FEATURE: Truly, All the Love! Why The Dreaming Is the Most Influential Kate Bush Album of 2025

FEATURE:

 

 

Truly, All the Love!

 

Why The Dreaming Is the Most Influential Kate Bush Album of 2025

__________

ONE may naturally assume that…

IN THIS PHOTO: Florence + The Machine’s Florence Welch/PHOTO CREDIT: Autumn de Wilde

Hounds of Love is always the most influential album from Kate Bush. In terms of its prominence and genius, it is her best-known and most successful album. So many artists cite it as an influence. There is no doubting that it is a masterpiece. It turned forty back in September and, with it, a fresh wave of appreciation. I previously talked about artists today who are very much inspired by Kate Bush. How some of the best albums of this year in fact were made by artists who are fans of Kate Bush. Maybe The Last Dinner Party look more to Kate Bush’s earlier albums when it comes to influence from her, though I think the album I am about to mention is on their radar. The same goes for Florence + The Machine. You might think Hounds of Love or even The Kick Inside (her 1978 debut) would be the go-to. Even though Taylor Swift’s The Life of a Showgirl was not great and got mixed reviews, the cover definitely tied to Hounds of Love. Specifically, the back cover, which was shot by John Carder Bush. Taylor Swift very much replicating that. I stated how, last year, Dua Lipa released a song called Houdini (late in 2023), which shares its title with a song by Kate Bush. That is from an album which I think is the most influential of this year. It is 1982’s The Dreaming. In fact, one that has inspired by Dua Lipa. She has been performing this year, and one feels there might be another album next year. I suspect that we will get shades of The Dreaming on that album. Houdini appeared on The Dreaming. It is my favourite song from Kate Bush, and one that I could study and dissect endlessly. It is a fascinating track. The album itself is only ten songs long. Some might say that this is a perfect length.

In spite of the fact The Dreaming has fewer tracks that some of Kate Bush’s albums – Hounds of Love included -, I do think that it has exerted more influence the past year than any other. We can look back to 2023 and Dua Lipa definitely incorporating parts of it. That song title and, as I have noted before, the promotional image/cover for it, where she holds a key on her tongue. That is taken from the cover of The Dreaming. Another photo by John Carder Bush. Kate Bush imagery, in addition to the music, providing guidance and influence. In some cases explicitly so, and others more abstract, I do feel that the experimentation, drama, darkness, violence, beauty and variety on The Dreaming has fed its way into one of the very best music of this year. Not to repeat the same artists I name-checked in the previous feature regarding Kate Bush’s influence this year. However, they did release exceptional albums. I mentioned The Last Dinner Party. From the Pyre is one of the best of 2025. An album noted for being experimental, dense and focusing on something more dramatic rather than going for melody and the accessible, you can very much link this to The Dreaming. Baroque but also gothic, this is what The Line of Best Fit noted – that could be applied to The Dreaming : “Love, heartbreak, deception, necromancy, passion that leads to fulfilment (transformation), and passion that leads to devastation (hubris): the epic themes are present. The instrumentation, as mentioned, is perhaps slightly tamed, the band’s everything-and-the-kitchen sink impulses somewhat corralled, but make no mistake: Pyre is high drama”. From the Pyre sounds The Dreaming-motivated in places though you can hear hints of other Kate Bush albums. That push to something more experimental and denser reminds me of Bush moving from 1980’s Never for Ever to 1982’s The Dreaming. Retaining her core but creating an album that is denser and layered. This is what Rolling Stone UK noted about From the Pyre: “ It’s ironic, however, that ruminations on death and darkness have allowed this band to sound more alive than ever”.

People might be able to apply other 2025 albums to The Dreaming. Maybe Perfume Genius’s Glory and Lily Allen’s West End Girl. Elements of FKA twigs’ EUSEXUA. Hayley Williams released one of the year’s defining albums with Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party. Frequently compared to Kate Bush because of (Williams’s) thematic depth, unique artistic vision, and dramatic flair, even if the sonic textures on Williams’s new album are not directly comparable to The Dreaming, I do think there are links. The emotional vulnerability you get on a couple of tracks from The Dreaminmg. Exploring emotional landscapes and some of the more revealing moments on Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party put me in mind of The Dreaming and even tracks like All the Love. A general feeling and spirit from The Dreaming, I feel has influenced Hayley Williams. Even if Florence + The Machine’s Everybody Scream seems to evoke Wuthering Heights-era Kate Bush, I do think The Dreaming is more visible. Spiritual magic, darkness, witchcraft, personal revelation, life, death, rebirth and catharsis run through the album. Tip in some Hounds of Love and Never for Ever but, when I think of the energy of Everybody Scream and some of its standout moments, I bring to mind Kate Bush’s The Dreaming. Consider this review from The Guardian: “Amid the stuff about paganism, witchcraft and the references to 14th-century mystic Julian of Norwich, this appears to be the central theme of Everybody Scream: the push and pull of fame, a compulsive desire to perform that overwhelms everything in ways that seem unhealthy…But there’s more light and shade here than you might expect, a greater desire to set the volume low than crank it up to 11”. So much of that relates to The Dreaming, I feel. Florence Welch also incorporates elements and aspects of The Kick Inside or even Never for Ever, Hounds of Love and The Sensual World. Consider too these words from NME: “Though informed by Wicca history and classic literature (the Brontë sisters and Mary Shelley named as specific inspirations), ‘Everybody Scream’ is still an unmistakably timely record, expertly treading between folk and mysticism observations on the disconnect of a chronically online generation clutching at new age practices for relief”. Definite The Kick Inside vibrations, though some of the more gothic or darker elements of Everybody Scream can be connected to The Dreaming.

Even though it is a single and not an album, I feel Charli xcx’s House is directly alluding to Get Out of My House from The Dreaming. In fact, Charli xcx has said that herself I feel. THE FACE wrote this in their review: “When you hear the screeching strings on House – which appears on the soundtrack for Emerald Fennell’s potentially-shocking adaptation of Wuthering Heights – you immediately think of John Cale’s unsettling viola on Venus in Furs, or The Black Angel’s Death Song. After the 83-year-old Welshman himself orates a poem with gravelly delivery, Charli jumps in to scream ​“I think I’m gonna die in this house,” her warped voice building into a tidal wave of distortion which crashes against the drums. Charli says she’s been inspired by Cale’s comment that VU’s music needed to be both ​“elegant and brutal”. Mission accomplished”. Red Brick provided these thoughts: “The first half of the track begins with an unnerving, dissonant string quartet, all the whilst being narrated by avant-garde legend John Cale of Velvet Underground fame. It’s the kind of collaboration you would imagine happening in some disorienting dream, but his narration and Charli’s subtly auto-tuned vocals intertwine to create such a dark atmosphere. This atmosphere drastically changes in the second half with a wall of distortion that rips through the vocals. The recurring line ‘I think I’m gonna die in this house,’ which Charli belts out in one of her most vulnerable and raw vocal performances – creating these perfectly imperfect vocals that reminds me of some of the most chilling moments in the Ethel Cain discography. Wuthering Heights gives Charli XCX a chance to reinvent herself, and to prove that her artistry moves beyond pop music. ‘House’, whilst being a short track clocking in at 3 minutes, gives us great insight into where her innovative sound may take fans next”.

IN THIS PHOTO: John Cale and Charli xcx/COMPOSITE: Kayla Oaddams/FilmMagic, Madeline McManus

It would be intriguing to think that Charli xcx’s next album away from the Wuthering Heights soundtrack would be more influenced by The Dreaming. There is no denying the fact that House brings in at least a couple of songs from The Dreaming. I feel another song, Chains of Love, has some The Dreaming DNA. I have bemoaned how Get Out of My House has never had a video made. I do think that Charli xcx could so naturally nail that song. I would love to hear her cover it. Maybe quite a faithful trace. House is one of this year’s best tracks. Again, this is an artist reinventing and pushing from something lighter and perhaps more accessible to embracing denser, darker, more gothic sounds. Kate Bush did that on The Dreaming, so I feel artists who do this too – and are Kate Bush fans – have this 1982 masterpiece in their minds. It would not be wholly unexpected to hear a Charli xcx album soon that is very similar to The Dreaminmg. There are albums I have not yet mentioned, or do not know about, where The Dreaming is at its core – or has some impact. I am going to move on to the year’s best album and how I feel it is influenced by The Dreaming. However, let’s go back to an album which is in the top three of 2025. West End Girl. Lily Allen is a big Kate Bush fan, and she was there for her 2014 residency in Hammersmith.

