Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Boys For Pele

0.0

販売価格

¥
2,190
税込
還元ポイント

在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 1996年01月18日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルAtlantic
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 82862
SKU 075678286223

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 01:10:09
Personnel: Tori Amos (vocals, harpsichord, piano, harmonium, clavichord); Nancy Shanks (vocals); Steve Caton (acoustic 12-string guitar, electric guitar, guitar, mandolin); The Sinfonia Of London (strings); Michael Deegan, Bernard Quinn (bagpipes); Clarence J. Johnson III (soprano & tenor saxophones); James Watson (trumpet); Tracy Griffin, Brian Graber (flugelhorn); Mark Mullins (trombone); Craig Klein (sousaphone); The Black Dyke Mills Band (brass); Alan Friedman (organ, programming, sound effects); George Porter, Jr. (bass); Marcel Van Limbeek (church bells); Manu Katche (drums); Mino Cinelu (percussion); Darryl Lewis, Mark Sterling, Marvin Sterling, Sam Berfect, Jack Trimble, James Crawford, Jr., Gus McField, Jr. (background vocals); R.O.B., Marcel. Principally recorded in Counties Wicklow and Cork, Republic Of Ireland. BOYS FOR PELE was nominated for a 1997 Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Performance. Personnel: Tori Amos (vocals, harpsichord, harmonium, clavichord, organ, keyboards); Steve Caton (guitar, electric guitar, 12-string guitar, mandolin); Sinfonia of London Orchestra (strings); James Watson (trumpet); Mark Mullins (trombone); Black Dyke Band (brass); Craig Klein (sousaphone); Manu Katche (drums); Mino Cinelu (percussion); Marcel VanLimbeek (bells); Alan Friedman (drum programming). Audio Mixers: Marcel VanLimbeek; Mark Hawley; Bob Clearmountain. Recording information: Air Studios, London, England; Co. Cork, Ireland; Delgany, Co. Wicklow, Ireland; Dinosaur Studios, New Orleans, LA; Egyptian Room, New Orleans, LA. Director: Peter Willison. Photographer: Cindy Palmano. Arranger: John Philip Shenale. Boys for Pele is the harshest and most challenging work in Tori Amos' catalog. However, it also stands as the most cathartic, nourishing, and artistically thrilling of her career. Birthed in the wake of a devastating breakup, Pele is a sprawling ode to the feminine, conjured in a whirlwind of pain that forced Amos to embark on a quest into the dark unknown to find the fire within that had been snuffed out by the men in her life. After her breakthrough confessional Little Earthquakes and the delicate impressions of Under the Pink, Amos struck out on her own for the first time, unfettered and uncompromised. Pele would be her debut at the helm as sole producer, a control she would maintain for the rest of her career. With that power, Amos was free to exorcize the demons as she saw fit. She did so with new additions to her arsenal: a harpsichord, brass flourishes, a choir, labyrinthine lyrics, and a pantheon of spirits summoned in the Louisiana bayou and the Irish countryside. It was a jarring shift. While unflinching songs like "Me and a Gun," "God," "Icicle," and "The Waitress" flirted with what was to come, Pele delved directly into the darkness, cleansing both her and the listener in ways that she hadn't before attempted. Like hitting an exposed nerve or an open wound, the rawness was striking. Following the sparse opener "Beauty Queen/Horses," the discord on "Blood Roses" shocks Pele to life with medieval harpsichord magic. That electricity surges throughout, most notably on "Professional Widow," a powerful dose of industrial-piano ferocity that holds nothing back in its demands for peace, love, and a little something extra. When her rage is restrained, the pain seeps through in quiet moments of devastation like "Hey Jupiter," "Putting the Damage On," "Doughnut Song," and the utterly heartbreaking "Marianne." While the first half of Pele houses the more immediate numbers, the back end of the LP provides rewards for the patient listener. From the rousing "In the Springtime of His Voodoo" to the funky "Little Amsterdam," Amos slowly crawls out from the underworld, nourishing her spirit with a Southern gospel choir on "Way Down" and finding bittersweet solace on "Twinkle." Although the album runs long -- and is emotionally exhausting in scope -- the shared journey is part of the expe to be continued...
録音 : ステレオ (---)

