Difference between revisions of "Tori Amos"
(Please add information regarding her career as a musician, as well as her piano training) |
Formilesnow (talk | contribs) (adding TONS of info. don't know if you need it all, but I'm a geek.) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:Toriamos.jpg|thumb|Tori Amos]] | [[Image:Toriamos.jpg|thumb|Tori Amos]] | ||
− | '''Tori Amos''' (born Myra Ellen Amos on August 22, 1963) is an American singer/songwriter and vocalist known for her unique and proficient style of piano playing, as well as for her intimate brand of songwriting. | + | '''Tori Amos''' (born Myra Ellen Amos on August 22, 1963) is an American singer/songwriter and vocalist known for her unique and proficient style of piano playing, as well as for her intimate brand of songwriting. Amos has released 9 solo studio albums and numerous B-sides to date, and has gathered a notoriously devoted following ("Ears With Feet") due to her eccentric personality and intense live shows. |
− | == | + | ==Background== |
− | Amos | + | Myra Ellen Amos was born the youngest of three children to a Methodist minister father and homemaker mother. Her strict Christian upbringing - and it's subsequent effects on her attitude towards sexual freedom, among other major issues - would later figure largely into her work. Her religious beliefs were also affected by her maternal grandfather, who was of Cherokee decent, and taught the young Ellen about Native American philosophies until he passed away when she was nine years old. |
− | + | Amos first began to play the piano when she was two and a half years old, and at five was the youngest person ever to be accepted into the prestigious Peabody Conservatory of Music. By the time she turned eleven, she had made it clear that she was more interested in classic rock than classical music, and her scholarship was discontinued. Amos would later cite Led Zeppelin as a favorite of hers when she was a child. | |
− | + | By thirteen she had begun playing gay bars in Washington, D.C., chaperoned by her father. At seventeen she won a contest involving a song she and her brother had written about the Baltimore Orioles, titled Baltimore. This was her first single, pressed for friends and family, and released with another original track as a B-side entitled Walking With You. | |
− | The two were obviously once close friends, and several interviews from the mid nineties detail random encounters between the two, such as the "cursed chicken" story. [http://www.thanatopsic.org/music/trivial/tori-trent-rmta.html] Some mutual fans of the artists speculate their friendship once reached beyond that into romantic territory, based on these interviews, | + | After seven years of unsuccessfully sending her demos to record labels, Tori (given the name by a friend's boyfriend) moved to Los Angeles to further her career. At some point while living there Amos was raped by a regular at the bar she played at weekly. This event would also later find it's way into her work. |
+ | |||
+ | ==Y Kant Tori Read through Boys for Pele== | ||
+ | As Amos was consistently told "the girl and a piano thing was dead," she began co-writing her first album Y Kant Tori Read under a band moniker of the same name, released in 1988 on Atlantic Records. Featuring contributions from Steve Caton and Matt Sorum of later Guns 'N' Roses fame, the album contained some hints of her future artistry, but was generally percieved as influenced by the popular hair metal of the decade. Amos has stated that at the time the record was made, she wasn't ready to face the personal demons she would confront later. The album was a flop critically and commercially, and when Amos talks about the project she often pokes good natured fun at it. She has occasionally performed a few songs from the album, and original copies of the LP are considered extreme collectibles to hardcore Amos fans. | ||
+ | |||
+ | After recovering from the mess of YKTR, Amos later recalled that what turned her music around was rediscovering the piano, an instrument she had nearly abandoned. She then realized that she could never separate from it again, and that she should just do what she wants to, whether it's accepted or not. This reversal in thought brought about her debut album ''Little Earthquakes'', centered around her piano and exploring themes like religious guilt, relationships, and, perhaps most famously, her own rape, released in 1992. This album shot Amos into the public's critically-favorable awareness, and began building her fanbase. Amos has described this album as her diary, and fans often find it as one of the most straightforward and accessible. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1994, Amos released her second album ''Under the Pink'', which she described as an impressionist painting. This description revealed itself in the LP's more metaphorical lyrics, orchetral instrumentation, and references to literature and history. It's title refers to the idea of going beneath the stereotypes of femininity, and many songs deal with women's relationships with each other, particularly those related to betrayal. It is generally considered Amos's most classically influenced record. Near the end of the UTP tour, Amos parted ways with Eric Rosse, her boyfriend of seven years who had also produced her first two albums. This, and other relationships with what Amos referred to as "baby demons," greatly changed her, as well as her next album. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ''Boys for Pele'' was released in 1996, and was an extreme departure from her previous works, featuring her Bosendorfer piano, a harpsichord, gospel choirs, church bells, brass, a Leslie Cabinet, and many other miscellaneous instruments. The lyrics were also much more metaphorical, associative, and complex, either being praised for their brilliance or dismissed as self-indulgent. Amos has described the album as a novel. This was also the first time Amos had ever self-produced. She would later state that she wouldn't know who she'd be today if she hadn't made the record, as it was about her "finding her own flame," and had greatly expanded and strengthened her voice. The subsequent tour was famously intense, and the album itself is generally the favorite of many fans, or thought of as the most "perfect." | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==from the choirgirl hotel through Scarlet's Walk== | ||
