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{{Infobox album
<!--NOTE: Copy everythin below here. Remember to remove unneccessary sections-->
| name = Scarlet's Walk
<!-- BEGIN WikiProject Album infobox (scroll down to edit main article text) -->
| type = studio
{| align=right border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width=225
| artist = ]
!align="center" bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|''Scarlet's Walk''
| cover = Scarlets Walk cover.jpg
|-
| alt =
|align="center" colspan="3"|]
| released = October 28, 2002
|-
| recorded = 2001–2002
!align="center" bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|] by ]
| studio = Martian Engineering (]) <br> Sony Music Studios (])
|-
| genre = ]<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/scarlets-walk-mw0000662056 |website=AllMusic |access-date=5 October 2022 |title=Tori Amos – Scarlet's Walk Review |last=Erlewine |first=Stephen Thomas}}</ref>
!align="left" valign="top"|Released
| length = 74:09
|colspan="2" valign="top"|] ]
| label = ]
|-
| producer = ]
!align="left" valign="top"|Recorded
| prev_title = ]
|colspan="2" valign="top"|?
| prev_year = 2001
|-
| next_title = ]
!align="left" valign="top"|]
| next_year = 2003
|colspan="2" valign="top"|]
| misc = {{Singles
|-
| name = Scarlet's Walk
!align="left" valign="top"|Length
| type = studio
|colspan="2" valign="top"|74 ] 9 ]
| single1 = ]
|-
| single1date = September 2002
!align="left" valign="top"|]
| single2 = ]
|colspan="2" valign="top"|]
| single2date = January 2003
|-
| single3 = ]
!align="left" valign="top"|]
| single3date = May 27, 2003
|colspan="2" valign="top"|Tori Amos
}}
|-
}}
!bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Professional reviews
|-
!align="left" valign="top"|<small>''']'''</small>
|valign="top"|3½ stars out of 5
|valign="top"|<small>''''</small>
|-
!align="left" valign="top"|<small>''']'''</small>
|valign="top"|Ambivalent
|valign="top"|<small>''''</small>
|-
!align="left" valign="top"|<small>''']'''</small>
|valign="top"|3 stars out of 5
|valign="top"|<small>''''</small>
|-
!align="left" valign="top"|<small>''']'''</small>
|valign="top"|9 out of 10
|valign="top"|<small>''''</small>
|-
!align="left" valign="top"|<small>''']'''</small>
|valign="top"|C+
|valign="top"|<small>''''</small>
|-
!align="left" valign="top"|<small>''']'''</small>
|valign="top"|4 stars out of 5
|valign="top"|<small>''''</small>
|-
!align="left" valign="top"|<small>''']'''</small>
|valign="top"|3 discs out of 5
|valign="top"|<small>''''</small>
|-
!bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Tori Amos chronology
|-align="center"
|valign="top"|<small>'']''<br />(])</small>
|valign="top"|<small>''Scarlet's Walk''<br />(])</small>
|valign="top"|<small>'']''<br />(])</small>
|}
<!-- END WikiProject Album infobox -->


'''Scarlet's Walk''' is the eighth album released by ] and ] ]. It is an 18-track ] that details the cross-country travels of the character Scarlet (loosely based on Amos) and her porn-star friend Amber Waves, and addresses the concept of America post-]. The album was the first released by Amos on ] after her split with former label ]. '''''Scarlet's Walk''''' is the seventh studio album by American singer-songwriter and pianist ]. It was released on October 28, 2002 in the UK and October 29 in the US on ], making it her first release on the label after her split with ]. Her first studio album of original material since '']'' in 1999, the 18-track ] (described by Amos as a "sonic novel about a road trip") details the cross-country travels of Scarlet, a character loosely based on Amos, and was greatly inspired by the changes in American society and politics post-]. Topics explored on the album include nationalism, personal relationships, and the death of a close friend. Amos also took inspiration from the stories of her grandfather, who she claims was ] and told her of the abuses against Native Americans throughout the United States' history.<ref>{{cite interview |subject=Tori Amos |interviewer=Lynn Parsons |date=14 October 2002 |title=Tori Amos |publisher=BBC Radio 2}}</ref>


Recorded at Amos's Martian Engineering in ], ''Scarlet's Walk'' solidified Amos's current backing band of Jon Evans on bass, ] on drums, and Mac Aladdin on guitar. Additionally, string arrangements were provided by ]. The self-produced album diverts from the ] and ]-influenced sounds of '']'' and '']'' and marks a return to the stripped-back sound of her earlier work with a greater emphasis on live instrumentation and Amos's piano, while also incorporating new keyboard instruments into the arrangements, such as the prominent use of ] and ] electric pianos. The packaging featured ]-esque photography by ]. ''Scarlet's Walk'' would also be released as limited-edition box set with bonus content.


The album was a commercial success, reaching number seven in the US and becoming Amos's fourth top 10 album.<ref name="Billboard charts">{{cite magazine |url=https://www.billboard.com/artist/tori-amos/ |magazine=Billboard |access-date=23 November 2022 |title=Tori Amos Chart History}}</ref> It sold 107,000 copies in its first week and reached RIAA Gold status about a month after its release.<ref name="RIAA">{{cite web |url=https://www.riaa.com/gold-platinum/?tab_active=default-award&se=tori+amos#search_section |website=RIAA |title=Tori Amos – Gold & Platinum |access-date=22 November 2022}}</ref> It spawned the singles "]", "]", and "]", the former reaching number two on the US adult alternative chart and becoming one of her most popular songs.<ref name="Billboard charts" /> Considered one of her best and most conceptually elaborate works, it received positive reviews and was supported by the "On Scarlet's Walk" tour throughout 2002-03.
The first single from the album was the catchy and radio-friendly track "A Sorta Fairytale." It was followed by the song "Taxi Ride," for which fans were asked to direct and submit music videos for a contest. The third single, "Strange," was released in a redone version to radio. It was given a Country and Western feel with twangy guitars and additional vocals.


==Background==
The album also served as a "key" to "unlock" Scarlet's Web, a massive web site that contained special concert ticket offers, photos, merchandise, and most notably, unreleased B-side tracks which were only available to CD-owners through the web site. (The underlying reason for this was that people would buy the CD rather than download tracks illegally in order to get special content. This hardly deterred people from illegally copying the website-only material and distributing it.) There was a limited edition version released in a special box with a bonus DVD, a map detailing Scarlet's journey, and a bracelet-charm.


''Scarlet's Walk'' was the follow-up to Amos' previous album '']'', which was released in 2001 and fulfilled her contract with ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Amos |first1=Tori |last2=Powers |first2=Ann |author-link2=Ann Powers |title=Tori Amos: Piece by Piece |year=2005 |publisher=Broadway Books |isbn=978-0-7679-1677-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1LE3VkMtdSkC |pages=314–15}}</ref> A primary motivation for Amos' switch from Atlantic to Epic was the presence of ], the president of Epic, whom Amos felt would be committed to properly promoting her work as she had felt that Atlantic had not promoted her recent releases to the proper extent and had felt trapped in her contract due to the label's refusal to sell her to another label. Amos would later experience further frustrations as Anthony stepped down from her position after the release of ''Scarlet's Walk'' in 2003.{{cn|date=April 2023}}
==Track listing==
#''Amber Waves'' - 3:38
#''a sorta fairytale'' - 5:30
#''Wednesday'' - 2:29
#''strange'' - 3:05
#''Carbon'' - 4:33
#''Crazy'' - 4:23
#''wampum prayer'' - 0:44
#''don't make me come to Vegas'' - 4:51
#''Sweet Sangria'' - 4:01
#''your cloud'' - 4:30
#''pancake'' - 3:54
#''I can't see New York'' - 7:14
#''mrs. jesus'' - 3:05
#''Taxi Ride'' - 4:00
#''another girl's paradise'' - 3:34
#''Scarlet's Walk'' - 4:16
#''Virginia'' - 3:55
#''gold dust'' - 5:54


