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Tori Sparks : Under This Yellow Sun
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“Tori can make you believe in something whether you want to or not. She has the purest vocals I’ve heard since Kate Bush.” (Rebecca Hosking, Music News Nashville) Quirky rock'n'folk with enough soul to last all night. *Features a BONUS MUSIC VIDEO and FRE
Genre: Rock: Acoustic
Release Date: 2007
Under This Yellow Sun Record Label: Glass Mountain Records
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.99
  • Buy CD - $12.97
SPECIAL: 10% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Cold War 3:34 $0.99
Out of the Void 3:40 $0.99
Free 4:12 $0.99
Under The Rug 3:46 $0.99
Most Alone 4:01 $0.99
Poison Well 4:07 $0.99
Providence RI 3:43 $0.99
Under This Yellow Sun 3:49 $0.99
Peace of Soul 3:47 $0.99
Caged Bird 3:03 $0.99
Where is the Love 4:09 $0.99
Carry Us 4:09 $0.99
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Album Notes

BREAKING NEWS! "Cold War" from Under This Yellow Sun included in Universal Music France double-disc music compilation and Paste Magazine June music sampler.

Under This Yellow Sun album licensed to MTV and Lifetime Networks. Shows include Road Rules, The Hills, and more TBA.

ABOUT TORI...

The Scorpion in the Story (2009)

Tori Sparks calls Nashville home, but spends most of her time on the road in the U.S. and Europe. Called “a knockout” by the Village Voice, her dynamic live show is equal parts eye-popping soul-singing, and zany stand-up-style humor. Tori’s brand-new third album, The Scorpion in the Story, was co-produced with indie rock veteran David Henry (R.E.M., Ben Folds, Josh Rouse, Widespread Panic, Cowboy Junkies) , and features players such as Steve Bowman (Counting Crows), Will Kimbrough (Rodney Crowell), Viktor Krauss (Lyle Lovett, Mindy Smith, and yes, Alliison’s brother), Fats Kaplin (Mark Knopfler, Kevin Welch), and Barry Walsh (Gretchen Peters).

The Scorpion in the Story is a tale in thirteen chapters, a tour diary in the form of a concept album. Each song was written about one of the many colorful individuals Tori met while touring across the U.S. last year. The album includes a French version of the song “Merry Go-Round,” (“Le Manege”), and was released on Glass Mountain Records in June 2009.

Tori’s relentless touring has taken her from New York to Los Angeles to Miami, from Toronto to London to Paris, and through every small town in between. She books most of her own shows, and does all of her own laundry. In 2008 and 2009, Tori has showcased at Folk Alliance, Bele Chere, American MusicFest, many other conferences and festivals, and played nearly 200 shows to boot. She recently performed on Woodsongs Old-Time Radio Hour alongside Rolling Stones pianist Chuck Leavell. Tori is the author of two courses for roaming music business education organization ProMusicU, and is the creator of The Feed Your Soul Guitar Project, a tour and folk art auction benefiting Oxfam America. Besides her big black boots, and balls-to-the-wall guitar playing, she is known for being a part of and organizing benefit concerts on behalf of the National Federation of the Blind, F.A.C.E., the March of Dimes, and the One Campaign.

Under This Yellow Sun (2007)

Tori’s sophomore album, Under This Yellow Sun, was released in 2007, and was the first release under the auspices of Tori’s own record label (Glass Mountain Records) and publishing company (Hand Over Foot Publishing). It has been praised by Relix, Harp, Maverick, Performing Songwriter, Skope, The Nashville Scene, XM Radio, and countless others. After breaking the Top 100 on the RIYL Weighted College Charts, the album was licensed by MTV, Lifetime, and the Oxygen Network for use in their upcoming 2009 television seasons. A subsequent feature by XM Radio Unsigned prompted Universal Music France to contact Sparks, has toured in France and other parts of Europe. Universal included Sparks’ single “Cold War” on their double-disc compilation Country Vol. 2, which has sold 30,000+ copies. "Cold War" is also featured on the Paste Magazine New Music Sampler released in June 2008.

Rivers + Roads (2005) and Tidewaters EP (2003)

Contrary to popular belief, Sparks did not emerge Venus-like from Lake Michigan on a gigantic seashell Tori was born in Chicago, and grew up in Sarasota, FL. She recorded her first EP, Tidewaters, in 2003, while attending Florida State University. . The four-song project attracted the attention of a small independent label based in Nashville. The label snapped her up, promptly recorded her debut album and music video ”Rivers + Roads” in 2005, moved her to Music City… and even more promptly went belly-up. Where some would crumble, Tori emerged from the wreckage and dove into eight solid months of exhaustive touring, radio, and video promotion. Her work paid off, as radio and video airplay in the U.S., Belgium, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Ireland, France, and England resulted.