+ | Amos's fourth album, ''from the choirgirl hotel'', was released in 1998 after much change in the singer's life. Since BFP she had married her sound engineer Mark Hawley and experienced two miscarriages, each of which was addressed on the album. This also marked the first time Amos performed alongside a traditional full band set-up, instead of tracking vocals and piano first and ''then'' adding other elements. Obviously then, the album had a very different sound than her previous records, as it also contained electronic elements. Most fans think of it as fairly accessible, and is also a major favorite. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Her next album of new material, ''To Venus and Back'', was released in 1999 (conversationally on the same day as NIN's album [[The Fragile]]), although it wasn't planned that way. Amos had originally wanted to release a collection of B-sides and a live disc, but new material began to unexpectedly come to her. The final project resulted in a double album of one disc new material and one disc live tracks from the FTCH tour. The first disc has a decidedly electronic feel, and was once described by Amos's good friend writer Neil Gaiman as "a collection of greatest hits from outer space." This is because there is no direct tie between all songs besides their atmospheric similarities and scientifically flavored language. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Between TVAB and her next album ''Strange Little Girls'', released in 2001, Amos suffered another miscarriage before having a baby girl named Natashya Lorien Hawley in 2000. SLG began when Amos was nursing her daughter while watching all of the hateful music being praised on TV and radio. She decided to make an album of covers of songs written by men, told from the female perspective, to shed some light on what was really being said. She brought in guitarist [[Adrian Belew]] on some tracks, and generally produced an eclectic sounding LP, ranging from more acoustic vibes to metal-tinged sounds. Each song was told from the perspective of an individual female, with corresponding artwork. Most fans list it near the bottom of their list, if only for the fact that it wasn't original, Amos-penned material. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Her 2003 album ''Scarlet's Walk'' was also a concept album, written from the point of view of Scarlet, who is a woman traveling across America. Each song is about her encounter with someone/something, and moves throughout the states. It is a generally more acoustic and mellow work, spanning 18 tracks, and also a fan favorite. It was Tori's first album on Epic Records. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==The Beekeeper through the present== | ||
+ | Amos's 2005 release entitled ''The Beekeeper'' was a return to more autobiographical material. It's major theme according to the singer was that of betrayal in a relationship, and also revolved around the idea of beekeeping and gardens. It contained a slightly more organic sound featuring gospel choirs, a Hammond Organ, and other elements. It is usually most fans least favorite album, although some love it. The former usually object to the production quality, certain lyrics, or the changes in her voice while the latter enjoy an album where no research into lyrical references is needed, and where there's more of an upbeat ambience. | ||
+ | |||
+ | For many though, much was riding on Amos's ninth album ''American Doll Posse'', released on May Day in 2007. This album was also based around a concept - Amos believed that too many American woman were pushed into boring or simple stereotypes (such as the "knickerless flirt" or the "career bitch",) and so wanted to create "new ones" where the women were much more interesting or empowered and so forth. Thus five women sing the 23 tracks on ADP, based on the Greek pantheon: Santa/Aphrodite who is very sensual, Pip/Athena who is brutally confrontational, Isabel/Artemis who is an unbiased chronicler, Clyde/Persephone who is introspectively compassionate, and Tori/Demeter/Dionysus who was viewed as a stylized version of the artist herself. The record was greatly influenced lyrically and musically by the rock gods of the seventies, and many fans thought it was a return to edge for Amos, as did critics, praising it as one of her most accessible and fun LP's. This was her last record for Epic. | ||
+ | |||
+ | On May 30th, the online Tori Amos community discovered that the singer was no longer listed on Epic's official site. A user's question regarding this was officially addressed on Billboard's website, stating that Amos was now independent and planning on remaining so. A message from Tori regarding this was later posted on her official site, with hints at coming news in the future. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Other work/miscellaneous== | ||
