SPIN Magazine, March 1996

The Volcano Lover
If you think Tori Amos is just another new age flower poet, wait till you meet  the furious girl inside. Francesca Lia Block talks faeries, boys, and pudding  with pop music's reigning goddess (Photographs by Corinne Day).
I had a dream about Tori Amos before I met her. She was wearing a stiff peach  damask Italian Renaissance gown; her hair was up on her head, cascading marinara  tendrils. We were walking through an ancient stone castle, discussing light and  darkness, and the way she is often seen as either one or the other-virgin or  whore, ex-classical pianist child prodigy or ex-rock chick, poet or punk, more  the daughter of a Methodist minister father or of a part-Cherokee mother. When  so many contradictions coexist in one petite palace, there's going to be a  cacophony of voices shaking up that dinner party, but what happens to the lady  at the head of the table?
When I actually meet Tori Amos, outside of Surrey, the castle is a pale pink  English country manor with roses clambering up the side and green fields all  around. The damask gown is a fuzzy angora sweater, worn with bell-bottoms and  Mary Jades. But her face is like in my dream, open and friendly, with that  lustrous baroque-pearl skin and generous mouth. Amos kisses my cheeks when I  give her the Sky Dancer doll-a flying plastic faerie-that I brought from F.A.O.  Schwarz in Manhattan. I join her for lunch in a dining room overlooking, through  French doors, a huge lawn and a pool the color of Amos's eyes and sweater. It  feels like I've been hanging out here for a while.
Later, I'm sipping red wine in an attic loft, and listening to the new album  Boys for Pele, named after the Hawaiian goddess of destruction and creation to  whom young men were sacrificed by being thrown into her volcano. Through most of  it, I don't know whether to cry or dance. Amos is dancing around behind me, and  bringing me Kleenex. She has told me, "The music is the magic carpet that other  things take naps on, and I am alternating between soaring on her tapestry carpet  with its elaborate, gold-encrusted surface and falling into its gorgeous and  bloody scenes. I am looking for the secrets in the hidden patterns, but my guide  into this woven world can be as allusive and abstract as the goddess herself.
"I don't fall in love much," she says. "I mean, I fall in love every five  seconds with something but I don't go from boy to boy. I go from archetype to  archetype."
Her words weave a kind of spell, so that even while you're thinking 'this is  an out-there girl', you're following her down every thickly wooded forest path,  among the roses and the briars, past the carnival mirage in the distance.
She starts to walk slowly in circles with her hand raised above her head as  she talks. "With Caton (Steve Caton, who plays guitar on Under The Pink and Boys  for Pele), we talked about 'Doughnut Song' and the swirling, the idea of girls  on hands of men and underneath men are slates of material that open up and there  are women underneath them on the backs of cattle and above the girls that are on  top of the hands of men there's something pouring into their water jugs. Those  are the pictures I get when we're trying to find a sound, and it's funny because  the guys go, 'Here we go again- Tori-speak.'"
Deciphering Tori-speak, I learn that the 14 major songs on Boys for  Pele-which at 70 minutes runs much longer than either of her two previous  albums-symbolize the 14 body parts of the Egyptian god Osiris. In the myth, they  were collected by the goddess Isis. If Amos is Isis, whose parts does she need  to collect and reassemble? She recently broke up with Eric Rosse, the coproducer  of Little Earthquakes and Under the Pink, whom she was with for over seven  years.
Eric and I were inseparable, and the truth is I don't care any less for him.  We just agreed that we needed to go and be independent of each other. Sometimes  I didn't know what was my thought or what was his, and that's not healthy. We  painfully held hands and looked at each other and said we have to go explore, we  can't protect each other anymore. I miss him of course; you kind of miss it when  one of your arms is gone. I mean, I have a really good left hand and it plays  really fast but I do miss my right arm. I seem to be growing another one,  though, and I think he needed his back so that he could play his instrument."
She also mentions some anonymous other he's who appear on Boys for Pele, but  won't say who they are, though the album is full of references.