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Horses

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    2. 2.
      Blood Roses

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    3. 3.
      Father Lucifer

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    4. 4.
      Boys

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    5. 5.
      Mr. Zebra

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    6. 6.
      Marianne

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    7. 7.
      Caught a Lite Sneeze

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    8. 8.
      Muhammad My Friend

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    9. 9.
      Hey Jupiter

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    10. 10.
      Way Down

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    11. 11.
      Little Amsterdam

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    12. 12.
      Talula

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    13. 13.
      Not the Red Baron

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    14. 14.
      Agent Orange

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    15. 15.
      Doughnut Song

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    16. 16.
      In the Springtime of His Voodoo

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    17. 17.
      Putting the Damage On

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

    18. 18.
      Twinkle

      アーティスト: Tori Amos

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Tori Amos

その他
プロデューサー: Tori Amos

商品の紹介

Spin (1/97, p.59) - Ranked #13 on Spin's list of the '20 Best Albums of '96.' Spin (3/96, p.109) - 9 (out of 10) - "...Part clasp-key dream diary, part coded message, part erotic Rorshach test, Amos' lyrics are so hermetic they'll set you tripping....her music [is]...full of breath but refusing climax, laced with brass filigrees and melodic tendrills, cut with shadows and grit..." Q (2/96, p.93) - 4 Stars (out of 5) - "...it utilises the strangest brew of instruments to create its effect, with harpsichord, mandolin, harmonium, organ, bagpipes, gospel choir and even the Delgany church bells passing through....it is surely the sound of Tori Amos they way she wants to sound..." Musician (3/96, p.87) - "...Everything on BOYS challenges the listener to accept the artist on her terms as she speaks in her own poetic language and follows her muse through territory both familiar and vaguely forbidding..."
Rovi

Boys for Pele is the harshest and most challenging work in Tori Amos' catalog. However, it also stands as the most cathartic, nourishing, and artistically thrilling of her career. Birthed in the wake of a devastating breakup, Pele is a sprawling ode to the feminine, conjured in a whirlwind of pain that forced Amos to embark on a quest into the dark unknown to find the fire within that had been snuffed out by the men in her life. After her breakthrough confessional Little Earthquakes and the delicate impressions of Under the Pink, Amos struck out on her own for the first time, unfettered and uncompromised. Pele would be her debut at the helm as sole producer, a control she would maintain for the rest of her career. With that power, Amos was free to exorcize the demons as she saw fit. She did so with new additions to her arsenal: a harpsichord, brass flourishes, a choir, labyrinthine lyrics, and a pantheon of spirits summoned in the Louisiana bayou and the Irish countryside. It was a jarring shift. While unflinching songs like "Me and a Gun," "God," "Icicle," and "The Waitress" flirted with what was to come, Pele delved directly into the darkness, cleansing both her and the listener in ways that she hadn't before attempted. Like hitting an exposed nerve or an open wound, the rawness was striking. Following the sparse opener "Beauty Queen/Horses," the discord on "Blood Roses" shocks Pele to life with medieval harpsichord magic. That electricity surges throughout, most notably on "Professional Widow," a powerful dose of industrial-piano ferocity that holds nothing back in its demands for peace, love, and a little something extra. When her rage is restrained, the pain seeps through in quiet moments of devastation like "Hey Jupiter," "Putting the Damage On," "Doughnut Song," and the utterly heartbreaking "Marianne." While the first half of Pele houses the more immediate numbers, the back end of the LP provides rewards for the patient listener. From the rousing "In the Springtime of His Voodoo" to the funky "Little Amsterdam," Amos slowly crawls out from the underworld, nourishing her spirit with a Southern gospel choir on "Way Down" and finding bittersweet solace on "Twinkle." Although the album runs long -- and is emotionally exhausting in scope -- the shared journey is part of the experience, as listeners play the Dante to Amos' Virgil. Boys for Pele remains one of her very best works, timeless in its examination of pain, self-discovery, and acceptance. ~ Neil Z. Yeung
Rovi

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