+ | Amos is known for her extensive B-side and singles collection, as well as her numerous covers, duets, and soundtrack songs. Perhaps her most famous cover was that of Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit in 1992, which Kurt Cobain greatly liked and was flattered by.[http://www.hereinmyhead.com/musicians/cobain.html] She is known to rework a cover in a way that reveals another layer to it, rather than flat-out copy it. As for soundtrack songs, she has contributed to several films including Mission Impossible: II, Mona Lisa Smile, and Twister. Her duets have included Robert Plant, Michael Stipe, and Damien Rice, among others. Every album has been accompanied by somewhere between 5 and 12 B-sides. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 2003, Amos also released a Best Of entitled ''Tales of a Librarian'', which featured two new tracks and reworked older songs. In 2004 she released a DVD from the SW tour called ''Welcome to Sunny Florida'' featuring "Scarlet's Hidden Treasures:" six unreleased songs from SW. In 2005 she commissioned "official bootlegs" of TBK tour and released a video collection called ''Fade to Red''. She also released her book entitled ''Piece by Piece'', co-written by Anne Powers, which made the New York Times Bestseller List. In 2006 she released ''A Piano: The Collection'', a five disc set containing numerous album tracks, remastered tracks, remixed tracks, demos, B-sides, and unreleased songs. In 2007, in conjunction with the ADP tour, she made ''Legs & Boots'' - bootlegs of the U.S. leg of the tour - available on her official site, mere hours after the shows were over, in MP3 format. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1994, Amos also co-founded RAINN - Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network - the only 24/7, toll-free hotline in America, geared towards helping victims and survivors of abuse. She performed a benefit concert for the organization in 1997, at which her friend [[Maynard James Keenan]] of [[Tool]] performed, and has since donated to it repeatedly. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Amos is often misconstrued as either "kooky" or too serious. She has admitted to "playing kooky for the British," as that's the pigeonhole they put her in, which she finds amusing. She's also stated that her sense of humor was "more like a butter knife" than a butcher knife. She also loves red wine (and turned Maynard onto it.) She and Neil Gaiman, author of The Sandman, regularly name-check each other in interviews and reference each other in their art. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Connection to NIN== | ||
+ | [[Trent Reznor]] and Amos originally met in mutual admiration for each other's respective debut albums, sometime in the early nineties. They recognized similar approaches in emotional expression, despite vastly different musical styles. Both artists influenced the other's work in some way; Reznor even admitted that he would listen to ''Little Earthquakes'' every day while recording [[The Downward Spiral]]. [http://www.thanatopsic.org/music/trivial/tori-trent-rmta.html] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcMEKppnpV8] From there a collaboration formed: Reznor contributed vocals to Amos's single "Past The Mission" for her 1994 album ''Under The Pink.'' His vocals on the track were uncharacteristically, and somewhat unrecognizably, soft and pleasant, and sang of finding hope in a relationship after trauma. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Amos has also performed the first two lines of "[[Hurt (song)]]" in concert - mainly in 1996, 1998, and 1999 - and has made allusions to [[Nine Inch Nails]] in her solo work, most notably in "Precious Things" from ''Little Earthquakes'' and "Caught a Lite Sneeze" from ''Boys for Pele.'' Reznor also most likely borrowed the phrase "starfucker" for his song [[Starfuckers, Inc.]] from her 1996 song Professional Widow, since both are rumored to be about one Courtney Love. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The two were obviously once close friends, and several interviews from the mid nineties detail random encounters between the two, such as the "cursed chicken" story. [http://www.thanatopsic.org/music/trivial/tori-trent-rmta.html] Some mutual fans of the artists speculate their friendship once reached beyond that into romantic territory, based on these and other interviews, various NIN and Amos lyrics, and other similarities in work. Their relationship is currently undetermined, though it is viewed as broken, based on the same aforementioned things. | ||
==Body Of Work== | ==Body Of Work== | ||
Line 51: | Line 92: | ||
*''Scarlet's Hidden Treasures'' (2004) | *''Scarlet's Hidden Treasures'' (2004) | ||
− | =====Collections===== | + | =====Collections/Other===== |
− | *''Tales of a Librarian'' (2003) | + | *''Little Earthquakes'' VHS (1992) |
+ | *''Live in NY'' VHS (1997) | ||
+ | *''Tales of a Librarian'' CD/DVD (2003) | ||
+ | *''Welcome to Sunny Florida/Scarlet's Hidden Treasures'' DVD/CD (2004) | ||
+ | *''Piece by Piece'' Autobiography (2005) | ||
+ | *''Official Bootlegs'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''Fade to Red'' DVD (2005) | ||
*''A Piano: The Collection'' (2006) | *''A Piano: The Collection'' (2006) | ||
+ | *''Legs & Boots'' MP3s (2007) | ||
==External Links== | ==External Links== |
Revision as of 06:32, 3 June 2008
Tori Amos (born Myra Ellen Amos on August 22, 1963) is an American singer/songwriter and vocalist known for her unique and proficient style of piano playing, as well as for her intimate brand of songwriting. Amos has released 9 solo studio albums and numerous B-sides to date, and has gathered a notoriously devoted following ("Ears With Feet") due to her eccentric personality and intense live shows.
