Tori Amos is now 45, but she’s no less provocative than when she was
making landmark albums like 1992’s Little Earthquakesin her mid-20s.
Her 10th studio album, Abnormally Attracted to Sin, contains its
trademark share of emotional land mines — see “Maybe California” –
and also its trademark share of exquisite piano work.
But
confirmation that Amos is still provocative isn’t confined to just her
music. In interviews, her language is PG-13: When talking with Amazon
from Cornwall, England, recently, she described her love of multi-sided
albums by crafting a metaphor involving the posterior of a beautiful
woman. Other topics she touched on included high-heeled shoes, power
and control, and mothers as sexual creatures.
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