Tori Amos: Little Earthquakes Cover Art


Track Listing
Listen Crucify
 
Listen Girl
 
Listen Silent All These Years
 
Listen Precious Things
 
Listen Winter
 
Listen Happy Phantom
 
Listen China
 
Listen Leather
 
Listen Mother
 
Listen Tear in Your Hand
 
Listen Me and a Gun
 
Listen Little Earthquakes
 



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Tori Amos:
Little Earthquakes
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CD Information
Label: Atlantic
Genre: Adult Alternative Pop/Rock , Alternative Pop/Rock , Singer/Songwriter
Titles: View all titles by Tori Amos
Review
With her haunting solo debut Little Earthquakes, Tori Amos carved the template for the female singer/songwriter movement of the '90s. Amos' delicate, prog rock piano work and confessional, poetically quirky lyrics invited close emotional connection, giving her a fanatical cult following and setting the stage for the ~Lilith Fair legions. But Little Earthquakes is no mere style-setter or feminine stereotype -- its intimacy is uncompromising, intense, and often far from comforting. Amos' musings on major personal issues -- religion, relationships, gender, childhood -- were just as likely to encompass rage, sarcasm, and defiant independence as pain or tenderness; sometimes, it all happened in the same song. The apex of that intimacy is the harrowing "Me and a Gun," where Amos strips away all the music, save for her own voice, and confronts the listener with the story of her own real-life rape; the free-associative lyrics come off as a heart-wrenching attempt to block out the ordeal. Little Earthquakes isn't always so stomach-churning, but it never seems less than deeply cathartic; it's the sound of a young woman (like the protagonist of "Silent All These Years") finally learning to use her own voice -- sort of the musical equivalent of Mary Pipher's -Reviving Ophelia. That's why Amos draws strength from her relentless vulnerability, and that's why the constantly shifting emotions of the material never seem illogical -- Amos simply delights in the frankness of her own responses, whatever they might be. Though her subsequent albums were often very strong, Amos would never bare her soul quite so directly (or comprehensibly) as she did here, nor with such consistently focused results. Little Earthquakes is the most accessible work in Amos' catalog, and it's also the most influential and rewarding. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide

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