American Doll Posse

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American Doll Posse
American Doll Posse cover
Studio album by Tori Amos
Released April 26, 2007
Recorded June 2006 – February 2007, Cornwall, United Kingdom
Genre Alternative rock, baroque pop, piano rock, Rock
Length 78:42
Label Epic
Producer Tori Amos
Professional reviews
Tori Amos chronology
The Beekeeper
(2005)
American Doll Posse
(2007)
Singles from American Doll Posse
  1. "Big Wheel"
    Released: 2007
  2. "Bouncing Off Clouds"
    Released: 2007
  3. "Almost Rosey"
    Released: 2007

American Doll Posse is the ninth studio album by singer-songwriter Tori Amos. Like her previous three albums, the 23-track American Doll Posse is a concept album that entails five female personae Amos developed based on Greek mythology. Musically, the album is a drastic departure for Amos. Having stated that the box set A Piano: The Collection (2006) was the summation of her previous work and the end of an era,[1] American Doll Posse elicits a new chapter in her career and is her heaviest, most rock-influenced album to date.[2]

Contents

[edit] Track listing

All songs written and composed by Amos, respective Doll personae in parenthesis. 

# Title Length
1. "Yo George" (Isabel) 1:25
2. "Big Wheel" (Tori) 3:15
3. "Bouncing Off Clouds" (Clyde) 4:06
4. "Teenage Hustling" (Pip) 4:02
5. "Digital Ghost" (Tori) 3:50
6. "You Can Bring Your Dog" (Santa) 4:04
7. "Mr. Bad Man" (Isabel) 3:18
8. "Fat Slut" (Pip) 0:41
9. "Girl Disappearing" (Clyde) 4:00
10. "Secret Spell" (Santa) 4:04
11. "Devils and Gods" (Isabel) 0:53
12. "Body and Soul" (Pip and Santa) 3:56
13. "Father's Son" (Tori) 3:59
14. "Programmable Soda" (Santa) 1:25
15. "Code Red" (Tori) 5:27
16. "Roosterspur Bridge" (Clyde) 4:01
17. "Beauty of Speed" (Clyde) 4:06
18. "Almost Rosey" (Isabel) 5:26
19. "Velvet Revolution" (Pip) 1:19
20. "Dark Side of the Sun" (Isabel) 4:16
21. "Posse Bonus" (Tori) 1:45
22. "Smokey Joe" (Pip) 4:19
23. "Dragon" (Santa) 5:03

[edit] Singles & B-sides

[edit] Singles

"Big Wheel" was released as the album's first radio single in the United States prior to the album's release. Multiple radio stations refused to give the song any air time because the acronym "MILF" is repeated in the bridge of the song.[3] Despite the acronym, the single was successful on Triple A radio. Epic Records re-issued the single with the "MILF" bridge replaced with Amos singing "MI-MI".

"Bouncing Off Clouds" served as the first single in Europe[4] and as the second single in the United States.[5] "Almost Rosey" was released as the third single as an internet-only release through MySpace.[6] All three singles were promotion-only singles, with "Big Wheel" being the only single to be accompanied by cover artwork when sent to radio stations.

[edit] B-sides

The album, as with most of Amos' albums, is also known for its collection of original B-sides. The final three tracks on the album, "Posse Bonus", "Smokey Joe", and "Dragon", were originally to be B-side tracks for the limited edition packaging, but were added to the official track listing as bonus tracks prior to the album's release. One B-side is included with limited edition versions of the album, while the other two were available exclusively through different retailers as digital downloads.

Title Release
"My Posse Can Do" (Santa) American Doll Posse DVD (2007)
"Miracle" (Clyde & Tori) digital download (iTunes) (2007)
"Drive All Night" (Santa & Isabel) digital download (Borders) (2007)

[edit] Development

Following songwriting during and after Amos' five-month solo tour in 2005, recording sessions commenced in June 2006 with longtime collaborators Matt Chamberlin on percussion, Jon Evans on bass, and Mac Aladdin on guitars at Martian Engineering in Cornwall,[7] like all of Amos' albums since From the Choirgirl Hotel (1998).[8] Due to the musical composition and nature of the album, Amos' principal band mates were present in the recording studio from the beginning of the recording session. After a month of tracking work, Amos continued editing and recording for the remainder of the year, as well as working on the promotion for her career-spanning box set A Piano: The Collection. Mixing work was completed by February 2007, and the album title was announced through a press release on February 20.