Amos and her crew are here at the castle "reeling in the girls," Tori-speak  for mixing the songs. Songs as girls? The more I listen the more I get it; the  words and sounds are like a girl-party. There are changelings whose faerie mamas  clipped their shivery wings down to the nub in order that they might pass as  human in North Carolina, where they (and Amos) first emerged. There are  goddesses raging in the heart of the volcano, brides in veils marrying the sun  god, sexy tango dancers in the devil's cocktail lounge, minister's daughters  wailing blasphemy in churches, feverish, gun-toting, swampy Southern belles gone  bad with pigs suckling on their breasts. Call them the girls of Boys.
We are walking down a country lane surrounded by hills so green it almost  hurts to look at them. This is definitely a land for the faeries, whom Amos  thanks on every album. Her connection to these and other mystical beings is  often perceived as a reason not to take her totally seriously- cute New Age  white-girl flower poet. But really the faerie thing is as much about an eerie  chill that makes every hair on your body stand erect-or about brutal, bloody  violence-as any Sky Dancer image. The original faerie tales were scary, sexy  stories that helped children and adults work out their most primal fears. Faerie  is as much bone and shards of glass and ice crystals sliding down the spine as  it is pretty daisies and dolls (all imagery from Under the Pink; Amos  understands this range). The queen of the faeries, Mab, had red hair and was  buried in a tomb in Ireland, the country Amos recorded much of Boys for Pele in.  Thinking about those curls, that breathy or wailing voice, those sometimes  crystalline, sometimes shattered, shattering melodies and lyrics, I find myself  wondering if this is some kind of pilgrimage to an incarnation of the faerie  queen herself.
"I think that people who can't believe in faeries aren't worth knowing," she  says when I bring myself to ask. "Neil [Gaiman, creator of the comic Sandman,  featuring the Amos-based character Delirium] believes that faeries have gone  beyond cool. They've transcended cool. I just think alternate realities make you  a good writer. If your work is any more than one dimension, you believe in  faeries. I'm sure I'll start thinking now about all the people I know who don't  believe, that I quite like. We can still go have a pint. Not the Chardonnay,  though."
We pass some white horses in a field and I ask about another mythical  creature that hasn't been taken seriously.
'People make statements about 'this unicorn sh*t' and don't realize that  'this unicorn sh*t' was a secret code that millions of people were killed for.  The gangs could learn a few things." She's referring to pagan beliefs that  survived through symbolism in tapestries and literature. "If you weren't toeing  the Catholic line at the time, then you were a heretic. I'm trying to  reconstruct some of these falsehoods Suddenly, she's had enough of theories and  abstractions. Modern-day-Mab wants to go into the small nearby town to get the  herbal pickup, guarana, for th e crew: "Kind of a naughty faerie thing to do."
Much of Boys for Pele stems from Amos's response to what she believes is "one  of the greatest lies that has been told, the lie about the sacred bride and the  sacred bridegroom." Originally, Jesus was the sacred bridegroom, but the  bride-or goddess-and her cults were wiped out by Christianity- making Mary  Magdalene a whore instead of a priestess and taking away the Madonna's  sexuality. "There's not a sacred bride in our culture." Amos says her life would  have been different, that she would be less oppressed by shame about her passion  and sensuality, if she had been raised with the sacred myth intact.
"We kind of skulk off into the darkness to fulfill these sides of ourselves.  We get tied up or defecated on because we've judged our true desires as women so  harshly." If the bride had been acknowledged, she argues, "there would have been  honor of the feminine. There wouldn't have been patriarchy as we know it or  matriarchy. There would have been balance."
This idea also applies to rock. "If you look at rock culture, there is very  much a desire for the sacred bridegroom to die. The sacred brides don't die  much. Janis Joplin is one of the very few."
In her song "Muhammed My Friend," Amos honors the bride with the lines, "It's  time to tell the world, We both know it was a girl back in Bethlehem." You can  just see a torrid Tori-video with a girl in a skimpy red dress stepping off the  cross and dancing into the distance.
All of this myth-speak isn't an abstraction for our sacred girl.
