Boys for Pele
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Boys for Pele | ||
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Missing image ToriAmosBoysforPelealbumcover.jpg Album cover | ||
Album by Tori Amos | ||
Released | 1996 | |
Recorded | 1993 | |
Genre | Alternative | |
Length | 70 min 09 s | |
Record label | Epic Records | |
Producer | Tori Amos | |
Professional reviews | ||
Allmusic.com | 3 stars out of 5 | link (http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:tw98b5m4nsqe) |
Q | 4 stars out of five | 2/1996 (p.93) (http://www.buy.com/retail/product.asp?sku=60148625&loc=109&PageFormat=7) |
Robert Christgau | Other | link (http://www.robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?id=1613&name=Tori+Amos) |
Rolling Stone | 2 stars out of 5 | link (http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/album/_/id/136027/toriamos?pageid=rs.ArtistDiscography) |
Salon | Negative | link (http://archive.salon.com/05/reviews/tori.html) |
Spin | 9 out of 10 | 3/1996 (p.109) (http://www.buy.com/retail/product.asp?sku=60148625&loc=109&PageFormat=7) |
Tori Amos chronology | ||
Under the Pink (1994) | Boys for Pele (1996) | From the Choirgirl Hotel (1998) |
Boys For Pele, the Grammy-nominated fourth album by singer and songwriter Tori Amos, is perhaps her least well-known and yet best-selling album to date. Featuring 19 pop songs that incorporate harpsichord, clavichord, harmonium, gospel choirs, brass bands and full orchestras, the album addresses the concept of the different types of men that enter and affect a woman's life. All of the tracks were written by Amos, and it was the first album she produced by herself. Most of the recording was done in a church in Ireland. The album's first single, Caught a Lite Sneeze, was groundbreaking because it was the first song in history to be offered free-of-charge as an internet download.
Named for the legendary volcano goddess Pele (and not the Brazilian football player), the album was inspired by Tori's break-up with longtime boyfriend Eric Rosse, co-producer of Little Earthquakes and Under the Pink. The songs represent a journey to find her power as a woman and the sexually and religiously charged lyrics are the most intense of any of her albums. The album consists of 14 fully-formed songs and four "interludes"; the 14 main songs represent the number of body parts the goddess Isis had to find of her husband Osiris to put his body back together in Egyptian mythology. Because the music was so inaccessible to radio, it did not initially sell well.
Shortly after its release, however, the song Professional Widow was remixed into a dance track that immediately rocketed to number one in the charts. The song Talula was also remixed and included on the soundtrack to the film Twister. Two new versions of the album were then released; in the UK, the remix of Professional Widow was added to the album after the original version of the song (and the song In the Springtime of His Voodoo was removed completely). In the USA, the original version of the song Talula was replaced by Talula (the Tornado Version).
Album sales quickly picked up because of the desire to have these remixes. Ironically, the removed track ...Voodoo was also remixed but was a much smaller club success. Interest in the album resurfaced when, a little less than a year after its release, Tori Amos sang vocals on Blue Skies, another huge club and dance hit by dance music artist BT (Brian Transeau).
The album stirred up a lot of controversy because of the photography included in the liner notes. Most notably, a photo of Amos suckling a baby piglet at her breast was removed from library editions of the album. There was also a lawsuit by a man who got into a car accident while looking at a Billboard advertisement of the album featuring that same photo.
The album eventually went on to achieve platinum status (selling more than one million copies).
Track listing
- "Beauty Queen" (on same track as "Horses")
- "Horses" (6.07)
- "Blood Roses" (3.56)
- "Father Lucifer" (3.43)
- "Professional Widow" (4.31)
- "Mr. Zebra" (1.07)
- "Marianne" (4.07)
- "Caught a Lite Sneeze" (4.24)
- "Muhammad My Friend" (3.48)
- "Hey Jupiter" (5.07)
- "Way Down" (1.13)
- "Little Amsterdam" (4.29)
- "Talula" (4.08)
- "Not the Red Baron" (3.49)
- "Agent Orange" (1.26)
- "Doughnut Song" (4.19)
- "In the Springtime of His Voodoo" (5.32)
- "Putting the Damage On" (5.08)
- "Twinkle" (3.12)
Charts
Album
Year | Chart | Position |
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1996 | Billboard 200 (U.S.) | 2 |
1996 | Official UK Album Chart (U.K.) | 2 |
Single
Title | Chart | Position |
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"Caught a Lite Sneeze" (1996) | Billboard Modern Rock Tracks (U.S.) | 13 |
"Caught a Lite Sneeze" (1996) | Billboard Hot 100 (U.S.) | 60 |
"Caught a Lite Sneeze" (1996) | Billboard Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles (U.S.) | 9 |
"Talula" (1996) | Billboard Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles (U.S.) | 49 |
"Talula" (1996) | Official UK Singles Chart (U.K.) | 22 |
"Hey Jupiter [EP]" (1996) | Billboard 200 (U.S.) | 94 |
"Hey Jupiter/Professional Widow [remix]" (1996) | Official UK Singles Chart (U.K.) | 20 |
"In the Springtime of His Voodoo" (1996) | Billboard Hot Dance/Club Play (U.S.) | 6 |
"Professional Widow [remix]" (1996) | Billboard Hot Dance/Club Play (U.S.) | 1 |
"Professional Widow [remix]" (1996) | Billboard Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles (U.S.) | 14 |
"Professional Widow [remix]" (1996) | Official UK Singles Chart (U.K.) | 1 |