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Recent Articles by Annie Zaleski

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  • Miami New Times

    Amazons a Go-Go

    Big girls, little guys, lots of fun.

    By Natalie O'Neill

  • SF Weekly

    The Rise and Fall of "The Monster"

    Gay porn star Michael Brandon goes from meth addict to anti-drug crusader--and back.

    By Ashley Harrell

  • Dallas Observer

    My Two Sons

    Andrew and Freddy Velez are the first brothers to die in America's War on Terror.

    By Megan Feldman

Tori Amos

Monday, September 5, Red Rocks Amphitheatre, 303-830-8497.

By Annie Zaleski

Published on September 01, 2005

Tori Amos perfected her ability to combine creative risks with emotional introspection on early discs such as 1996's Boys for Pele, which struck a welcome balance between modern flash and old-fashioned sentimentality. But with her more recent, experimental albums, listeners felt curiously removed from the flame-haired faerie queen, largely because their characters weren't very compelling (2001's Strange Little Girls) or were too obscure (2002's Scarlet's Walk). At nineteen songs, Amos's eighth solo effort, The Beekeeper, is no less ambitious, but its stripped-back production and resonant lyrics make it one of the most subtle and affecting works in her catalogue. Amos uses language as deftly as Sylvia Plath and crafts extended metaphors with perfect verbal economy. Beekeeper works best musically when the lilting piano compositions remain unadorned by slick studio flourishes -- save for the title track, a moving Portishead doppelgänger. Only several uneven forays into funky '70s soul needlessly muddle Amos's classically trained exorcisms of the psyche's demons.


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