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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best evidence for the argument of Tori Amos as Genius,
By
This review is from: From the Choirgirl Hotel (Audio CD)
Have you ever wondered what the "fuss" about Tori Amos was? Have you perhaps heard one of her more successful singles in recent years (say, A Sorta Fairytale or Sleeps With Butterflies) and perhaps, blasphemy of blasphemies, thought she was a bit lightweight, a bit trite, a bit, dare we say it, uninteresting?
Well, if you did think those things, you would be wrong, and From the Choirgirl Hotel is the album to prove that to you. Choirgirl is a lot of things, but lightweight is not one of those. It is a dark, dense, intense, harrowing, experimental and adventerous trip, where your guide is 1/2 Sylvia Plath and 1/2 Chopin, with dashes of Massive Attack and Jimmi-Hendrix-if-he-had-taken-up-piano (for flavour). I am an unabashed Tori Amos fan. I will admit that I'm biased in her favour. I would rate all of her 8 major studio albums from "good" to "amazing," having come to her music as a hard-core piano student during the mid-90's, when songs like "Blood Roses" and "Father Lucifer" seemed more like Bach and Debussy than like anything else on the airwaves at the time. But why chose this album, then, as it marks the now 8-year trend of Tori moving away from the baroque, challenging, symphonic compositions that characterized her first three albums? Choirgirl was the start of her break for the mainstream, a move that culminated in 2005's disappointing MOR-mush of "The Beekeeper." It seems rather odd that I would venerate it above all others. I do so because, while 'Choirgirl' is one of Tori's most accessible albums (especially for fans of dark alternative rock), it also shows her at the top of her game as a songwriter and instrumentalist. Even though, for the first time, the piano took a backseat in some songs and was entirely absent from one (the slinky, sexy "cruel"), this album also contains some of her most breath-taking passages at the keyboard. Listen to the bridges of "Spark" and "Black Dove," the improvisational sections of "Liquid Diamonds," the piano breakdown in the 4th section of the multi-movemental "Hotel," the lithe, graceful playing of "Jackie's Strength," and the accomplished jazz stylings of "Pandora's Aquarium." All of these moments stand as testament to the fact that Tori started her life in the world of music at age 3, as a child prodigy, and that, if she had applied herself in a different direction, she could legitimately make it as a concert pianist with a classical repetoire. This album is hard-hitting. Each track is a gem; the weakest of the set would be a standout on any album by a lesser talent. What's more, she doesn't bog the album down with filler (as in "The Beekeeper") or sometimes lose herself in self-indulgent ramblings (as can be argued for "Boys for Pele"). Sure, the lyrical ambiguity is here as per usual, but the ratio of comprehensible metaphors to head-scratchers is balanced in the former's favour. "From the Choirgirl Hotel" is tight. Over the 50-odd minutes it takes to play the album from start to finish, its 12 tracks are 12 musical punches to the gut, and if you give it your time and your attention, I'm sure you will finally understand what the fuss about Tori Amos is.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What else to say?,
This review is from: From the Choirgirl Hotel (Audio CD)
Honestly, there is not much that I can say about Tori Amos that I'm sure hasn't already been said concerning her brilliance, emotional overflow, and the adaptation it takes to enjoy her music. It is hard for me to say which of her albums is her best, and perhaps it is no coincidence that my three favorite songs of her's are all on "Choirgirl Hotel." "Pandora's Aquarium" is simply beautiful, with lyrics such as "Line me up in single file with all your grievances..."That line alone gives the song such a beautiful feel. But more appropriately, there is "Liquid Diamonds," probably the unspoken hero of this cd. Her piano and the drums in the opening part of the song are transfixing, and her lyrics just blend in so perfectly, "There's a secret in me, It's plain to see that it is rising, but I must be floating, Liquid Diamonds." And finally, the other song that grabbed me was "Hotel." It is interesting if you listen to that song all the way through its transitions and instrument sounds make it seem like pure musical story telling, with a feel of pain and curiosity throughout the song, and then this wonderful sensation of relief and survival in the last few moments. Despite the fact that all of the songs on "Choirgirl Hotel" have their own unique and heartthrobbing, emotion-wrenching styles, Tori Amos has achieved with her fourth album something that can only be described as special.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Oh. My. God.,
By
This review is from: From the Choirgirl Hotel (Audio CD)
I finally took the plunge and bought this disc. I had been discouraged from buying it by many other Ears with Feet, thus the reason why it took me so long to jump on the bandwagon. But when I finally bought and listened to it...my GOD. I have never heard anything as innovative and filled with so much emotion. It starts out with an amazing rock influenced song about the miscarriage she suffered called "Spark". "Cruel" is a brutally honest, dark song about the power-play in relationships, and Tori tries to describe and understand her own malicious behavior. Some of my favorites being "Black-Dove" and "She's Your Cocaine" as well as the haunting tune of "iiee" and "Liquid Diamonds" My favorite song of the entire album would have to be "Playboy Mommy," a song Tori wrote for her dead daughter who she miscarried. I listen to this song every chance I get, for the simple reason that this right here, is raw emotion. The entire piece is without a doubt heart-breaking. It reminds of the suddenness of life and the mourning of life unlived. The pure and unadulterated love on this track is enough to leave you in tears for hours ('In my platforms I hit the floor, I fell face down, it didn't help my brain at all, then the baby came before I found the magic how to keep her happy, I never was the fantasy, of what you wan...wanted me to be, don't judge me so harsh, little girl......I'll say it loud here by your grave, those angels can't ever take my place').
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