― The Lex (The Lex), Sunday, 13 February 2005 23:44 (nineteen years ago) link
We have? Didn't Tori PRE-DATE them both?
In any case, while not a huge fan (I'll stick with Kate Bush, thanks very much), she has had her moments. Search: "Cornflake Girl" and her covers of the Stranglers' "Strangle Little Girl" and Slayer's "Raining Blood" (which is actually quite strikingly lovely in its harrowing starkness...much more disturbing that the original).
― Alex in NYC (vassifer), Sunday, 13 February 2005 23:44 (nineteen years ago) link
― reo, Sunday, 13 February 2005 23:57 (nineteen years ago) link
― The Lex (The Lex), Sunday, 13 February 2005 23:59 (nineteen years ago) link
― joey deacon, Monday, 14 February 2005 00:42 (nineteen years ago) link
― Organized Crime (Leee), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 19:15 (nineteen years ago) link
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 10 November 2005 08:06 (eighteen years ago) link
'liquid diamonds' is very...aquatic, but also decadent. a real sea of music.
the other song which still blows my mind is 'hotel' - about six completely different styles of music in one somehow-coherent song! kate bush trapped in a computer game shoot-em-up!
― The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 10 November 2005 11:18 (eighteen years ago) link
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 10 November 2005 13:20 (eighteen years ago) link
much of the record sounds "underwater." i think "playboy mommy" ruins the flow in the last 4th, though
― Vichitravirya XI (Vichitravirya XI), Thursday, 10 November 2005 13:31 (eighteen years ago) link
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 10 November 2005 13:40 (eighteen years ago) link
― joseph cotten (joseph cotten), Thursday, 10 November 2005 14:47 (eighteen years ago) link
her voice, holy christ. on "hotel" especially.
― Mrs. Genius McGuruchakra (and her secret knowledge) (Jody Beth Rosen), Friday, 11 November 2005 02:05 (eighteen years ago) link
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Friday, 11 November 2005 02:19 (eighteen years ago) link
― Mrs. Genius McGuruchakra (and her secret knowledge) (Jody Beth Rosen), Friday, 11 November 2005 02:22 (eighteen years ago) link
'playboy mommy' is a stone-cold classic ballad, really - the "played glo-ri-a, talkin' 'bout ho-sanna" bit always gets me. and i love the way the lyrics should be an apology, but really aren't: the narrative persona there is probably one of my favourites ever.
― The Lex (The Lex), Friday, 11 November 2005 19:31 (eighteen years ago) link
The first listen was "wtf?", the second "wait, no this is actually awful", the third - pure roffle! I listened a couple more times after that, and I'm now more baffled about Tori luv than ever.
― Worst song, played on ugliest guitar (fandango), Friday, 11 November 2005 19:45 (eighteen years ago) link
Only, every time I listen to Scarlet's Walk I get the sense that really I should love it. The lyrics are probably the best she's done on the whole... at first they seem almost too straightforward but they actually come across as much more complex and intricate on paper, lots of extended metaphors and back'n'forth conversations and lovely turns of phrase which shouldn't be able to fit into song structures but somehow do.
And, track by track, the music is actually pretty good, thoughtful arrangements, excellent multi-harmonising vocals, lovely melodies, lots of variety in Tori's phrasing.
I can even see the bits which are supposed to totally blow my away - "Gimme gimme gimmee" in "Sweet Sangria", "your invading this thing you call love" in "Taxi Ride", "you used to look my good right in the eye" in "Pancake", "through the eyes of Laura Mars" in "Gold Dust".
So why doesn't it work out that why? Why isn't this record as effective as it should be?
I'm starting to think that maybe it's just too articulate, that maybe Tori actually finally understood what song she was trying to sing too well.
On Boys for Pele (by far her most cryptic album) you get these songs with ridiculous lyrics but enormous musical and emotional power ("Father Lucifer", "Marianne") - it's like the ridiculous lyrics represent the site of a blockage, an inability on the writer's part to express herself, which the music and the vocals have to burst through - such that "Timmy and that purple monkey are all down at Bobby's house" seems impregnated with meaning and consequence in a manner you could never divine from the lyric sheet.
