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    Abnormally Attracted to Sin

    Abnormally Attracted to SinArtist: Tori Amos
    Label: Republic
    Category: Music

    List Price: $13.98
    Buy New: $6.97
    as of 2/9/2010 20:00 EST details
    You Save: $7.01 (50%)



    New (37) Used (15) from $6.95

    Seller: dlincoln
    Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 45 reviews
    Sales Rank: 7916

    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 4.8 x 0.4

    MPN: 001287302
    UPC: 602527034355
    EAN: 0602527034355
    ASIN: B001VPJYYQ

    Release Date: May 19, 2009
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Tracks:

      • GIVE
      • WELCOME TO ENGLAND
      • STRONG BLACK VINE
      • FLAVOR
      • NOT DYING TODAY
      • MAYBE CALIFORNIA
      • CURTAIN CALL
      • FIRE TO YOUR PLAIN
      • POLICE ME
      • THAT GUY
      • ABNORMALLY ATTRACTED TO SIN
      • 500 MILES
      • MARY JANE
      • STARLING
      • FAST HORSE
      • OPHELIA
      • LADY IN BLUE

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Album Description
    ABNORMALLY ATTRACTED TO SIN, Tori's tenth studio album, is another innovative chapter in the artist's trailblazing story. Every track on the album will be accompanied by a corresponding `visualette,' featuring footage that has been captured over the past year. Shot in HD and Super 8, the visualettes will incorporate a documentary style. Tori's most recent album, AMERICAN DOLL POSSE, which has been hailed by Rolling Stone magazine as `her best album in years,' was released in 2007 to a chorus of rave reviews. The captivating album, like many of her previous efforts, adhered to a strong conceptual theme, with Tori inhabiting multiple archetypal female personae, a testament to her willingness to continue to push the boundaries of the female singer/songwriter. Regarded as one of the most emotionally fearless live artists in music today, her most recent world tour, launched in the summer of 2007, saw her soar with her first full-fledged rock band in nearly a decade. Media platforms such as the BBC lauded both her live show and album as `returning Tori Amos back to the forefront of a genre she defined...still pushing her own boundaries.' With more than 12 million albums sold, and commanding a significant and uniquely loyal audience from the rock, pop, alternative, and under-the-radar regions of the music world, Ms. Amos has influenced a new generation of artists in a myriad of platforms. Most recently, she was the catalyst for a one-of-a-kind anthology chronicling her career, the 500 page Graphic Novel, Comic Book Tattoo, featuring stunning visual interpretations of her songs by more than 80 artists, (including an introduction by friend and creative influence artist Neil Gaiman, creator of the Sandman series). Her genre-shattering breakthrough in the early 1990s, including 1991's `Me And A Gun' EP, and 1992's masterwork, Little Earthquakes, single-handedly revived the piano-andsinger motif in rock music. Little Earthquakes went on to sell more than 3 million albums worldwide, with subsequent Grammy® nominated albums such as Under The Pink (1994), 1996's Boys For Pele, 2001's Strange Little Girls and 2002's Scarlet's Walk continuing to explore broader themes. Nominated for multiple awards, including ten Grammys®, Ms. Amos has been working on a musical for London's British National Theatre called The Light Princess tentatively scheduled to debut in 2010.

    Album Description
    2009 album from the acclaimed songstress. Abnormally Attracted To Sin is a treasure. An elaborate feast made from home-grown stock, offered up to a generation fed on small meals made with cheap ingredients. The album has a typically detailed and wide sound, dominated by dark, rich reds and hints of silver. The mood is dark but charged, like a late night conversation (or confession) held over several bottles of wine. AATS is the work of someone who knows, with fierce certainty, what she believes in. Anybody, whether it's a newcomer or a lifelong member of Tori's phenomenal fanbase, will feel that certainty. The 18 tracks on AATS were recorded in Cornwall by Tori's husband Mark Hawley and his partner Marcel Van Limbeek. Features the single 'Welcome To England'.


