Inside Music: Features
Tori Amos/RHINO
advertisement
Tori Amos
Past Songs, Perfectionism and Problems With iTunes
By Alan Light
Special for MSN Music

<<< Previous Page

 

You've always approached your albums as such complete, singular works. What was it like pulling them apart and reconfiguring these songs?

All the albums I've done exist and will continue to exist in that form. But I was really inspired by the Zeppelin remasters in 1992. Some people can get it right. And sometimes you can really screw up something that was better left untouched. But there's technology now that didn't exist then, so no matter how good George Martin and the engineers were, there are things that can be improved.

The actual compiling of the work was key, so that certain work wasn't competing with others. When I finish an album, as narrative, that needs to live. But it's a sonic exhibition, a sonic installation. If you're going to MoMA and you see an artist that you haven't seen for a long time, that Chagall can affect you very differently because of what you see around it.
 
I was surprised that there's not one cover version on this collection. Your covers have been such a recurrent part of your career, including the entire "Strange Little Girls" album, which isn't represented here.

I felt that "A Piano" needed to come from the piano as a composer with a woman. This is a representation of me as a singer/songwriter. Me as an interpretive performer is not what this was about. This had to not be me pushing up on somebody else's scene.

A box set has to have 20 years -- or for some people, 30 or 40 years -- of work behind it. I have a lot of pride in that work ethic, that I could generate this much material. So the box was about original ideas coming from a piano. Live performance is different -- that can be about music that inspired me, and having been a piano bar player for so long, that's another facet to the artistry.
 
In the booklet, you write about how resistant you have always been to the idea of releasing any of your demos or songs in progress. Why did you decide to do it in the end?

That was the closest Mark (producer and husband Mark Hawley) and I ever came to the word "divorce." I say that tongue in cheek, because the best part of our relationship -- well, one of the best parts -- is that when we get confused, the professional side takes over. And he said, I won't be doing my job unless I vote for the demos to make this box set -- it's imperative. To me, it's similar to showing your sonogram pictures to the Internet.

Neil Gaiman (science-fiction writer and sometime Amos collaborator) and I talk about this all the time. He really exposes his process and doesn't feel like he's giving himself away. But if you ask me what songs I'm listening to now as I compile the ideas for the new album, I wouldn't tell you. What goes on as you make a CD is as sacred as what goes on in the bedroom.

In the end, we did think that the demos would give people the idea that you don't just sit down and record a finished piece of music, you really have to work for it. Part of me has been very inspired by reading about how Max Ernst or Georgia O'Keefe achieved results without ripping off their platelets. I had some of that in the book I did with Ann Powers. So we thought the demos might help prove a point to young songwriters that want to give up because they don't achieve it.

Bob Dylan has often spoken about feeling like a transmitter for his songs. Finally, though, in the "Chronicles" book, he started to address the fact that it's also a lot of sweat and hard work to get them done.

You do see yourself as a conduit, a transmitter, just because of ego issues. Songwriters who think it's all about them can't keep it together for 20, 30 years because the hubris takes over.

So how does it feel to listen to the demos on the box?

Oh, I don't listen to that part. I can't. But that's OK. The artist in me can't, but the producer can and not blink an eye.

I really have to divide myself to make the decisions that the artist can't. As the years have progressed, it's gotten easier to tell the performer to leave the room.
 
Since albums, and narratives, are so important to you and your music, how do you feel about the new digital world and the fact that your catalog can be cherry-picked in whichever way a listener wants?

Steve Jobs has too much control. To call it iTunes and not have iAlbums -- I don't like being railroaded. It should be the artists' choice how people hear the work initially, even if it means losing half of their sales. Choosing just some of the songs is like walking into a top restaurant and telling the chef, "I want to pick the ingredients apart and make it this way."

It's a narrative -- if you cut up "War and Peace" and just sell it chapter by chapter, I don't know that those writers would have agreed to that. "OK, Charlie, let's sell these few pages of 'David Copperfield,' we'll just let people take what they want ... ." I don't think so. [Editor's note: Charles Dickens did make "David Copperfield" available in installments.]

Jobs has done a great thing. But I think it's dangerous, and if he's really a great man, really a genius, he needs to understand that maybe iTunes could expand its thinking, and maybe it could even get better. Let this be taken by creative minds as a way to grow, not as an insult. I'm not stupid, I'm not trying to cut myself off from the entire digital community.

I have a friend, a young student, who is a huge Tori fan. She bought "A Piano" because it wasn't on iTunes when it first came out, but she told me that if she could have waited and downloaded the "Bonus B-Sides" disc, and saved the money, that's what she would have done.

Well, I can't be held hostage as an artist to the fact that she doesn't have the cash. Maybe 10 years from now she'll have more money than any of us, who knows?

I'm a motherf***er, and the reason she likes me is that you can't guilt me into saying what she wants to hear to make her day. I am going to stand by what I want for the songs, period.

I wasn't going to let this box set become "Boxing Helena" in the first six weeks. I knew that I would deliver what she needs, but no way was I going to let the sonic perverts cut up this music.

I don't make singles, I make albums. I don't shoot just one crotch shot -- that's not what I do. I'll give you the crotch shot -- but at least put me in a pair of Louboutin high heels.


<<< Previous Page

Discuss | Send us an e-mail | More features

Alan Light is the former editor-in-chief of Spin, Vibe and Tracks magazines and a former senior writer at Rolling Stone. His writing has also appeared in the New York Times, the New Yorker, GQ and Entertainment Weekly. His book "The Skills to Pay the Bills: The Story of the Beastie Boys" was published in 2006. Alan is a two-time winner of the ASCAP-Deems Taylor Award for excellence in music writing.

advertisement
Re:Masters Archive
Tori Amos
Past songs, perfectionism and problems with iTunes

Pete Townshend
On the Who, the solo albums and not being misunderstood

Ray Manzarek
On Doors records, Morrison's poetry and soft drugs

Yoko Ono
On solo work, being remixed and the perils of being Mrs. Lennon

The Traveling Wilburys
Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne discuss the long road to Wilburys reissues

Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead
The once and future Dead rhythm guitarist on the iconic band's deep vaults

Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips
On 'The Soft Bulletin' and more

Emmylou Harris
On 'Songbird Surprises,' the state of country music and more

The Lone Stone
Mick Jagger on his solo career

Santana
The '60s icon, at 60, surveys his legacy and his influences

Keith Urban
A year after putting his career on hold to confront personal demons, the superstar gauges his hits, his goals and the state of modern country

Wynton Marsalis
From '80s jazz wunderkind to 21st century institution, the virtuoso trumpeter and composer measures the music's enduring vitality

Sheryl Crow
Singer-songwriter and new mother emerges from a turbulent year with her most urgent, ambitious music yet

Steve Winwood's Nine Lives
The British rock legend on his return to the spotlight and his legacy with Traffic and Blind Faith

Steely Dan
What do studio perfectionists do when the record biz fades? Take their show on the road ...
MSN Music Newsletter
Get weekly updates on hot new releases; listen to full albums; watch videos and much more

Subscribe to the newsletter
video vault
Watch 'I Kissed a Girl' by Katy PerryKaty Perry: 'I Kissed a Girl'
See the Old 97's, Mates of State, N.E.R.D., Ace Young and more

PlayWatch video | More videos
Top Search
Search for more on Alicia Keys (Image: Alicia Keys/J Records)Alicia Keys
Alicia Keys delivers memorable performance at BET Awards

Search | More Celebrity xRank
Top galleries
Top features