Silent All These Years
"Silent All These Years" is a song by American singer-songwriter and musician Tori Amos, released as the second single from her debut studio album, Little Earthquakes (1992). It was originally released in the United Kingdom in November 1991 via EastWest Records. It was released in North America in 1992 by Atlantic Records and was later used to promote awareness of the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network (RAINN). In the UK, the single was re-released on August 10, 1992.
"Silent All These Years"
- "Upside Down"
- "Thoughts"
- "Ode to the Banana King (Part One)"
- "Song for Eric"
- "Smells Like Teen Spirit"
November 1991
Tori Amos
Tori Amos, Eric Rosse
Origins[edit]
Amos wrote "Silent All These Years" during a period of self-reflection and searching for solo album material after the failure of Y Kant Tori Read. According to VH1 Storytellers, she originally wrote this song with Al Stewart in mind to sing it. Eric Rosse, who was producing some other songs Amos had composed, heard it and told her, "You're out of your mind. That's your life story."
In the Little Earthquakes songbook, Amos reveals that writing the song was a slow, evolving process and that the light piano riff during the verses came first. This "bumble bee piano tinkle," as she calls it, is one of the more emblematic and recognizable parts of the song.
Lyrically, Amos was inspired by reading Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid story to her young niece, Cody.[1]
Passing note: at the time of release "25 bucks and a cracker" was a reference to Nitrous Oxide use/abuse. $25 would buy a "case" of 20 Nitrous Oxide charges, nominally sold for the preparation of whipped cream. A "Cracker" was a manual device that would break the seal of the NOX cartridge and allow the measured discharge of the gas, usually into a balloon, from which the Nitrous would then be inhaled.
Critical reception[edit]
Melody Maker wrote, "Noble. The way she sings the words "boy, you better pray that I bleed real soon" will send little shivers from the tip of your head right down to your heels." The reviewer added, "Without the screeching and the bluster, with just a piano for company, it will make you realise just how great a song it is. It will also make you feel a little stupid that you've been singing nowhere near the right lyrics for the last nine months."[3] The magazine's Chris Roberts complimented the "genuine clever narratives" of "Silent All These Years".[4] Ian McCann from New Musical Express said, "Her voice makes me shiver, it's all hurt and nutty. On 'Silent' she hears it herself, she reckons, and goes on about a bloke's jeans. People like this should be locked up or given a spell in the marines. They're just too sensitive for their own good."[5] In 2014, Stereogum ranked the song number seven on their list of the 10 greatest Tori Amos songs,[6] and in 2023, The Guardian ranked the song number one on their list of the 20 greatest Tori Amos songs.[7]
Music video[edit]
The accompanying music video for "Silent All These Years" was the first of Amos's solo career. It was shot by Cindy Palmano over the course of two days. Palmano, who had been a stills photographer until this project, came up with the idea of Amos rolling inside a box, the image which is most often associated with the video. Other clips include impersonal shots of objects such as false breasts on a clothes hanger and flowing honey, which Palmano describes as having "a modern look, very clean." The video approaches a climax with shots of Amos twirling against an uneven surface, created by using a corner of a room painted such a crisp white that it's hard to tell that the wall is even there at all. For the final seconds, Amos's face fills the frame as she simply sings to the camera.
The video for "Silent All These Years" was well-noted by the mass media. MTV, in March 1992, used "Silent All These Years" as a "Buzz clip". Additionally, the video was nominated for Breakthrough Video, Best Cinematography in a Video, Best New Artist in a Video, and Best Female Video at the MTV Video Music Awards in 1992. Rolling Stone magazine lists this video at #98 of the 100 greatest videos of all time.
The video has been released on two compilations: the Little Earthquakes VHS and Tori Amos: Complete Videos 1991–1998.
The November 1991 CD, 12-inch, and 7-inch are identical except for title to the same singles for "Me and a Gun", released in October 1991.
Note: Recorded at Cambridge Corn Exchange, April 5, 1992
Note: Recorded at Madison Square Garden, January 23, 1997 (The Concert For RAINN)