In addition to cementing her longest-running backing lineup, guitar contributions were also made by ] and ]. It would become Amos' fourth consecutive release to be primarily recorded at her studio, Martian Engineering in ]. Production was handled by Amos (as has been the case for all her albums since '']''), and the album was mixed by her husband Mark Hawley and Marcel van Limbeek.
===Website exclusive tracks / B-sides===
#''Tombigbee''
#''Operation Peter Pan''
#''Seaside''
#''Mountain''
#''Indian Summer''


==Music and lyrics==
===Scarlet's Hidden Treasures (released with Welcome to Sunny Florida DVD in 2004)===
#''Ruby Through the Looking-Glass''
#''Seaside''
#''Bug a Martini''
#''Apollo's Frock''
#''Tombigbee''
#''Indian Summer''


] piano, ''Scarlet's Walk'' featured extensive use of the ]]]
===Bonus DVD===
''Scarlet's Walk'' follows the journey of the titular character across America after September 11, 2001, and the songs describe her encounters with various characters and facets of American life after the attacks. At the time, Amos' recent releases experimented heavily with electronic elements, with extensive use of synthesizers in place of her piano on many songs. ''Scarlet's Walk'' was a conscious return to a stripped-down sound, with Amos saying in an interview with ''Keyboard Magazine'': {{cquote|Scarlet came at a time when I had experimented with all forms of keyboards, from harpsichord to synthesizers to sampled things, and each album that I’ve done, I think has taught me something about a different facet of the keyboard world. With Scarlet’s Walk, it wasn’t about sampled sounds. I needed to capture the authenticity of the land, so I used instruments that weren’t a sample of themselves. And I was also trying to tap into that ‘great American road trip’. And the Wurly and the Rhodes lent themselves to that. But we were going for more of that classic songwriting, sonically nostalgic feeling.<ref name="Popmatters 20">{{cite web |url=https://www.popmatters.com/tori-amo-scarlets-walk-atr20 |website=PopMatters |title=Tori Amos' 'Scarlet's Walk' travels across land and time |last=Earp |first=Michael |date=1 November 2022 |access-date=30 November 2022}}</ref>}}
#gold dust (video version)
#a sorta fairytale (video version)
#polaroids
#taxi ride (audio bed)
#play all
#chapters
#audio options
#tori audio commentary (on)
#tori audio commentary (off)


Additionally, she looked to 1970s-era albums as references for the songs' overall structures and sound, with ]'s '']'' and ]'s '']'' being listed as particularly significant influences.<ref name="The Music Room">{{cite web |url= https://www.cnn.com/2003/SHOWBIZ/Music/02/05/mroom.amos/ |website=CNN |title=Tori Amos' musical journey across America |access-date=26 November 2022 |date=13 February 2003}}</ref>


"Amber Waves", the album's opening track, describes Scarlet's encounter with a porn star of the same name. The name "Amber Waves" is both a reference to a character from the film '']'', as well as the lyric "amber waves of grain" from "]".<ref>''Rolling Stone'' (Germany), Oct 2002</ref> The song describes the toll the character's work has taken on her and how her dreams of becoming a successful actress have gone awry ("From ballet class to lap dance and straight to video").<ref name="Scarlet's Walk bio">{{cite press release |title='Scarlet's Walk' bio |date=2002 |last=Amos |first=Tori |publisher=Epic Records}}</ref> On certain occasions, Amos has integrated portions of "America the Beautiful" into "Amber Waves" in live performances. "A Sorta Fairytale", the album's first single, tells the story of the melancholy of Scarlet's experience taking a drive up the Pacific Coast Highway with someone whom she is in a failing relationship with. As Amos described in the "''Scarlet's Walk'' bio", a ] for the album, "They take the big trip in the classic car up the Pacific Coast highway and across the desert. But as they go on, the masks drop away and they discover the fantasy they have of each other isn't who they really are."<ref name="Scarlet's Walk bio" /> The Southern boogie-style "Wednesday" contains multiple short movements with varying instrumentation, including sections featuring a full band arrangement and ], to solo piano-and-vocal sections. Amos described the song as depicting Scarlet's relationship with "a man who harbours secrets", extending the song's meaning to the peoples' trust in the ideals of America and how that trust is broken.<ref name="Scarlet's Walk bio" />
===Description (from promotional materials)===


"Strange" is the first of many songs on the album to tackle the unjust treatment of ]. The ''Scarlet's Walk'' bio describes this part of the character's journey as " her to the sites of some of the last stands of the native American people, including Little Big Horn. From there she journeys on through the Bad Lands."<ref name="Scarlet's Walk bio" /> The song was later released as a promotional single. "Carbon" describes Scarlet's meeting with a character sharing the song's name who suffers from ].<ref name="The Journal News">{{cite web |website=The Dent |title=The Journal News - Searching for 'Scarlet' Through Letters |date=11 March 2003 |access-date=24 November 2022 |last=D'Giff |first=Ian |url=https://thedent.com/more.php?id=A234_0_1_0_M}}</ref> ] imagery is heavily present throughout the lyrics, with references to ski runs such as "bear's claw", "free fall", and "gunner's view"; both carbon and skiing are used as metaphors for the character's desire to partake in self-destructive behaviors ("carbon made only wants to be unmade"). The song experiments with ], frequently shifting between {{music|time|6|8}} and {{music|time|7|8}}.
"The CD's about America -- it's a story that's also a journey, that begins in ] and crosses the country, slowly heading east. America's in there, and specific places and things, ] history and ] and a girl on a plane who'll never get to ], and ] and ] and madness and a lot more. Not to mention a girl called Scarlet who may be the land and may be a person and may be a trail of blood." - Author ]


{{quote box |quote=The CD's about America—it's a story that's also a journey, that begins in ] and crosses the country, slowly heading east. America's in there, and specific places and things, ] and ] and a girl on a plane who'll never get to ], and ] and ] and madness and a lot more. Not to mention a girl called Scarlet who may be the land and may be a person and may be a trail of blood.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.usatoday.com/life/music/news/2002-10-30-tori-amos_x.htm | work=USA Today | first1=Elysa | last1=Gardner | title=Amos' 'Walk' goes in search of America's soul | date=2002-10-31}}</ref>|source=–], author and friend of Amos |width=30%|align=left|style=padding:8px;}}
==Sample lyrics and song descriptions==