    Customer Reviews:
    Showing reviews 1-5 of 45
    1 2 3 4 5 6 ...9Next »



    3 out of 5 stars Your mama ain't New York, she is pure.   May 30, 2009
    Jason Stein (San Diego, CA United States)
    54 out of 62 found this review helpful

    By now there must be a division of Tori Amos fans--the ones, like myself, who like her earlier work, and the ones who like what she has done over the past decade. I'm sure there are die-hard fans like myself who subject themselves to everything Amos, and who might be lulled into a comfortable coma that feels (on the surface) blissful, but then the inability to come to sets in.

    "Abnormally Attracted To Sin" carries on the Amos tradition set forth by "Strange Little Girls" back in 2001. Slick production, that also sounds flat and bland--like it was made behind a wall. Amos's clever and wry lyrics about the same old subjects--religion, sin, womanhood, etc. Plus her inimitable vocals which don't reach the dizzying heights of her earlier work anymore. She sounds like she's been taking Valium for the past decade, lazily churning her own butter, far from the taste buds of her adoring fans.

    There's nothing here to get excited about. The songs come and go with no particular track standing out. This is just like her last three albums, and what's strange is she jumped record labels only to make the same album for a fourth time in a row. All of her albums this decade have been overstuffed (can Amos actually make a 40 minute album? She seems musically challenged to do so).

    "Welcome To England" is a mediocre first choice as a single. What's she singing about? I don't know, I feel asleep already. To her credit, I liked "Give", "Maybe California", "500 Miles", and well, all the songs are just fine, really. That's the problem--there's nothing compelling or gripping here. Amos is supposed to represent intensity, originality, experimentation. All gone. It all died after "To Venus And Back" in 1999. Amos has gone through a longer blue period than Elton John.

    Wake up and smell the coffee, Amos. Oh wait, that's all you've been doing for the past decade, because it's the only place your music has been heard--at Starbucks across the U.S. I expect more from you. I want my money's worth. Surprise me next time.

    Here's how "Abnormally Attracted To Sin" compares to her other work:

    1992 Little Earthquakes: Five Stars
    1994 Under The Pink: Five Stars
    1996 Boys For Pele: Five Stars
    1998 From The Choirgirl Hotel: Five Stars
    1999 To Venus And Back: Four Stars
    2001 Strange Little Girls: Two Stars
    2002 Scarlet's Walk: Three Stars
    2005 The Beekeeper: Three and a Half Stars
    2007 American Doll Posse: Three and a Half Stars
    2009 Abnormally Attracted To Sin: Three Stars



    5 out of 5 stars Tori Stays on Target   August 22, 2009
    Robert J. Howal (Nowhere USA)
    6 out of 6 found this review helpful

    Lots of people are moaning about this album on these pages. And I am honestly not sure why. Tori's voice sounds terrific, the lyrics are intelligent and the music is rich and melodious as well as interesting, colorful, and diverse. All on one CD clocking in at over 72 minutes! Who else bothers to do this these days - or can? I certainly don't want Tori to start kicking out 40 minute albums like every other recording "artist". She has more to offer and thankfully does so with a rare and rewarding consistency. Is the texting generation now so attention-span challenged to actually consider this a liability? Pitiful. And as for the ad-hominem attacks, they are utterly pointless and not worth rebuttal. I have every Tori Amos album and they are all excellent on their own terms. AAtS is no exception. In fact I have listened to it now for the 7th time in the 4 days since I bought it. So if you have found immersion in a Tori Amos record in the past a pleasing experience you should expect nothing less from this piece of work because the girl has still got it - in spades!


    3 out of 5 stars More Piano, Less Makeup - I Want My Old Tori Back!   May 28, 2009
    Glady Rosales (Philippines)
    21 out of 27 found this review helpful

    Call me the fan in the "soft" Tori spectrum. There's something about her piano playing that lends emotional connection to her most cryptic of lyrics and most bizarre arrangements. That was what made Tori so great to me - her music transcended the surrealism of her words. You listen to her wanting to kill a waitress, taking the Lord's name in vain, and other dirty images - and yet, you feel the songs speaking to/about you clearly. And that was why I wasn't particularly fond of heavier albums such as ADP or FTCH.