There are quite a few songs on Scarlet's Walk which are passionate - deeply nostalgic, angry, bitter, crestfallen etc. - but the songs always feel aware of their emotions, self-reflective and resigned in a way that can work really well for other artists (Ani DiFranco springs to mind) but seems to undercut the brute force of Tori's music somehow.
This theory is probably flawed in so far as the more likely scenario is the music came first and the lyrics are added in piecemeal, but it seems to explain why it is that there's at times almost an inverse relationship between lyrical clarity and musical effect in Tori's work.
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Saturday, 12 November 2005 03:56 (eighteen years ago) link
the scarlet's walk lyrics, more than anything else about that album, turn me off: instead of genuinely impenetrable metaphor like eg that line from 'marianne' which tim quoted, and much of 'riot poof', there's heavy-handed genuine metaphor about putting snowflakes under microscopes. it's all very...conscious, in every sense of the word, and she deliberately tones down musical and lyrical excess in favour of, i guess, what she sees as the Important Theme.
'a sorta fairytale' and 'gold dust' manage to slip under this somehow.
― The Lex (The Lex), Saturday, 12 November 2005 23:53 (eighteen years ago) link
― stockholm cindy is in your extended network (Jody Beth Rosen), Saturday, 12 November 2005 23:57 (eighteen years ago) link
http://www.rkstar.com/video/playvid?qtfile=musicvideo/tramstft
― stockholm cindy is in your extended network (Jody Beth Rosen), Sunday, 13 November 2005 00:01 (eighteen years ago) link
― Worst song, played on ugliest guitar (fandango), Sunday, 13 November 2005 00:04 (eighteen years ago) link
i'm not sure whether to recommend 'datura', 'juárez' and 'raspberry swirl' to fandango or not!
― The Lex (The Lex), Sunday, 13 November 2005 00:37 (eighteen years ago) link
― stockholm cindy is in your extended network (Jody Beth Rosen), Sunday, 13 November 2005 00:45 (eighteen years ago) link
I think I'd end up listening to other songs for the roffle factor right now after that last one though :( Plus, I should probably lend an ear to the other new stuff in my never-quite-empty 'incoming' folder right now.
Politely declining more gifts of Tori, with thanks, for the moment ;)
― Worst song, played on ugliest guitar (fandango), Sunday, 13 November 2005 00:59 (eighteen years ago) link
― stockholm cindy is in your extended network (Jody Beth Rosen), Sunday, 13 November 2005 01:09 (eighteen years ago) link
I did say thanks for that other one before though! I didn't download just to shoot it down, honestly :(
― Worst song, played on ugliest guitar (fandango), Sunday, 13 November 2005 01:18 (eighteen years ago) link
Whereas with something like "Marianne", I think there are the bits which are related to the subject matter ("And they said Marianne killed herself, and I said 'not a chance'") and there are the bits which are just free association ("tuna, rubber, a little blubber in my igloo")
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Sunday, 13 November 2005 03:52 (eighteen years ago) link
― Susan Douglas (Susan Douglas), Sunday, 13 November 2005 04:41 (eighteen years ago) link
i think those are the most successful songs of hers as well, the ones that are couched in elaborate and seemingly confused metaphors in which she introduces brief moments of startling lucidity (cf. "baker baker," with its extended baking metaphor that's interrupted with snippets of some larger story ("i guess you heard he's gone to LA") and really abrupt moments where she seems to let her guard down ("time, thought i'd made friends with time, thought we'd be flying...")). you sense that she's not consciously playing these components off each other for shock/absurdist value but rather that she's negotiating with herself while singing these songs, as if just playing the music is such an overwhelming, confusing experience for her that she's torn between employing either elliptical turns of phrase or full-blown confessionals. if she leaned too much in either direction i doubt i'd find her as fascinating as i do.
and under the pink in general is just really astounding, isn't it?