The ] "Wampum Prayer" also tackles the subject of the atrocities committed against Native Americans, with Scarlet hearing the voice and song of an old ] woman, a survivor of a massacre whose site Scarlet has recently visited.<ref name="Scarlet's Walk bio"/> The song was used to open each night of the "On Scarlet's Walk" tour. Featuring prominent ] playing from Evans, "Don't Make Me Come to Vegas" revolves around Scarlet struggling with a call from her niece who is being mistreated by a man she has committed to a relationship with. As Amos said in "Scarlet Stories", "it's one of those moments where, even if you have a resolve to not go to a place and do something, there's something that pulls at you, especially when you remember somebody as a little girl." The "Timo on Tori" remix of "Don't Make Me Come to Vegas" would become a dance hit for Amos after being released (along with other remixes of the song) as the album's third single in 2003. In "Sweet Sangria", Scarlet meets a "revolutionary-type character" fighting American intervention in Central and South America. While Scarlet supports the cause of the revolutionaries, she struggles to commit to violence against either side: "although she believes in the cause, she can't load the gun... It's about what you believe in and how far you're prepared to go."<ref name="Scarlet Stories">{{cite AV media |title=Scarlet Stories |type=commentary |last=Amos |first=Tori |date=2002 |publisher=Epic Records}}</ref><ref name="Scarlet's Walk bio"/> In "Your Cloud", Scarlet arrives at a monument mourning Cherokee Native Americans who were killed in the ].<ref name="Scarlet Stories"/> The song revolves around the themes of separation: {{cquote|It's about separating that which you cannot separate, not really. There will be strands, there will be molecules. And taking those people from their land, the land of the ancestors. Taking a child away from its mother. That doesn't mean that there aren't pieces of that child still in that mother just because it's been, you know, delivered from her womb. Because a couple separates doesn't mean that there aren't pieces of him still in her.<ref name="Scarlet Stories"/>}} "Pancake" criticizes those who use their power to rally people for certain causes without fighting for said causes themselves.<ref name="Scarlet Stories"/> The song sees Scarlet encounter a "Messiah figure" who exploits his power and influence: "He doesn't uphold the values which he preaches. He's deaf to the real needs of the people and is becoming drunk on the kind of power which he once denounced."<ref name="Scarlet's Walk bio"/> Despite its apparent association with the September 11 attacks, "I Can't See New York" was written months earlier.<ref name="Can't See New York">{{cite web |url=https://thedent.com/more.php?id=A445_0_1_0_M |title=Travels with Tori |website=The Dallas Morning News |last=Clark |first=Rob |access-date=28 November 2022 |date=18 April 2003}}</ref> In the song, Scarlet witnesses a plane crash whilst on a plane herself, and experiences the fear and panic felt by a woman on the crashed plane before her death.<ref name="Scarlet Stories"/> "Mrs. Jesus" depicts Scarlet's encounter with a character of the same name; the song tackles the subject of religious fanatisicm and the effects of Christianity on America's history.<ref name="Scarlet Stories"/> "Taxi Ride" is a partial ''homage'' to the late make-up artist ], a friend of Amos's who died in May 2002, and served as the second single from the album. An on-line contest was held asking fans to direct and submit a music video for the song. Amos said of the song and its connection to Aucoin: {{cquote|I knew he was in a lot of pain, and he felt betrayed by people who weren't there when he was in need. Then everybody who shows up in his death can give a statement, but they weren't there in the trenches. His death brought up a lot of things in people -- some lovely and some despicable and disgusting. "Taxi" is for Kevyn.<ref name="Out 2002">{{cite magazine |magazine=Out Magazine |date=November 2002 |access-date=24 November 2022 |title=Scarlet Fever |url=https://thedent.com/out1102.html}}</ref>}}
'''"Amber Waves"''' (attempts to correlate the life of a porn star with the history of America; in the song the character Amber has lived her life making pornography and feeling glorious and important, only to realize that she has put her life in the hands of people whose intentions for her may not be altruistic):


{{quote box |quote=…when I think being around all these women who have all these different kind of… perceptions of each other and, you could say, some of them are intimidated by each other and some of them are envious and some of them... really kind of like the other one, but are afraid of being rejected, so they don't know how to approach them.<ref name="Scarlet Stories"/> |source=–Tori Amos on "Another Girl's Paradise" |width=30% |align=right |style=padding:8px;}}
''Well he lit you up like Amber Waves in his movie show/Fixed you up real good 'til I don't know you anymore/From ballet class to a lap dance straight to video/And the poolside news was that he would be launching you into every young man's bedroom''
Scarlet makes her way into Florida in "Another Girl's Paradise", a song which relates to the different dimensions of relationships between women, and feelings of envy and intimidation. The title track took inspiration from stories told to Amos by her grandfather, who she claims was Cherokee.<ref name="Scarlet's Walk bio"/> The song depicts the climax of Scarlet's story, where after meeting other characters during her journey and seeing their path, she has decided on her own.<ref name="Scarlet Stories"/> Amos has also stated that the song was written to expose the ] in 1830 and its stealing of Native American land.<ref name=Elle>{{cite web |url= https://www.elle.com/culture/music/a41425/women-political-songs/ |website=Elle |title=8 Female Musicians Talk About the Power of Political Songs |date=15 December 2016 |access-date=29 November 2022}}</ref> "Virginia" tackles the hypocrisy of a nation built on notions of freedom denying it to the Native American population.<ref name="Scarlet's Walk bio"/> The song personifies America as a young girl, and explores the concept of being able to warn it about the troubles that will come in the future.<ref name="Scarlet Stories"/> The song features McIntosh playing a ] ]. In the heavily orchestrated closing track, "Gold Dust", Scarlet has given birth to her daughter and has the experience of having another life depending on her.<ref name="Scarlet's Walk bio"/> Additionally, Amos has stated that the song is about "being other people and feeling how they feel", and how one's own personal experiences stick with themselves and create their story (Amos uses the metaphor of a "body map" in the Scarlet Stories commentary).<ref name="Scarlet Stories"/> The song was later re-recorded on, and lent its name to, Amos' 2012 album '']'', featuring orchestrated re-recordings of songs from her back catalogue.


==Release and promotion==
'''"a sorta fairytale"''' (Scarlet, the album's protagonist, recounts how a relationship has dissolved during a road trip because of a difference in opinion between herself and an unnamed lover):


''Scarlet's Walk'' saw release on October 28, 2002 in the UK and was released a day later in the US. Peaking at number seven on the ], it became her fourth album to reach the top ten in the US.<ref name="Billboard charts"/> The album would also reach the top 20 in six additional countries (including a top ten placement in Germany) and be certified Gold by the RIAA for sales in excess of 500,000 copies.<ref name="RIAA"/> In addition to the standard release, a limited edition box set was released with slightly altered cover art, a bonus disc ("Scarlet's DVD", which included content for "Gold Dust", "A Sorta Fairytale", and "Taxi Ride"), and collectibles. Advance copies of the album sent to reviewers were sealed inside ] ] players with glue to prevent Internet trading of the album.<ref name="CD player">{{cite web |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/09/16/business/mediatalk-epic-records-takes-steps-to-seal-its-newest-music.html |website=The New York Times |title=MediaTalk; Epic Records Takes Steps To Seal Its Newest Music |last=Nelson |first=Chris |date=16 September 2002 |access-date=25 November 2022}}</ref> Headphones were also glued to the players to prevent listeners from connecting recording devices to them. As another incentive to curb piracy, the physical CD release provided entry to "Scarlet's Web", a website that was the sole source for additional tracks, tour photos, and other content. All tracks included on "Scarlet's Web" (with the exception of "Mountain") would later be included on the '']'' ], released as a companion to the 2004 live video '']''. ''Scarlet Stories'', a disc of commentary by Amos about each of the album's songs, was released as part of the "Get Tori as a Gift — Get a Gift From Tori" promotion, being given as a free bonus to those who bought two copies of ''Scarlet's Walk'' at indie retailers.
''And I'm so sad/Like a good book, I can't put this/Day back/A sorta fairytale with you/Down New Mexico way, somethin' about the open road/I knew that he was lookin' for some Indian blood/Find a little in you, find a little in me/We may be on this road, but/We're just imposters in this country, you know''


