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�After Y Kant Tori Read I had a huge dose of what it's like to be on the precipice and then Zola Budd comes and knocks you off. Bloody hell. I had no idea that Little Earthquakes would get heard. It was such a dose of humility.�
-- Tori; Illinois Entertainer magazine, September, 1998
""Yeah. That first album [Little Earthquakes] was very naked, it was me rationalising my life at that point, like a diary."
-- Tori, New Musical Express, December 17, 1994
"I lived on the other side of this hill in this little apartment and wrote Little Earthquakes. So it's kinda funny, being on the other side of the hill, isn't it girls? I don't mind so much being on the other side of the hill.""
-- Tori in-concert; Los Angeles, CA, 06/28/96
RDT: Where did the idea for the lyric design for the album come from?
CP: In a square? Well, because everything else was square, I suppose. (laughs) I reckon that with lyrics, I don't know, I haven't followed lyrics when I'm listening to something for ages, but usually what you do is you listen then you look to the lyric sheet when there's something you can't hear. You only look to it then. I don't think you follow it with the lyric sheet. You may as well try something new.
RDT: What about the capital letters?
CP: Oh, I just picked out the ones that I thought would look good in capital letters. (laughs) In fact, we did it over the telephone. I asked Tori to sing it so that if somebody was trying to follow it, it would help relate. Then I'm afraid I moved it around a bit, according to where it came typographically. Where there was an emphasis on the word, or a word that you really heard... it really does work.
-- Cindy Palmano, Really Deep Thoughts Fanzine, Issue #4
In 1991, [Dough] Morris (head of Atlantic Records) asked to hear a demo version of Amos' album,
'Little Earthquakes.' Morris didn't exactly enthuse over the quiet and
cerebral songs, which were costly to produce and seemed too
spacey for American listeners. In fact, Morris was downright annoyed. "He called me up and said: 'Why are you doing this?'," Amos recalls. Her belligerent response: "Because I believe in it with every cell of my being."
-- Tori, Businessweek, June 20,1994
"On Little Earthquakes (her 1992 debut album), I went after the Son..."
-- Tori, The West Australian, August 11, 1994
"Um, it's kind of like trying to stay alive. At that point, Little Earthquakes was my first, um, attempt at getting out of the egg. You know that little chicken that kinda kicks out the egg (imitates chicken) and says, "OK, um, what have I really not been saying all these years?" You know you can wear the plastic snake pants and put 15,000 holes in your body, which is fine. Enjoy it (laughter). But what am I saying? I'm just saying absolutely Nothing. So I started to think about... what is the most powerful thing I can do for myself. The Truth is actually the most shocking thing you can do because nobody really hears it much. So when you start saying things truthfully, and I mean truthfully, there's no greater .. (sighs) .. Freedom than that, and I was really dying. So I had to find out, I had taken on all of these belief systems. Whether you go from .. Christianity, to Buddhism, to God, .. I'm going to be one of those Mary Magdalenes, YES (raises arms). I mean, to finally say, "No, wait a minute, I'm just, who's this redhead?" Dyed of course. But, you know, what are my beliefs? Not what you want me to believe. Or what I should believe. But what do I Really, Really believe? And if there are a million people telling me I'm out of my mind, that should really be inconsequential. Because it's not your truth, it's gotta be mine. And same with you, you know?"
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