Even if West End Girl is deeply personal and you cannot compare that to anything on The Dreaming so much in terms of lyrics, the rich production and raw emotion, together with unconventional songwriting and storytelling can be applied to The Dreaming. in recent music reviews and discussions. The comparison often highlights a shared touchstone for ‘strangeness’ or unique, unconventional artistic approaches in their respective works. Think about the sonics and effects on West End Girl and the technology and effects on The Dreaming. The songwriting is mature, brave, bold, sharp but also revealing and raw. Words I can very much associate with The Dreaming. Boundary-pushing, unconventional and exposing, Lily Allen has also stepped away from the sound of her previous album. So many artists have this year. Again, think of Kate Bush in the early-1980s. Less conventional and taking greater risks and exerting more control, I feel The Dreaming is this touchstone for so many artists today. For Lily Allen and West End Girl, there are unconventional instruments, varied vocal techniques (including demented, double-tracked vocals), and intricate vocal phrasing. These components are present in The Dreaminmg. CLASH reviewed West End Girl. There are some words that stood out: “There’s also a sense of an artist both reclaiming and out-pacing her past” and “making imposing shapes out of the rubble”. That idea of out-pacing her past and changing the narrative or stepping into a bold new territory, you can match Kate Bush and Lily Allen. The intensity in The Dreaming comes more from its production and non-fiction, whereas it is more present with the real-life experiences for Lily Allen. Even so, there are more than a few comparable notes for West End Girl and The Dreaming. It is also great that Lily Allen is considering turning West End Girl into a play.

This is me focusing on the very best albums and songs of the year. I can appreciate there are other possibilities and connections. Chappell Roan has not released an album this year, though the use wide vocal ranges, explore unique themes, and have theatrical styles of Roan can be connected to Bush and specifically The Dreaming. If fans debate the influence of The Dreaming on Chappell Roan, I feel that album will make an impact on Roan next year. The experimental percussion, diverse inspirations in terms of themes, together with that theatricality and her diverse vocal stylings and delivery seems to be inspired by The Dreaming and Hounds of Love. This review mentions a Chappell Roan Manchester gig from last year and mention how “she embraces unashamed Kate Bush cosplay during the guttural bridge of Good Luck, Babe, throwing herself to the floor for extra dramatics”. If we are also going back to last year, Billie Eilish’s HIT ME HARD AND SOFT put me in mind of The Dreaming. That was one of the best albums of 2024. Eilish is a big fan of Kate Bush and has been compared to her. I think her later work has more in common with The Dreaming than any other Kate Bush album. Another masterpiece of this year that is in the top three is CMAT’s EURO-COUNTRY. CMAT is a huge Kate Bush fan and pleasingly adores The Kick Inside.

When I celebrate fifty years of The Kick Inside in 2028, I will see if CMAT is free. She has covered Wuthering Heights and mentioned how the album was a favourite in her childhood – and now. CMAT has said how she saw Kate Bush as someone who paved the way for "cuntrifying" music. There are elements of camp, kitsch culture clash on EURO-COUNTRY one can link to The Dreaming. Actually, seeing Drowned in Sound’s list of the best albums of 2025 made me ask think about some albums on there that I did not naturally think of when considering Kate Bush’s The Dreaming. Heartworms and Glutton for Punishment? Anna Von Hauswollff’s ICONOCLASTS? Ethel Cian’s Perverts? Their words about the later seems to resonate with The Dreaming: “Across Perverts' 90 minutes, you're gently caressed, in the dark, by warm hands and pressed against cold surfaces. At times you will feel as if you've wandered into a dustbowl village where you're not meant to be”. MARINA’s Princess of Power has aspects of The Dreaming in it. MARINA's 2010 single, Mowgli's Road, borrows heavily from The Dreaming. However, I also think that she retains that fascination with the 1982 album. Princess of Power is one of this year’s best albums.

The genre-bending and experimental nature of Kate Bush that ROSALÍA admire, I feel, is personified by LUX and its brilliance. An album that is a complete shift from came before, again, here is an artist pushing boundaries and doing this incredible left (or right?) turn. Operatic and dramatic but also light, I have previous written about how I feel LUX is influenced by The Dreaming. Again, there is madness, eccentricity, experimentation and real groundbreaking stuff that seems so alien to the modern landscape. LUX has shades of The Dreaming and what Kate Bush was doing, even if the two artists plough their own furrow and have different lyrical perspectives and characteristics. That said, there are some takeaways from reviews where these words could apply to 1982’s The Dreaming. This from Pitchfork: “It’s not a dopamine machine like MOTOMAMI, but it rewards listeners who ache for more from pop artists: more feeling, more risk…Rosalía’s voice remains at its centre. With her as its lodestar, LUX advances like a crusade to conquer the mysteries of human existence”. The Guardian discusses the fact LUX is not like the algorithmic-driven Pop of today. More conventional and commercial, ROSALÍA, they say, is asking a lot from her fans. How she has radically changed between albums. Her past three albums are all different and this is her biggest to date. That is also true when we think of The Dreaming and look back on Never for Ever and Lionheart (1978). These words make me think of The Dreaming: “So Lux demands the listener abandon preconceptions and submit themselves to its author’s way of doing things. There’s no question that this is quite a big ask”. Granted, LUX is a much longer album than The Dreaming and it celebrates female saints and has a specific dynamic. The Dreaming is tighter and broader in terms of its lyrics. These words from NME seem ready-made for The Dreaming and what was being said about Kate Bush at that time: “But give it what it demands, and it will reward you many times over. It is an astonishing record – one that continuously stops you dead in your tracks, encourages curiosity, and builds a new world for you to dive into, while connecting to the sounds of all of Rosalía’s previous releases. “The more we are in the era of dopamine, the more I want the opposite,” she recently told the New York Times’ Popcast podcast. This album reinforces that – there are no easy hits or quick highs, no addictive loops to get trapped in, and it’s all the more divine for it”.

Rolling Stone UK talk about the “lyrically opaque” nature of LUX. How “Lux isn’t a record that’s bogged down in its own seriousness despite its grandeur and scale”. These The Dreaming-esque sentiments: “Though the release of Lux is undoubtedly an anti-commercial move on Rosalía’s part…”; “Considering the hours she must have put in on Duolingo, lending a close, curious ear to the most unique album of the year – the anti-easy listening – is the least we could do”. Its also the work rate of ROSALÍA and how intensely she worked on the album. How grand and detailed it is compared to her extraordinary work previously. This seems like Kate Bush’s mindset and life producing The Dreaming. I think about the operatic and unorthodox on The Dreaming. How different it was to her female peers in 1982. ROSALÍA standing very much on her own when it comes to taking risks and the sounds she employs. If Bush’s The Dreaming was forward-thinking in terms of the production or it being very uncommercial compared to other female Pop artists, LUX is forward-looking because it is the antithesis to the streaming Pop: the quick and easy-to-understand and absorb songs. How so much modern Pop s unchallenging and geared to the lowest level of concentration. LUX demands attention and damns any commercial gain in favour of truth, depth and something truly important. Again, I think of The Dreaminmg. For this reason, and for everything I have written above, I feel The Dreaming is the most influential Kate Bush album of this year. One that I feel will shape and inform the best musical moments…

WE hear next year.

FEATURE: Eponymously Yours: Exploring the ‘Kate Bush’/’Kate’ Projects Through the Years

FEATURE:

 

 

Eponymously Yours

 

Exploring the ‘Kate Bush’/’Kate’ Projects Through the Years

__________

I must give thanks…

IMAGE CREDIT: The World of Kate Bush

to Kate Bush Encyclopledia for their resource. I was interested to discover the eponymous Kate Bush projects. Those that use her name or part of it. There has been a variety of things through the years. I am not including those by Kate Bush herself. Any E.P.s, Christmas specials or anything else, instead, I am looking at Kate Bush-tiled things by other people. This year is a quiet one when it comes to Kate Bush anniversaries or anything big. Of course, things can pop up and there might be an occasion when one of her songs blows up. However, I think it will be less busy than last year. It would be good to see something arrive like a new book or some documentaries. I wanted to look at a selection of Kate Bush projects from throughout the years. I am starting out with the below, which concerns the Kate & I pop-up museum:

Pop-up museum devoted to Kate Bush, created by Luna van der Horst (who was 15 years old at the time) in Zaandam (Netherlands) in December 2016. The museum started as a project for school. Luna decided she wanted to make something that didn’t feel like work.