Prior to its release, Amos revealed that the album is political in nature:

The main message of my new album is: the political is personal. This as opposed to the feminist statement from years ago that the personal is political. I know it has been said that it goes both ways, but we have to turn it around. We have to think like that. I’m now taking on subjects that I could not have been able to take on in my twenties. With Little Earthquakes I took on more personal things. But if you are going to be an American woman in 2007 with a real view on what is going on, you need to be brave, and you need to know that some people won’t want to look at it.[9]

While Amos had hinted that she may bring back both the harpsichord (last used on Boys for Pele) and the Wurlitzer (used on Strange Little Girls and Scarlet's Walk),[10] only the latter appeared on the track "Dark Side of the Sun". Before the album's release, she made several comments about bringing a "warrior woman" out, as well as stating that the record would be a very different chapter from what has come before.[11]

[edit] The Doll Posse

The "American Doll Posse" of the title consists of five different female characters that Amos developed, representing different aspects of her own personality:[12][13]

What I'm trying to tell other women is they have their own version of the compartmentalised feminine which may have been repressed in each one of them. For many years I have been an image; that isn’t necessarily who I am completely. I have made certain choices and that doesn’t mean that those choices are the whole story. I think these women are showing me that I have not explored honest extensions of the self who are now as real as the redhead.[14]

[edit] Posse members

Posse
doll
Mythological
derivation
Attributes Songs Covers in
concert
Isabel (HisTORIcal) Greek goddess of the hunt Artemis Photographer and is the most outwardly political "Yo George", "Mr. Bad Man", "Devils & Gods", "Almost Rosey", "Dark Side Of The Sun" "Sweet Dreams", "In The Springtime Of His Voodoo", "Tombigbee", "Virginia", "Scarlet's Walk", "Sweet Sangria", "Mountain", The Exorcist theme "Part One", the Velvet Underground song "New Age", which Amos had previously covered under her own name in 2001
Clyde (CliTORIdes) Greek goddess of the underworld Persephone "Wears her emotional wounds on her sleeve, but remains idealistic. She is looking at the effects of not being a whole person. She is trying to figure out what she believes in and she is dealing with having been disappointed in her life" [15] "Bouncing Off Clouds", "Girl Disappearing", "Roosterspur Bridge", "Beauty Of Speed" "Little Amsterdam", "Black-Dove (January)", "Juarez", "Little Earthquakes", "Upside Down", "Mary" and the Lloyd Cole track "Rattlesnakes," which Amos had previously covered under her own name in 2001
Pip (ExpiraTORIal) Greek goddess of war, wisdom and strategy Athena Confrontational "warrior woman" "Teenage Hustling", "Fat Slut", "Body & Soul" (with Santa), "Velvet Revolution", "Smokey Joe" "Bliss", "Cruel", "The Waitress", "Blood Roses", "Me And A Gun," "Professional Widow", "Suede", the Neil Young song "Heart Of Gold," which Amos had previously covered in 2001
Santa (SanaTORIum) Greek goddess Aphrodite Sensual and passionate "You Can Bring Your Dog", "Secret Spell", "Body & Soul" (with Pip), "Programmable Soda", "Dragon", "My Posse Can Do" "Cruel", "God", "Sugar", "She's Your Cocaine", "Hoochie Woman", "Raspberry Swirl", "Bug A Martini", "Sweet The Sting", the Brazilian traditional song "Carnival"
Tori (TerraTORIes) Greek gods Demeter and Dionysus Caricature of the artist herself, with promotional images released depicting the character holding sage and with a Bible in one hand and the word 'shame' scrawled across the other "Big Wheel", "Digital Ghost", "Father's Son", "Code Red", "Posse Bonus"

[edit] Posse blogs

As part of the marketing campaign, a series of blogs written by each character are circulating on the Internet on various websites, with fans invited to "hunt" for the blogs.[16][13] The blogs were updated through the end of 2007.

