Tori in Making Music magazine

January 1995

Tori Amos, flame-haired chanteuse, agony aunt to millions, and  self-confessed vampire, talks to Rikky Rooksby (funky name, eh?- Paul) about her  "scary" new album. If you're of a sensitive disposition, read on.

D.H. Lawrence, the Nottingham torch singer... well, novelist actually, once  wrote a poem called Piano, which began ; "In the dusk a woman is singing to me."  He wrote about men, sex, power and religion. As it happens, so does Tori Amos,  who coincidentally pounds a mean joanna herself, and, just at this moment, the  dusk having fallen from Kensington High Street, is singing to me in a dimly-lit  room in her record company offices, after a whole day of interviews.

If you've seen her sing from row W, you'll have an idea how expressive she  can be. But this, in the words of St. Eddie, is something else. And she knows  it. Her voice moans, teases, whispers and flutes the melody of "Father Lucifer",  one of the new songs which will be leaving elegant scorch marks across the  nation's hearts in the new year. Sigh. The fidelity of CDs will never seem the  same again.

A certain sector of the record-buying millions and press will always have  Tori Amos in a box in the basement marked "Fragile. One raisin short of a  fruitcake". For them, she will remain Little Miss Loopy. But for those hooked on  her high-wire vocal style and habit of going from whisper to scream, ballad one  minute, ballistic the next, the new album will be a feast.

Called "Boys For Pele" (Pele is a volcano goddess..), it was inspired by the  break-up of her seven-and-a-half year relationship with Eric Rosse, who  co-produced her last opus, "Under The Pink". Dressed in jeans, a black top and a  wooly jumper, Tori leans back on the sofa, cradling her tea, and with eloquent  pauses, tells the story of how the split happened mid-tour and the songs came.

"It just happened. I didn't try to write at all. I had to, on an emotional  level. Each of the songs became fragments. There's a story - you're given  excerpts. When you hear the whole record, the story will either make sense or  not."

She pauses, throws back that famous, red, tangled hair. "When you believe  you've found your soulmate and it falls to pieces.... Sometimes when you  separate you're both ready to move on. Sometimes I think you separate still  loving. You don't know why you can't be a couple anymore. And a lot comes out.  The record is metaphorical in that there are places within each song where it  becomes very clear, I think, what the emotion is that's being claimed. It's all  about the intimacies of womanhood."

Her first album, "Little Earthquakes" (1992) immediately established herself  as a singer-songwriter of originality and fire. Its success was consolidated by  the second, "Under The Pink", and a punishing tour schedule. Along the way she  has picked up critical plaudits, survived the Kate Bush comparisons, duetted  with childhood hero Robert Plant, and wooed an audience who stay behind after  gigs to pour out their own emotional traumas.

I suspect woman feel as affectionate towards her as an earilier generation  did towards Joni Mitchell. In the early seventies, "Blue" or "For The Roses"  kept company many hurt souls whose daughters now find solace in "Little  Earthquakes". In different ways, Amos, Bush and Mitchell all report back from  the civil war into which men and women's attempts to find love and passion often  decends. Tori's audience are used to a confessionary culture.

"I had to write for my freedom. I was shattered. I had to begin to look at  myself. I tried to get energy from different men in my life. I got my vampire's  licence. In "Tatula" I'm begging this concept of ideal woman to come alive in  myself, feeling afraid of losing someone. If it matters, it must be something  worth losing. Each song began to a piece of claiming myself."

Tori cites "Professional Widow", a striking chunk of what can only be  described as baroque funk - sort of Mozart meets Funkadelic or Sly, stripped  down. "That's my Lady Macbeth, the side of my that wanted power. But power in a  man's world. I wanted to be Indiana Jones, not the girlfriend (she laughs). But  as I began to do that I started to alienate many men.

"'Widow' is my hunger for the energy I felt some of the men in my life  possessed; the ability to be king. I wasn't content just being a muse. I was the  creative force. I was in relationships with different men where if they could  honour that, they couldn't honour the woman, and if they could honour the woman,  they couldn't honour the creative force.

Her energy returning, Tori is animated, sitting up and gesticulating as she  talks. Does she think she would have had this problem with men even if she were  not a famous recording artist? "I've talked to a lot of women about this and  those who have heard this album understand it as exposing the female part of the  game in the relationship, in humour or fury, vunerability and rage, and womean  who are becoming their own force left very akin to it, understood this person.  But I don't think men really know the extent women have looked to htem for  support, acknowledgement, passion and yet compassionate love. I don't know if  men really know what happens on the other end of the phoneline when they hang  up; when it's getting uncomfortable yet when it's time to communicate.

"It's just that I found it do hard to get into their heart sometimes, to get  to the place of openness. At that point, maybe they didn't trust me. I don't  know if I was totally trustworthy then. It's really difficult to have a  relationship when you need something from a person. When you want to share,  that's different. I didn't see it when I was doing it until everything began to  fall to pieces and it wasn't there anymore."

Mythology serves as s useful shorthand for Tori. It lets her dramatise  herself and her life, which it artistically productive, plus it cloaks the  intimate details of her private self when she's talking in public. Looking back  at the tour, she says, "There were high spots - like my chat with Lucifer... you  begin to face your fears - that's what it's really about. Being alone forces you  to do that. There's nobody can make it go away. There's this incredible strength  you can pull from a great love. So being alone is hard, but it was time to claim  my woman. It's what I've begun to do.

"I made a choice with this record that I wouldn't censor it. I think when you  hear the break in the voice and the fury and the piano, the undulating of the  rhythm, it's just me jumping off a cliff, a quest for freedom. But I couldn't  have freedom without looking at my part in what happened, without seeing the  sides I wanted these men to give me that I could only give myself.