The museum was officially opened on December 2, after which it was open to visitors for free on December 3, 4, 10 and 11. Besides official memorabilia, records and magazines, the museum showed art created by Dutch artists Bregtje Zitman-Deelen (portrait). Buket Albayrak (engraving art), Edgar van der Woude (couture), Esther Hans (painting), Eveline Heijkamp (beamer art), Gea Zwart (painting), Gerben Valkema & Eric Hercules (cartoon), Joost Pielkenrood & Katrine van Klaveren (installation), Lousanne Schuuring (glass art), Marja Eshuijs (bags), Martijn Couwenhoven (drawing), Michel Teunen (PU-foam), Panda Gielen (digital art), Stefana Caramanica (photography), Willem Moeselaar (graphics) and famed Dutch artist Rob Scholte with a special creation”.

IMAGE CREDIT: The World of Kate Bush

Even though there is not a lot of detail about it, I do love that a special issue of Rock & Roll Comics focused on Kate Bush. You can read more about it here, and there is a page here, where you can see artwork from the comic:

Issue 58 of the Rock ‘n’ Roll Comics series, published by Revolutionary Comics in the USA on 1 April 1993, is devoted to an unofficial biography of Kate Bush, with uncredited writer and artist. It tells the story of the beginning of Kate’s career up until the release of The Sensual World”.

I do think that there should be more about Kate Bush in graphic and comic form. She is a fan of science fiction, fantasy and horror, so it would be great if there was something more modern. I tend to find a lot of eponymous Kate Bush projects sort of stopped in the 1990s. When she was still quite active or releasing new music. I am shocked that not too much has been done recently. I guess there is the occasional documentary, though not too much when it comes to books, comics, exhibitions or anything like that. I am going to include a couple of eponymous Kate Bush songs, as she has also not been immortalised in song for a while. It is interesting to hear what artists did when using Kate Bush’s name. It is a bit annoying that there has not been a tribute album where major artists take on her songs. Consider how many modern-day artists cite her as an influence, having Charli xcx, The Last Dinner Party, CMAT, ROSALÍA, Björk and even Big Boi do something with her music would be amazing. However, as this article explains, there was a great Kate Bush covers album in the 1990s:

Kate Bush Covered is a compilation album of cover versions of Kate Bush songs, as performed by fans and professional musicians. The album came together in the first half of 1997 when Kate Bush fan Marcel Rijs used the Kate Bush mailing list Love-Hounds (also known as the newsgroup rec.music.gaffa) to get recordings from fans all over the world.

Contributions were sent in on tape, CD and DAT from Australia, Canada, Sweden, UK and USA. The album was released on 1 August 1997”.

A Kate Bush fan club is something that we need this year. Maybe something too oldskool, many people are hankering for something by gone in terms of maybe a physical fanzine or magazine and conventions. Opportunities for Kate Bush fans to get together. I am going to mention a great Kate Bush tribute act to finish. However, the Kate Bush Fanclub is something we need to revive:

Dutch fanclub, based in Breda (Netherlands), which started in 1980. The club was founded by Joshja Brans. He was soon joined by Rob Assenberg, Arie den Draak and Eric Vermeer. In 1987 Theo Haast also joined the fanclub board. Joshja’s wife Laila and Arie’s wife Diana also helped out. In the beginning their relationship with EMI Records in the Netherlands was virtually non-existant, but by the end of the 1980’s that had improved. The club’s membership usually hovered around the 200 mark.

The fanclub published its own magazine called ‘Kate’, which appeared irregularly between 1981 and 1996. The fanclub folded by the end of the 1990’s when the internet became the go-to medium for Kate Bush fans”.

There have been some relatively recent projects using Kate Bush’s name, including a documentary and a book. One from the 1980s that would be good to see reprinted is Kate Bush: A Visual Documentary. I do think that we will get some Kate Bush books this year. An encyclopaedia or huge reference book would be incredible to see and has not yet been published. Kate Bush: Song by Song was published in 2021 and is worth buying:

Kate Bush: A Visual Documentary is a book written by Kevin Cann and Sean Mayes. Published by Omnibus Press on 5 December 1988, this 96 page book was presented as “the first book to present a major study of Kate as a serious and exceptional recording artist”.

The book features photographs (both in colour and in black & white), a chronology, a discography and videography, as well as 12 chapters in which her career is described in some detail”.

One book that is quite well-known and recent is 2016’s THE KATE INSIDE by Guido Harari. Someone who photographed her for many years, it is something that I hope to own one day. A little out of my price range, I am also hopeful there will be more Kate Bush books with photos of her. Maybe another volume from someone like Guido Harari or her brother, John Carder Bush:

Book published in March 2016, featuring photographs of Kate Bush by Guido Harari. Guido photographed Kate between 1982 and 1993, while she was involved in her albums Hounds Of LoveThe Sensual World and The Red Shoes and the film The Line, The Cross & The Curve.

The book was limited to 3000 copies worldwide. The deluxe edition was limited to just 350 copies, all personally signed by both Guido and Lindsay Kemp, who has also written a special foreword for the book. The deluxe edition had a full leather cover and featured extra pages. It also included a 24x30cm (10”x11”) signed/numbered fine art pigment print and a set of 8 replica Polaroids (10x15cm/3”x5”, unsigned and non editioned). These are replicas of the actual Polaroids used by Guido with Kate on the 1985 and 1989 shoots”.

Before ending with a terrific Kate Bush tribute artist, there is a great booklet, Kate Bush: Before the Dawn that I was not sure existed. I would love to get a copy or see the contents, if anyone knows where to look. I did not get to see Before the Dawn, so it would give me insight into what the epic and adored residency was like:

Booklet released by Paul Sinclair from the website SuperDeluxeEdition.com on 14 September 2019. The A4 sized, 20 page booklet describes Paul Sinclair’s experiences seeing the Before The Dawn live shows in 2014: reflecting all aspects of them; the surprise announcement, the press frenzy, the build up, the anticipation, the expectation, and finally the concerts themselves; what it was like to actually be there and see Kate perform many of her best songs live, for the very first time.

Additionally, the booklet includes the full interview by Sinclair with David Rhodes, conducted only a few weeks after the series of concerts were completed. The front cover was created by Helen Green”.

There have actually been recent documentaries about Kate Bush: L'odyssée musicale de Kate Bush (The Musical Odyssey of Kate Bush): A fifty-minute documentary available on the ARTE channel's website in France; Kate Bush: The Timeless Genius: A program that aired on Sky Arts/NOW in the UK in late-2025, celebrating her enduring appeal; BBC Archive on 4: Kate Bush: The Power of Strange Things: A BBC Radio 4 program exploring her impact, referencing Stranger Things and her unique creative journey. 2014’s Kate Bush at the BBC was released to coincide with her residency. Great moments when Bush performed for the BBC. Some performances that many people have not seen:

TV special, produced for BBC Four and originally broadcast on 22 August 2014. The special is a compilation of performances by Kate Bush in various BBC programmes.

Track listing

  1. Wuthering Heights (Top Of The Pops, 23 March 1978)

  2. Them Heavy People (Saturday Night At The Mill, 25 February 1978)

  3. Moving (Saturday Night At The Mill, 25 February 1978)

  4. Don’t Push Your Foot On The Heartbrake (Sounds Like Friday: Leo Sayer, 17 November 1978)

  5. Wow (Abba Easter Special, 21 April 1979)

  6. Hammer Horror (Nationwide, 3 March 1979)

  7. The Wedding List (Kate, 28 December 1979)

  8. The Man With The Child In His Eyes (Kate, 28 December 1979)

  9. Babooshka (Dr. Hook, 20 March 1980)

  10. Running Up That Hill (Wogan, 5 August 1985)

  11. Hounds Of Love (Top of the Pops, 6 March 1986)

  12. Experiment IV (Wogan, 31 October 1986)

  13. The Sensual World (music video, 1989)

  14. This Woman’s Work (Wogan, 6 December 1989)

  15. Rocket Man (Wogan, 16 December 1991)

  16. And So Is Love (Top of the Pops, 17 November 1994)”.

Another 2014 BBC documentary is The Kate Bush Story: Running Up That Hill. It has not been shown on the channel for a while but, given a resurgence and new interest, it is time to show it again. Though it is not that authoritative or deep, it is a good introduction for new fans:

Documentary about Kate Bush, originally broadcast on 22 August 2014 on BBC television on the occasion of her then upcoming Before The Dawn live shows. It explores her career from January 1978 to her 2011 album 50 Words for Snow, through the testimony of some of her key collaborators and those she has inspired.

