Kate Bush: Figure of Fun No Longer
Gary Steel explains why it’s not big and clever to ridicule the genius of this sublime singer-songwriter…
It was 2005, and I was at the launch of Vodafone’s first-ever mobile phone with live video capability. Hundreds of media and sundry liggers were gathered in the international corporate’s spacious atrium in downtown Auckland. Our attention was drawn to a stage where Kate Bush suddenly blurted out her 1978 hit, Wuthering Heights. She didn’t make a personal appearance of course, it was just the recording, but the crowd tittered at the ridiculousness of it all.
Then the music stopped, and some rank DJ made a joke about how we hadn’t come to listen to Kate Bush; what we really needed was some real music. And behind us, New Zealand band The Feelers – the actual band – suddenly burst to life with one of their drab, grinding and deplorably imitative songs that had made them a platinum success story.
While the gathered punters seemed to appreciate the stunt, I quickly made my exit. How dare they make fun of my hero? I was outraged but felt unable to open up and bleed. I’d just been made the editor of a manly gadget magazine that featured scantily-clad females on every cover. I wasn’t about to expose my sensitive, Kate Bush-loving side to these macho pseuds.
A few years before, when I was running an increasingly loss-making record shop – and a brief but tumultuous romantic liaison had gone horribly wrong – I had found great solace in a Kate Bush CD box set that gathered up all her albums and added a couple of compilations of odds and sods. Her music gave me comfort, allowed me to breathe in the grief, and face the loss and begin to feel a lust for life again.
Even back then, around the turn of the century, I detected a surprising affection for Kate Bush amongst my music-loving friends. It was a kind of “aww, bless her!” attitude that recognised her genius, but also the assumed loopiness of someone whose art and persona were so very vulnerable and exposed. Although my female friends at the time mostly simmered in the more declamatory and obviously feminist sensibilities of more contemporary singer-songwriters, they knew that she represented something incredibly special.
Generally though, she was viewed as a freakish novelty with a squeaky voice and bookish ballads who hadn’t released an album since 1993 – and was therefore off the musical agenda. Of course, dedicated fans came out to drool when she released her comeback double album Aerial in 2005, and again in 2011 when 50 Words For Snow hit the record racks. Just like that other musical genius, Joni Mitchell, over the past ten years, Kate Bush has slowly become recognised as one of the most important artists of her time.
Yet it took the repeated exposure of her 1985 hit Running Up That Hill on Season 4 of the Netflix hit show Stranger Things to reintroduce her to the general public and expose her to a whole new generation of music lovers. Ironically, it was the album that song came off, Hounds Of Love, that turned me into a fan all those years ago. As a music reviewer, I’d heard a few of her previous albums and decided that they were just too prissy, too ballad-driven, too much like something from a musical starring Julie Covington to warrant a place in my record collection. I was mired in the hard and energetic sensibilities of post-punk in the late nineteen seventies, and Bush seemed to me like a throwback to a previous era and a sensibility that was foreign to me.
There was one exception. I loved the song Breathing from her 1980 album Never For Ever, an epic and very unusual musical construction with an equally esoteric lyric about a foetus about to enter a post-apocalyptic world. Golly, what a concept! It helped that one of my favourite folk-rockers, Roy Harper, appeared on the track. It turned out that she was a bit of a fan, which wasn’t surprising. He was mates with Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour, who had effectively discovered Kate, and he’d even sung on one of Floyd’s tracks, Have A Cigar.
Yet it was a fellow music scribe’s enthusiastic recommendation that somewhat belatedly brought me to the extraordinary Hounds Of Love, and made a real fan of me. The album was practically a reinvention for Kate Bush. Her vocals were more mature and less freakishly squeaky, the music was armed with all the latest technology – with a central place for the Fairlight sampler (more on that here) – and the music itself was a revelation of originality. There’s still debate about this, and in fact, the individual who recommended the album vehemently disagrees with me about it. Still, the exploratory and immersive seven-song suite on the second side, The Ninth Wave, takes it somewhere special.
Kate Bush with a Fairlight CMI, circa 1981
There is so much embedded in the latter – spectral ambience, awe-inspiring Georgian choral singing, trippy arrangements redolent of the best of the previous decade’s progressive rock – that it would take a long read to fully explicate its genius. But unlike the first side of Hounds Of Love – which sounds somewhat tagged and limited by the way its more conventional song format meshes with the now-dated technology of 1985 – it still sounds quite outside of time.
Inevitably, falling for Hounds Of Love led me straight back to Kate’s earlier albums, and in retrospect, her phenomenal talent is of course there in spades right from her 1978 debut, The Kick Inside. Listening to it now, it’s still easy to understand why she was such an obvious target for parodists. Wuthering Heights especially is so fruity and old-world, but it’s still singular and quite amazing. It is not, however, the best thing here.
Listen closely to the first song, Moving, and allow yourself to be taken completely off-guard by the pitch-perfect vocal multi-tracking and Kate’s spectacularly unnerving passion in this gorgeous tribute to her mime teacher, Lindsay Kemp. Then there’s The Man With The Child In His Eyes, which amazingly she’d composed at the age of thirteen and recorded just two years later. The song is utterly lovely, somehow regal, and both deeply naïve and mature at the same time. A friend of mine who committed suicide in the early nineties had it played at his funeral. It was his favourite song.
Listening to the (then) career summary of the box set, This Woman’s Work (1990), it always seemed to me that every one of her albums was flawed but also touched by genius. I never much liked the more theatrical aspects of songs on the early albums, or her occasional use of crummy cod-reggae, and the sampling techniques she used in the early eighties sound dated and lo-res now. Then, by 1993’s The Red Shoes, it sounded like she had other things on her mind.
While the 1989 follow-up to Hounds Of Love, The Sensual World, was quietly stunning, The Red Shoes only had a few songs I ever wanted to go back to. One, in particular, justified the whole sorry mess: Moments Of Pleasure is a song about death, or at least a roll-call of people she knew or whose work she loved who had died. A lush ballad with the crucial ballast of Michael Kamen’s exquisite orchestral arrangement, it’s a piece I’ve played literally hundreds of times and one that seldom fails to elicit the urge to weep.
When Kate Bush rebooted her career with Aerial in 2005, it was tempting to make a mockery of it. Several friends who were long-time fans rejected it out of hand. She was as honest as ever, but she’d returned as a slightly eccentric middle-aged mum with different things on her mind. She imitated birds with her voice on one song, and another was an ode to her washing machine! But really, why do great songs always have to be about the fantastical or illusory or impossible love?
Although it hasn’t often been overt in her music, she has always appreciated humour and sometimes even gone along with what some thin-skinned artists might have considered quite hurtful parodies. Her art will probably never be evident to those blockheads at Vodafone who thought The Feelers were a better bet than Kate Bush, but she doesn’t need them. With the worldwide smash success of Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God) turning her on to millions of fresh-faced fans, it’s just another twist in one of the most unusual and most singular artistic trajectories of modern times.
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