"A Sorta Fairytale" (backed with the non-album track "Operation Peter Pan") was released as the album's first single and reached number two on the US ] chart and 14 on the ] and became one of her biggest radio hits. A music video was made for the song, directed by ]. It depicts Amos as a head with a disembodied leg falling in love with a head with a disembodied arm (played by ]). After kissing, the video ends with them growing the rest of their body parts, and becoming "whole" from their love. The music video later received its own DVD release, with extras including a "making of" for the video and an interview with Amos. The second single, "Taxi Ride", reached number 20 on the US Triple A chart and number 35 on the Adult Top 40. Remixes of "Don't Make Me Come to Vegas" by Timo Maas served as the third and final single from the album. The single (Amos' last commercially available, physical single release to date) reached number six on the US Dance Club Songs chart and number 12 on the Dance Singles Sales chart in the summer of 2003. Finally, "Strange" would receive a promotional single release later that year.
'''"Wednesday"''' (in a short song with a ] feeling, Scarlet takes up residence with a brief fling after her previous breakup, only to be haunted by the ghost of her failed relationship):


==Critical reception==
''No one's at the door/You suggest a ghost, perhaps a phantom/I agree with this (in part)/Something is with us/I can't put my finger on/Is Thumbelina size 10 on a Wednesday?''
{{Album reviews
| MC = 76/100<ref name=meta>{{cite web|url=http://www.metacritic.com/music/scarlets-walk/tori-amos/critic-reviews |title=Critic Reviews for Scarlet's Walk |website=] |access-date=2017-01-26}}</ref>
| rev1 = ]
| rev1score = {{Rating|4.5|5}}<ref name="AllMusic">{{cite web|author=Stephen Thomas Erlewine|author-link=Stephen Thomas Erlewine|url=http://www.allmusic.com/album/scarlets-walk-mw0000662056 |title=Scarlet's Walk - Tori Amos &#124; Songs, Reviews, Credits |website=] |date=2002-10-29 |access-date=2021-10-07}}</ref>
| rev2 = '']''
| rev2score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref name=meta/>
| rev3 = '']''
| rev3score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref>{{cite news|author=Melanie Haupt |url=http://www.austinchronicle.com/music/2002-11-22/108650/ |title=Review: Tori Amos - Music |newspaper=] |date=2002-11-22 |access-date=2017-01-26}}</ref>
| rev4 = '']''
| rev4score = {{Rating|5|5}}<ref name="Blender">{{cite web|url=http://www.blender.com/guide/reviews.aspx?id=10|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070806173728/http://www.blender.com/guide/reviews.aspx?id=10|url-status=dead|archive-date=2007-08-06|title=Tori Amos : Scarlet's Walk Review on Blender|access-date=2017-01-26}}</ref>
| rev5 = '']''
| rev5score = D−<ref>{{cite web |author=Ken Tucker |url=https://ew.com/article/2002/11/01/scarlets-walk/ |title=Scarlet's Walk |website=Ew.com |date=2002-11-01 |access-date=2017-01-26 |archive-date=2011-10-29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111029021524/http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,384151,00.html |url-status=live }}</ref>
| rev6 = '']''
| rev6score = 9/10<ref name=meta/><ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://www.popmatters.com/pm/review/amostori-scarlets |title=Tori Amos: Scarlet's Walk |magazine=] |access-date=2017-01-26}}</ref>
| rev7 = '']''
| rev7score = {{Rating|3.5|5}}<ref name="Album Guide">{{cite web |url=http://www.rollingstone.com/music/artists/tori-amos/albumguide |title=Tori Amos: Album Guide &#124; Rolling Stone Music |website=www.rollingstone.com |access-date=17 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120715001905/http://www.rollingstone.com/music/artists/tori-amos/albumguide |archive-date=15 July 2012 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
| rev8 = '']''
| rev8score = 9/10<ref>{{cite web|author=Laura Sinagra |url=http://www.spin.com/reviews/tori-amos-scarlets-walk-epic |title=Tori Amos, 'Scarlet's Walk' (Epic) |publisher=SPIN |date=2003-07-23 |access-date=2017-01-26}}</ref>
| rev9 = '']''
| rev9score = C+<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.stylusmagazine.com/reviews/tori-amos/scarlets-walk.htm |title=Tori Amos - Scarlet's Walk - Review - Stylus Magazine |website=www.stylusmagazine.com |access-date=17 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061112141537/http://www.stylusmagazine.com/reviews/tori-amos/scarlets-walk.htm |archive-date=12 November 2006 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
| rev10 = '']''
| rev10score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref name=meta/>
}}<!--List Automatically Moved by DASHBot-->


''Scarlet's Walk'' garnered a positive reception from critics. At ], which assigns a ] rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an ] score of 76 based on 21 reviews, indicating "generally positive reviews".<ref name=meta/> '']'' gave the album a score of 9 out of 10 and referred to it as "As ambitious as anything in recent pop music memory," going on to call it "one of the most invigorating and arresting works of her career." ]'s ] rated the album 4.5 stars out of 5, stating the album "marks a return to the sound and feel of '']''" and called ''Scarlet's Walk'' Amos's best album since that release.<ref name="AllMusic"/>
'''"Strange"''' (Scarlet pontificates on the fact that her last two relationships were not what they seemed to be, and that it actually may be her own fault):


In '']''{{'}}s "Tori Amos Album Guide", ''Scarlet's Walk'' received a rating of 3.5 out of 5, with the magazine calling it "her most carefully crafted and inviting album since ''Little Earthquakes''".<ref name="Album Guide"/> '']'' gave the album a perfect 5 out of 5 score, calling it "her most fully realized yet" and highlighting the songs' arrangements and imagery.<ref name="Blender"/>
''Just stay/You said we'll build a nest/So I left my life, tried on your friends/tried on your opinions/But when/the bridges froze and you/Did not come home/I put our snowflake under a microscope''


==Track listing==
'''"Carbon"''' (Scarlet meets a ] and they travel together through the ] of Dakota to ], scene of one of the darkest episodes in Native American history. She's on a path to destruction, and though Scarlet takes her to a ski resort, for this girl the normal parameters and boundaries have ceased to apply, and Scarlet walks away with the situation unresolved):
{{Track listing
| headline =
| title_width =
| all_writing = ]
| title1 = Amber Waves
| length1 = 3:38
| title2 = ]
| length2 = 5:30
| title3 = Wednesday
| length3 = 2:29
| title4 = Strange
| length4 = 3:05
| title5 = Carbon
| length5 = 4:33
| title6 = Crazy
| length6 = 4:23
| title7 = Wampum Prayer
| length7 = 0:44
| title8 = ]
| length8 = 4:51
| title9 = Sweet Sangria
| length9 = 4:01
| title10 = Your Cloud
| length10 = 4:30
| title11 = Pancake
| length11 = 3:54
| title12 = I Can't See New York
| length12 = 7:14
| title13 = Mrs. Jesus
| length13 = 3:05
| title14 = ]
| length14 = 4:00
| title15 = Another Girl's Paradise
| length15 = 3:34
| title16 = Scarlet's Walk
| length16 = 4:16
| title17 = Virginia
| length17 = 3:55
| title18 = Gold Dust
| length18 = 5:54
| total_length = 74:09
}}


==Personnel==
''Carbon maid only wants to be unmade/Blade to ice/It's double diamond time/Just keep your eyes on her/Just keep your eyes on her horizon''
*Tori Amos – ] piano, ] electric piano, ] electric piano, ] synthesizer, vocals
*] – electric guitar {{small|(6, 16)}}, acoustic guitar {{small|(6)}}
*Mac Aladdin – electric guitar {{small|(2, 3, 11, 12, 15, 16)}}, acoustic guitar {{small|(5)}}
*] – electric guitar {{small|(1, 3, 6, 14)}}, acoustic guitar {{small|(2, 3, 14)}}, ] {{small|(17)}}
*Jon Evans – bass guitar
*] – drums, percussion
*] – strings
*] – string arrangements, chamberlain flutes {{small|(13)}}
*David Firman – conductor
*Peter Willison – director of strings {{small|(4, 13, 18)}}
*Scott Smalley – orchestration


