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Tori Amos on Recording New Album, Gold Dust
September 19, 2012
"I seem extroverted but I'm incredibly introverted," Tori Amos says in an articulate whisper. She's sitting in a light-filled Tribeca apartment explaining why, after a life spent performing, it was a thoroughly nerve-racking experience recording her new album, Gold Dust (due October 2nd).
The album – Amos' second foray into classical music, following 2011’s Night of Hunters – reads like a scrapbook of her career, comprising old favorites reworked with orchestration from the Metropole Orchestra.
It wasn't revisiting her discography so much as the orchestra itself that intimidated Amos during the album's recording, which saw her tracking her vocals in front of the nearly 60-piece Dutch orchestra (whom Amos first performed live with in 2010) and personnel from her label (Deutsche Grammophon). "I sing about some of these very intimate moments in my life, and a lot of them written before I got married to Mark [Hawley, also her sound engineer], and he's there and everyone knows," she says. "It was walking into a room full of people and baring your most intimate thoughts to after barely saying hello." With the premiere of two songs from the album – title track "Gold Dust" (originally off 2002's Scarlet's Walk) and "Silent All These Years" (from her breakthrough 1992 solo debut, Little Earthquakes) – Rolling Stone sat down with Amos to discuss song choices and revisiting Little Earthquakes 20 years later. Your voice sounds stronger on a lot of the songs on Gold Dust. Is that because you're reacting to the orchestra playing with you, or is it because you have distance from these songs now?
Some wanted to come, and it became about time. "Hey Jupiter" was there floating around, but she was there on the tour with the quartet so an arrangement was done. And you'll be seeing her – she'll show up live. But we didn't have that ready for the recording with Metropole. I chose to do "Gold Dust" instead, which is a very complex piece. I felt I needed something that could work as an album title and a flagship song that would explain what the work is, to hold all the other ones and to treat this like a memory box. Looking back to Little Earthquakes, 20 years later and now reworking some of these songs for the new album, how has your emotional relationship with the record changed? When I began playing with the orchestra, I began seeing new pictures. A good example of that is with "Winter" [off Little Earthquakes]. I began to see not me running over that hill, but there was a picture of Mark and Tash [Amos' daughter, Natashya] in Vienna. She was a little girl, two or three, and she had fallen on the ice. He picked her up and she was crying because she had hurt her little knee through her tights. There was a moment where she put her hand in her dad's and I just thought, "I'm not the little girl in the picture anymore – and that's OK." I imagine you've heard many stories involving the songs you've written about rape. What stories come to mind with "Silent All These Years" besides your own?
Years later, when I played Israel, I was in an airport bathroom when a Middle Eastern woman came up to me. She said, "Don't think we're not listening. We pass your music behind closed doors to each other and it's something secret that we know, so don't stop." "Silent All These Years" was one of the songs that she mentioned. In those moments, it puts in perspective the twentysomething in me, who was more focused on the charts than the power of music. I just didn't comprehend the value in my mind of a Middle Eastern woman stopping me and saying that to me: "Don't stop.
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i think what excites me most is that she's singing more like the way she did up to scarlet's walk.
in recent years she would stretch some of her words or syllables so long it just made my roll my eyes. if you have all her stuff you know what i mean.
she seems to be back to a bit more of a relaxed, natural vocal phrasing and it works very well.
liking all 3 tracks we've heard this far. very tastefully done. i might even go out and buy my first tori hard copy since scarlet's walk.
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