― joseph (joseph), Sunday, 13 November 2005 04:42 (eighteen years ago) link
― Susan Douglas (Susan Douglas), Sunday, 13 November 2005 04:46 (eighteen years ago) link
― stockholm cindy is in your extended network (Jody Beth Rosen), Sunday, 13 November 2005 04:58 (eighteen years ago) link
i agree with jody re: the confessional stuff. i think this is a point which tim has discussed in depth somewhere else, but what makes tori's take on confessional lyrics so interesting is the way the confessional tone, the overall gist of what she's trying to say, comes across so loud and clear even as she erodes the distinction between meaning and non-meaning, brutally straightforward (and v quitable) lyrics and lines which seem to be purely linguistic/phonetic experiments.
― The Lex (The Lex), Sunday, 13 November 2005 19:06 (eighteen years ago) link
I'm trying to avoid thinking of Scarlet's Walk as a concept album because it was approaching it from that perspective which made me not bother to listen to it much at all for 2-3 years.
I see what you mean about the type of imagery that Scarlet's Walk employs, in terms of sheer subject matter the imagery is much more safe/Lilith-ish than her previous stuff. But I think that going in that direction is not automatically a bad thing - in the Kate Bush thread we've been discussing a lot the domesticity/"blandness" of the album, and I think Jody is correct when she says that, even if Aerial *is* "bland", it makes of blandness something great, makes us question why "bland" comes with negative connotations.
I'm not saying Scarlet's Walk achieves something similar, but listening to the two albums consecutively has made me question the narrative I spun to explain the mildness of my enjoyment w/r/t this album. It may well be that Scarlet's Walk is indeed bland in a bad way, but just saying that by itself no longer seems satisfactory for me, as it has been previously.
Would you say The Beekeeper is better or worse, Lex? Jody?
I'm not dissing "Marianne" by the way, that's one of my favourite tracks! I'm just trying to take a devil's advocate position with myself because the tastes here are something I don't feel I've gotten to the bottom of yet, i.e. I know what I'm responding to but I'm still not entirely sure why.
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Sunday, 13 November 2005 21:12 (eighteen years ago) link
there's a line about tuna in laura nyro's "captain saint lucifer," which is about, um... somehow sex and the devil are involved.
buckles off shinglesoff a cockleshell on norway basincoke and tunaboots and roses from russia
― stockholm cindy is in your extended network (Jody Beth Rosen), Sunday, 13 November 2005 21:15 (eighteen years ago) link
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Sunday, 13 November 2005 21:17 (eighteen years ago) link
i need to listen to both albums again. the beekeeper is fresher in my mind, having listened to it in its entirety once when it came out (and i've still got the tracks i like on my ipod).
― stockholm cindy is in your extended network (Jody Beth Rosen), Sunday, 13 November 2005 21:19 (eighteen years ago) link
the beekeeper is much much worse than scarlet's walk, in my kinder moments i can almost convince myself that the only problem with the latter is that it's overlong. most of the beekeeper isn't just dull or disappointing, but just terrible. whereas i can put the flaws in scarlet's walk down to wrong-headed conscious decisions, the beekeeper is just stale, the sound of completely dried-up inspiration.
i actually think knowing about the scarlet's walk concept helped me enjoy the album a little more, esp the road trip angle which could explain her sonic choices - it's a very feminine, soft take on drivetime music.
― The Lex (The Lex), Monday, 14 November 2005 09:17 (eighteen years ago) link
"It's ending, again, just before it begins. Look, there's no point in me pretending I don't think this is the best album ever. I already said that from the choirgirl hotel was the best album of the Nineties, and that listening to Tori play live is the most transcendent musical thing I've ever experienced, but this album is greater than either of those. This is the first Tori Amos album that is actually better than hearing her play the songs live. It's the complete control that Little Earthquakes didn't have, it's a better rock album than Rumours, it's more brilliant in its discipline than Hounds of Love or The Speckless Sky. It's better than even music maybe has the right to be, more precious than every assembled loss it arises from. It's bigger than me or you, and I tell you quite literally that I don't understand how a person subject to the same mortal rules could have made it. I've stayed up all night with it, tonight, with a computer in front of me and my hands on the keys, and have only really tried to type around it. The short version of this reaction, and the truest one, would simply have been silence; these thousands of evasive words and irrelevant digressions are merely a version of speechlessness. There is nothing I claim I can add to this album, no obscure points I think I should help to clarify, no clear truths I would hope to obfuscate. It doesn't get any better than this, I don't think it can't be made any better than it is by any action of mine, and trying to convince you of any of that through argument is too heartbreaking a prospect to contemplate. This is my apotheosis, and if you won't let it be yours, I hope you have some other one in mind. "Sometimes I hear my voice", Tori said, amazed, in "Silent All These Years". I hear my voice almost all the time. Too much. It's Thursday morning, and I'm going to shut up now."
