Known As: Tori Amos
Birth Name: Myra Ellen Amos
Date of Birth: August 22, 1963
Birth Place: Newton, NC, USA
Occupation: Singer
Tori Amos almost falls into a class of music of her
own. As introspective as Alanis Morissette, but less
folksy than Jewel. As edgy and original as Björk,
but not as grungy as P.J. Harvey or Fiona Apple. With
a tremendous fan following hailing her for her strong
and erotic style, Tori Amos has secured her place in
contemporary music; and has dared to go where no other
has gone with a piano.
Myra Ellen Amos was born August 22, 1963, in Newton,
North Carolina, to a Methodist minister father and a
homemaker mother. The youngest of three children, Ellen
(as Tori was referred to before an acquaintance said
she looked more like a "Tori" while watching
her perform) moved to a Maryland suburb at the age of
one, when her family decided to relocate.
It was hard to ignore the fact that young Tori had
an innate talent for playing the piano. By the time
she was four, she was composing music on the piano,
and two years later she was studying classical piano
at the Peabody Institute at Baltimore's Johns Hopkins
University, becoming the youngest student to attend
the school.
Her stay at the prestigious school did not last long
after she performed her own compositions to the faculty
(apparently ad-libbing John Lennon and The Doors tunes)
that did not meet the conservative standard they were
accustomed to. Foreshadowing her non-conformist style,
Tori was expelled from the school.
The 13-year-old took her talents to Washington DC and
Baltimore clubs, this time performing jazz on the keyboard,
while in high school. Along with her older brother,
Tori penned a song called "Baltimore", in
honor of the Orioles who were heading to the World Series
during that time.
After graduating from high school in 1981, the girl
named "Most Likely to Succeed" by her classmates
headed to the West Coast to pursue her dream of becoming
a famous performer. Twenty-one and right smack in the
middle of her punk phase, Tori joined a hard-rock band
called Y Kant Tori Read (a jab at her conformist school
days at the conservatory).
The band's self-titled debut was a flop and her days
with the band were short lived, but thankfully, audiences
knew better than to judge the band's lead singer solely
on Y Kant Tori Read's commercial and critical failure.
Her solo performances proved that she was more than
just another 80's female punk rocker.
After Atlantic Records' co-chairman got hold of a demo
tape of Tori's solo recordings, he was impressed by
her songwriting and sound and saw potential for her
music in the UK. Tori moved to London and got to work
on songwriting and composing. The fruit of her labor
was her debut solo album entitled Little Earthquakes,
released in 1992.
With singles such as "Silent All These Years",
"Crucify" and "Winter", and a chilling
"Me and a Gun" (about her personal brush with
rape), the album went double platinum. She followed
this up with her sophomore album, Under The Pink, two
years later.
Questioning femininity and exploring daring ideas,
Under the Pink was a critical success, with singles
such as "God" and "Cornflake Girl".
Her third foray into music, Boys for Pele is a darker
album, and followed Tori's breakup with her boyfriend
and co-producer, Eric Rosse.
Released in 1998, From The Choirgirl Hotel was inspired
by her unfortunate miscarriage. Since From The Choirgirl
Hotel, Tori has married British sound engineer Mark
Hawley and released another album in September 1999
entitled, To Venus And Back.
Known for the sexual and erotic way that she plays
the piano while in concert and for her radical and often
rebellious lyrics, Tori has developed a huge fan base
and much critical acclaim. She is the founder of RAINN,
the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network; she and
her music have helped many women deal with rape, having
been a rape victim herself.
Despite the tragedy Tori has seen in her life, she
is now happily married, has just recently given birth
to a baby girl, and continues to please her millions
of fans -- earning some new ones along the way.