"It was the transition of womanhood for me, and I hat to go visit Lucifer to  make a descent. We had to go have a cup of tea, cut a deal and the deal was: no  censorship."

How did Tori make the jump in musical style from the mainstream LA rock of "Y  Kant Tori Read", her flop 80's rocjk album for Atlantic, to her current  innovative songwriting, with its bold use of sparse rhythmic textures and  dissonance?

"I wrote "Little Earthquakes" in LA before I came to London. I had that style  before "Y Kant Tori Read". Whether you look at "China" or "Hey Jupiter", It's  the same girl who whrote those songs.

"I'm alwyas trying to push the boundries of form, but I don't analyse it when  I'm writing. To me it's about a visual symmetry and that's how I can write from  an emotional level - knowing instinctively, the craft of sensing when a melody  doesn't work."

As an example of the breathtaking moments that litter her songs, she pick the  bridge in "Caught A Lite Sneeze", when the drum loop is pulled out for a couple  of bars. "I wanted to take the whole rhythm because we're moving (she sways on  the couch), we're trying to get rid of the possession. The track just stops for  a minute and it goes (sings), "Right on time" and then right on time our rhythm  comes back."

Her songs are often deeply moving, even when it's not clear what they're  about. "Great. That was the intention. When they were coming, it wasn't me  sitting around going, "What am I going to write about?" "Under the Pink" was  more like an impressionist painting, stepping back, looking at a subject and  sculpting a painting. "Boys For Pele" was drinking a little bloody and having to  write, needing blood, can't get it, needing to write."

Tori is the daughter of a Methodist minister from the Southern States but has  been in flight from the church for many years. When she draws on the imagery of  Christianity, it's usually for subversive purposes, to challenge partiarchal  religion. The new album has its usual quota of references which will have the  bible belt foaming at the mouth - like claiming Jesus was a girl... (wasn't that  Bruce Wayne? - hopelessly confused Ed).

"As a writer you need to jump off cliffs. I was sitting there last Christmas  Eve with my parents watching the nativity, hearing all these songs about Jesus.  I began to see how the world has viewed his birth - with that cane the death of  the Goddess. To me he was part of the Goddess - peace, love, (and a hard cock? -  Paul) Christian mythology is so rich. Before they changed the Catholic ceremony  there was much more metaphor, but the whole idea of the son of God came and  there was no place for the Goddess. Yet with what Jesus taught, there was a  complete balance of male and female in his being."

The first of the new songs was "Blood Roses" in May 1994. Tori describes the  songs as "Baroque gone askew", to capture the dissillusionment of the loss of  romance. The recording started in June 1995, in a church in Delgany, Co.  Wicklow, Eire, and a "Wonderfully damp Georgian house in Co. Cork," and was  completed in studios in Louisiana.

"I went back to the church to speak some of my most private thoughts, but I  did it with honour. I reclaimed something for myself. These relationships were  affecting me because of the way things became hidden, which reminded me of the  South." Tori relates a memory of sitting at dinner, the smell of sweet fried  potatoes on the table, but having someone whisper that she really shouldn't be  showing any interest in that little black boy up the road. "It's a very  confusing place...

"The record begins with the horses from "Winter" (and outstanding track from  "Little Earthquakes") coming back to take me on this journey and we ride and go  find the demons. The music keeps broadening out - whether it's "Father Lucifer",  which is tounge-in-cheek style, or something else."

Ditching the traditional rock backing band, "On tour there'll be the Blak  Dykes Mills brass band, and I'll bring the harpsichord. If I bring it musicians  it's got to be something interesting; it can't be a band. That choice doesn't  excite me. So we're starting with the brass band, which will be fun." Several of  the tracks feature Tori's inspired harpischord playing. She sees it as following  "the bloodline of the piano. I got a harpsichord, I played it and my guys miked  it up. Very simple. I was trying to become a woman and the musician in me said,  "Well, fuck you, you know, let's get a new wardrobe, let's expand, honey girl."  So I got a harpsichord and a harmonium.

"I've heard woman say that when they separate from a long-term relationship,  they go out and buy a new wardrobe. Well, I didn't do that. Instead, I decided  on something inner, because a makeouver isn't going to do this. There were so  many things I never allowed myself to do when I was in this relationship, and I  think Eric would tell you the same. All sorts of things you see which you can be  finally honest about.

"Like "Doughnut Song", the last I worked on. There's a bitter-sweet quality  about it (she sings...). There's a sweetness to becoming a woman that the  virgins don't have. They have a physical sweetness, but once you claim the  woman... Yes I want to wring their (men's) neck sometimes - those I fall in love  with - yet there's much more of an understanding."

How does she feel about her audience being very intense and off-loading onto  her? "I'm trusting that they're intense (she laughs). It's a big responsibility.  When I turned in this record, somebody in the States commented, "This is very  intense, it's not comfortable - aren't you worried about whether they are ready  for this?"

"I'm ready to jump off a cliff, and if they're ready to jump with me, we jump  together, and it's another journey. The woman's journey. "Little Earthquakes"  was the girl finding her voice. "Under The Pink" was testing those waters and  looking primiarily at women's relationships. This is a little volatile. About  the men and what they gave me. Sometimes they gave me nothing and that was the  gift. Sometimes they stood there and didn't come save me, didn't come make it  OK, because at that point in a relationship when you're going separate ways,  you're on your own. It is a gift, being forced to claim your fire, but scary  sometimes."

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