Contents
Background
Myra Ellen Amos was born the youngest of three children to a Methodist minister father and homemaker mother. Her strict Christian upbringing - and it's subsequent effects on her attitude towards sexual freedom, among other major issues - would later figure largely into her work. Her religious beliefs were also affected by her maternal grandfather, who was of Cherokee decent, and taught the young Ellen about Native American philosophies until he passed away when she was nine years old.
Amos first began to play the piano when she was two and a half years old, and at five was the youngest person ever to be accepted into the prestigious Peabody Conservatory of Music. By the time she turned eleven, she had made it clear that she was more interested in classic rock than classical music, and her scholarship was discontinued. Amos would later cite Led Zeppelin as a favorite of hers when she was a child.
By thirteen she had begun playing gay bars in Washington, D.C., chaperoned by her father. At seventeen she won a contest involving a song she and her brother had written about the Baltimore Orioles, titled Baltimore. This was her first single, pressed for friends and family, and released with another original track as a B-side entitled Walking With You.
After seven years of unsuccessfully sending her demos to record labels, Tori (given the name by a friend's boyfriend) moved to Los Angeles to further her career. At some point while living there Amos was raped by a regular at the bar she played at weekly. This event would also later find it's way into her work.
Y Kant Tori Read through Boys for Pele
As Amos was consistently told "the girl and a piano thing was dead," she began co-writing her first album Y Kant Tori Read under a band moniker of the same name, released in 1988 on Atlantic Records. Featuring contributions from Steve Caton and Matt Sorum of later Guns 'N' Roses fame, the album contained some hints of her future artistry, but was generally percieved as influenced by the popular hair metal of the decade. Amos has stated that at the time the record was made, she wasn't ready to face the personal demons she would confront later. The album was a flop critically and commercially, and when Amos talks about the project she often pokes good natured fun at it. She has occasionally performed a few songs from the album, and original copies of the LP are considered extreme collectibles to hardcore Amos fans.
After recovering from the mess of YKTR, Amos later recalled that what turned her music around was rediscovering the piano, an instrument she had nearly abandoned. She then realized that she could never separate from it again, and that she should just do what she wants to, whether it's accepted or not. This reversal in thought brought about her debut album Little Earthquakes, centered around her piano and exploring themes like religious guilt, relationships, and, perhaps most famously, her own rape, released in 1992. This album shot Amos into the public's critically-favorable awareness, and began building her fanbase. Amos has described this album as her diary, and fans often find it as one of the most straightforward and accessible.
In 1994, Amos released her second album Under the Pink, which she described as an impressionist painting. This description revealed itself in the LP's more metaphorical lyrics, orchetral instrumentation, and references to literature and history. It's title refers to the idea of going beneath the stereotypes of femininity, and many songs deal with women's relationships with each other, particularly those related to betrayal. It is generally considered Amos's most classically influenced record. Near the end of the UTP tour, Amos parted ways with Eric Rosse, her boyfriend of seven years who had also produced her first two albums. This, and other relationships with what Amos referred to as "baby demons," greatly changed her, as well as her next album.
