News Archives
Keep an eye on our Twitter and Facebook pages since we often post quickie updates there when we're on-the-go.
During tours, we do our best to cover setlists in real-time on Twitter. If you want to tweet a show in, just DM or @ us on the day and tell us to watch your stream that night.
Tori is touring in 2017 to support the release of Native Invader. The European legs runs from early September through early October and the North American leg runs from late October to early December. We do not know if additional dates elsewhere will be added.
And when you’re changing the show every night, that means you can’t just sit back and do crack…
Good advice for all you wannabe rock gods and pop starlets taken from this article in Billboard where Tori addresses the upcoming tour. Probably not a bad idea if you plan on following her around on tour as well, now that we think about it.
Thanks to Chris M for the tip!
Tori Amos To Mix New And Old On Summer Tour
May 19, 2009 08:43 AM ET
Gary Graff, Detroit
Even though she has 17 new songs on her new album, “Abnormally Attracted to Sin,” Tori Amos promises she’ll play plenty of familiar fare during her Sinful Attraction Tour, which begins July 10 in Seattle.
“I think a live shows has to be inclusive of your whole catalog — that’s how I look at them,” Amos tells Billboard.com. “The new record always sets a tone, but the catalog will be there. By utilizing the whole catalog I think you’re able to tell a different story every night.
“I just feel if you come to one of my shows, there are a lot of songs, and I think that each night can be different when you have a big catalog. Why not give different songs an opportunity to come out and play?”
Amos says variety will be paramount when she convenes rehearsals in a couple of weeks with drummer Matt Chamberlain and bassist Jon Evans. Even Amos’ regular guitarist Mac Aladdin played on “Abnormally Attracted to Sin,” but because the new album is so keyboard-driven she’s decided to return to a trio format for the tour. So, she notes, “rearrangements will have to happen.”
“There will be long days and long hours; everyone has to have their chops up for a lot of songs,” Amos explains. “Once you’ve been playing for awhile, four weeks into a tour, your chops are tight and you know a lot more songs. But when you’re starting you have to really build your repertoire back up — and the light guys and sound guys, everybody’s got to dial in and program their individual responsibilities.
“And when you’re changing the show every night, that means you can’t just sit back and do crack…”
Amos will spend a little over five weeks touring theaters in North America, followed by four U.K. shows in early September and a Sept. 17 date in Amsterdam.