Tori At Age 17 In The Washington Post, December 18. 1980Added May 25, 1997 |
This article and photo of Tori from when she was only 17 years old was sent to me by Richard Handal.
Washington Post
Thursday, December 18, 1980
Maryland Weekly section, page 2
Article type: Profile and interview
One large black and white portrait photograph of Ms. Amos playing the
piano in the Capital Hilton bar, hands on keyboard, singing into a Shure SM57 microphone.
Caption: Ellen Amos singing and playing at the Capital Hilton bar.
Photo by James A. Parcell--The Washington Post
Headline: At 17, Student Sings a Song of Success
Scene one: The Capital Hilton bar. Dim lights, ice clinking in glasses,
laughter a little too loud. To one side of the room, at the piano, a woman
leans into the microphone and sings, "Some say love, it isn't easy..."
Scene two: The living room of a two-story brick house on a winding
suburban street. The same young woman, a high school senior, is perched at
one end of the sofa. "I want to be a legend," she says unabashedly.
Another star-struck teenager with an ear for music and dreams of the pop
charts? Perhaps. Or then again, Ellen Amos may one day be the hit
recording artist she is determined to be.
And if legends are born in places like Eastern Junior High School in
Silver Spring or Richard Montgomery High School in Rockville, she is well
on her way.
There they know Ellen for her renditions of the pop hits as well as for
her own songs and for her love of singing and playing for an audience.
"I was a star at Eastern, but I tell you, that doesn't get you on the
radio," she says realistically.
Her senior class elected her homecoming queen, but already her sights are
set beyond high school, which she calls a "hobby that sometimes gets in
the way."
"One of the reasons I'm an entertainer is because my father's a minister,"
she explained. "I meet so many people and get so much attention."
The Rev. Dr. Edison Amos of the Rockville United Methodist Church
wholeheartedly supports his daughter's ambitions. For a year, he and his
wife Mary Ellen spent every Friday night in the restaurant-bar called Mr.
Smith's in Georgetown while Ellen, then 14, sang.
"Most of us who grew up during the World War II years want our kids to go
to college," said Rev. Amos. "But I've found in counseling parents that
some parents have a psychological mindset that works to the detriment and
sometimes the devastation of youngsters. I've come to realize that for
her, we have to change for her if she's going to become a national
recording artist."
"My concern is to get her into entertainment without her entering a
lifestyle that is self-destructive," he said.
Amos, who has played the piano since the age of 3 and read music before
she could read words, cut her first single this fall, "Walking with You" on
one side and "Baltimore" on the other. She wrote "Baltimore" in honor of
the Baltimore Orioles, hoping they would win the American League's eastern
division title. Baltimore mayor William D. Schaefer gave her a citation of
merit last month for the song.
She took music lessons at the Peabody Institute of Music in Baltimore when
she was in elementary school, and has been studying voice and music at
Montgomery College for the past five years.
Sometimes she feels obligated to justify her love for popular music:
"What's good singing? You're just appealing to people's likes and
dislikes. Who's to criticize? What they like sometimes is what they hear
the most."
Songs by the Beatles, James Taylor and Julie Andrews are high in her
repertoire that includes most of the popular tunes since the 1940s. Since
singing at Mr. Smith's, Ellen has performed at dozens of parties, clubs,
schools, colleges and even basketball games. In November, the Capital
Hilton signed her for a month, and she'll be back there next year.
For a 17-year-old raised in a minister's well-disciplined home, where is
the common ground with the lifestyle and experiences that rock stars sing
about?
"I think I'm perceptive. You don't always have to go through things to
feel them," she said. "Being a minister's daughter, I could tell the moods
of people my father counseled. I've been through a lot because so many
people I know have been through a lot."
By Kathryn Tolbert--Washington Post Staff Writer
Please give me feedback, comments, or suggestions about my site. Email me (Michael Whitehead) at mikewhy@iglou.com