Contributors include the guitarist who discovered her (Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour), the choreographer who taught her to dance (Lindsay Kemp) and the musician who she said ‘opened her doors’ (Peter Gabriel), as well as her engineer and ex-partner (Del Palmer) and several other collaborators (Elton JohnStephen Fry and Nigel Kennedy)”.

The Guardian reviewed the documentary. It is important because of the incredible contributors, including the late Del Palmer. A portrait of an artist who is unique and original yet has this wide and diverse fanbase. Someone whose influence is huge and continuing. Nobody else out there like Kate Bush:

When Kate Bush got her £3,000 record deal from EMI at 16, she used some of it to pay for dance classes with the legendary choreographer Lindsay Kemp. In last night's The Kate Bush Story: Running Up That Hill (BBC 4), a documentary about the singer-songwriter broadcast on the near-eve of her first tour in 35 years, he remembered how he had to coax her forward from the back row – . "She was as timid as hell … but once she started dancing, she was a wild thing" – and a few months later found an LP pushed under his door.

It was Bush's first album, The Kick Inside, released in 1978, with the song Moving dedicated to Kemp. "I didn't know she had any aspirations to be a singer," he says. "She never talked about herself." Fellow contributor Elton John called her "the most beautiful mystery", and recalled how at his A-lister-stuffed civil partnership ceremony she was the only person anyone wanted to speak to.

Guests, contributors and soon even formerly ignorant viewers like me were in awe of the talent displayed and then intelligently discussed and dissected by John, Kemp and other respected experts, such as David Gilmour, Peter Gabriel, John Lydon, Tori Amos and Del Palmer, Bush's bandmate and partner from the 1970s to 1990s. Neil Gaiman was on hand to hymn her fearlessly literary inspirations and lyrics, from – of course – Wuthering Heights (from which she derived her first single, in March 1978) to Molly Bloom's soliloquy from Ulysses in the title track of her 1989 album, The Sensual World.

Bush herself appeared only in old interview footage – so young, so fragile, so shy, but full of the sureness and certainty that only talent brings – but what emerged was a wonderful, detailed portrait of that talent. Although it gave her precocity its full due (she had written The Man With the Child in His Eyes by the time Gilmour came to listen to her when she was 14), it also gave proper weight to her evolution and her later, less commercial, still astonishing work. Why it chose to close on a stupid jarring joke by Steve Coogan, I do not know. But the rest of it succeeded in making Bush and her work less of a mystery but no less beautiful for that”.

I might re-explore Kate Bush tribute acts later in the year. Maybe not a tribute act in the strict sense, Sarah-Louise Young is different in that sense. It is more of a production and theatrical experience that a straight concert where she covers Kate Bush songs. An Evening Without Kate Bush is a worldwide sensation:

A self-described ‘chaotic cabaret cult’, An Evening Without Kate Bush is created by performer Sarah-Louise Young and director Russell Lucas. The idea is to celebrate Kate Bush’s songs with a unique show.

The show debuted in August 2019 at Edinburgh Fringe festival, and continues to this day. Regular tours in the UK followed, as well as a tour of Australia and New Zealand in 2025”.

You can discover more about An Evening Without Kate Bush here. I am going to finish up with this review from 2024 for An Evening Without Kate Bush. I have not seen it yet, though I have interviewed Sarah-Louise Young about it, and she is amazing. I think she lives up in Manchester, though she is going to be travelling a lot this year:

If you know anything about Kate Bush (other than her song was recently in Stranger Things) you may know she’s an artist who rarely tours. A decade ago she took on a residency at the Hammersmith Apollo for a month. Aside from that and a handful of gigs at the end of the 1970s, she doesn’t play live. She’s never gigged in Nottingham and sadly it’s likely she never will.

However, Kate’s lack of public appearances has opened the door to a shadow industry of tribute acts; Cloudbusting, Kate Bush-Ka, Baby Bushka etc. What we see tonight is at times a bit like one of those, but it’s also quite a lot more – a tribute act crossed with a comedy show and an academic thesis on the artist. This show is created by Sarah-Louise Young and Russell Lucas and stars Young as the principal and only cast member. It’s charming, funny, emotional and at times quite moving.

The first thing that we should probably say about Sarah-Louise Young is that she’s got an amazing voice on her. Quite a lot of Kate's notes can be hard to hit and she’s basically note perfect all night. This despite the fact that during some songs she’s also running, clowning, doing gymnastics and quite a lot more. She works her way through all the songs you’d expect; Cloudbursting, Babooshka (sung entirely in Russian), This Woman’s Work, Hounds of Love, Hammer Horror, Wuthering Heights and more.

She gets the crowd involved and up on stage with her, accompanied by the kind of suitcase full of props and costume changes you’d expect to belong to a 1970s Butlins comedian. She’s also constantly spouting facts about Kate Bush that even the most-hardened ‘Fish People’ (apparently what a collective of Kate Bush fans is known as) may not know.

At the beginning of the show Young states that she wanted to create a show that can be enjoyed by both enthusiasts and also for people who don’t know much about the artist. I’m probably somewhere between both of those and I completely loved it. Entertaining from start to finish, when it finished I wanted to see more. The only shame is that Kate herself wasn’t there to see it”.

I was curious about some of the Kate Bush-titled projects, whether eponymous or semi-eponymous. Most of them are way in the past, though some recent documentaries have used Kate Bush’s name. I wonder what the rest f this year offers and whether anything Kate Bush-titled will come. An interesting selection I have featured above, from documentaries and books through to a comic book and a tribute act. All proudly representing Kate Bush in their own way. Giving their love and salute…

TO one of the most important artists ever.

FEATURE: Something Good…Again: The Idea of an Iconic New Kate Bush Sample or Remix

FEATURE:

 

 

Something Good…Again

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush on the set of Cloudbusting (a single from her 1985 album, Hounds of Love

 

The Idea of an Iconic New Kate Bush Sample or Remix

__________

THE thought came to me…

that we do not really hear Kate Bush mixed or sampled into songs. Maybe that is a cost thing or she has been approached but has not given permission. However, she has granted permission for her music to be used on screen. People cover her songs. However, when it comes to music and use of Kate Bush’s own music, that has not really happened. I am not really a fan of a lot of the cover versions of her songs. However, there was an interpolation from 1992 that stands out. That is Utah Saints and Something Good. In 2022, the brains behind Something Good spoke with The Guardian about their iconic track:

Tim Garbutt, DJ/producer

Jez and I met in Harrogate in a club called The Mix. I DJ’d house on Friday, and he played funk and disco on the Saturday. One night, Jez brought a rough copy of What Can You Do for Me on cassette. I played it and the place went mad, so we began working together.

As with all Utah Saints tracks, the tune for Something Good was written before we decided on any samples. It’s generally easier to build tracks the other way around, but our back-to-front method meant any borrowings were used in a different context rather than taking someone else’s creativity, and making it the essence of our track.

For Something Good we recycled a line from Kate Bush’s 1985 hit Cloudbusting. We are super honoured that we’re the only act she has officially cleared a sample for and we hope it’s because we created something new out of her singing. We used it in such a way that Something Good stood up as a song in its own right. We still see tweets now from people who hadn’t realised it was Kate Bush on the track. She is such an enigma, superstar and an all-round great person. We did send her a letter to say thank you, but I’m not sure if she ever saw it.

The song was made on limited equipment – old Akai samplers and Atari computers – and saved on to floppy disks. It took more than two weeks of fine tuning to make it all work.

We were buzzing when the track was used over the highlights of the ’92 Barcelona Olympics coverage by the BBC: you don’t forget moments like that. When we performed it on Top of the Pops, health and safety powered down my mixer during the recording – they were set up for a lead guitarist, not a lead DJ, and I had to work fast to make our performance look natural. Luckily, I was spending eight hours a day practising. It was one of six times the show had us on.

After the first album we spent a lot of time touring, and doing remixes for lots of different acts, from Blondie and the Osmonds to Hawkwind. We were about to start recording another LP, but then got a call to do the Zooropa stadium shows with U2, so we went off and did that. And then a load more shows after that.