"Even if you don't read history or you aren't interested in anything that  happened before the '60s, there are reasons why we think the way we do. There  are reasons why people are going crazy right now." Paraphrasing Joseph Campbell,  she says: "A culture that doesn't know its mythology is powerless. Some kids  show up at my shows crawling out of their bodies. They'd turn their power over  to anything; that's 'cause they don't know the tools to go in."
The tools are the myths themselves. Without them, we won't be able to  understand who we are. This tapestry will dissolve, the faeries will be  silenced, white horses will lose their horns, and the goddess will become the  frightened girl forever. The more you live inside Tori's tapestry, the more you  realize how necessary it is to keep the golden threads of myth intact.
"I wanted to marry Lucifer," she tells me. "Even though I had a crush on  Jesus. Lucifer was the brother holding the space for mankind/womankind to act  out their fears and hidden secrets, things they won't acknowledge. That's what  the shadow is, the side that's been denied, and once you don't deny your shadow  anymore then it's not a perversion of that energy source. I don't consider  Lucifer an evil force. We can all tap into that free-running current of  distorted energy.
"Some of my girlfriends-liberal London girls-had a problem with the idea that  I was writing a song called 'Father Lucifer.' One of them heard it and cried and  said, 'You made him so beautiful,' and I said, 'What if he is beautiful?' Shadow  defines light. The shadow is where I hang out a lot because I like chasing and  diving with those forces."
I mention the Greek myth of Persephone, the girl stolen away by Hades, god of  the underworld, and how she might have preferred that fate to hanging out with  her mother among the flowers and sunshine forever.
Amos replies, "Although I think my mom would like to tag along and have a  dance with him because she's been a minister's wife for so long! But this is not  Hollywood's view of Lucifer."
Instead of an evil satanic demon, her Lucifer is a dark god who has great  respect for life and love. "On some of my darkest days, he's the one that comes  and gives me an ice cream. I feel such a sadness from him. I cry and feel his  presence with his music. I feel like he comes and sits on my piano. Yet this is  a pretty serious being. I'm a little squirt when you think what a very serious  force this is."
Sounds pretty heavy, but "Father Lucifer" is as much a romantic fantasy as  anything else. "I just always wanted to learn flamenco so I could dance with  him," Tori teases. "I wanted a great tango in the June summer with somebody  really hot. There are a lot of cute boys around. It's that quirk in their  personality that makes my toes curl, and Lucifer's got a very quirky  personality."
And just as she loves the darkness, she craves the light: "I flirt with the  sun god too. I enjoy that immensely." She gives her "yummy" smile, like a little  girl with a bowl of pudding, a food that comes up quite often with her. "In  fact, I enjoy both of them quite immensely."
"Tori is a foody," her assistant, Kerri Manuell, has told me. And it's true.  Tonight is Halloween and we dine by candlelight on salmon steaks, potatoes,  sweet potatoes, broccoli, home-baked bread, apple raspberry crumble, and the  Chardonnay she loves and might not share with you if you don't honor alternate  realities.
Amos uses food as a way to talk about everything that isn't food. Searching  for a sound on "Marianne," a song about a childhood friend who died, she told  her musicians "It's kind of like that melon slush that I made ten years ago and  poured it out the side of my little hovel when I lived in L.A." Food is how she  explains the status of her record label: "When it's time, that information will  be made available, but right now I think it's good to let the bread bake in the  oven. There's definitely some muffins in the oven." It's how she expresses her  desire to care for people-"Anorexics need to hang out with me. I know the finest  chefs. I do! I've had a few propose marriage and everything!" -and how she  describes her harpsichord: "I really was getting a bit bored with the piano;  compositionally I just needed a new taste, kind of like another spice, so I got  into the red pepper. Cayenne pepper. Cayenne pepper in orange juice, cayenne  pepper in spaghetti, cayenne pepper in pudding, and this is what the harpsichord  has been." In fact, when I ask her to define her core beliefs, she doesn't have  to think. "Lots of food!"