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Tuesday, 15 November 2005 05:00 (eighteen years ago) link
― The Lex (The Lex), Tuesday, 15 November 2005 18:07 (eighteen years ago) link
"There is a certain place from which Scarlet's Walk looks like the best album ever made by a human being"
And the idea of this sort of fascinates me, perhaps precisely because of its perversity. What is this place?
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Tuesday, 15 November 2005 22:01 (eighteen years ago) link
― stockholm cindy is in your extended network (Jody Beth Rosen), Tuesday, 15 November 2005 22:42 (eighteen years ago) link
― stockholm cindy is in your extended network (Jody Beth Rosen), Tuesday, 15 November 2005 22:57 (eighteen years ago) link
i am so glad i am going back home on friday, because among other things i'm going to reclaim the tori cds i left there that i've been inspired to listen to again (mostly thanks to this thread).
― joseph (joseph), Wednesday, 16 November 2005 05:17 (eighteen years ago) link
'pancake' reminds me of something, too. i can't work out what style she's aiming for with it. it's one of the better moments of the album anyway.
i think part of the problem would have been heightened expectation - as far as i'm concerned pele through to venus was an extraordinary creative flowering for tori, and scarlet's walk falls some way short of that peak.
tim and jody, what do you think of strange little girls? i really, really, like it. her cover of '97 bonnie & clyde' is chilling. the concept actually vaguely makes sense!
― The Lex (The Lex), Wednesday, 16 November 2005 11:55 (eighteen years ago) link
haha and the beekeeper : the red shoes (that's pretty harsh on the red shoes though)
― The Lex (The Lex), Wednesday, 16 November 2005 11:56 (eighteen years ago) link
i like about half of it. it would have made a very cool EP. she should have left off "happiness is a warm gun," "heart of gold," i'm not in love," and "enjoy the silence." sort of on the fence about "i don't like mondays."
"real men" is too good to be stuck way back there at the end.
― stockholm cindy is in your extended network (Jody Beth Rosen), Wednesday, 16 November 2005 12:05 (eighteen years ago) link
i like the way she chose ultra-canonical males to deconstruct so completely.
― The Lex (The Lex), Wednesday, 16 November 2005 12:13 (eighteen years ago) link
Introducing Norway's answer to Tori Amos - Ingrid Olava.
any Tori fans around - give it a listen, and a verdict:
MIC Norway: Ingrid Olava
Ingrid Olava
01/16/2008
The first single has been released form what is set be one of the most talked about records of the year, Ingrid Olava's debut Juliet Wishes
Album released by EMI Norway in early March.
listen: MySpace.com - Ingrid Olava - - Pop / Indie / Jazz - www.myspace.com/ingridolava
― djmartian, Wednesday, 16 January 2008 20:30 (sixteen years ago) link
oh also, "bang"! "bang" is like my favorite tori song in years
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Wednesday, September 13, 2017 8:42 AM (five years ago) bookmarkflaglink
still the high-water mark of her late period
― ivy (BradNelson), Saturday, 1 July 2023 01:41 (ten months ago) link
Coincidentally, I was curious about Tori recently – a video came on; I realized that I've never really "heard her stuff"; and it struck me that she seems like an artist I could either become obsessed with, or have no taste at all for. (An initial Wikipedia dive was pretty intimidating... I didn't realize she has so many albums.)