That’s why the gap between our first and second albums was a long one. Not as long as the gap before our next one, though. We’re working on tracks now.

Utah Saints video for Something Good

Jez Willis, producer/DJ

Tim and I had been DJing since school. He was way cooler, becoming a DMC World DJ finalist when he was 17. He’s still that good now. We always wanted to do music full-time, but never expected hits – we just tried to make interesting tunes that we thought were good.

As a DJ, you constantly think about which tracks work together, and that helped when choosing samples. The Kate Bush vocal came straight off the CD. Hardware in 1992 was very basic, and getting all the elements to sync was tricky. We had to pitch-bend the first part of Kate’s vocal to keep it in time, which is why it goes “oo-oo-aye”.

We threw the kitchen sink at Something Good. There was so much happening, and Guy Hatton, the ace studio engineer mixing it, managed to keep everything together.

Pete Tong was our A&R man at the time, and we were lucky to have such a legend in our corner. He would always input something really helpful, and was confident in Something Good being a hit – in fact, the whole record company thought it was a No 1, which it would have been if it had come out earlier or later that year, based on how much it was selling [the single got to No 4].

When it was rereleased in 2008 we had to rebuild everything on the original track from scratch, and then send it to Van She Tech, the remixers in Australia. We then finished it on a laptop in our Leeds studio. It still has the DIY elements, and when it became Radio 1’s most played track of that year, we were really honoured. Just as we were when it was recently voted the ultimate Ministry of Sound track.

Our music has been used on a number of soundtracks, everything from Mortal Kombat to FIFA to Ridley Scott’s Raised By Wolves. Recently, Olly Alexander from Years and Years posted a video of him hula-hooping to Something Good, which was amazing. What a legend”.

In 1992, a year before Kate Bush released her only album of the 1990s, The Red Shoes, this helped bring her back into public consciousness. Not that she had ever gone away. However, they reimagined Cloudbusting from 1985’s Hounds of Love and gave it this Rave spin. That was over thirty years ago now. Since then, we have not seen anything like this. I was thinking a huge summer hit with a Kate Bush song interpolated would be timely. You cannot recreate the sound of Something Good and the era in which it was released. However, as I have stated in previous features, you do not really get Kate Bush remixes or samples. I am sure Bush would allow it and be intrigued. Covers are fewer than you’d hope and there is that real lack of music interrogation. The biggest viral moment happened in 2022 when Stranger Things gave another Hounds of Love cut, Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God), a spotlight. The song was sort of remixed and was not in its original form. However, that was quite dramatic and dark. Showing how people can reinterpret and experiment with these songs. Whether it was a third dip into Hounds of Love or a long-overdue look at one of her other studio albums, I would love to hear this modern-day Something Good. I am not sure what is holding people back. Maybe Rave is not a thing anymore. Pop artists provide Rave and Trance-like songs, though Dance and Rave are not at the forefront as much as they were in the 1990s. I am thinking who in the current landscape could do something like that. Take a sample of incorporate one of her songs into a banger. Maybe waiting until this summer. However, we are due something like Something Good.

It does confuse me why there is this real absence of Kate Bush sampling. I don’t think she is anymore expensive or restrictive than any major artist. The expense of using a sample compared to writing oriignal music. However, back in 1992, I don’t think Utah Saints were expected to pay thousands to use Cloudbusting. Now, as Kate Bush is pretty comfortable financially, she is not going to extort an artist or D.J. who wants to use one of her songs. In terms of the joy and rush of a song like Something Good, what other Kate Bush track could be used? There are plenty of options to choose from. Anything from The Kick Inside, like Wuthering Heights, or a Never for Ever cut like Babooshka. How about something tense from The Dreaming given a bit ofg light and a Rave backdrop?! Think about The Red Shoes and songs from there. There are even songs on 2005’s Aerial that are already Balearic and Dance-like, such as Nocturn or Aerial, that could be heightened. Bringing Kate Bush back to the clubs. Her music has been on the screen more emphatically the past few years than it has in music itself. Artists nodding to her but there not being too many huge covers or moments. The Last Dinner Party and CMAT have covered her and there has been airplay of her catalogue. Even so, I feel more could be done. I have pitched endlessly for a Kate Bush tribute album or even someone high-profile including a Kate Bush cover on their album. When was the last time this happened?!

The heady and euphoric Something Good might seem nostalgic and a dated throwback. However, it was a real revelation in 1992. At a time when Kate Bush as more influential than she has ever been, where are the producers and artists doing something as inventive? Whether you like Something Good or not, there is no denying that is was a smash and a rightful chart success. In 2022, Rolling Stone Australia named Something Good among their favourite 200 Dance tracks ever: “Long before Stranger Things, an earlier electronic generation discovered Kate Bush through this song by Brit duo Tim Garbutt and Jez Willis, who sampled Bush’s “Cloudbusting” and made a stadium-rave anthem out of it. “We’ve taken a lot of flak about that sample,” Willis admitted, “but we’ve always been very open and honest about it. Still, I’m surprised how many people didn’t know it was Kate Bush. When we were on tour, in South Carolina, the program director of this radio station had never heard of Kate Bush!”. Something Good was remixed in 2008 and went back on the charts. A number four success in the U.K. back in 1992, that does seem like an age ago, A definite gulf to fill! I hope that this year sees a lot more activity. I am sure that Kate Bush is played at D.J. sets but, when it comes to the mainstream, there is not a lot of representation there. And there should. I feel Bush would like it and it. You could say that other major icons are not represented either. David Bowie, Prince or even The Beatles. Joni Mitchell or anyone you can name. Perhaps too expensive to get clearance or sample culture being a thing of the past. I hope not. It is clear that we need to make something good happen…

ONCE more.

FEATURE: I Know That I’ve Imagined Love Before… Massive Attack’s Unfinished Sympathy at Thirty-Five

FEATURE:

 

 

I Know That I’ve Imagined Love Before…

 

Massive Attack’s Unfinished Sympathy at Thirty-Five

__________

RELEASED as the second single…

from the band’s second studio album, Blue Lines, Massive Attack’s Unfinished Sympathy turns thirty-five on `11th February. Written by members Robert ‘3D’ Del Naja, Andrew ‘Mushroom’ Vowles and Grant ‘Daddy G’ Marshall, the track’s vocalist Shara Nelson and the group's co-producer Jonathan ‘Jonny Dollar’ Sharp were also writers. It is a classic that is the standout from Massive Attack’s 1991 album. In July, Music Radar told the story of Unfinished Sympathy. A title that started as a joke, it was kept because it fitted the song perfectly. Massive Attack writing a song for the heart rather than the feet, Unfinished Sympathy was a perfection fusion of chilled-out and euphoric. Something that propelled the Bristol music scene to the world:

The musical climate that forged the Bristol sound can be traced back to 2 April 1980, when police raided the Black and White Cafe in the heart of the St Pauls area of the city. The heavy-handed tactics of the police became a flashpoint, sparking a riot, fuelled by community grievances, racial tensions and the government’s controversial ‘sus’ laws.

The outpouring of anger from the St Pauls community took the police by surprise and they were soon outnumbered. In the aftermath of the riot, the police gave St Pauls a much wider berth and this created a climate where communities would come together through impromptu street parties, with custom-built sound systems.

These sound systems provided the musical backdrop to inner city Bristol and would become a unifying force for young people, regardless of their skin colour.

“Sound system culture was all about DIY,” said Roni Size in a 2016 BBC documentary Unfinished: The Making Of Massive Attack. “It was about learning how to string up amps, how to cut the wood, how to load the speakers onto the van properly, even [learning] how to drive a big HGV lorry down the narrow roads in St Pauls.”

The sound system culture shared a DIY ethos with punk and there was one seminal post-punk Bristol band, The Pop Group, that would have a huge influence on development of the Bristol sound.

The Pop Group’s sound was aggressive and avant-garde, incorporating elements of funk, free jazz, and dub. Their tours took them to New York, where they became entranced by the emerging hip-hop culture.

“We were virtually living in New York,” recalled former singer and founder Mark Stewart in the Unfinished documentary. “Suddenly, somebody says there's a really cool radio show on this thing called Kiss FM and WBLS.

“We used to have big ghetto blasters of double cassette machines back in the day. We copied these tapes, brought them back to Bristol. Copied, copied, copied.

“3D would draw on them. Suddenly, everybody was getting into hip-hop in Bristol. London was not even aware of it.”