==Charts==
'''"Crazy"''' (Scarlet meets a man called "Crazy". After her encounter in "Carbon", she is looking for some stability, so even though it's evident he may not be the best person for her journey, she stays with him until he abandons her):
===Weekly charts===
====Original release====
{|class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"
|+ Weekly chart performance for ''Scarlet's Walk''
! Chart (2002)
! Peak<br /> position
|-
{{album chart|Australia|20|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|Austria|26|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|Flanders|15|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|Wallonia|40|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|BillboardCanada|13|artist=Tori Amos|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|Denmark|32|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|Netherlands|17|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|Finland|20|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|France|32|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|Germany4|9|id=4274|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|Ireland|24|year=2002|week=44|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|Italy|26|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|New Zealand|45|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|Norway|30|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|Scotland|28|date=20021103|rowheader=true|access-date=November 21, 2021}}
|-
{{album chart|Switzerland|21|artist=Tori Amos|album=Scarlet's Walk|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
{{album chart|UK2|26||date=20021103|rowheader=true|access-date=November 21, 2021}}
|-
{{album chart|Billboard200|7|artist=Tori Amos|rowheader=true|access-date=August 2, 2016}}
|-
! scope="row"|] ('']'')<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.worldradiohistory.com/UK/Music-and-Media/00s/2002/MM-2002-11-16.pdftitle=European Hot 100 Albums|magazine=]|volume=20|issue=47|date=16 November 2002|page=12|oclc=29800226|via=World Radio History}}</ref>
| style="text-align:center;"|17
|}


===Year-end charts===
''Found that I crave it all/Saw me melt into your Native Shelter/Where you call my name/Paper tigers/Scared me and came alive/...and as soon as you have rearranged the mess in your head/He will show up looking sane, if I know Crazy''
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
|+ 2002 year-end chart performance for ''Scarlet's Walk''
! scope="col"| Chart (2002)
! scope="col"| Position
|-
!scope="row"|Canadian Alternative Albums (Nielsen SoundScan)<ref name = "CANALTYE02">{{cite web|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20031204012816/http://jamshowbiz.com/JamMusicCharts/2002_alt.html|archivedate=December 4, 2003|url=http://jamshowbiz.com/JamMusicCharts/2002_alt.html|title=Canada's Top 200 Alternative albums of 2002|website=]|access-date=March 26, 2022}}</ref>
| 96
|}


====2023 vinyl release====
'''"Wampum Prayer"''' (Scarlet continues her journey alone and visits the site of a massacre of the ] people. She hears the ghostly voice of a surviving Indian woman and this prayer enters her thoughts):
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center;"
|+ Weekly chart performance for 2023 vinyl release of ''Scarlet's Walk''
!scope="col"|Chart (2023)
!scope="col"|Peak<br />position
|-
{{album chart|Scotland|42|date=20230915|rowheader=true|refname=Scotland_42|access-date=September 17, 2023}}
|-
{{album chart|BillboardVinyl|10|artist=Tori Amos|rowheader=true|access-date=September 19, 2023}}
|-
{{album chart|BillboardAlbumSales|29|artist=Tori Amos|rowheader=true|access-date=September 20, 2023}}
|-
! scope="row"|] (OCC)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.officialcharts.com/charts/vinyl-albums-chart/20230915/9/|title=Official Vinyl Album Chart Top 100|publisher=]|date=15 September 2023|access-date=17 September 2023}}</ref>
|align="center"|21
|-
! scope="row"|] (OCC)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.officialcharts.com/charts/albums-sales-chart/20230915/7511/|title=Official Album Sales Chart Top 100|publisher=]|date=15 September 2023|access-date=17 September 2023}}</ref>
|align="center"|38
|}


===Singles===
''In our hands an old thread/Trail of blood and Amens/Greed is the gift for the sons of sons/Hear this prayer of the Wampum''
{|class="wikitable"
|+ Chart performance for singles from ''Scarlet's Walk''
!rowspan="2"| Year
!rowspan="2"| Song
!colspan="8"| Peak positions
|-
! style="font-size:85%;line-height:1.3;"| ]<br /><ref name="Scarlet's breakdown">{{cite web|url=http://www.thedent.com/scarletschart.html|title=Scarlet's Walk - Chart News for the album and singles|access-date=2008-07-10|publisher=The Dent}}</ref>
! style="font-size:85%;line-height:1.3;"| ]<br /><ref name="Scarlet's breakdown" />
! style="font-size:85%;line-height:1.3;"| ]<br /><ref name="Scarlet's breakdown" />
! style="font-size:85%;line-height:1.3;"| ]<br /><ref name="billboardsingles">{{cite magazine|url={{BillboardURLbyName|artist=tori amos|chart=all}}|title=Tori Amos chart history|access-date=2008-07-10|magazine=Billboard}}</ref>
! style="font-size:85%;line-height:1.3;"| ]<br /><ref name="Scarlet's breakdown" />
! style="font-size:85%;line-height:1.3;"| ]<br /><ref name="Scarlet's breakdown" />
! style="font-size:85%;line-height:1.3;"| Canada
! style="font-size:85%;line-height:1.3;"| Germany
|-
| 2002
| "]"
| style="text-align:center;"|14
| style="text-align:center;"|11
| style="text-align:center;"|1
| style="text-align:center;"|—
| style="text-align:center;"|9*
| style="text-align:center;"|41
| style="text-align:center;"|6
| style="text-align:center;"|98
|-
| rowspan="2"| 2003
| "Taxi Ride"
| style="text-align:center;"|—
| style="text-align:center;"|35
| style="text-align:center;"|17
| style="text-align:center;"|—
| style="text-align:center;"|—
| style="text-align:center;"|—
| style="text-align:center;"|—
| style="text-align:center;"|—
|-
| "]" <small>(remix)</small>
| style="text-align:center;"|—
| style="text-align:center;"|—
| style="text-align:center;"|—
| style="text-align:center;"|6
| style="text-align:center;"|12
| style="text-align:center;"|—
| style="text-align:center;"|—
| style="text-align:center;"|—
|}


* ''Billboard'' Hot Single Sales chart/ 2003 *
'''"don't make me come to Vegas"''' (Scarlet gets a call from her sister: her 18 year old niece, living in ], is in an abusive relationship, and Scarlet knows that to return to Vegas means confronting a history with an old flame there who treated her poorly):


==Certifications==
''My old flame was a jester/and a joker/and a dealer of men/They called him the Prince/of blackjacks, and of women, and of/anything that slipped through his hands/...don't make me come to Vegas/don't make me pull you out of his bed''
{{Certification Table Top|caption=Certifications for ''Scarlet's Walk''}}
{{Certification Table Entry|region=United States|title=Scarlet's Walk|type=album|relyear=2002|certyear=2002|artist=Tori Amos|award=Gold|salesamount=618,000|salesref=<ref>{{cite magazine | url=https://www.billboard.com/articles/news/1045442/ask-billboard | title=Ask Billboard | magazine=] }}</ref>}}
{{table end}}


==Release history==
'''"Sweet ]"''' (While in Texas, Scarlet meets a Latino revolutionary fighting American intervention in Central and Southern America. But the more Scarlet is drawn into the fight, the more she begins to see that she can't go along with hurting people on either side):
{|class="wikitable plainrowheaders"

|+ Release history for ''Scarlet's Walk''
''Before sundown the Mexicans leave San Antone/The car will then drop him at the Border (the breaking point)/I know you know people have suffered time and time again/but what about, I ask you now, the innocents/on both side''
! Region

! Date
'''"your cloud"''' (Scarlet leaves the revolutionary behind as she travels through ] and up to ]. Observing the cracked ], she muses on the concept of "body maps" and the idea that no matter how you split things apart, a trace will remain connecting some things that are inseparable):
|-