― Bittern Storm Over My Hammy (morrisp), Saturday, 1 July 2023 01:44 (ten months ago) link
it is so much goddamn music
― ivy (BradNelson), Saturday, 1 July 2023 01:45 (ten months ago) link
always makes me so happy to see a tori thread update from ivy
― Tim F, Saturday, 1 July 2023 05:36 (ten months ago) link
Scarlet's Walk vinyl / reissue is out; heard bad things about the black vinyl pressings, waiting for a red vinyl amazon one to show up which is supposed to be better, but have been re-listening to it on streaming. Two things: The reissue, on streaming, sounds a little muffled, or bass-heavy; but I also am suffering from some hearing loss over the past year and it's possibly related to that (the new Mitski album sounds similar to me, like the highs are missing). 2) this is kind of the last Tori album I loved or even thought was any good until Geraldines and the following (which I still don't think measure up) but somehow I never paid that much attention to the actual lyrics of a lot of it, so color me surprised to read the lyrics to Taxi Ride and find out she was not singing "just another dead fly to you".
― I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Friday, 6 October 2023 21:36 (seven months ago) link
“Taxi Ride” is such an interesting song I think. Trying to capture the experience of being both suspicious of / irritated by someone but also thankful for them feels very Tori, so many of her songs describe these sorts of emotionally ambivalent relationships but rarely with such specificity (although being Tori it’s not like the lyrics are consistently clear).
― Tim F, Friday, 6 October 2023 23:18 (seven months ago) link
Under The Pink = 30 years old today.
It's interesting, I was drinking at a coffee shop over the holidays and they had on a playlist and "God" came on. Removed from the context of me saying "today I am going to listen to Under The Pink", it is a crazy fucking song. Caton's guitar has none of the "atonal, but catchy" appeal of a Marc Ribot solo, it's just a squall of irritation; the piano writing is Tori at her most elegantly "guitaristic"; the verses are grand but fragmented and the "bridge" is brief but also the climax? It's so wild to think that this song was even picked as a single, let alone charted... and I'm sitting there thinking "and this is Track 2. This comes after the insanity of 'Pretty Good Year' and before 'Bells For Her'. This might be the strangest album to ever go platinum"
― a hyperlink to the past (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 1 February 2024 00:48 (three months ago) link
I listened to this album about 200 times before I turned 16 and so its features feel like my own, but I just realised really that the extreme-placid photo shoots and the easy-colour design of the packaging likely perfumed this album extremely, disguised it visually as "something pretty", drove it like a Trojan My Little Pony into my brain to surprise-infect me with its brilliant craziness
This album terrified my younger brother. He was 13! I asked my mom if we could listen in the car and he said "I don't like that album" and my mom said why not? and he started crying! At 13! My younger brother was not usually a crybaby but he was crying. "Mom it's about her wanting to kill waitresses and touching herself and eating babies and stuff it is so horrible." That's right! Cry you fucker! Listen to this and cry your heart out
― a hyperlink to the past (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 1 February 2024 00:56 (three months ago) link
This is such a nice sounding album too - the step up in production from Little Earthquakes is so huge.
Although I got both albums not much later in 1995, I think my listening was not yet sufficiently developed to really appreciate how much production quality was improving for so many bands and artists during the early 90s. Was this something that people actively noticed at the time? In my head now it would be like watching layers of grime being wiped off your windows.
― Tim F, Thursday, 1 February 2024 01:33 (three months ago) link
I mean, my family only got a CD player around this same time. My immersion in these albums occurred at the same time I was introduced to the glory of 44.1 kHz, so I didn't really have a basis for comparison
― a hyperlink to the past (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 1 February 2024 02:28 (three months ago) link
Until recently , this was my favorite album of hers. At the time I thought Boys For Pele was a disappointment, but I’ve since realized it’s the best and I wasn’t worthy when it was released.
Now I’m wondering if Choirgirl Hotel is also good. That’s where I got off the bus.
― Cow_Art, Thursday, 1 February 2024 03:31 (three months ago) link
it is. it's not AS good but it's very strong.
under the pink just dazzled me yet again! magnificent, otherworldly.
