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Music > Columns > Suffragette City > Tori Amos Suffragette CityAbnormally Attracted to Sin: Tori Amos Talks with PopMatters[22 May 2009] By Matt MazurPopMatters Contributing Editor ![]() Watch for the redheads … With every new record, there are the proverbial, derisive critics who decree she is “over” or that her records are over-long, and there are old fans, expecting Boys for Pele II, burning their fan cards and cursing her name for not giving them another harpsichord record. None of this has gotten her down yet, or stopped her from experimenting. To my mind, this is the artist’s ultimate function: to provoke an emotional, intellectual response and, in Amos’ case, to challenge listeners’ conceptions of what the “Tori Amos” sound is. The singer-songwriter dabbles into a bold new aural palette and comes up with another winning, sure-to-be-controversial work. Amos chatted with me on the eve of the release of her tenth album to talk about collaborating with rock Gods and Goddesses, how bootlegs could potentially cause divorce, and why a gal sometimes just needs a good wig to add an extra element of surprise to both her marriage and her live show. I’d like to jump right in and talk about your voice – an aspect I think critics often overlook when discussing your music. On Abnormally Attracted to Sin, there are so many amazing “vocal” moments, and I am thinking of the end of “500 Miles” in particular. How has your singing voice changed over the years? Let’s talk about marijuana. On the record, there is “Mary Jane”, of course, and on “Fast Horse” you talk about wanting to find “the man who can smoke this out”. Then there is the sonic juiciness of the record. Is Abnormally Attracted to Sin the Tori Amos pot record? I’ve seen you live since (pretty much) the beginning and I am always amazed at how technology has advanced since, say, The Dew Drop Inn Tour, where you hoped to sneak a crappy camera in to a venue to get a blurry shot and you loved it, but now seemingly the next day, your entire concert is on YouTube. How do you feel when you look out and see a bunch of phones in the air at a show instead of lighters? That’s this kind of polar opposite world that I live in. I try and create a concert that’s somewhat different every night and I wanted to do the bootlegs [Legs and Boots, 2008]. The effort that it took from the crew was just…beyond. I don’t think Mark slept on that tour. I barely saw him sometimes. He would just be uploading stuff at four or five in the morning from hotels in the city and then getting to the next gig and the crew was all very supportive of that. My bus would roll ahead and I would sleep. The effort to do that in that way was a huge commitment, but I think everybody on our side really wanted to achieve that. I don’t know if we’ll be doing it again this time… Because you want to actually see your husband? I wanted to talk about the magic moments, I’m thinking of the “Bliss” video at the mirror, on Welcome to Sunny Florida, where you are observed by the camera and the audience, snapping into “character” before going out on stage. Can you talk about this time? What are you thinking of right before you walk on stage? And that’s a process, there’s a real psychological process you go through so that you don’t get thrown off-center or distracted by even your own thoughts. It’s about self-discipline because in order to do a show, night after night for people, you really have to think ‘ok, I have to put aside the ‘Tori’ of it all, and be an artist. Everything will be there, waiting for me to deal with when I get offstage. The funny thing is, is that by the time I get offstage, I usually see it all differently, you see, because a transformation can happen through creativity. Perceptions can change. You’ve always had characters in your writing, I always appreciate the detail you bring to character to the table. There is more to it than just the ‘traditional singer-songwriter’. You’re like a sonic character actress. David Bowie is somebody who has been always able to do that. There are quite a few performers who can do that, where it’s not just like (laughing) ‘OK, I’m going to play my tunes for you tonight’. To me the songs are independent of me as well, so I try and let my body become a canvas so that the songs can then sort of mold and shape and take over me, in order to deliver their frequency. You bring up Bowie, but I was actually going to bring up another rock legend: David Byrne. What was it like working with him recently? I wish I could have been a fly on the wall for that dinner! I really liked this quote from you, which is from the American Doll Posse era:
