Peeping Tommi---new Tori Amos unreleased track

Wow. Wow. Seriously...as eloquently as I usually am able to describe my feelings about music, I feel shell-shocked by hearing one of the most gorgeous songs I've heard from Tori Amos. The song is called "Peeping Tommi" and it will be on the Piano Boxed Set, coming out on September 26. So, how come I've already heard this previously unreleased track? Well, it came about when I was searching myspace.com for a new track to up up on my page. I knew that "Here In My Head" is the unofficial Tori Amos fansite on myspace since the people who run her official page NEVER change the songs. Its a crime, considering her recorded songs range into the hundreds and beyond.
But anyway, I open up the page to find two new Tori tracks that will be released in the Piano Boxed set. The other was "Ode to My Clothes", but it was the sheer simplistic beauty of "Peeping Tommi" that enchanted me, reminding me of the way I felt the first time I listened to Little Earthquakes four years ago. Maybe people on the toriforums are comparing this song to "Yes, Anastasia" and I can see why. From my understanding, this was a song cut from Under the Pink, hence its similarity in vocals and delicate piano riffs.
Here are the lyrics:
Looking past branches past fresh mown grass dirt licking my elbows I watch his hand move up up up her dress
Don't run away from me now
Don't run away from me now
She's down on the ground she gives the boy smile I think of you I think of the man all the while you see my dreams are filled with him his face shows up up up in my favourite danish
Don't run away from me now she's willing just breathe willing one day I'll be
Don't run away from me now she's willing just breathe willing one day I'll be
Sail through my ears I heard you fine the first time time to let it go time to give my gun a nice surprise surprise
Willing just breathe willing peeping Tommi
Listen to the track @: http://www.myspace.com/diagnosedsounds
jinkesvelma @ 9/25/2006 |
 |  |  | ~Morgan~ November 21, 2006 01:36 PM PST
oo, kickass picture. I thank heavens for her lately...I play her all the time at work. My one thread of enjoyment. |  |
  |  |  | Aimee September 30, 2006 09:34 AM PDT
haha I just went there and Peeping Tommi isn't up anymore.
But there are others... I'm listening to Walk To Dublin for the first time ;) |  |
  |  |  | Aimee September 30, 2006 09:32 AM PDT
Oooh Kristy, it's exciting isn't it!!
I might have to go listen to that later... so far I've only heard Not David Bowie. I wasn't going to download any more, but I'm getting impatient and my box set will take at least another week (I hope! I'll be pissed off if it takes longer than that!). |  |
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Music Updates
jinkesvelmaNovember 19th 1985 (Age 24) Female La Porte City I made this playlist at MyFlashFetish.com. Check out this MySpace MP3 Player! Featured Song: "Dead Road 7" by The Kills

There has been much coming and going of the authors here at Vintage Rock. If you have not posted an entry in over two months, I'm either deleting you from Vintage Rock or marking you as inactive on the side-bar. I don't think its fair to give authors credit here if they don't post any entries. Its nothing personal, I'm sure you all understand.
Kristy (founder)
Aims (co-founder)
Shay (non active co-founder)
Jess (non active co-founder)
Morgan (non active co-founder)
Kerry
What Is "Vintage Rock" About?
Vintage Rock has officially been on the internet in various forms for about five years now. I started it on a whim of boredom at the terrible, bolt.com. I met some great friends there, and we ended up forming a super-group; a forum where it was okay to speak our minds about anything and everything music. And since there were multiple authors here, we were able to learn about an eclectic variety of music news, recommendations, and bands.
In the last few years, many of the authors who helped co-found this blog quit posting entries. I'm not bitter about their absence, because I know it takes a lot of time and dedication to write quality articles and posts. I will never forget them, but I think its time I quit expecting them to come back. I'd really like to see Vintage Rock turn back into the place it once was. I really don't forsee that happening though. I do however think it is valid for me to keep up this blog in hopes I can inspire even one person to realize that MTV is not the only way to define one's musical tastes. I know its difficult, and takes a lot of research, but there are amazing bands out there just waiting to be discovered. And that is the purpose of this blog. I've never made one penny for running Vintage Rock, and that's okay. Its worth all the hard work when I hear one person say, "Hey, that band kicks ass!" So yes, if you like Vintage Rock and what we stand for, don't be afraid to comment on an entry or say hi on the tag-board. The more input from you readers, the more likely I am to be inspired to post more entries.
Anyway, I'm off my soap-box for today. I just thought I'd let you know that things are going to be a bit different here. I'm taking the focus off the side bar and deleting a lot of things I don't find relevant anymore.
Album:
Our Beloved Revolutionary Sweetheart closed with Lowery singing about how "Life Is Grand" in pointed response to "those of you who have appointed yourselves to expect us to say something darker." So when Key Lime Pie came out, its moodier music and imagery, not to mention that soon after the fact the band fell apart on the tour for the album, led more than one person to think those darker times had finally arrived. As it is, the group had already gone through one major shake-up between the two albums -- founding member Segel had taken a powder to concentrate on other efforts, with Morgan Fichter brought in as a replacement violinist. Her abilities were certainly praiseworthy, as the album-starting instrumental "Opening Theme" shows quite well. However, it's definitely not the same band that did Telephone Free Landslide Victory a mere four years previous -- things are more straightforwardly rock here most of the time, perhaps not too surprising in light of Lowery's subsequent work in Cracker. As it is, though, it's excellently conceived rock, with space, moodiness, and more to spare. Consider "Jack Ruby," with its wordless backing vocals, tense rhythms, and thick soloing, or "Laundromat" and its steady but unnerving crunch. It's not all potential melancholia, though -- "June" in particular is an underrated number, celebrating the early summer with sweetness and love (at least up to the increasingly stranger ending). Lowery's singing is his best yet, perhaps a little less prone to wackiness but an emergent, distinct voice all the same, and certainly prone to sing a quirky lyric or two still. The oddest thing of all was that the band actually gained a little mainstream attention on MTV and radio via a cover of Status Quo's psych-era nugget "Pictures of Matchstick Men."--- Ned Raggett

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