By the mid-’80s, the Bristol scene was thriving and its epicentre was the now legendary Dugout club, in the city’s Park Row, where the Wild Bunch performed a regular slot and dominated the Bristol club scene.

In 1988, Massive Attack was created as a spin-off group from the Wild Bunch and featured Daddy G, Mushroom, 3D and, in the early days, Tricky.

3D had been a co-writer on Neneh Cherry’s song Manchild.

Along with her husband, singer, songwriter and producer Cameron McVay, Cherry would help Massive Attack to record Blue Lines, which they started work on in 1990.

“One of the things that made Massive Attack into the phenomenon they were was meeting and knowing Neneh Cherry and Cameron McVay,” said Sheryl Garratt, former editor of The Face. “They supported them financially and gave them lots of resources and really encouraged and nurtured their talent.”

Cherry also injected the drive necessary to cut through the chilled-out languor of the Bristol scene.

For all their talent, Massive Attack were not driven by ambition or any desire to be celebrities.

“We were lazy Bristol twats,” Daddy G told writer Ben Thompson of The Observer in 2004. “It was Neneh Cherry who kicked our arses and got us in the studio.

“We recorded a lot at her house, in her baby's room… what we were trying to do was create dance music for the head, rather than the feet. I think it's our freshest album, we were at our strongest then.”

By then, the sound that music journalist Andy Pemberton would define as ‘trip-hop’ in the June 1994 issue of Mixmag magazine was taking shape, a melding of New York hip-hop with homegrown dub, soul, funk, jazz and electronica, and all imbued with an achingly melancholic and laid-back feel.

This was the sound that would distinguish Blue Lines and would first come to prominence on Unfinished Sympathy, released as a single two months before the album.

“Blue Lines kind of had this impact where they recognised Bristol having a sound,” recalled Roni Size in Unfinished. “It was that underlying sub-bass from the dub. It was the breaks from hip-hop and the two gel together. It just summed up the culture and I think Massive Attack really tapped into that.”

Once Mushroom, Nelson and producer Dollar had worked up the basis of Nelson’s vocal melody and lyric, Massive Attack worked on the song during a jam session.

The song’s title, Unfinished Sympathy – a pun on Franz Schubert's 1822 Unfinished Symphony No.8 in B minor – was decided that same day.

“I hate putting a title to anything without a theme,” said Robert Del Naja in Select magazine in 1992. “The title came up as a joke at first, but it fitted the song and the arrangements so perfectly, we just had to use it.”

The song’s arrangement incorporates scratching and drum programming from Mushroom.

Chilled hip-hop beats set the tone and there is a percussion break sampled from jazz trombonist, composer and arranger JJ Johnson’s 1974 instrumental Parade Strut.

One major decision taken in the early stages of the song was to use a real orchestra on the track.

“The synth sounded too tacky,” Mushroom told writer John Robb of Sounds in 1991. “So we thought we may as well use real strings.”

Dollar contacted the music producer Wil Malone (who had worked on Iron Maiden’s debut album in 1980) to arrange and conduct the strings, which were recorded in Studio Two at Abbey Road Studios, London.

A 42-piece orchestra was hired to perform the surging string arrangement. Dollar had instructed Malone to “do what you feel like” with the string arrangement.

“My approach for Unfinished Sympathy was that it’s a really open track,” Malone told Uncut magazine. “Basically it’s just a groove – keyboards, and a great vocal by Shara Nelson – so you just let it drift, just let it chill.

“With most string arrangements that I do, the strings are ‘put back’ in the mix. In other words they are so quiet you don’t really hear them, or they’re mixed up, so that you can just hear the top lines.

“But on Unfinished Sympathy, the strings are exposed. You can really hear them and I think that makes soething different.”

Vowles told John Robb of Sounds that the orchestra “were really good [but] it took them about five takes to do it because they were slightly behind the beat”.

The orchestra is a haunting and enigmatic addition to the song.

Unfortunately, as Massive Attack never set out to use a full orchestra on the album, they hadn’t budgeted for it. Mushroom had to sell his car – a Mitsubishi Shogun – to cover all the hiring costs for the orchestra.

One surprising aspect of Unfinished Sympathy is that there is no actual bassline on the original album version of the song.

The bass is provided by the orchestra.

Unfinished Sympathy was released on 11 February 1991, in the midst of the Gulf War.

On the advice of their record company and management, the group dropped the word ‘Attack’ from their name, to allegedly prevent the song being banned by the BBC, releasing the track simply as ‘Massive’.

Unfinished Sympathy was groundbreaking and hugely influential, a unique blend of electronic and orchestral elements that is both melancholic and uplifting.

The song is justifiably considered a masterpiece, one that set the template for the trip-hop genre, with its ethereal strings, dub-heavy bass and shuffling beats”.

There are a few more features that I want to bring in an article. Thirty years on, Abbey Road explored how Massive Attack did not budget for an orchestra for Unfinished Sympathy. the group’s Mushroom was forced to sell his car to cover the costs:

Wil Malone is a musician, producer and responsible for the string arrangements of Massive Attack’s Unfinished Sympathy. He explains his story below of how the arrangement came to be:

“With Unfinished Sympathy it was the band and the producer who asked me to do the string arrangements for the song. I remember, the track was originally eight minutes long and they let me hear many demos of the song; all sorts of constructions and different ways of doing it. I asked them what they had in mind for the string arrangements of the track and it was Massive’s producer Jonny Dollar – he was highly responsible for putting together the track – who said: ‘do what you feel like’.

“The reason for inclusion of the string arrangements was to be supportive. In my view, in pop music, strings have to be supportive to the vocal, although they also have to give a boot and a sense of tension. If you have a rough track, it’s good to have the strings as a classical contrast sound so that you create a tension, a suspense going on all the time between the roughness of the track and the purity and classical feel. In pop music you’re usually working on a track with bass, drums, guitar, synthesizer, vocals and the strings have to blend with all that. My approach for Unfinished Sympathy was that it’s a really open track: basically it’s just a groove – keyboards, and a great vocal by Shara Nelson – so you just let it drift, just let it chill.

"With most string arrangements that I do, the strings are ‘put back’ in the mix. In other words they are so quiet you don’t really hear them, or they’re mixed up, so that you can just hear the top lines; but on Unfinished Sympathy, the strings are exposed. You can really hear them and I think that makes something different”.

"The string arrangements were played by 42 session players in Abbey Road Studio One. I wanted to make the sound rich so that it vibrates in your chest and stomach, but to also keep it cool, so not so much vibrato – hit the bar lines very accurately. When you are writing, descriptively, in classical music there are emotions that you want the orchestra to have or play, but in pop music that isn’t true. There is no point in writing instructions like ‘dolce’ unless it really means something; basically it is a different way of writing for strings in pop music as you’re writing to a mix, you’re trying to blend your sound into the sound that is on the track."

Former Abbey Road chief engineer, Haydn Bendall, adds: "I think the song is wonderful and everything on that album so well defined. Including the cover! The session was just a normal string session in Studio Two, nothing terribly remarkable in that I think; but it seems there have been numerous attempts to re-create that “sound”! It’s just a string section playing with minimal vibrato!".

In 2021, Culture focused on a masterpiece from 1991. Evoking, as they say, “the urban soundscape of a lost era”, I do hope that there is new focus on this track thirty-five years later. I was seven when it came out, so I don’t really remember it. I did hear it when I later first heard Blue Lines:

Gender heterogeneity was a hallmark of trip hop, as was racial heterogeneity. The three creative forces behind Massive Attack during that time—Robert “3D” Del Naja, Andrew “Mushroom” Vowles, and Grant “Daddy G” Marshall—were two Black men and a white man who, as DJs and producers, ceded the vocal spotlight to women. “Unfinished Sympathy” is sung by the resplendent Shara Nelson, with the accompanying video featuring her walking down a busy street in Los Angeles. “Protection,” the melancholy title track from the group’s follow-up album, is sung by the shy and introspective Tracey Thorn, who starred in a whimsical Michel Gondry–directed video set in a crowded English housing block. The former vocalist is Black and the latter white, prompting a viewer to wonder: Is this white music or Black music? Well, it is both.

