Britney Spears isn’t the only performer on tour in Australia these days, Tori Amos — who just released her amazing first-ever holiday album Midwinter Graces — is also on tour in Oz and played a show at the famed Opera House in Sydney, Australia yesterday (which is actually today for us). Here are a few pics of Tori on stage in Sydney and some excerpts from a recent interview she did for the Sydney Morning Herald:

Tori Amos is obsessed with a three-letter word: sin. In 2005 she came to Australia with The Original Sinsuality Tour, her new tour is called Sinful Attraction and her 2009 album, which comes with erotic photos of Amos (including one of her posing provocatively in bondage gear), is titled Abnormally Attracted to Sin – a line that was inspired by the 1955 Guys and Dolls musical. “As soon as I heard [the actress] Jean Simmons say that I put the movie on pause and never went back to it, just because my mind as a minister’s daughter went into a completely different place,” Amos says. When asked what kind of place that is, however, Amos becomes shirty. “Well, you have the record,” she says shortly. “That kind of place.” The record creates a dark and troubled terrain filled with power struggles, sadomasochistic imagery and – of course – plenty of sin. “I’m attracted to the idea of what sin is and how it’s been defined for hundreds of years because, frankly, the patriarchal fathers have the power to define us and how women view their bodies, and the fact they have this power is the greatest sin, an abuse of their power,” Amos says. “So, as a minister’s daughter, I’ve been fascinated with how church authorities have been able to influence and control and divide the masses within themselves.” Even though many people know of Amos thanks to her earlier, more radio-friendly songs such as Cornflake Girl and Crucify, the topics behind her songs have always been dark and complex, such as Me and a Gun, which was inspired by Amos’s experience of sexual abuse (she later co-founded the RAINN [Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network] helpline). “Journalists used to ask me years ago, ‘Why don’t you want to write happy pop songs?’ and I felt like saying to them, ‘Why don’t you want to be funny?’” Amos says. “Meaning you have to accept what your strengths are and what kind of writer you are. I do think some people excel at making happy little catchy tunes and then there are writers that are strong when they’re going after multi-levelled subjects and subjects that are hard to talk about – and that’s kind of where I’m most comfortable, in talking about the uncomfortable” … Whereas American Doll Posse was influenced by her unhappiness with George Bush, Amos says her new songs are “very much about what women are going through right now”. For example, the song Ophelia tells the tale of a woman repeatedly choosing to be in abusive relationships, Maybe California is about a mother contemplating jumping off a cliff and Strong Black Vine talks about religious intolerance. “A good musician is a reflector of the times, monitoring the emotions of the masses,” Amos says. “Events determine what songs show up and that I’m able to be a scribe for. “These songs are very much from the perspective of a woman who’s observing people losing their homes and their lives and kids being told they can’t go to college – if you travel now across the States, there are people saying ‘I don’t know what my life is going to be because I was planning on going to university and that’s gone, because my parents have lost everything,’ and they’re working a job to try and save the money to go to a community college and you begin to realise the magnitude of what this crisis has caused,” she says. “So friends and families are being torn apart, there’s great upheaval and there’s always opportunity in upheaval. ‘People are trying to find what their strengths are, what their gold is – not monetarily but what their spiritual gold is – and the record talks about different emotions.”
Gah, reading this interview makes me want to see Tori Amos live again. Even tho I got to see her in concert a few times this past Summer, I can never have enough. I won’t even go into how much IN LOVE I am with Midwinter Graces since I’ve already mentioned it a few times. Tori will play another performance at the Sydney Opera House tonight (which is actually tomorrow for the folks in Oz). Any Aussies out there attend either of these two shows?
[Photo credit: Wireimage; Source]





























I caught her in Melbourne. She played the Regent Theatre which is an old ornate cinema that was the perfect setting for her on what was a stunner of an evening. She was brilliant. Not as chatty as she normally is but we didn’t really care. She did “I can’t see New York” which I’ve always been curious to see Live and gave us a glimpse of the new album with her version of We Three Kings. I’ve literally just got my copy at lunch so its sitting in my bag waiting to be played. And I am itching to get home to do just that. One more hour to go. (ps. LOVE!! our website!)
Tori Amos is a Goddess. The woman is… I can’t even find words to describe how phenomenal she is. I found this footage of the show in Sydney and it causes me the worst kind of pain to say I have never witnessed the beauty and ridiculous awesomess that is the Amos in person. Check out the footage here. http://the-celeb-news.blogspot.....98745.html If you haven’t seen her live either, weep with me.
I’m seeing her this Saturday in Perth…Can’t wait!
This makes me wish I had postponed my trip to Sydney this past summer. Not that I should complain, I saw her twice on this tour, but I would have loved to see her at the Sydney Opera House.