― Swen, Thursday, 1 February 2024 03:55 (three months ago) link
in the mid-90s my best friend was in the peace corps in diffa, niger, which is at the ass end of the ass end of countries not so far from what used to be lake chad but also 820 miles over impossibly slow roads to niamey, the capital
he had no books and was more or less dependent on me to send him anything related to then-current western culture. (so naturally i sent him THE EIGER SANCTION by TREVANIAN, which had long been made into a truly awful movie featuring clint eastwood, george kennedy and jack cassidy)
but i also sent him mixtapes, one of which included the jawbox cover of 'cornflake girl' (which is great)
a few years later i met one of his fellow peace corps volunteers, named Pcarolyn (but the P was silent). she asked me if i was the person who'd sent the jawbox cover of 'cornflake girl' to michael; i said yes, and she said 'i didn't like that'
anyway that was 25 years ago and i'm told she's since dropped the ~ silent P ~ but also she was super nice and now this story is all i can think about when i consider 'under the pink'
― mookieproof, Thursday, 1 February 2024 04:31 (three months ago) link
LOL
― Swen, Thursday, 1 February 2024 04:34 (three months ago) link
Under The Ink
― a hyperlink to the past (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 1 February 2024 04:35 (three months ago) link
Yeah, I think Under the Pink just edges Little Earthquakes as her best album. Like Cow_Art I was disappointed in Boys for Pele, but unlike them I've never gotten into it and indeed it's where I got off the bus.
Little Earthquakes had three producers working on it at different times, which I think helps to account for its fairly nondescript sound. Under the Pink was a real step up in production values.
― lord of the rongs (anagram), Thursday, 1 February 2024 08:12 (three months ago) link
I don't think Tori Amos really figured out a "signature sound" until Choirgirl. I can't pick between which is "my favourite" of the first three, but I am pretty sure Choirgirl is "her best" in terms of realisation and execution. Those first three albums sound like albums of prototypes, buying plots of land and doing some surveying. Surveyor-Tori might be my favourite mode of hers, as a listener. Sometimes it gets too safe ("China"), or zany ("Leather", "Mr. Zebra"), or theatre kid ("The Wrong Band", "Happy Phantom"), or annoying ("In The Springtime Of His Voodoo"), or fake-rawk ("Professional Widow"), or uncomfortable ("Me And A Gun"), but the risks feel riskier and the rewards feel greater.
I was reading about Under The Pink on wiki yesterday and seeing that there were song rankings ("God" is her 3rd best song! "Cornflake Girl" is #1!) and I was puzzling over my own ranking. When I try and draw one up, I find I'm listing the more "complete" songs and overlooking the deformed experiments. It doesn't feel right.
― a hyperlink to the past (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 1 February 2024 15:51 (three months ago) link
Like if I had to pick a Tori song to play at a party it'd def be "Cornflake Girl" or "Crucify", but if I had to take one song with me to the afterlife it'd be "Yes, Anastasia" (or "Mother", or "Here. In My Head")
― a hyperlink to the past (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 1 February 2024 15:53 (three months ago) link
got an angry snatchgirls you know what i mean
― ivy., Thursday, 1 February 2024 16:07 (three months ago) link
I put "Past the Mission" on a mixtape once, hoping to impress a girl. One of her friends later told me that she hated Tori Amos. Alas.
― Washington Post Malone (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 1 February 2024 17:08 (three months ago) link
the piano work on Yes Anastasia is insane
so glad to have seen her once, sat front row. she fully rollicks on the piano.
― Swen, Thursday, 1 February 2024 17:30 (three months ago) link
got an angry snatchgirls you know what I mean
See... if "Voodoo" was just the body of the song I'd have a different feeling about it, because it's amazing, but that first minute of snarling always made me annoyed. But then again, maybe I'd think less of the song without it, who knows, it's definitely a beautiful strangething
Literally have never once seen her, which is crazy to consider
― a hyperlink to the past (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 1 February 2024 18:05 (three months ago) link
I put "Past the Mission" on a mixtape once, hoping to impress a girl. One of her friends later told me that she hated Tori Amos. Alas.― Washington Post Malone (Ye Mad Puffin)
― Washington Post Malone (Ye Mad Puffin)
kind of riffing off this (nothing about you YMP) and thinking about my complicated feelings about amos as a cultural icon in this era
i had this sense in 1994 that amos was sort of a synecdoche for an entire gender, "me and a gun", that really kind of... i think overshadowed her early career. like #metoo if people just focused it all on one woman, one song. and honestly, that was how i, a fairly confused young person who thought of themselves as a "man" and wanted to understand What It Was Like Being A Woman, approached her music.