Tori's debut music video, "Rivers + Roads," was screened at the Flint Film Festival 2006, and was selected "Best Pop Video" by the Indie Gathering 2006. She was selected as a Unisong International Songwriting Contest Finalist for her politically-charged alterna-blues tune "The Poster Child” in 2005, and again in 2007 for “Cold War.”

Guilty Pleasures.

Tori’s albums can each be purchased for less than the price of a veggie burger in Los Angeles at one of 100+ digital distributors in 25 countries. These include the ubiquitous iTunes, and 30+ CD retailers, including BestBuy.com, Target.com, Amazon.com, and others. Tori’s guilty pleasures include black jelly beans, cop shows, and 80s music. There is a big map of the U.S. and Europe on her wall, full of little colored pins marking cities she’s played.

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REVIEWS

"Strong, eloquent vocals of Bonnie Raitt and theguitar mastery of Joni Mitchell.
author: Nancy Dunham, Relix Magazine (October 2007)
Music insiders often lament the great talents who struggle to survive the industry's murky undertow. Submit Tori Sparks as Exhibit A. Here's a singer/songwriter with the strong, eloquent vocals of Bonnie Raitt and theguitar mastery of J oni Mitchell. Her second indie release Under This Yellow Sun is a bounty of subtle rock and haunting blues skillfullyvflavored with splashes of folk and country. The straightforward stringvaccompaniments interspersed with keyboards, horns and percussion are thevperfect backdrop for Spark's lush voice as it gracefully lures listenersvinto tales of love, longing and adversity. Interesting that the first line of lead song "Cold War" seems autobiographical: "I been knocking/ At your door/ Don't call these blood knuckles bad luck/ Call them battle scars." Keep knocking, Tori. They'll answer.
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The characters peopling Sparks' songs aren't always lucky in love, but they're l
author: Jeff Tamarkin, Harp Magazine (December 2007)
Jeff Tamarkin is an editor, author, and historian who was the first editor of CMJ and has written for many publications such as Billboard, Pulse , Boston Phoenix, Creem, Mojo, The Aquarian Weekly, Newsday, Tracks, The New York Daily News and Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music. "Tori Sparks' voice isn't one of those passive instruments that treats a lyric like it's a classified ad. The Floridian burrows deep inside her words, which largely attend to affairs of the heart, and once arriving at the core, she elevates them until they demand close attention. Here is a supple, teasing voice that flutters and flies seemingly without effort from note to note, line to line, so that weepy sensitivity and pleading vulnerability cozy up with tough resilence and firm resolve so seamlessly you never even notice the mood swing. Sparks' brand of Americana, powered by her own gutsy guitars and a like-minded crew, doesn't conform to any known filing system: acoustic and electric blues, pre-war jazz, folk, country and rock commingle, but rarely does a song on her second full-length veer toward formula. The characters peopling Sparks' songs aren't always lucky in love, but they're lucky to have her telling tales.
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Sparks needs little in the way of effects or layering to get her music across!
author: Jason MacNeil, PopMatters
POPMATTERS (DECEMBER 2007) Reviewed by Jason MacNeil, Music Critic. If you’re a fan of bluesy folk along the lines of Be Good Tanyas then please seek out Tori Sparks. The new album, her follow-up to 2004’s Rivers + Roads, opens with the sultry “Cold War” that could go on for far longer than it’s three minutes and change. Sparks could be mistaken for the younger, sassier sister of Chrissie Hynde during the gorgeous waltz of “Out of the Void” which gathers steam in spite of its rather winding chorus. She even outdoes herself with the first eye-opening and jaw-dropping acoustic pop gem “Under the Rug”. The singer rarely takes the easy way out as is the case during the tender, touching and string-accented “Free” which has her hitting some sweet notes in the upper registers. Sparks needs little in the way of effects or layering to get her music across, resulting in strong numbers like “Poison Well” shining from the opening notes to the closing blues-meets-roots-meets-pop fade out. The quirky tune of this lot has to be the awkward but appealing title track which sounds like it would be perfect music for strippers at Lilith Fair. Perhaps the highlight here is how strong and fabulous “Caged Bird” comes across, mixing Hynde’s vocals with an arrangement that Lucinda Williams might be interested in.
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her voice is found here.
author: Ken Lawrence
In my review of rivers plus roads I said Tori sparks was too styleized and that experience would teach her to sing rather then be a stylest. Well this writer can say mission acomplished. this is a wonderful follow for her last so c'mon Lightning 100 Nashville, KFOG San Fransisco, WXRT Chicago, WBOS Boston, and KPIG Freedom CA, snap this one up today. And Hey WXPK play this on the new music show called Next.
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