"I just have to have a giggle sometimes because these relationships are so  overblown. You know the pudding that never stops growing? Like tapioca.. you  could forge houses in it."
Even with her lust for life and funny puddings, Amos habitually deals with  images as rippingly painful as "chickens get a taste of your meat," in the Boys  song "Blood Roses. Let go and love,' F*ck that sh*t! My heart is scarred. I have  a tear running down the middle of it and I'm not ready to say, 'Let go and  love.'"
But the pain on her new album seems less like the pain of victimization that  we witnessed on Under the Pink and more the growing-up pain of self awareness.  "It's not a revenge record but a releasing record. I've been angry at myself,  too, for getting into certain situations with men. Anger is healthy, but out of  balance if it doesn't have compassion.
One of the girls on Boys is "Hey Jupiter," a song about the pain of  separation that Amos says is very much about a real man. "I was at my lowest. I  was at a hotel in Phoenix, and I realized that for once there wasn't a man I  could turn to." The song contains lines from inside the sorrows of a breakup,  words that encapsulate a lot of what the album represents: "So are you gay? /  Are you blue? / Thought we both could use a friend to run to."
But this is only part of the story. She also quotes from the driving, bitter  bang of a song, "Professional Widow": "'Give me peace, love, and a hard c*ck':  because you can't have one without the other. For her to really say, 'Are you  gay? / Are you blue?' that same person has had to say 'Give me peace, love, and  a hard c*ck,' because if I hear peace and love one more time! That is so full of  sh*t!"
Seething with a rage made visceral by the baroque but violent sounds of the  harpsichord, "Professional Widow" has an anger and power that we've rarely, if  ever, heard from her before. "Slag pit / Stag sh*t / Honey bring it close to my  lips (yes :)...) / ...Starf*cker, just like my daddy." Speaking about her  furious girl, Amos says, "I really like her because she's dead honest. I've been  a groupie and I wish I hadn't been, but I was and it happens. I can relate."
"And now you're on the other side," I say.
"No, I've been a groupie when I was on the other side, actually."
"Do you sometimes use abstractions or obscure references to give yourself a  little distance from such specific events?" I ask. We are curled up on a couch  drinking tea. Outside, the grounds are veiled in furtive, silvery light.
"I don't think Boys for Pele is abstract at all. I think Under the Pink was  an abstract work; it was meant to be. This one is more like when you're in a  relationship where there are things that are hidden but are definitely  underlying the conversation; you're interrogating him-over a glass of red wine  and a fire, but you're still trying to get information. And you feel more than  one thing at one time.
"Poppa [her part-Cherokee grandfather] always said the South was so confusing  because the South smells the sweetest after a lynching. That's because after a  lynching the goddess cries and the honeysuckle never smelled sweeter. That's  similar to relationships. You're sitting there thinking one thing and hearing  one thing and yet he's telling you another thing. It's like, what was that about  not being able to commit himself? He said it without saying those words, he  said, 'My mind is divided, I want to come see you but my mind is divided.' Give  me a f*cking break. But I'm buying this- I wanted to hear his mind was divided  so I could hang on a little longer. And this is many _he's_-my whole life."
I ask about the choice of finishing up the album in Louisiana. "At first I  was going to record everything in the South. There's a hiddenness about the  South, and I wanted to go back there because it was similar to how I felt in my  relationships with men." The Southern girl wanted to convey the buried meanings  that often haunt love relationships, by working in an environment thatis so much  about cruelty disguised by rich, sensual beauty. "Things smell so delicious  coming from that oven, the lazy summer days and the grasshoppers and the  honeysuckle and the magnolia, the rhododendrons. You don't want to see how cruel  people are being to each other. It's much more harsh because they're in this  impressionist painting, so everything is muted, even though it's shockingly out  of order. It's very much like the relationships. Everything looks as if there's  this beauty and then we would be doing things to each other that were far from  beautiful."