! scope="row"| United Kingdom
''If there is a horizontal line/that runs through the map of your body/straight through the land and shooting up/right through my heart/will this horizontal line/when asked know how to find/where you end/where I begin?''
| October 28, 2002

|-
'''"pancake"''' (Here Scarlet meets a ]-like character with whom she quickly becomes disillusioned. If the man from "Sweet Sangria" was all action, this man is all talk, and he is swollen with power):
! scope="row"| United States

| October 29, 2002
''I believe in defending what we once stood for/It seems en vogue to be a closet misogynist homophobe/You could have spared her oh, but no/Messiahs need people dying in their name/You say "I ordered you a pancake."''
|}

'''"I can't see New York"''' (Scarlet meets a woman in an airport while in ], and they take separate planes into ]. After landing, Scarlet witnesses the plane explode in mid-air; it is September 11th):

''From here no lines are drawn/15,000 and holding/swallowed in the purring of her engines/tracking the beacon here, is there a signal there/I can't see New York/as I'm circling down through white clouds and falling out''

'''"mrs. jesus"''' (Scarlet needs to leave the chaos of New York and she hitchhikes with a man called "mrs. jesus". He is a Christian, but one who doesn't judge or inflict his beliefs on others, and he sheds some light on religious fanaticism for her):

''Life lines and suicide crimes/he found me in a state/grabbed my purse and hitched a ride with Mrs. Jesus/...made my bed of cut roses/by understanding that the cause/it just comes first with Mrs. Jesus''

'''"Taxi Ride"''' (Scarlet meets several women in ] who have lost a gay mutual friend. She is disillusioned with their reactions and realizes many of them are two-faced. The plot arc reflects Amos' own loss of gay makeup artist and friend ]):

''Just another dead fag to you, that's all/Just another light missing/In a long taxi line/and down to your last cigarette/and this "we are all one" crap/as you're invading this thing you call love/she smiles too much''

'''"Another Girl's Paradise"''' (Scarlet passes back down through ], making it to ] and eventually ]. She envies the women who make their homes there and realizes that it's possibly true that we can never ever be completely altruistic)

''You caught me lingering in another girl's paradise/The way she paints the world? I want that in my life/Emeralds, you should know, are renting in the meadow/With a stroke, beauty lives/How can I resist? You are desire''

'''"Scarlet's Walk"''' (Scarlet travels up the east coast, tracing the steps of early European settlers, and imagines what it might have felt like to welcome them in only to have them take over your land):

''If you're a thought you will want me to think you, and I do/Invited a guest up until you announced that you had moved in/What do you plan to do with all your freedom?/..I will follow her honored path/Scarlet's Walk through the violets''

'''"Virginia"''' (Scarlet goes up through ] into ], wondering how a land built on the idea of freedom could deny it to the Native Americans, and imagining a young Indian girl following the settlers into a new frontier):

''So hundreds of years go by/The red road carved by sharp knife/and she loses a little each day/to ghetto pimps and presidents/who try and arouse her turqouise serpents/she can't recall what they represent''

'''"Gold Dust"''' (Scarlet settles into D.C. where she gives birth to a daughter. It is never established which of her many lovers gave her this child, but the character's journey comes to fruition as she realizes that the things that are lasting are not lands, or towers, or even lovers, but that which is within):

''Letting names hang in the air/What color hair?/Auburn crimson/Autumn knowingly stared/and the day that she came/I'm freezing that frame''

'''"Operation ]"''' (recalls the crisis in 1960-62 when 14,000 children were evacuated from their home in Cuba on Pan Am flights, some never to be reunited with their families.)

''Hola Rojo, mornin' to you/You always helped me chase demons away/Don't know what I'd do without you/So Pan is the name of the plane/Second to the right, straight on 'til morning''

'''"Tombigbee"''' (Scarlet discovers the full extent of the Native American horrors in the South.)

''To you it's another day/To me it's a grim reaping/Just another shooting star/strung out on your wire''

'''"Seaside"''' (an account of a bombing.)

''There at the seaside, fifth of December/we chased the tide as her treasures were gathered/I had to laugh as she gave sand a bath''

'''"Indian Summer"''' (tackles the subject of female empowerment through masturbation.)

'']/fresh mown grass/girls in the attic/looking on them/Indian summer/call me back/someone tell me there is another way''

'''"Ruby Through the Looking-Glass"''' (a disturbing encounter during Scarlet's pregnancy.)

''Running through the house screaming/girl unstrung/you could always play that one/baptized of fire/and every beat in the bar/hymns for her/feel her kick me from the inside''

'''"Bug a Martini"''' (evokes the lounge-style bossa nova of classic American spy films.)

''Bug a martini/send me to Moscow/lounge and return/echo can't hear you/and as you wander/through perfume and pathways/your version - coercion/my version - elixir of quietude/line up the dots/music to spy to/music to die to''

'''"Apollo's Frock"''' (draws parallels between ] and a modern relationship)


==References==
''You and your predators were warned/if the cubs were drawn in/for the last time you would officially cross my line/you could never see Apollo's frock/was always as beautiful/always as beautiful as the saddest rainstorm/Apollo, your frock was always as beautiful/always as beautiful as your sister's that your light shined on''
{{Reflist}}


{{Tori Amos}}
{{Footer_Albums_Tori_Amos}}
{{Authority control}}


] ]
] ]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 08:22, 30 October 2024

2002 studio album by Tori Amos
Scarlet's Walk
Studio album by Tori Amos
ReleasedOctober 28, 2002
Recorded2001–2002
StudioMartian Engineering (Cornwall, England)
Sony Music Studios (London, England)
GenreAlternative rock
Length74:09
LabelEpic
ProducerTori Amos
Tori Amos chronology
Strange Little Girls
(2001)
Scarlet's Walk
(2002)
Tales of a Librarian
(2003)
Singles from Scarlet's Walk
  1. "A Sorta Fairytale"
    Released: September 2002
  2. "Taxi Ride"
    Released: January 2003
  3. "Don't Make Me Come to Vegas"
    Released: May 27, 2003

Scarlet's Walk is the seventh studio album by American singer-songwriter and pianist Tori Amos. It was released on October 28, 2002 in the UK and October 29 in the US on Epic Records, making it her first release on the label after her split with Atlantic Records. Her first studio album of original material since To Venus and Back in 1999, the 18-track concept album (described by Amos as a "sonic novel about a road trip") details the cross-country travels of Scarlet, a character loosely based on Amos, and was greatly inspired by the changes in American society and politics post-September 11, 2001. Topics explored on the album include nationalism, personal relationships, and the death of a close friend. Amos also took inspiration from the stories of her grandfather, who she claims was Cherokee and told her of the abuses against Native Americans throughout the United States' history.

Recorded at Amos's Martian Engineering in Cornwall, England, Scarlet's Walk solidified Amos's current backing band of Jon Evans on bass, Matt Chamberlain on drums, and Mac Aladdin on guitar. Additionally, string arrangements were provided by John Philip Shenale. The self-produced album diverts from the electronica and trip hop-influenced sounds of From the Choirgirl Hotel and To Venus and Back and marks a return to the stripped-back sound of her earlier work with a greater emphasis on live instrumentation and Amos's piano, while also incorporating new keyboard instruments into the arrangements, such as the prominent use of Wurlitzer and Fender Rhodes electric pianos. The packaging featured Polaroid-esque photography by Kurt Markus. Scarlet's Walk would also be released as limited-edition box set with bonus content.