    "Abnormally Attracted To Sin" has its share of heavy and slow tempo arrangements, so I can't fault it by being too much of a rock album. Predictably, "Police Yourself" and "Strong Black Vine", the most drowned in heavy rhythms are my least favorites.

    I DO FAULT IT FOR BEING... BLAH. Alright, "Fire To Your Plain" does have a catchy tune, "Welcome To England" has the recognizable sweetness in Tori's elongating of her vowels, and "Flavor" (my favorite track) mirrors the soulfulness of "Beekeeper" (plus reminds me of that Bush song from the "Buffy The Vampire Slayer" soundtrack). The rest seem to be forgettable tracks. A 17-track record is not necessarily too long - but this one is because I'm waiting in vain for a gem. My ears just stop paying attention after track #12.

    It's nice that "That Guy" starts out nicely like snake charmer's music, and that there are vibes of other-worldliness and tribal in "Give" and "Not Dying Today", respectively. Touches of eclecticism, sure, but so wanting in the quirkiness and wit that made me love good old "Mr. Zebra", "Happy Phantom", "Past The Mission" and "Wrong Band" so much. "Mary Jane" has a little hint of that, but not enough to make you smile in wonderment.

    "Maybe California", with its string accompaniment, evokes a familiar mood as "Gold Dust" and "Toast" from a few years ago, and even ends in a similar minor chord. Overall, though the whole record somehow pictures Tori as a more complete and stronger woman - albeit detached and devoid of any vulnerability. Plus, there is absolutely no sign of Tori's haunting piano anywhere!

    What doesn't help and this was also why ADP didn't leave me with a stronger impact - was that whatever initial impressions I have of the tracks has little room for "growing on" because... I HAVE NO IDEA WHAT THE SONGS ARE ABOUT! And it's not that they're odd, apart from choruses... THEY'RE JUST PLAIN UNINTELLIGIBLE! Whether it is the synths and guitars or the accent drowning the vocals, it totally robs the songs of their personality. While I give up on making out Tori's garbled speech, I mentally try to find aural cues by finding similarities from old albums just in an attempt to connect to the songs. (For instance, is the title track in any way connected to "Original Sin-suality"?) But after the comparisons, the connection ends.

    As a last note, I can't help but notice there are some traces of the "dolls" here (yeah, I'm looking at the blonde wig in the "Fire To Your Plain" video and super-straightened hair on TV guestings). I hope it stops before anybody notices that makeup amount and costume outlandishness level are inversely proportional to quality of music.



    5 out of 5 stars Different, in a good way.   June 14, 2009
    Jon Freeman (Columbus, OH)
    7 out of 8 found this review helpful

    The first thing I think about when I listen to this album is how far Tori has come. This is a new sound for her. She is always trying new things, which is very good. Who wants to listen to the exact same album time and time again? This new CD works. At times I hear To Venus And Back styles here, but for the most part it is very fresh. It gets better with each play. A must have CD.


    5 out of 5 stars The most consistent effort since "To Venus and Back"   October 11, 2009
    marschallin73 (milan, italy)
    3 out of 3 found this review helpful

    In the midst of such volley of criticism, I feel the need to redress an imbalance. This album is Tori's tautest, most exciting effort in (exactly) a decade. Many a fan has noticed (mostly with dismay) the change in direction in her music after "To Venus and Back", an abrupt change whose somewhat disheartening harbinger was an entire album of covers, "Strange Little Girls". What distinguished her subsequent output was a situation whereby diminishing melodic inventiveness was made up for (as we have seen happen so many times with lesser artists) by an inflation in para-musical aspects: the underlying "concept", the production, the duration, all of which became rather sprawling and overblown.

