Agent Orange (song): Difference between revisions
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''''Agent Orange'''' is the name of a short composition by American singer-songwriter [[Tori Amos]]. It first appeared on her 1996 album ''[[Boys for Pele]]'', and has been performed live on a number of her tours. The song title has nothing to do with the chemical defoliant [[Agent Orange]], rather it is a nickname given to her long-time [[bodyguard]] Joel Hopkins, because of the colour of his tanned [[skin]]. The track contains some of her most obtuse [[lyric]]s of her recording career, and has been the subject of endless debates by her fans, as to their meaning. | ''''Agent Orange'''' is the name of a short composition by American singer-songwriter [[Tori Amos]]. It first appeared on her 1996 album ''[[Boys for Pele]]'', and has been performed live on a number of her tours. The song title has nothing to do with the chemical defoliant [[Agent Orange]], rather it is a nickname given to her long-time [[bodyguard]] Joel Hopkins, because of the colour of his tanned [[skin]]. The track contains some of her most obtuse [[lyric]]s of her recording career, and has been the subject of endless debates by her fans, as to their meaning.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 06:01, 7 July 2024
Agent Orange | |
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Appears on | Boys for Pele |
Published by | Sword and Stone Publishing |
Registration | ASCAP 310538406 |
Release date | 22 January 1996 |
Recorded | August - October 1995 at Delgany, Ireland. |
Genre | Experimental pop |
Language | English |
Length | 1 minute 26 seconds |
Composer | Tori Amos |
Label | Atlantic Records |
Producer | Tori Amos |
Engineer | Marcel Van Limbeek and Mark Hawley |
'Agent Orange' is the name of a short composition by American singer-songwriter Tori Amos. It first appeared on her 1996 album Boys for Pele, and has been performed live on a number of her tours. The song title has nothing to do with the chemical defoliant Agent Orange, rather it is a nickname given to her long-time bodyguard Joel Hopkins, because of the colour of his tanned skin. The track contains some of her most obtuse lyrics of her recording career, and has been the subject of endless debates by her fans, as to their meaning.