The album was a commercial success, reaching number seven in the US and becoming Amos's fourth top 10 album. It sold 107,000 copies in its first week and reached RIAA Gold status about a month after its release. It spawned the singles "A Sorta Fairytale", "Taxi Ride", and "Don't Make Me Come to Vegas", the former reaching number two on the US adult alternative chart and becoming one of her most popular songs. Considered one of her best and most conceptually elaborate works, it received positive reviews and was supported by the "On Scarlet's Walk" tour throughout 2002-03.

Background

Scarlet's Walk was the follow-up to Amos' previous album Strange Little Girls, which was released in 2001 and fulfilled her contract with Atlantic Records. A primary motivation for Amos' switch from Atlantic to Epic was the presence of Polly Anthony, the president of Epic, whom Amos felt would be committed to properly promoting her work as she had felt that Atlantic had not promoted her recent releases to the proper extent and had felt trapped in her contract due to the label's refusal to sell her to another label. Amos would later experience further frustrations as Anthony stepped down from her position after the release of Scarlet's Walk in 2003.

In addition to cementing her longest-running backing lineup, guitar contributions were also made by David Torn and Robbie McIntosh. It would become Amos' fourth consecutive release to be primarily recorded at her studio, Martian Engineering in Cornwall, England. Production was handled by Amos (as has been the case for all her albums since Boys for Pele), and the album was mixed by her husband Mark Hawley and Marcel van Limbeek.

Music and lyrics

Wurlitzer electric piano
In addition to Amos' trademark Bösendorfer piano, Scarlet's Walk featured extensive use of the Wurlitzer electric piano.

Scarlet's Walk follows the journey of the titular character across America after September 11, 2001, and the songs describe her encounters with various characters and facets of American life after the attacks. At the time, Amos' recent releases experimented heavily with electronic elements, with extensive use of synthesizers in place of her piano on many songs. Scarlet's Walk was a conscious return to a stripped-down sound, with Amos saying in an interview with Keyboard Magazine:

Scarlet came at a time when I had experimented with all forms of keyboards, from harpsichord to synthesizers to sampled things, and each album that I’ve done, I think has taught me something about a different facet of the keyboard world. With Scarlet’s Walk, it wasn’t about sampled sounds. I needed to capture the authenticity of the land, so I used instruments that weren’t a sample of themselves. And I was also trying to tap into that ‘great American road trip’. And the Wurly and the Rhodes lent themselves to that. But we were going for more of that classic songwriting, sonically nostalgic feeling.

Additionally, she looked to 1970s-era albums as references for the songs' overall structures and sound, with Fleetwood Mac's Rumours and Neil Young's Harvest being listed as particularly significant influences.

"Amber Waves", the album's opening track, describes Scarlet's encounter with a porn star of the same name. The name "Amber Waves" is both a reference to a character from the film Boogie Nights, as well as the lyric "amber waves of grain" from "America the Beautiful". The song describes the toll the character's work has taken on her and how her dreams of becoming a successful actress have gone awry ("From ballet class to lap dance and straight to video"). On certain occasions, Amos has integrated portions of "America the Beautiful" into "Amber Waves" in live performances. "A Sorta Fairytale", the album's first single, tells the story of the melancholy of Scarlet's experience taking a drive up the Pacific Coast Highway with someone whom she is in a failing relationship with. As Amos described in the "Scarlet's Walk bio", a press release for the album, "They take the big trip in the classic car up the Pacific Coast highway and across the desert. But as they go on, the masks drop away and they discover the fantasy they have of each other isn't who they really are." The Southern boogie-style "Wednesday" contains multiple short movements with varying instrumentation, including sections featuring a full band arrangement and wah-wah guitar, to solo piano-and-vocal sections. Amos described the song as depicting Scarlet's relationship with "a man who harbours secrets", extending the song's meaning to the peoples' trust in the ideals of America and how that trust is broken.

"Strange" is the first of many songs on the album to tackle the unjust treatment of Native Americans in the United States. The Scarlet's Walk bio describes this part of the character's journey as " her to the sites of some of the last stands of the native American people, including Little Big Horn. From there she journeys on through the Bad Lands." The song was later released as a promotional single. "Carbon" describes Scarlet's meeting with a character sharing the song's name who suffers from bipolar disorder. Skiing imagery is heavily present throughout the lyrics, with references to ski runs such as "bear's claw", "free fall", and "gunner's view"; both carbon and skiing are used as metaphors for the character's desire to partake in self-destructive behaviors ("carbon made only wants to be unmade"). The song experiments with mixed meter, frequently shifting between
8 and
8.

The CD's about America—it's a story that's also a journey, that begins in LA and crosses the country, slowly heading east. America's in there, and specific places and things, Native American history and pornography and a girl on a plane who'll never get to New York, and Oliver Stone and Andrew Jackson and madness and a lot more. Not to mention a girl called Scarlet who may be the land and may be a person and may be a trail of blood.

Neil Gaiman, author and friend of Amos

The a cappella "Wampum Prayer" also tackles the subject of the atrocities committed against Native Americans, with Scarlet hearing the voice and song of an old Apache woman, a survivor of a massacre whose site Scarlet has recently visited. The song was used to open each night of the "On Scarlet's Walk" tour. Featuring prominent fretless bass playing from Evans, "Don't Make Me Come to Vegas" revolves around Scarlet struggling with a call from her niece who is being mistreated by a man she has committed to a relationship with. As Amos said in "Scarlet Stories", "it's one of those moments where, even if you have a resolve to not go to a place and do something, there's something that pulls at you, especially when you remember somebody as a little girl." The "Timo on Tori" remix of "Don't Make Me Come to Vegas" would become a dance hit for Amos after being released (along with other remixes of the song) as the album's third single in 2003. In "Sweet Sangria", Scarlet meets a "revolutionary-type character" fighting American intervention in Central and South America. While Scarlet supports the cause of the revolutionaries, she struggles to commit to violence against either side: "although she believes in the cause, she can't load the gun... It's about what you believe in and how far you're prepared to go." In "Your Cloud", Scarlet arrives at a monument mourning Cherokee Native Americans who were killed in the Trail of Tears. The song revolves around the themes of separation:

It's about separating that which you cannot separate, not really. There will be strands, there will be molecules. And taking those people from their land, the land of the ancestors. Taking a child away from its mother. That doesn't mean that there aren't pieces of that child still in that mother just because it's been, you know, delivered from her womb. Because a couple separates doesn't mean that there aren't pieces of him still in her.

"Pancake" criticizes those who use their power to rally people for certain causes without fighting for said causes themselves. The song sees Scarlet encounter a "Messiah figure" who exploits his power and influence: "He doesn't uphold the values which he preaches. He's deaf to the real needs of the people and is becoming drunk on the kind of power which he once denounced." Despite its apparent association with the September 11 attacks, "I Can't See New York" was written months earlier. In the song, Scarlet witnesses a plane crash whilst on a plane herself, and experiences the fear and panic felt by a woman on the crashed plane before her death. "Mrs. Jesus" depicts Scarlet's encounter with a character of the same name; the song tackles the subject of religious fanatisicm and the effects of Christianity on America's history. "Taxi Ride" is a partial homage to the late make-up artist Kevyn Aucoin, a friend of Amos's who died in May 2002, and served as the second single from the album. An on-line contest was held asking fans to direct and submit a music video for the song. Amos said of the song and its connection to Aucoin:

I knew he was in a lot of pain, and he felt betrayed by people who weren't there when he was in need. Then everybody who shows up in his death can give a statement, but they weren't there in the trenches. His death brought up a lot of things in people -- some lovely and some despicable and disgusting. "Taxi" is for Kevyn.

…when I think being around all these women who have all these different kind of… perceptions of each other and, you could say, some of them are intimidated by each other and some of them are envious and some of them... really kind of like the other one, but are afraid of being rejected, so they don't know how to approach them.