it was actually when boys for pele came out that i realized with some embarrassment that it was... kind of shitty to view someone like that. _boys for pele_ was _weird_, and to some extent amos herself was (unsurprisingly!) _weird_. "weird", that i understood. amos wasn't "every woman", she was _a_ woman.
and the thing was, like a lot of gen x shit, i think there was a lot of stuff people were trying to do back then that just wound up not going anywhere. not, like, because people _did it wrong_ or anything like that. she did these songs and they _were_ powerful, passionate songs, and people paid it lip service and nothing changed except that things got worse. the reason i was looking for a synecdoche was because i believed strongly that the way men viewed women, men treated women, needed to change, and listening to women was how you did that. and i failed at that for a couple of reasons... i wasn't ever a man, but that wasn't the major reason. the major reason was that i wasn't in a place where i could understand and acknowledge women as _individuals_. which is a problem that also underlaid my inability to understand _myself_ as a woman.
anyway as much as people seem to love those first couple records i really treasure that amos did find a distinctive individual voice. it doesn't seem like she was in an environment that made that sort of thing easy.
-
when i listen to something like "god" it makes me think of, i don't know, 1994. post-nirvana, labels were just throwing anything at the wall and seeing what would stick. sure, let's sign royal trux to a major label, why not? i get the sense that a lot of the label a&r people heard nirvana as the latest variety of electronic noise. and responded by saying "hey let's throw a lot of obnoxious noise on our songs, the kids seem to like that". (i don't think the guitar on "god" is "obnoxious noise", at least not in the sense that my hypothetical label people would have.) in that context "god" as a lead single makes sense!
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 1 February 2024 21:06 (three months ago) link
god i love god
― Swen, Thursday, 1 February 2024 21:10 (three months ago) link
Agree but "Crucify" remains my sentimental favorite
― Washington Post Malone (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 1 February 2024 21:52 (three months ago) link
With "Sorta Fairytale" a close second; it is the best driving song ever
― Washington Post Malone (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 1 February 2024 21:53 (three months ago) link
Is "Sweet Dreams" the apotheosis, musically and lyrically, of the Poppy Bush Interzone?
― Front-loaded albums are musical gerrymandering (Prefecture), Thursday, 1 February 2024 22:33 (three months ago) link
I said this a while back about Voodoo (and in particular its intro) and I hold to it:
And maybe the very specific thing about Boys for Pele which is so far out, and which maybe makes it her greatest album in the final analysis, is how it places this particular quality of her performances at the centre of almost every song. Whereas on From The Choirgirl Hotel, if she wants to do southern boogie skronk, she fucking gets the band in, on "In The Springtime of his Voodoo" the centre is always always the piano (except when, bizarrely given the surrounding song, she switches over the harpsichord). The first minute and a half is in some ways one of the most astonishing things she ever did, the way she uses these exploratory, ruminative piano lines to trace out an idiom that is not even hers except by genetic extraction - and the pay-off when the crawling baseline and percussion come in is just massive.
― Tim F, Friday, 2 February 2024 06:36 (three months ago) link
I love that, Tim!
I myself feel like I’m bargaining for a wrap and a barista is growling at me about it for a minute before delivering the wrap I desire, but either way the wrap is delicious
― a hyperlink to the past (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 2 February 2024 06:43 (three months ago) link
those first four albums are an all-time great run
― ufo, Friday, 2 February 2024 07:13 (three months ago) link
quite unfathomable
― Swen, Friday, 2 February 2024 16:03 (three months ago) link
Listening to Pele again now and every time it gets better. There are moments and phrases within the songs that are incredibly rich: "and this little masochist is lifting up her dress." In Muhammad My Friend where she mentions having her own TV show and a cheesy little theme song wafts in.
The length of the album works for it too, in contrast to a lot of bloated discs from the same time.
Maybe it was ahead of its time? I feel like a doofus for writing it off. The production is amazing.
― Cow_Art, Friday, 2 February 2024 17:00 (three months ago) link
i think very much a grower, that's the way it happened to me. the strings are incredible and Marianne for me reshaped music. i imagine it must have felt like a big risk which i think is commendable, and feels like sometimes you have to do that to get at the best nuggets
― Swen, Friday, 2 February 2024 17:24 (three months ago) link