Boys for Pele was released in 1996, and was an extreme departure from her previous works, featuring her Bosendorfer piano, a harpsichord, gospel choirs, church bells, brass, a Leslie Cabinet, and many other miscellaneous instruments. The lyrics were also much more metaphorical, associative, and complex, either being praised for their brilliance or dismissed as self-indulgent. Amos has described the album as a novel. This was also the first time Amos had ever self-produced. She would later state that she wouldn't know who she'd be today if she hadn't made the record, as it was about her "finding her own flame," and had greatly expanded and strengthened her voice. The subsequent tour was famously intense, and the album itself is generally the favorite of many fans, or thought of as the most "perfect."
from the choirgirl hotel through Scarlet's Walk
Amos's fourth album, from the choirgirl hotel, was released in 1998 after much change in the singer's life. Since BFP she had married her sound engineer Mark Hawley and experienced two miscarriages, each of which was addressed on the album. This also marked the first time Amos performed alongside a traditional full band set-up, instead of tracking vocals and piano first and then adding other elements. Obviously then, the album had a very different sound than her previous records, as it also contained electronic elements. Most fans think of it as fairly accessible, and is also a major favorite.
Her next album of new material, To Venus and Back, was released in 1999 (conversationally on the same day as NIN's album The Fragile), although it wasn't planned that way. Amos had originally wanted to release a collection of B-sides and a live disc, but new material began to unexpectedly come to her. The final project resulted in a double album of one disc new material and one disc live tracks from the FTCH tour. The first disc has a decidedly electronic feel, and was once described by Amos's good friend writer Neil Gaiman as "a collection of greatest hits from outer space." This is because there is no direct tie between all songs besides their atmospheric similarities and scientifically flavored language.
Between TVAB and her next album Strange Little Girls, released in 2001, Amos suffered another miscarriage before having a baby girl named Natashya Lorien Hawley in 2000. SLG began when Amos was nursing her daughter while watching all of the hateful music being praised on TV and radio. She decided to make an album of covers of songs written by men, told from the female perspective, to shed some light on what was really being said. She brought in guitarist Adrian Belew on some tracks, and generally produced an eclectic sounding LP, ranging from more acoustic vibes to metal-tinged sounds. Each song was told from the perspective of an individual female, with corresponding artwork. Most fans list it near the bottom of their list, if only for the fact that it wasn't original, Amos-penned material.
Her 2003 album Scarlet's Walk was also a concept album, written from the point of view of Scarlet, who is a woman traveling across America. Each song is about her encounter with someone/something, and moves throughout the states. It is a generally more acoustic and mellow work, spanning 18 tracks, and also a fan favorite. It was Tori's first album on Epic Records.
The Beekeeper through the present
Amos's 2005 release entitled The Beekeeper was a return to more autobiographical material. It's major theme according to the singer was that of betrayal in a relationship, and also revolved around the idea of beekeeping and gardens. It contained a slightly more organic sound featuring gospel choirs, a Hammond Organ, and other elements. It is usually most fans least favorite album, although some love it. The former usually object to the production quality, certain lyrics, or the changes in her voice while the latter enjoy an album where no research into lyrical references is needed, and where there's more of an upbeat ambience.
For many though, much was riding on Amos's ninth album American Doll Posse, released on May Day in 2007. This album was also based around a concept - Amos believed that too many American woman were pushed into boring or simple stereotypes (such as the "knickerless flirt" or the "career bitch",) and so wanted to create "new ones" where the women were much more interesting or empowered and so forth. Thus five women sing the 23 tracks on ADP, based on the Greek pantheon: Santa/Aphrodite who is very sensual, Pip/Athena who is brutally confrontational, Isabel/Artemis who is an unbiased chronicler, Clyde/Persephone who is introspectively compassionate, and Tori/Demeter/Dionysus who was viewed as a stylized version of the artist herself. The record was greatly influenced lyrically and musically by the rock gods of the seventies, and many fans thought it was a return to edge for Amos, as did critics, praising it as one of her most accessible and fun LP's. This was her last record for Epic.
On May 30th, the online Tori Amos community discovered that the singer was no longer listed on Epic's official site. A user's question regarding this was officially addressed on Billboard's website, stating that Amos was now independent and planning on remaining so. A message from Tori regarding this was later posted on her official site, with hints at coming news in the future.
Other work/miscellaneous
Amos is known for her extensive B-side and singles collection, as well as her numerous covers, duets, and soundtrack songs. Perhaps her most famous cover was that of Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit in 1992, which Kurt Cobain greatly liked and was flattered by.[1] She is known to rework a cover in a way that reveals another layer to it, rather than flat-out copy it. As for soundtrack songs, she has contributed to several films including Mission Impossible: II, Mona Lisa Smile, and Twister. Her duets have included Robert Plant, Michael Stipe, and Damien Rice, among others. Every album has been accompanied by somewhere between 5 and 12 B-sides.
