Tori Amos
Under the Pink

Atlantic    82567-2  (1994)

Rock/Pop
CD, 12   Tracks, 56:46  Length
01 Pretty Good Year Tori Amos 03:26
02 God Tori Amos 03:59
03 Bells for Her Tori Amos 05:22
04 Past the Mission Tori Amos 04:06
05 Baker Baker Tori Amos 03:18
06 The Wrong Band Tori Amos 03:03
07 The Waitress Tori Amos 03:10
08 Cornflake Girl Tori Amos 05:07
09 Icicle Tori Amos 05:47
10 Cloud On My Tongue Tori Amos 04:43
11 Space Dog Tori Amos 05:12
12 Yes, Anastasia Tori Amos 09:33
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Vocals Tori Amos
Bass George Porter, Jr.
Drums Carlo Nuccio
Guitar Steve Caton
Producer Eric Rosse; Tori Amos
Engineer Eric Rosse; Paul McKenna
Personal Details
Index # 88
Owner Dave
Tags Alternative Rock
User Defined
Purchased Cut-out/Promo
Notes
Tori Amos'second full-length solo effort has often been considered a transitional album, a building on the success of Little Earthquakes that enabled her to pursue increasingly more adventurous releases in later years. As such, it has been unfairly neglected when in fact it has as good a claim as any to be one of the strongest, and maybe even the strongest, record she has put out. Able to appeal to a mass audience without being shoehorned into the incipient "adult album alternative" format that sprang to life in the mid-1990s, Amos combines some of her strongest melodies and lyrics with especially haunting and powerful arrangements to create an artistic success that stands on its own two feet. The best-known tracks are the two contemporaneous singles "God," a wicked critique of the deity armed with a stiff, heavy funk-rock arrangement, and "Cornflake Girl," a waltz-paced number with an unnerving whistle and stuttering vocal hook. While both memorable, they're actually among the weaker tracks when compared to some of the great numbers elsewhere on Under the Pink (other numbers that more openly misfire are "The Waitress," a strident and slightly bizarre rant at such a figure, and "Yes, Anastasia," which starts off nicely but runs a little too long). Opening number "Pretty Good Year" captures nostalgia and drama perfectly, a simple piano with light strings suddenly exploding into full orchestration before calming again. "Bells for Her" and "Icicle" both showcase what Amos can do with prepared piano, and "Past the Mission," with Trent Reznor guesting on gentle, affecting backing vocals, shifts between loping country and a beautifully arranged chorus. The secret winner, though, would have to be "Baker Baker," just Amos and piano, detailing the story of a departed love and working its cooking metaphor in just the right way. -- Ned Raggett (allmusic.com)