It almost impossible to find a halfway objective review of a Tori Amos album on here - either her music gets lavishly praised by those creepily obsessed "Toriphiles", or it gets rubbished by people who think she's just Kate Bush-lite. I have no strong opinion either way about her music - I am drawn to some of it because I love music with just voice, piano and haunting melodies. This album has some of that, but it also has some not so great songs. To be honest, I sort of like this album and I sort of don't. A reflection of that is that I have purchased it twice and sold it again twice subsequently!
First of all, I think that as a male, it's slightly more difficult for me to listen to this music than for a female. It has a certain feminine perspective that can be alienating. Now I love most of Joni Mitchell's work and other female artists such as Fiona Apple, and their music is very "female", but this is an altogether different experience.
For me, exactly half of this album is wonderful - 6 tracks. Those are "Crucify", "Silent All These Years", "Winter", "Happy Phantom", "Leather" (the highlight) and "Little Earthquakes". The rest range from pleasantly forgettable to downright boring. The much lauded "Me And A Gun" is so personal and difficult to listen to that it's embarrassing. And for someone who doesn't really care about Tori's lyrics all that much, it's boring as well because there's no music. Go on, deride me for my insensitivity or whatever - I know the song is about her rape experience - but sorry, I had to press the skip button every time.
The main problem overall with this album though actually has nothing to do with Tori or the songs - it's the production. This is frankly the most dated sounding album from the 90's that I've ever heard. Voice and piano should be timeless, but listen to "Crucify" and the title track - great songs, but production-wise it's stuck in a time warp.
So overall, this album isn't really the classic it's made out to be. Half of it is great, as I said. Unfortunately, it all went downhill after this album, with Under The Pink being one of the more impenetrable works I've ever encountered from a mainstream artist. That doesn't necessarily make it bad, but it makes for a pretty underwhelming listen.
In the end, this is what I did: Got rid of Little Earthquakes (only half decent) and Under the Pink (collecting dust on my shelf), bought the "Cornflake Girl" single (her best and most accessible song), which has a fantasic b-side called "Sister Janet" and another quite good piano "suite". Then I bought the "Crucify" EP, which gives me 2 out of the 5 songs I liked on Little Earthquakes ("Crucify" and "Winter") plus 3 terrific covers - "Angie", "Thank You" and "Smells Like Teen Spirit". This is all the Tori I'll ever need I think and with this limited selection I think of her as a good artist and a terrific pianist, rather than someone who released a couple of good songs and a lot of overwrought garbage.
I await your unhelpful votes!