[edit] Personnel

[17]

  • Isabel – vocals on tracks 1, 7, 11, 18, 20
  • Clyde – vocals on tracks 3, 9, 16, 17, background vocals on track 5
  • Pip – vocals on tracks 4, 8, 12, 19, 22, background vocals on track 15
  • Santa – vocals on tracks 6, 10, 12, 14, 23, background vocals on track 3
  • Tori Amos – vocals on tracks 2, 5, 13, 15, 21, background vocals on track 20, Bösendorfer piano on tracks 1-7, 9-10, 12-23, electric piano on track 3, Fender-Rhodes on tracks 7, 13, 23, upright piano on track 17, Wurlitzer on track 20, clavichord on track 22, Mellotron on track 23
  • Matt Chamberlain – drums & percussion on tracks 2-7, 9-10, 12-13, 15-18, 20-23
  • Jon Evans – bass on tracks 2-7, 9-10, 12-13, 15-18, 20-23
  • Mac Aladdin – electric guitar on tracks 2-8, 10, 12-13, 15-18, 20, 22-23, ukulele on tracks 7, 11, electric 6 and 12 string guitars on tracks 10, 13, 18, 20, mandolin on tracks 11, 19, acoustic guitar on tracks 11-12, 15-16, 20, ebow guitar on 22
  • Edward Bale, Matthew Elston, Holly Butler, Rosmary Bank – string quartet on tracks 9, 14
  • John Philip Shenale – string arrangement on tracks 9, 14, brass arrangement on track 14
  • Nick Hitchens – tuba, euphonium on track 14

[edit] Sales and chart performance

Upon its release in the US, the album entered the Billboard 200 at # 5, selling 54,000 copies, making it her sixth album to debut in the US Top 10 Albums chart.[18] Twenty-five percent of the first week's sales were digital sales, an increasing figure as per general market trends.[19] The album remained on the Billboard 200 for six weeks with its final position at # 186 for the week of June 23, 2007, before falling off the chart.[20] One year after its release, the album has sold 152,000 copies in the US.[21]

The album's debut at # 5 is the same debut position as The Beekeeper (2005), but with American Doll Posse selling fewer units. This decrease in sales is partially explained by the overall decline of sales in the music industry. At the time of the album's release, overall music sales for 2007 were down over 16% than the previous year's sales.[18]

Limited edition copies of the album were ruled to be ineligible for the UK Top 40 sales chart due to the inclusion of free art cards depicting each of the Posse members. According to an article on Amos' site, Amos chose not to issue a reduced packaging version of the special edition (as had been done with Scarlet's Walk).[22] As a result, the album's UK debut at # 50 is based only upon sales of the single-disc standard version of the album.

The chart below lists the album debut positions (within the top 20) in major markets around the globe.

Chart (2007)[23] Peak
position
United World Chart 10
Billboard Top 200 Albums (US) 5
Billboard Top Digital Albums (US) 2
Billboard Top Internet Albums (US) 3
European Top 100 Albums 7
Australian Albums Chart 20
Austrian Albums Chart 14
Canadian Albums Chart 15
Dutch Albums Chart 5
Finnish Albums Chart 7
German top-100 Albums Chart 10
Italian Top-100 Albums 18
Norway Albums Chart 11
Swiss Albums Chart 15

[edit] Release history

As with Amos' previous releases under the Epic Records label, American Doll Posse was offered in a limited edition, which includes two videos (a behind-the-scenes of her photo shoot and a slide show-style bonus track titled "My Posse Can Do"), an expanded booklet, and five postcards, one of each "doll".

iTunes offered a free bonus track, "Miracle", and a Ticketmaster concert pre-sale code for anyone who pre-ordered either version of the album. Standard edition versions of the album purchased from Borders included a code to download a different bonus track, "Drive All Night", while albums purchased at Target were accompanied by a poster featuring the five "dolls".