In 2003, Amos also released a Best Of entitled Tales of a Librarian, which featured two new tracks and reworked older songs. In 2004 she released a DVD from the SW tour called Welcome to Sunny Florida featuring "Scarlet's Hidden Treasures:" six unreleased songs from SW. In 2005 she commissioned "official bootlegs" of TBK tour and released a video collection called Fade to Red. She also released her book entitled Piece by Piece, co-written by Anne Powers, which made the New York Times Bestseller List. In 2006 she released A Piano: The Collection, a five disc set containing numerous album tracks, remastered tracks, remixed tracks, demos, B-sides, and unreleased songs. In 2007, in conjunction with the ADP tour, she made Legs & Boots - bootlegs of the U.S. leg of the tour - available on her official site, mere hours after the shows were over, in MP3 format.
In 1994, Amos also co-founded RAINN - Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network - the only 24/7, toll-free hotline in America, geared towards helping victims and survivors of abuse. She performed a benefit concert for the organization in 1997, at which her friend Maynard James Keenan of Tool performed, and has since donated to it repeatedly.
Amos is often misconstrued as either "kooky" or too serious. She has admitted to "playing kooky for the British," as that's the pigeonhole they put her in, which she finds amusing. She's also stated that her sense of humor was "more like a butter knife" than a butcher knife. She also loves red wine (and turned Maynard onto it.) She and Neil Gaiman, author of The Sandman, regularly name-check each other in interviews and reference each other in their art.
Connection to NIN
Trent Reznor and Amos originally met in mutual admiration for each other's respective debut albums, sometime in the early nineties. They recognized similar approaches in emotional expression, despite vastly different musical styles. Both artists influenced the other's work in some way; Reznor even admitted that he would listen to Little Earthquakes every day while recording The Downward Spiral. [2] [3] From there a collaboration formed: Reznor contributed vocals to Amos's single "Past The Mission" for her 1994 album Under The Pink. His vocals on the track were uncharacteristically, and somewhat unrecognizably, soft and pleasant, and sang of finding hope in a relationship after trauma.
Amos has also performed the first two lines of "Hurt (song)" in concert - mainly in 1996, 1998, and 1999 - and has made allusions to Nine Inch Nails in her solo work, most notably in "Precious Things" from Little Earthquakes and "Caught a Lite Sneeze" from Boys for Pele. Reznor also most likely borrowed the phrase "starfucker" for his song Starfuckers, Inc. from her 1996 song Professional Widow, since both are rumored to be about one Courtney Love.
The two were obviously once close friends, and several interviews from the mid nineties detail random encounters between the two, such as the "cursed chicken" story. [4] Some mutual fans of the artists speculate their friendship once reached beyond that into romantic territory, based on these and other interviews, various NIN and Amos lyrics, and other similarities in work. Their relationship is currently undetermined, though it is viewed as broken, based on the same aforementioned things.
Body Of Work
Studio Albums
- Y Kant Tori Read (as Y Kant Tori Read) (1988)
- Little Earthquakes (1992)
- Under the Pink (1994)
- Boys For Pele (1996)
- From the Choirgirl Hotel (1998)
- To Venus and Back (1999)
- Strange Little Girls (2001)
- Scarlet's Walk (2002)
- The Beekeeper (2005)
- American Doll Posse (2007)
EPs/Singles
- Me and a Gun (1991)
- Silent All These Years (1992)
- Crucify (1992)
- Winter (1992)
- China (1992)
- God (1993)
- Cornflake Girl (1994)
- Pretty Good Year (1994)
- Past the Mission (1994)
- Caught a Lite Sneeze (1996)
- Talula (1996)
- Professional Widow (1996)
- Hey Jupiter (1996)
- In the Springtime of His Voodoo (1996)
- Spark (1998)
- Jackie's Strength (1998)
- Cruel / Raspberry Swirl (1998)
- Jackie's Strength Remixes (1999)
- Bliss (1999)
- 1,000 Oceans (1999)
- Glory of the 80s (1999)
- Concertina (2000)
- Strange Little Girl (2001)
- Don't Make Me Come to Vegas (2003)
- Scarlet's Hidden Treasures (2004)
Collections/Other
- Little Earthquakes VHS (1992)
- Live in NY VHS (1997)
- Tales of a Librarian CD/DVD (2003)
- Welcome to Sunny Florida/Scarlet's Hidden Treasures DVD/CD (2004)
- Piece by Piece Autobiography (2005)
- Official Bootlegs (2005)
- Fade to Red DVD (2005)
- A Piano: The Collection (2006)
- Legs & Boots MP3s (2007)