Concertina

Album: To Venus And Back (1999)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • The fourth and final single from Tori Amos' fifth album, this track is named for the concertina, a squeezebox-type instrument with expanding and contracting bellows with keys or buttons on the ends. Amos uses it to describe how she feels when social anxiety hits. She told Alternative Press in 1999:

    "Do you ever feel like you walk in a room, and you don't know why, but you're just so uncomfortable you're crawling out of your skin, even though nobody's touched you, physically? That's in 'Concertina,' when you feel like you haven't excavated enough of your different personalities that when one pops up, you're not sure where it came from, and you try to hack it out of yourself. It shocks you that you could have this kind of fault, or that other people could bring it out in you."
  • Amos told Australia's Time-Off how she let the song, which features contrasting acoustic piano and electronic drums, dictate how it wanted to sound: "You always have to be listening to the song itself and to the soul of the song. Because sometimes there were different directions I could have taken the songs into and it's not where the song itself wanted to go. It's funny, during 'Concertina,' the band all looked at me and said, 'Oh, just do it like you played it this morning on the piano.' But I cut it to a loopy click track and said, 'Get in there and pick up your instruments and we'll find it.' I wanted those electronic drums that Matt [Chamberlain] was playing with because particle by particle, she slowly changes, and I wanted the sense of the acoustic piano with the electronic drums. That also re-occurs in 'Lust.' So there was this dichotomy going on and I'm really drawn to that."
  • Thanks to its second disc, To Venus And Back is notable for producing the first live album of Amos' career. Along with a disc of original studio tracks (including "Concertina"), the double album also features a disc of live material from her Plugged '98 tour.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Wedding Bell Blues

Wedding Bell BluesSong Writing

When a song describes a wedding, it's rarely something to celebrate - with one big exception.

Pam Tillis

Pam TillisSongwriter Interviews

The country sweetheart opines about the demands of touring and talks about writing songs with her famous father.

Queen

QueenFact or Fiction

Scaramouch, a hoople and a superhero soundtrack - see if you can spot the real Queen stories.

Barry Dean ("Pontoon," "Diamond Rings And Old Barstools")

Barry Dean ("Pontoon," "Diamond Rings And Old Barstools")Songwriter Interviews

A top country songwriter, Barry talks about writing hits for Little Big Town, Tim McGraw and Jason Aldean.

Don Brewer of Grand Funk

Don Brewer of Grand FunkSongwriter Interviews

The drummer and one of the primary songwriters in Grand Funk talks rock stardom and Todd Rundgren.

Sending Out An SOS - Distress Signals In Songs

Sending Out An SOS - Distress Signals In SongsSong Writing

Songs where something goes horribly wrong (literally or metaphorically), and help is needed right away.