The chart below lists the release dates for American Doll Posse in major markets around the globe.

Region Date
Poland April 26, 2007
Austria April 27, 2007
Denmark
France
Germany
Ireland
The Netherlands
Sweden
Australia April 28, 2007
Italy
Mexico April 30, 2007
Singapore
UK
USA May 1, 2007
Finland May 2, 2007
Norway
Japan July 18, 2007

[edit] Tour

The first live performance of the new material took place on April 10, 2007 for Radio Eins in Berlin, Germany, where Amos performed six songs solo on piano - "Silent All These Years" and "Leather" from 1992's Little Earthquakes as well as four songs from the new album - "Velvet Revolution," "Father's Son," "Beauty of Speed," and "Almost Rosey."

The full band tour for American Doll Posse commenced on May 28, 2007 in Rome, Italy. The European leg of the tour ended with a show in Ra'anana, Israel on July 21, 2007. The Australian leg of the tour, which commenced on September 10 and lasted the rest of the month, was followed by the North American leg which began October 9. The tour ended on December 16, 2007 in Los Angeles, CA. Amos, using a Bosendorfer piano, Yamaha synth, and Hammond organ, was backed by Matt Chamberlain (drums), Jon Evans (bass), and Dan Phelps (guitar).

As hinted before the tour began,[14] one of the four alter-egos, complete in her own unique wardrobe, opened each show, performing as many as seven songs, followed by a costume change with Amos taking over as herself for the remaining two-thirds of the show. Three exceptions were the San Diego and Los Angeles shows, where two dolls opened,[24][25] and the Anaheim show, where two dolls opened and one of them returned for the encore.[26]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Paul Tingen Interview. Tingen.org. Retrieved on 2007-02-21.
  2. ^ For 'American Doll Posse,' Tori Amos took cues from performance art and classic rock (with audio). Idahostatesman.com. Retrieved on 2008-04-23.
  3. ^ Got MILF? Er, Maybe Not ....
  4. ^ Bouncing Off Clouds Hits European Airwaves.
  5. ^ R&R Going for Adds. Radio & Records. Retrieved on 2007-08-13.
  6. ^ Tori Amos - Undented: Tori Featured At MySpace Music
  7. ^ MP3.com: Tori Amos announces new album, tour. Retrieved on 2007-02-21.
  8. ^ About The Martians.... Martian Engineering. Retrieved on 2007-02-21.
  9. ^ Tori Amos on American Doll Posse. Retrieved on 2007-03-12.
  10. ^ News: BBC 6 Music Interview. Retrieved on 2007-03-10.
  11. ^ News: Recording On Tori's Next Album To Start Soon. Retrieved on 2007-03-10.
  12. ^ News: The Posse ... Revealed!. Retrieved on 2007-03-21.
  13. ^ a b Introducing…the American Doll Posse!. Retrieved April 22, 2007.
  14. ^ a b Meet The Posse. Retrieved on 2007-03-28.
  15. ^ Tori Amos To Release New Album American Doll Posse; To Launch World Tour in May 2007. Retrieved on 2007-03-28.
  16. ^ News: Tori Introduces the American Doll Posse. Retrieved on 2007-03-21.
  17. ^ American Doll Posse Credits. Retrieved on 2007-04-14.
  18. ^ a b Billboard News May 9, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-05-09.
  19. ^ Chart Recap: Ne-Yo and Buble Lead The Pack. Coolfer. Retrieved on 2008-02-15.
  20. ^ The Billboard 200 - Chart Listing For The Week Of Jun 23 2007. Billboard. Retrieved on 2008-04-03.
  21. ^ Ask Billboard - How Many Dolls are in a Posse. Billboard. Retrieved on 2008-05-10.
  22. ^ UK Chart Regulations. Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
  23. ^ Charts: American Doll Posse.
  24. ^ Tori Amos - Undented: San Diego, CA
  25. ^ Tori Amos - Undented: Los Angeles, CA
  26. ^ Tori Amos - Undented: Anaheim, CA