“Unfinished Sympathy” is an especially good example of Massive Attack’s both-ness. The track’s various elements—a relentless dance beat, a swelling orchestral arrangement, a crooning soul singer—should not really work together, but they do, magnificently, producing a music that is somehow both modern and classic. It feels like a jump into the future, into what would become the sound of the nineties, epitomized by the string-laden, dance-inflected albums of Bjork (who dated Tricky and whose first album was produced by Bristol DJ Nellee Hooper). Yet it is also an old-fashioned lover’s lament:

I know that I’ve imagined love before
And how it could be with you
Really hurt me, baby, really cut me, baby
How can you have a day without a night?
You’re the book that I have opened
And now I’ve got to know much more

This is the song I’ve returned to time and again during this pandemic year, on solitary treks across New York that self-consciously mimic Shara Nelson’s lonely walk in the video for “Unfinished Sympathy.” Watching her on that bright evening in Los Angeles, so full of longing, has also inverted my adolescent experience of this music: It is she who is perpetually moving through the golden light of summer while I, like everyone else here, am stuck in a cold and wet city. The music, just as it did back then, serves as a consolation, reminding me that this is what a city is supposed to feel like, and what I am supposed to feel like, too: urgent, alive.

It is also a reminder of what the music of a genuine urban culture sounds like—what distinct ooze bubbles up from a place that is not like other places. It is ironic that trip hop itself is just the sort of mood music—soft percussion, swooning strings—that might now play in a hotel bar in a downtown area that looks like every other downtown area on the planet. But for that, like so much else, I blame the homogenizing impact of the internet. Our music these days could come from anywhere; our cities could be anywhere. I still have never been to Bristol, but at least I know where I can find it”.

Jim Arundel from Melody Maker wrote, "It'll be the "When a Man Loves a Woman" of its time, mark me well." Barbara Ellen from NME named it Single of the Week and called it "an intense, warmblooded dance track that boasts more fire in its balls than the Pixies ever dug for", a reference to the Pixies' recently released single "Dig for Fire". Another editor, Mandi James, expanded, "Lush and extravagant, plied with rich strings and roving keyboards, this is music with depth and grace. Massive aren't afraid to indulge their imaginations and let themselves go. Plaintive vocals that smack of Randy Crawford, smart samples liberated from the Mahavishnu Orchestra and all the romanticism of the Pet Shop Boys without the clipped, camp edge. Those not completely smitten by this record have no soul."[“. The reaction to the song was understandably positive. In years since, Unfinished Sympathy is seen as one of the greatest songs of all time. This timeless song is…

A divine symphony.

FEATURE: The Pink Floyd Influence… Inside a ‘Lost’ Kate Bush Interview from 1985

FEATURE:

 

 

The Pink Floyd Influence…

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1985/PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

 

Inside a ‘Lost’ Kate Bush Interview from 1985

__________

I have explored some…

‘lost’ interviews before, but I am not sure that I have covered this. I have included 1985 interview where I ran some features to mark forty years of Kate Bush’s Hounds of Love in September. Now, I have found an interview online that has not been seen by most Kate Bush fans. In an interview for Cash Box in a Manhattan hotel room in December 1985, Paul Iorio spoke with an artist who, at this time, was possibly at the peak of her career. Kate Bush did travel to America for promotion, though she was not there often:

Iorio: You write about that emotional exhaustion on the second side [of "Hounds..."], with waves being almost an emotional metaphor for drowning.

Bush: It's very personal -- and we're sort of getting into psychiatry here! I'm sure there are all kinds of levels here like that. Actually my attitude in writing this album is a very positive one... I wanted the music to launch us all into the next era rather than be an emotional dark thing.

I think each album does have a different energy, otherwise you'd be doing the same thing again and not experimenting anew... Albums are such autobiographical material, not in the material but as an expression of what you're like at the time. And I was feeling kind about mankind and how nice people were rather than the demon side of things...

Iorio: Now that you've come out into the world and are doing appearances and interviews, has your view changed on mankind in general?

Bush: [Laughs] No, I still feel pretty positive, actually. It's really great for me that the album is being accepted...You would like people to enjoy it, but obviously you can't force them to. I feel very happy...

Iorio: In '78, you actually got your contract because of David Gilmour --

Bush: Yes.

Iorio: And this was a period when a lot of punk bands were being signed. How did you ever get a contract?

Bush: When I was signed, that was before the punk thing even happened. Punk was happening at the time of my first single.. Yes, I agree it was completely different than what was happening with punk music but perhaps that's why it works... I think that music is something that surpasses trends, fashions; music is something much deeper...

Iorio: How about concept albums? What were some of your influences?

Bush: ...The only concept for me that I thought worked was [Pink Floyd's] "The Wall." I think the third side of that is just brilliant, the best thing Floyd has ever done. So good. I mean, "Comfortably Numb" is perhaps the classic Floyd song. And Roger Waters' production and the sense of him being in there I found really fascinating... I was surprised at how many people kept referring to [The Who's] "Tommy" and "The Wall." And, really, they are very different. And I wonder if it's because they're concepts that they get labeled together. Do you think?

Iorio: Who do you like now? If you were home, who would you put on the turntable?

Bush: I listen to very little music, particularly contemporary. If I listen to it, it's going to be my own music, some arrangement or something. I spend so much time listening that the way I relax is by watching things, a comedy, that's my way to wind down.

Iorio: What comedy?

Bush: I don't know if you have it here [in the U.S.]: "The Young Ones."

Iorio: No.

Bush: Really good stuff. "Fawlty Towers," you must have that don't you here? 

Iorio: No, we don't.

Bush: Oh, no! You don't know what you're missing! You know John Cleese.

Iorio: Oh, yeah!

Bush: He did this whole sit-com that was about someone called Basil Fawlty, one of the funniest things. I'm so surprised you don't have that here. You don't know what you're missing, you poor people. It's brilliant stuff. [Monty] Python is great, but this has made John Cleese beyond Python. Whenever John Cleese appears, they consider him Basil Fawlty.

Iorio: What are your favorite [films]?

Bush: "Don't Look Now"... I think is one of the best films ever made... You have so many things you don't understand, but by the end of the film, one of those has been tied up neatly. I really love Hitchcock; I think he was a complete genius, to me one of the best directors. Such a sense of how to put things together. I really like Terry Gilliam's work. Do you remember "Time Bandits"?

Iorio: That was a big one...

Bush: He's made three films, one before that, and one, actually, "Brazil," that, as far as I know, wasn't released here [in the U.S.], which is crazy, because it's such a good film and was released everywhere else. Neil Jordan. Have you heard of his stuff? [I nod.] He did a very interesting film called "Angel." He's Irish and his work has a great sense of the Irish culture, the whole rural sense of Ireland. And I love Kurosawa's films. And comedy films. "Young Frankenstein." It's funny but it's also an incredibly beautiful film, it's so well done. I think [Mel Brooks] was one of the first people, too, to play with black and white, when color was what everyone was using. Beautiful. Gene Wilder is so funny.

Iorio: How about Woody Allen?

Bush: I really like Woody Allen, but there are a lot of his films I haven't seen. My favorite one is "Play It Again, Sam." I thought that was so funny. But there's a lot I haven't seen.

Iorio: You mentioned Irish cinema. How about Irish music? You have Irish [music] on the second side of the ["Hounds of Love"] LP. How did you get into Irish folk?

Bush: I think it's probably the biggest influence musically that I've ever had. My mother's Irish. And when I was very young, both my brothers were very into traditional music, English and Irish. They were always playing music, so I was always brought up with it. And they were playing instruments. And I think when you're a kid, you're very open to all things musical...It's only in the last couple of albums that I've been able to express my influences in Irish music through my work.

It's funny when you write a song -- it's easy for me now -- but there's almost a second stage where you take control of the song. You start writing it, and if you're not careful, it just finishes itself and it might not be what you wanted. It's very strange, it takes over itself. It has its own life.

I've just never really been able to write something where I could present the Irish music in a very obvious way. And I think the second side of the album, it was a perfect vehicle to involve the Irish musicians I worked with on the last album in a more involved way, to use them to create that atmosphere...

Iorio: What songs have you written that wrote themselves?

Bush: That's a difficult question.

Iorio: Some must have taken some time. Others probably took off automatically.

Bush: Oooo. Yes, that's right. A lot of songs are like -- wolllaahhh! And that's it. And other songs -- it's like stages. It maybe takes three or four days to get the song structurally together. But then I could spend a couple weeks finishing off the lyrics. Each song is so different...It has its own personality. Some are really grumpy. Some are really quite easy. It's extraordinary. You can put some things on a track, and it will just reject them, it just won't work. And you can put them on another track, and it works really well.