–Tori Amos on "Another Girl's Paradise"

Scarlet makes her way into Florida in "Another Girl's Paradise", a song which relates to the different dimensions of relationships between women, and feelings of envy and intimidation. The title track took inspiration from stories told to Amos by her grandfather, who she claims was Cherokee. The song depicts the climax of Scarlet's story, where after meeting other characters during her journey and seeing their path, she has decided on her own. Amos has also stated that the song was written to expose the Indian Removal Act in 1830 and its stealing of Native American land. "Virginia" tackles the hypocrisy of a nation built on notions of freedom denying it to the Native American population. The song personifies America as a young girl, and explores the concept of being able to warn it about the troubles that will come in the future. The song features McIntosh playing a Dobro resonator guitar. In the heavily orchestrated closing track, "Gold Dust", Scarlet has given birth to her daughter and has the experience of having another life depending on her. Additionally, Amos has stated that the song is about "being other people and feeling how they feel", and how one's own personal experiences stick with themselves and create their story (Amos uses the metaphor of a "body map" in the Scarlet Stories commentary). The song was later re-recorded on, and lent its name to, Amos' 2012 album Gold Dust, featuring orchestrated re-recordings of songs from her back catalogue.

Release and promotion

Scarlet's Walk saw release on October 28, 2002 in the UK and was released a day later in the US. Peaking at number seven on the Billboard 200, it became her fourth album to reach the top ten in the US. The album would also reach the top 20 in six additional countries (including a top ten placement in Germany) and be certified Gold by the RIAA for sales in excess of 500,000 copies. In addition to the standard release, a limited edition box set was released with slightly altered cover art, a bonus disc ("Scarlet's DVD", which included content for "Gold Dust", "A Sorta Fairytale", and "Taxi Ride"), and collectibles. Advance copies of the album sent to reviewers were sealed inside Sony Walkman players with glue to prevent Internet trading of the album. Headphones were also glued to the players to prevent listeners from connecting recording devices to them. As another incentive to curb piracy, the physical CD release provided entry to "Scarlet's Web", a website that was the sole source for additional tracks, tour photos, and other content. All tracks included on "Scarlet's Web" (with the exception of "Mountain") would later be included on the Scarlet's Hidden Treasures EP, released as a companion to the 2004 live video Welcome to Sunny Florida. Scarlet Stories, a disc of commentary by Amos about each of the album's songs, was released as part of the "Get Tori as a Gift — Get a Gift From Tori" promotion, being given as a free bonus to those who bought two copies of Scarlet's Walk at indie retailers.

"A Sorta Fairytale" (backed with the non-album track "Operation Peter Pan") was released as the album's first single and reached number two on the US Triple A chart and 14 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 and became one of her biggest radio hits. A music video was made for the song, directed by Sanji. It depicts Amos as a head with a disembodied leg falling in love with a head with a disembodied arm (played by Adrien Brody). After kissing, the video ends with them growing the rest of their body parts, and becoming "whole" from their love. The music video later received its own DVD release, with extras including a "making of" for the video and an interview with Amos. The second single, "Taxi Ride", reached number 20 on the US Triple A chart and number 35 on the Adult Top 40. Remixes of "Don't Make Me Come to Vegas" by Timo Maas served as the third and final single from the album. The single (Amos' last commercially available, physical single release to date) reached number six on the US Dance Club Songs chart and number 12 on the Dance Singles Sales chart in the summer of 2003. Finally, "Strange" would receive a promotional single release later that year.

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic76/100
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic
Alternative Press
The Austin Chronicle
Blender
Entertainment WeeklyD−
PopMatters9/10
Rolling Stone
Spin9/10
Stylus MagazineC+
Uncut

Scarlet's Walk garnered a positive reception from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 76 based on 21 reviews, indicating "generally positive reviews". PopMatters gave the album a score of 9 out of 10 and referred to it as "As ambitious as anything in recent pop music memory," going on to call it "one of the most invigorating and arresting works of her career." AllMusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine rated the album 4.5 stars out of 5, stating the album "marks a return to the sound and feel of Under the Pink" and called Scarlet's Walk Amos's best album since that release.

In Rolling Stone's "Tori Amos Album Guide", Scarlet's Walk received a rating of 3.5 out of 5, with the magazine calling it "her most carefully crafted and inviting album since Little Earthquakes". Blender gave the album a perfect 5 out of 5 score, calling it "her most fully realized yet" and highlighting the songs' arrangements and imagery.

Track listing

All tracks are written by Tori Amos

No.TitleLength
1."Amber Waves"3:38
2."A Sorta Fairytale"5:30
3."Wednesday"2:29
4."Strange"3:05
5."Carbon"4:33
6."Crazy"4:23
7."Wampum Prayer"0:44
8."Don't Make Me Come to Vegas"4:51
9."Sweet Sangria"4:01
10."Your Cloud"4:30
11."Pancake"3:54
12."I Can't See New York"7:14
13."Mrs. Jesus"3:05
14."Taxi Ride"4:00
15."Another Girl's Paradise"3:34
16."Scarlet's Walk"4:16
17."Virginia"3:55
18."Gold Dust"5:54
Total length:74:09

Personnel

  • Tori Amos – Bösendorfer piano, Rhodes electric piano, Wurlitzer electric piano, ARP synthesizer, vocals
  • David Torn – electric guitar (6, 16), acoustic guitar (6)
  • Mac Aladdin – electric guitar (2, 3, 11, 12, 15, 16), acoustic guitar (5)
  • Robbie McIntosh – electric guitar (1, 3, 6, 14), acoustic guitar (2, 3, 14), Dobro (17)
  • Jon Evans – bass guitar
  • Matt Chamberlain – drums, percussion
  • Sinfonia of London – strings
  • John Philip Shenale – string arrangements, chamberlain flutes (13)
  • David Firman – conductor
  • Peter Willison – director of strings (4, 13, 18)
  • Scott Smalley – orchestration

Charts

Weekly charts

Original release

Weekly chart performance for Scarlet's Walk
Chart (2002) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA) 20
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria) 26
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders) 15
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia) 40
Canadian Albums (Billboard) 13
Danish Albums (Hitlisten) 32
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100) 17
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista) 20
French Albums (SNEP) 32
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100) 9
Irish Albums (IRMA) 24
Italian Albums (FIMI) 26
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ) 45
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista) 30
Scottish Albums (OCC) 28
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade) 21
UK Albums (OCC) 26
US Billboard 200 7
European Albums (Eurotipsheet) 17

Year-end charts

2002 year-end chart performance for Scarlet's Walk
Chart (2002) Position
Canadian Alternative Albums (Nielsen SoundScan) 96

2023 vinyl release

Weekly chart performance for 2023 vinyl release of Scarlet's Walk
Chart (2023) Peak
position
Scottish Albums (OCC) 42
US Vinyl Albums (Billboard) 10
US Top Album Sales (Billboard) 29
UK Vinyl Albums Chart (OCC) 21
UK Album Sales Chart (OCC) 38

Singles

Chart performance for singles from Scarlet's Walk
Year Song Peak positions
US
Bubbling

US
Adult

US R&R
Triple A
Airplay

US
Dance

US
Dance
Sales

UK
Canada Germany
2002 "A Sorta Fairytale" 14 11 1 9* 41 6 98
2003 "Taxi Ride" 35 17
"Don't Make Me Come to Vegas" (remix) 6 12
  • Billboard Hot Single Sales chart/ 2003 *

Certifications

Certifications for Scarlet's Walk
Region Certification Certified units/sales
United States (RIAA) Gold 618,000

Release history

Release history for Scarlet's Walk
Region Date
United Kingdom October 28, 2002
United States October 29, 2002

References

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