory songs. These days, the singer-songwriter, who is forty-two, rarely leaves her tranquil house, in Venice Beach, other than to take early-morning walks on the beach with Mercy. The first day that I visited, last July, it was set to MSNBC, which was airing a story about Jeffrey Epstein’s little black book. Worn out, they flopped onto two daybeds in the living room, in front of a TV that was always on. Apple tugged on a purple toy as Mercy, a pit-bull-boxer mix, gripped it in her jaws, spinning Apple in circles. Fiona Apple was wrestling with her dog, Mercy, the way a person might thrash, happily, in rough waves. ![]()
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