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Tori Amos's Biography
In July of 2008, during a visit to the West Coast to appear at Comic-Con in San Diego, Tori Amos stopped by Los Angeles for a business lunch. During the meeting a woman passed Tori’s table, talking animatedly on the phone. When somebody told her Doug Morris was on the other end of the line, Amos interrupted the woman on the phone and said, “Please send Doug my love.” A few seconds later, Amos was talking to Morris—her mentor at Atlantic Records during the early nineties—for the first time in fourteen years. A few hours later, Amos began writing a new batch of songs. A few weeks later, Amos had entered into a new partnership deal with Morris and Universal. On May 19, 2009, “Abnormally Attracted To Sin,” the tenth Tori Amos studio album, will be released on Universal Republic.
Amos describes “Abnormally Attracted To Sin” as “really handmade. I wanted to make a treasure, something people will value.” “AATS” is an elaborate feast made from homegrown stock, offered up to a generation fed on small meals made with cheap ingredients. Like all of Tori’s albums since “Boys For Pele,” “AATS” was recorded at Martian Studios in Cornwall, England by Tori’s husband Mark Hawley and his partner Marcel van Limbeek. The center of the album is Amos’s voice, and her Bösendorfer piano, locking in with her touring and recording band of the past five years: guitarist Mac Aladdin, bassist Jon Evans and her longtime drummer and rhythmic foil, Matt Chamberlain.
“AATS” is Amos at her most passionate and most comfortable. In the best way possible, “AATS” could have come out at any point between her 1992 solo debut, “Little Earthquakes,” and 2009. The object itself, though, is a state-of-the-art Christmas present. The packaging shows Amos in a variety of guises, photographed in various rooms of a plush, cream-colored Victorian hotel room by glamour expert Karen Collins. The sound of the album is typically detailed and wide, dominated by dark, rich reds and hints of silver. (“I want to make audio mescaline,” Tori said.)