In this tapestry castle is a room I glimpse but don't go into-the sacred  temple that houses the piano and the harpsichord. One difference between Boys  and the earlier albums is the presence of the harpsichord, which Amos learned to  play specifically for this venture. Because it has no sustain, it is very  different from the piano, and she's been "playing it more like a percussive  instrument. I got into my thrash harpsichord. When I look at it, I just see it  go to me, 'Wear your high- heeled red shoes and give me some ass, girl.'"
Amos is obsessed with finding unique sounds. "I'm a hunter," she says. "I'm  not much of a collector but I have a really hard time not collecting shoes." Her  confidence as a musician is truly of goddess proportions. And she should be  confident, selling out every venue to screaming audiences who recall Beatles  fans in their hysteria even though she's just one girl and a piano. But she  catches me off guard by suddenly expressing her vulnerabilities. Ironically,  since many people are frustrated that they aren't taken seriously as musicians,  Amos struggles with wanting to be appreciated as a woman first.
"You've got to remember I was playing since I was a little girl. I've been a  musician before I was a human. I've always been judged musically before I even  knew what was happening just because that's what happens when you're playing at  such a young age. But now there really is a person inside here other than the  musician, and I'm just coming to that this year. Music is so much a part of me I  think it's in my cells. If I lost my hands and I lost my voice and I was just  sitting there I'd still think in tone and rhythm because that's how I think  every second. But I can be a woman that thinks in tone and rhythm, not just this  thing."
As Amos figures it, "This is where a lot of Boys for Pele is coming from.  It's not [about] pushing the boys off the side of the volcano or roasting them  with marshmallows. There were five seconds when that did occur to me, but that's  just because I wasn't really ready to see the gift. I think these relationships  are such gifts."
So what happens to the girl who is all these girls? How does she integrate  the fragments? How does she resolve her anger toward the boys?
"It's very much working with that Pele energy, that destruction/creation  energy, trying to find the balance, because I would find myself either the  lovey- doveyest-woviest sweet pea, or a madwoman," Amos says.
With hard work, self-awareness, analysis, and expression, she is bringing all  her fragments together. And she has something else that helps, too- her appetite  for the humor in life. She interrupts all the analysis with "I think the Brits  would laugh their asses off and go, 'Tori, you have to go to a rugby match.'"
I realize that I like her even more than I'd imagined I would. This isn't  just about worshiping at the temple of the goddess. It's about sharing pudding  secrets with a girlfriend.
"This is an interview, so I'm speaking to that boy out there who feels like  he's been sh*t on by this girl. I'm speaking to that girl out there who will  never get approval from her father-it ain't going to happen, she's never enough.  I know how many kids this reaches, but at the same time there is a balance to  all that search for wholeness and part of that is going to the rugby game.  Diversity creates wholeness."
We stop in front of the house. She is lighting and extinguishing one match  after another.
"And what about the Pele reference?" I ask. "When and how did the album come  to be called that?"
"I'm a bit of a pyro and I ran out of matches when I was staying in Hawaii."
Pianos for pyros, I think.
Back at the house, Amos tells me about her upcoming tour, in which she will  do some 180 appearances in one year. I'm reassured to know that she will have  her best friend, Beenie Shanks, who also does Amos's body work, along, as well  as her kindly, protective road manager John Witherspoon, her loyal quirky-angel  crew, and a chef specializing in gourmet Asian cuisine. Still, it's tough work  under any circumstances, even for a girl with "warrior energy" who has told me,  "If we were a pile of Vikings, I'm not a bad guy to have on your side."
When I'm about to leave, she hugs me.
"See you around the bend," she says.
I'd like to go with her.
But instead I'll imagine her flying across continents, alighting at the best  restaurants for her savory favorite meals of wild mushrooms and fish cooked on  wood planks, the finest Chardonnays; collecting shoes with seven-inch heels in  Paris; I'll imagine her crying in hotel rooms in the Midwest and sweating at her  harpsichord, lit by the faces of thousands of the devoted. She is in Hawaii,  playing her piano at the edge of a volcano, embodying (with typical dualism)  both the flame and the ash. It is impossible to tell where one ends and the  other begins.
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1