The Show

The Veterans Room of New York City’s Park Avenue Armory set the stage for a private concert by Tori Amos for a few hundred lucky fans. Described as “Greek, Moresque, and Celtic with a dash of the Egyptian, the Persian, and the Japanese,” the room provided a fitting setting for one of the most eclectic and culturally curious artists in music today. Amos performed her classics and songs from her two studio albums – Abnormally Attracted to Sin and her seasonal release, Midwinter Graces.

Ruby Through the Looking Glass

Tori Amos, one of the most eclectic and culturally curious artists in music, performed for a few hundred lucky fans.

Concertina

Behind the Den

 

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Tori Amos

Tori Amos is one of the most influential and respected artists of the modern era. The double-digit Grammy nominee has recorded 15 acclaimed studio albums (and gone platinum nearly 20 times) since emerging in the early ’90s.

The Venue

The Park Avenue Armory was built in 1880 on Manhattan’s Upper East Side to serve as the headquarters and social club for the Seventh Regiment of the National Guard, also known as the “Silk Stocking Regiment” because so many of its members belonged to New York’s prominent Gilded Age families. The 55,000 square-foot drill hall was designed by Regiment veteran and architect Charles W. Clinton, and remains one of the largest unobstructed spaces of its kind in New York. Photography courtesy of Erika Goldring for Artists Den Entertainment

Interview