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    Tori Amos

    Abnormally Attracted to Sin

    Tori Amos - Abnormally Attracted to Sin

    2009 | Republic 

    • CD

      $12.99

      ABNORMALLY ATTRACTED TO SIN

      05/19/2009

    • LP

      $17.99

      ABNORMALLY ATTRACTED TO SIN

      05/19/2009

    Videos from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

    Abnormally Attracted to Sin Review

    Tori Amos has always been—and will always be—the kind of artist who uses music to exorcise and absolve her demons, as opposed to plopping on a therapist’s couch in search of a talking cure. This beloved redhead can always be counted on to lay her cards face up on the table, for all her fans to see and that’s precisely why her diehards are so passionately connected to her and would follow her into Hell. We’re happy to report that things haven’t changed on Amos’ latest, Abnormally Attracted to Sin. The reigning queen of alternative piano pop is at her quirky best. While she’s not Madonna and doesn’t need to drastically and dramatically re-invent herself with every release, Amos does like to further experiment and play with current trends. Abnormally Attracted to Sin sees her embracing synthetic keys even more! After disentangling herself from Epic Records, her most recent label home, Amos, now with Universal-Republic, doesn’t sacrifice one iota of her integrity, despite remaining within a major label system. She’s as odd, confessional and confounding as ever.

    The daintily subversive Abnormally Attracted to Sin posits Amos in her familiar roles: she is cast as a vixen and a virgin. But this is when she’s truly at her girlish, frothy, flirty and beautiful best: challenging the notions of femininity and the divine in a male dominated world. Her muses remain the, same and she mines the same fertile sources that have always governred her albums.

    The music feels good and is exceptionally pretty, thanks to Amos’ ability to tickle the ivories in a way that sends chills down your spine. But lurking even further beneath the depths is Amos’ quintessential lyrical brilliance. She will, once again, have you thinking about, well, women and sin.

    The album opens with the sultry, melancholic “Give,” the sexiest song Amos has ever recorded, while “Welcome to England” pits her organic piano against studio-created synths. It’s a juxtaposition of the organic and the inorganic. “Strong Black Vine” is another vampy rocker backed by epic, tense instrumentation, while “Flavor” appears like a breathy come on, but it’s really much more intelligent than that. They say that well-behaved women rarely make history. With Abnormally Attracted to Sin, Tori Amos is aiming for her own chapter in music history books!

    — Amy Sciarretto
    05.20.09


    All Music Guide Review

    After the high conceptualism that lorded over 2005's The Beekeeper and 2007's American Doll Posse, singer and songwriter Tori Amos has decided to return to the relatively simple songs-as-songs approach on Abnormally Attracted to Sin. Those recordings, fine though they may have been, stretched the artist's reputation and the patience of her fans to the breaking point; based on her record sales, she whittled them down to simply the Tori cult (not a derogatory term, since many of her fans are proud to refer to themselves that way). The scope of this set in comparison with the previous two offerings seems more like a retrenchment than anything else. Not that there's anything at all wrong with that. There are songs on Abnormally Attracted to Sin that are as strong as anything she's written. Certainly the opener "Give," with its trip-hop rhythmic landscape and shifting backing vocals, slippery synth bass, and acoustic piano is beautifully constructed with a melody line that glides along a minor-key slant with a Middle Eastern tinge, and its lyric is both poignant and provocative. But then there is the single, "Welcome to England," whose 4/4 loop, drifting piano, and blend of guitars (electric and acoustic), strings, and ambient sounds is rudimentary Amos at best, and boring at worst. The refrain creates a bit of a hook, at least enough to catch the ear, but that's all. "Strong Black Vine," with its echoes of Led Zeppelin's "Kashmir" in the intro, tosses Amos back into her Jerry Lee Lewis dilemma: she loves and hates religious faith, and is both ensnared by it and saved by it. It's a rocker as far as her songs go, and works beautifully. "Maybe California" is a simple, straightforward modern pop ballad. It's beautifully composed and delivered. The track listing goes on, and on, and on, and on. And if there is a problem with Abnormally Attracted to Sin, this is it: it's 73 minutes long. At the dawn of the CD era, it made sense on some level to be this "generous" with listeners. But for any artist to sustain the kind of consistency necessary to keep a listener's attention for this length of time is extraordinary. By the album's second half, one has to play and replay certain tracks because they seem to go by in a blur. And to be honest, this set would have fared better for some real pruning. Whereas cuts like "Fire to Your Plain," with its country overtones and in-the-gut melody fare quite well here, another country-ish experiment, "Not Dyin' Today," could have been deleted because it feels like a tossed off idea more than a fully realized one. The title track is an eerie abstract exercise in ambience and atmospherics and its fragmented (and provocative) lyric is the perfect strategy to anchor it without losing its dreaminess. "500 Miles" (not the Proclaimers song) has a beautiful lyric, but musically it feels lifeless and lazy. The faux cabaret of "That Guy" feels like it updates Brecht and Weill in the 21st century, just as the jazzy intimacy of "Mary Jane" does the Parisian Saravah jazz scene of the late 50s and early '60s. What it all boils down to is, well, boiling it down. Amos doesn't record as much as most artists, and it must be tempting to give fans everything she can, but in this case, it's hurt her a bit. Still there, are many tracks here worth adding to one's Amos shelf. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi

    Abnormally Attracted to Sin Track Listing

  • Track#
  • Title
  • time
  • 1
  • Give
  • 4:13
  • Sound Clip for Give from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

  • 4
  • Flavor
  • 4:05
  • Sound Clip for Flavor from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

  • 7
  • Curtain Call
  • 4:51
  • Sound Clip for Curtain Call from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

  • 9
  • Police Me
  • 3:54
  • Sound Clip for Police Me from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

  • 10
  • That Guy
  • 4:03
  • Sound Clip for That Guy from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

  • 12
  • 500 Miles
  • 4:06
  • Sound Clip for 500 Miles from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

  • 13
  • Mary Jane
  • 2:41
  • Sound Clip for Mary Jane from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

  • 14
  • Starling
  • 4:01
  • Sound Clip for Starling from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

  • 15
  • Fast Horse
  • 3:52
  • Sound Clip for Fast Horse from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

  • 16
  • Ophelia
  • 4:42
  • Sound Clip for Ophelia from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

  • 17
  • Lady in Blue
  • 7:11
  • Sound Clip for Lady in Blue from Abnormally Attracted to Sin

  • Credits of Abnormally Attracted to Sin

    • John Philip Shenale
    • Synthesizer, Arranger, Conductor, Hammond B3, String Arrangements, Orchestration, Organ (Hammond)
    • Mac Aladdin
    • Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric), Guitar (12 String), Guitar, Mandolin
    • Adam Spry
    • Assistant, Technician, Audio Engineer
    • Tori Amos
    • Organ, Synthesizer, Audio Production, Fender Rhodes, Producer, Vocals, Keyboards, Composer, Piano