    As of 2000, in other words, Tori began to sound--surprisingly--like somebody else. More specifically, in my opinion, she began to sound like Sheryl Crow on a good day (nothing wrong with that, except that we're talking about Tori Amos here, a unique artist whose first stunning string of 5 masterpieces inured listeners--unfairly, no doubt-- to expect excellence as a matter of course). The softer, folkier, more upbeat, mainstream sound which permeated "Beekeper" and "Scarlett" I felt only skimmed the surface of her reservoir of talent.

    The albums, mind you, were not bad by any normal standard (not even the least of them, "Beekeeper"): the point is, perhaps, that they could have easily been made by somebody else. They ceased to be unmistakably Tori's, as her uniqueness only surfaced in glimpses and twists, diluted over an ever-lengthening landscape of not-so-essential songs enslaved to a fastidious, often Byzantine "concept" arc.

    A return to form was announced by American Doll Posse. The editing laxity was still rampant, but her Sheryl Crow routine (enriched by echoes of Juliana Hatfield, among others) reached heights that Sheryl herself could never have attained. And there was a lot of Tori-ness to it too, more so than in the previous two albums, so things were indeed looking up. (She is indeed one of those artists who draw their musical strength from their dark side, rather than their sunny one: and in Posse, luckily, the dark side is back: which means, thank goodness, no more bees and vineyards!)

    And now comes "Abnormally Attracted to Sin". At first sight, the 70+ minutes spell an alarming continuity with her interminable predecessors. But after the second listen, the sonic landscape reveals a tightness that had been missing since the astounding "Choirgirl Hotel", and the melodic inventiveness is back around those apices. There is hardly a dispensable song in the lot (one or two tops: and, let's be frank, not even her early masterpieces were untouchable in this respect), and so many are excellent ones, worthy of the old Tori. The lyrics are marvelously hermetic, the voice mangles away at English phonetics (who else could make "Tennessee" sound like "Genocide"?), warping and dragging vowels like she's channelling Billie Holiday, and the old INTENSITY is back--although, as some have noticed, further removed, and a bit over-rehearsed, even antiseptic. But we can hardly expect from Tori the same spontaneity she exhibited 20 years ago. Or maybe we should say "spontaneity effect". For, let's not forget that spontaneity is mostly achieved through hard work. Despite what the film "Amadeus" would like us to believe, even Mozart was known to tweak, fix, tinker, and agonize over his best work.

    To get to the selection: As one perceptive reviewer put it, "Give" is probably the strongest opening since "Spark" (from "Choirgirl"), with a serpentine pentatonic streak running through it. "England" is quietly beautiful, "Vine" deliciously twisted and dark. "Flavor" is ok, perhaps a little too conventional, "Dying" sounds straight out of the best part of "Posse", "Maybe California" is one of her standard intimate ballads, "Police" is a real tour de force, infectious, dark, and rich in melodic and rhythmic invention, "That guy" (the most Billie Holiday-esque) moves me to tears, "Curtain" and "Fire" are sinuous enough to sustain interest throughout, "Sin" gets under your skin (no pun intended), "500" is maybe dispensable (meaning: it could have been on "Beekeper"), "Mary Jane" is the old let's-expose-the-obscene-puritan-underbelly Tori back on top, "Ophelia is majestic, and "Lady in Blue" possesses the timeless, hypnotic, monumental beauty of an old Blues song (like Sinatra's lunar rendition of "Baby won't you please come home" from "Where Are You"): what an amazing way to end a great album.

    In my opinion, then, "Abnormally" is a sure-footed return to form after a decade of uneven, meandering, generic music. Of course, as we set out to write reviews, we should never forget how extremely subjective a listening experience is bound to be. My highly unprofessional yardstick is the following: an album is really exceptional if it manages to bring tears to my eyes at least twice (by the time of my second or third listen, that is: and I'm not talking about an emotional upheaval brought on by words per se, but rather by a certain melodic/harmonic progression, like the piano flourish that introduces the bridge "You gotta bring your own sun" in "Welcome to England", or the breathtaking "Make up to break up" chorus in "That Guy"). Those two episodes alone are worth--if we want to be prosaic--the price of the album. Enjoy!


    Showing reviews 1-5 of 45
    1 2 3 4 5 6 ...9Next »


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