
Little Earthquakes |
LITTLE EARTHQUAKES (1992)
Emotionally
and musically intense, Little Earthquakes shows that the piano is
as much a rock & roll instrument as the guitar. Tori Amos's debut (if
one disregards Y Kant Tori Read, as one would be well advised to
do) is at once listenable and challenging; she takes on every topic,
from sex to gender to religion, in an uncompromising manner. Her music
appears gentle at first, but this appearance is deceiving, as one
quickly learns upon listening to the wrenching "Crucify" or
the almost violent "Precious Things." By the time the album
gets around to "Me and a Gun," sung hauntingly by Amos without
accompaniment from her piano, the juxtaposition of Amos' sweet voice and
the emotional complexity of her lyrics is both familiar and shocking. Sandman
fans should listen for a reference to author Neil Gaiman in "Tear
in Your Hand." --Genevieve Williams
(Amazon.com) |