I really like that you address this openly. It seems there is a general reticence to talk about age in relation to women, especially in the entertainment industry. This quote from you made me wonder what kind of ageism a woman in power faces in today’s society? But men the same age have a different chess game that they get to play in the industry, where it’s not looked upon as anything strange. In a way, they’re ageless, if you follow me. They can be fathers or objects of desire in their mid-40s without it becoming some kind of ‘oh, you’re old’. The whole kind of ‘cougar’ definition means you’re prowling and, again, I’m just saying to you, that you don’t think of these men and their early- to mid-40s, or it [being] odd that young women are attracted to them, or young men are attracted to them, because they’re ageless. Whereas, once you hit your late-30s, early 40s, in the movie business and the music business, then I do think that you’re talking about the characters, the roles, that unless a story is written for you, if you are the ‘significant other’ of the guy, a lot of these women, the objects of desire, are not necessarily the same age as these men. They might be women that are powerful or threatening but they might not be the love interest in the bedroom, you see what I mean? And this is something that women have to define for themselves, how they see themselves. Wisdom is a sexy thing. One woman, who I would say is one of your few contemporaries, who I would say is “ageless” is PJ Harvey. She released White Chalk around the same time as American Doll Posse. Now Abnormally Attracted to Sin is being released in close proximity to PJ & John Parish’s A Man a Woman Walked By. What would a Tori Amos-PJ Harvey record sound like? You become a mom, you get involved in your life, and she’s involved in her life, and you keep missing each other, from town to town and city to city but there’s always been goodwill on both sides on both sides of that fence. I think that because we’ve both been creating for a long time and do very different kind of work. There’s always been a feeling of ‘wow, that’s another bird flying in the distance, doing beautifully.’ One last question and I will let you off the hook. We talked about “characters” and playing “characters”, and you’ve experimented with the physical manifestation of that on your last tour, and now the Posse has shown up on the visualette side of Abnormally Attracted to Sin. I was just wondering, how many wigs do you travel with and where they all go at the end of the day? These performances will all be with red hair. I think Sinful Attraction, which is the name of the tour, will definitely be having redheads, for the most part. You just never know who might show up in the encore, you know? The Sinful Attraction Tour kicks off in Seattle, Washington on 10 July. L’Amos will kick out the jams with stalwarts Matt Chamberlain (on percussion) and Jon Evans (on bass), as the trio takes the show from the States, to Europe and finally to Russia for the first time, ever. Abnormally Attracted to Sin is currently available for purchase in stores and digitally.
Suffragette City
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Comments
A wonderful piece, Matt, as expected. You pinpoint exactly her willingness to evolve and adapt - and the price she pays for it, both critically and commercially. Great to read her take on “Lady In Blue” and she comes up with the best description of the album that I’ve heard yet: it’s “like going to many different shows at fashion week.”
Comment by Alex R from London, England — May 22, 2009 @ 4:43 am
Wonderful, thank you!
Comment by Josiah from lawrence, ks — May 30, 2009 @ 12:01 pm
Matt - WOW! - what can be said besides “thank you!!”? After reading such an acknowledged review (the sort Tori Amos’s work so very often -always! - deserves, but rarely gets in numbers to gather a thunder), I feel relieved in the sense that this woman’s genius isn’t being wasted to half-sided perception! While reading the review, I wanted to run around the house with my arms up shouting, big grin in face, thumping my chest like kingkong! That sort of feeling of bonding, almost, of identification and gratificattion & gratitude. Excellent! Now on to the article, and completely ravished:) Guess you’ve earned yourself a potential follower of your articles, lol:)Greetings from Brazil! - C
Comment by Carmven from São Paulo, Brazil. — July 2, 2009 @ 2:43 pm
The review got my hopes all up for the article. And you sure didn’t miss hitting the ball HARD! Amazing work, thank you so much for such delicious read! - C
Comment by Carmven from São Paulo, Brazil. — July 2, 2009 @ 3:01 pm
Very well thought out and written review, Matt. I’m a big Tori fan and most of the reviews of her work, especially her last several releases seem to have been done by people who haven’t really paid attention to the work they are reviewing. You know after their first paragraph how it ends:“Some good songs, but why is it so LONG?”, and then dismissing the lyrics because they contains quirk imagery. Since I first heard her music in 2002 I’ve found her to be a very intriguing human being. Direct, forthright, and outspoken and willing lay it all out there for the listener to take it for and as whatever they feel, think or sense from it.
Paul R
Comment by Another Paul R from Los Angeles CA — August 6, 2009 @ 4:07 pm
Love this piece about Tori. the most distinct perspective, so far, amongst all of the articles ive read about her. You did a great job!
Comment by Sheng Reyes from Philippines — October 25, 2009 @ 7:01 pm