One of the most successful, prolific and influential artists of her generation, Tori Amos has debuted the first track 'Cloud Riders' from her hotly-anticipated new studio album Native Invader - to be released on Decca Records on 8th September. 'Cloud Riders' Is Available To Listen To HERE
Tori Amos reveals her inspiration behind 'Cloud Riders':
"Before the Storm, at 4:22 AM,
I saw a shooting star.
Some Storms are electrifying
but some Storms are deadly.
Life Changing.
Some resolve themselves,
Some don't.
Conflicts can be that way.
You don't know how a conflict is going to play out when you are in the middle of it.
And the one thing I have learned is that when the Cloud Riders are coming, they cannot be outrun."
Amos's 15th album is an intense feast of melody, protest, tenderness and pain. In the summer of 2016, she took a road trip through North Carolina's Smoky Mountains. The intention was to reconnect with the stories and songlines of her mother's family, who were from the North Carolina and Tennessee Smoky Mountain area. That winter, two seismic events knocked the plan off its axis. The fall out from the US Election. And in January her mother, Maryellen Amos, suffered a severe stroke leaving her unable to speak.
UK TOUR DATES
October 4th 2017 London Royal Albert Hall
October 5th 2017 Manchester Palace Theatre
October 6th 2017 Glasgow O2 Academy
The complex influence of America's alt-right Super PACs, lobbyists and think tanks informs much of the tension in Native Invader. "It wasn't going to be a record of pain, blood and bone when I began," she says. "It wasn't going to be a record of division. But the Muses 9 insisted that I listened and watched the conflicts that were traumatising the nation and write about those raw emotions. Hopefully people will find strength and resilience within the songs to give them the energy to survive the storms that we are currently in". The sense of semantic distortion permeates Native Invader. Amos talks of the need to form a "militia of the mind" in the face of national lies. Hidden messages and subliminal protests lend themselves perfectly to Amos's natural playfulness. For all its dark themes, this album is a joy to absorb, full of warmth and puzzles.
More than two decades after her debut studio album Little Earthquakes - recently hailed by NPR as No.27 of 150 Greatest Albums Made By Women - Tori's work is as powerful as ever. Her extensive world tour kicks off on 6th
September in Ireland and includes shows at the
Royal Albert Hall on 4th October, Manchester's
Palace Theatre on 5th October and Glasgow's O2 Academy on 6th October.
Following 2014's Unrepentant Geraldines - her eighth Billboard Top 10 album - Native Invader is Tori's 15th studio album and will be made available in various physical and digital configurations, as well as vinyl later this year. The physical CD package will be available in standard as well as deluxe offerings; the latter includes a hardcover book and two bonus tracks.
A pioneer across multiple platforms, Tori was the first major label artist to offer a single for download. Nominated for multiple Grammy Awards, she has had her songs turned into graphic novels and has produced ground-breaking videos throughout her career. In late 2016 she released the title song 'Flicker' to the acclaimed Netflix documentary 'Audrie and Daisy', addressing issues of high school rape. A noted humanitarian, Tori is co-founder of RAINN (Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network), which is the United States' largest anti-sexual assault organisation.
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