[Bush offers me an Irish cigarette.] Do you want one of those?

Iorio: Oh, I was dying for you to ask! [I read from the pack:] "Cigarettes can seriously damage your health." So in Britain you have the same warnings?

Bush: You have them here, too, don't you?

Iorio: We have modified ones. There are rotating warnings. They have, like, "[Cigarettes] can cause complicated pregnancy." Another says, "Quitting now can seriously increase your chances of having a normal life." They have rotating warnings. But yours are standardized ones?

Bush: Absolutely. They're on every packet. That's an interesting idea, actually: putting different [warnings]....Maybe you'll listen to one of them! [laughs]

Iorio: The headline: Kate Bush -- Candid on Cigarettes"!

Bush: [laughs] Oh, God.

Iorio: Suppose this becomes a number one hit in America. What's the first thing you're going to do?

Bush: Buy an SSL. Get back to the studio!...An SSL is the best mixing console you can get. I'd get one of those. And change the room a but and get some more equipment in”.

I wanted to spotlight this interview, as it is one that I have not included on my site before. Kate Bush gave a lot of interviews in 1985, but this one is particularly interesting. Hounds of Love is this masterpiece that was a worldwide success. If some of Bush’s albums have not endured and are not talked about too much, Hounds of Love is a remarkable work that still sounds utterly wonderful…

AFTER all of these years.

FEATURE: Chips of Plutonium Are Twinkling in Every Lung: How Criticism Against Her Endless Positivity Affected and Changed Kate Bush’s Music

FEATURE:

 

 

Chips of Plutonium Are Twinkling in Every Lung

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1980/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

 

How Criticism Against Her Endless Positivity Affected and Changed Kate Bush’s Music

__________

NOT to say that…

Kate Bush’s music dramatically shifted after one encounter, though there was this awkward clash in the late-1970s and 1980s where a lot of the music press saw her as too optimistic and lacking any depth. One could say that it not only motivated her to include more political and socially conscious songs. In terms of her production and the scope of her work, maybe she was proving to the dismissive and misogynistic critics that she was serious and was not this slight and empty artist. I have included the interview before, but on 20th October, 1979, Danny Baker interviewed Kate Bush for NME. This was not long after she completed The Tour of Life and whilst she was recording 1980’s Never for Ever. To this point, the singles that had been released were quite theatrical in a way. Different to what was being offered by artists of the time, I guess publications like NME were more favourable to Rock bands and Punk artists. To them, Kate Bush must have seemed slightly ridiculous. Though Danny Baker has since regretted his attitude and tone in this interview – though this is no excuse as he was disgraceful and hugely unprofessional! -, there was something in it that provoked Kate Bush to shift. Not going from nice to sharp. If some quarters of the press saw her as too optimistic and shallow in a way, a few of the tracks on Never for Ever was an answer to those who asked if she could be serious. The entire interview is a hatchet job and car crash. Bush, only twenty-one at the time, is incredibly professional (much more so than Danny Baker) and navigates perhaps the most insulting, sexist and worst interview she has been involved with.

There are some segments of the interview that are especially galling and significant. Even if Danny Baker is an inexcusable misogynistic and completely unprofessional in every respect, there are some positives that did come from the aftermath:

Hey Kate. Do you feel obliged to sing like that these days?

"What? You mean…"

Y'know, like you could age the nation's glassblowers.

"Oh, yeah, sure. I mean, I don't feel obliged – that is me. See, like in a recording studio, when it's all dark and there's just you and a couple of guys at the desk, well, you get really so involved that to actually plan it becomes out of the question. It just flows that way. As a writer I just try to express an idea. I can't possibly think of old songs of mine because they're past now, and quite honestly I don't like them anymore."

Have you still got people around you who'll tell you something's rubbish?

"My brother Jay, who's been with me since I was writing stuff that really embarrasses me – he'd let me know for sure… Yeah, there's a few I can really trust."

She smiles again and I was warm to her. Mind you, she speaks my language, so I could be sympathetic because she's one of the south London rock mafia. I ask her what it's like to be paraded in the Sun and suchlike as the Sex Goddess of POP!

"Hmmm. You see, you do a very straight interview with these people, without ever mentioning sex, but of course that's the only angle they write it from when you read it. That kind of freaks me out, because the public tend to believe it…"

Asking a few more questions, I begin to realise that this isn't the kind of stuff that weekloads of Gasbags [NME letters page] are made of. I'm searching for a key probe, but with Kate Bush – well, there's not likely to be anything that will cause the 12-inch banner-headline stuff, is there now? I recall Charlie Murray's less than enthusiastic review of her Palladium shows, which were apparently crammed with lame attempts to "widen" the audience's artistic horizons – y'know, lots of people dressed as violins and carrots an' that. CSM reckons it was one of the most condescending gigs in the history of music. Kate had read the review, but she didn't break down.

For a start I have cut about a hundred "wows" and "amazings" from her speech. She talks at length about how important she feels it is to be "creating" all the time, and when I asked her if she looked to the news for any song inspiration I got this curious answer:

"Well, whenever I see the news, it's always the same depressing things. War's hostages and people's arms hanging off with all the tendons hanging out, you know. So I tend not to watch it much. I prefer to go and see a movie or something, where it's all put much more poetically. People getting their heads blown off in slow motion, very beautifully."

She grins broadly again. Kate is an artist through and through, seeing the world as a crazy canvas on which to skip. Her outrageous charm covers the fact that we are in the midst of a hippy uprising of the most devious sorts. I approach her on the question of being a woman in pop music once more. How do her workmates treat her?

"Well, when I started, I felt really conscious of being female amongst all these fellows. But these days I feel like one of the lads”.

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush at the 1980 British Rock and Pop Awards/PHOTO CREDIT: Mirrorpix/Getty Images

Something Graeme Thomson notes in Under the Ivy: The Life and Music of Kate Bush is how Danny Baker felt Kate Bush was hippy-dippy and pampered. Someone who was perhaps a spoilt rich girl, Bush did not go from writing about one thing and completely concentrated on another. Rather than the nature of the music that came from that October 1979 interview, there was a sensibility and determination that grew. However, two hugely politically and powerful songs were written for Never for Ever. Early on the morning of 9th November, 1979, four American command centres received signals that a full-scale nuclear attack by the Soviet Union was on its way. This was the time of the Cold War. A terrifying time when nuclear destruction was a constant threat and possibility, Kate Bush would have been well aware of it, however, she kept it out of her music. Making her first two albums similar in nature when it came to the themes addressed (alongside songs of desire and love was the fantastical, sometimes gothic and fantastical; always unique but never really political), Never for Ever consciously ended with two songs that could be deemed ‘political’. However, as Graeme Thomson notes, neither as potent and cohesive perhaps as artist like Elvis Costello and her peers. However, Breathing was very much an observation of potential nuclear holocaust. A foetus protected by her mother’s womb, this unborn child is breathing in their mother’s nicotine. “We're the first and last, ooh-ooh-ooh/After the blast/Chips of plutonium are twinkling in every lung”. Army Dreamers is perhaps more of a reaction to numerous casualties of young men in numerous conflicts in 1979 and 1980. Maybe The Troubles in Northern Ireland were moving Bush. Or the Iran-Iraq War.

Rather than her music being entirely positive – or at least neutral and not really having too much anger or political drama -, there was a change. Bush co-produced Never for Ever and you can tell that she wanted her music to be much more in her control. Bigger and more diverse. Moving her voice slightly from the high-pitched impression people had of her, you can hear growl and grit in Breathing. Army Dreamers’ narrator is quite high-pitched, though I think Bush is using her mother’s voice. This idea of a mother losing a young son. Bush acting as this mother figure. The Irish accent makes me think Bush is focusing on The Troubles. I do think there was an issue with critics writing Bush off as nice and naïve. Perhaps someone who was prancing and leaping around without saying anything significant, I feel the likes of Danny Baker forced Bush to put distance between her and her first two albums (1978’s The Kick Inside and Lionheart) and almost apologise. Even if she did not compromise her vision and sound because of idiots in the press, I do think a fire was lit. Actually, more politics did come into her music. You can hear it on 1982’s The Dreaming. Pull Out the Pin is one example. I feel Bush’s vocal style changed because she no longer wanted to be diminished and infantilised in the press. A more masculine energy and harder percussive sound would come in. Never for Ever hardly contains anything that thematically could be linked to her first two albums. In terms of talking about love, most of Never for Ever looks at characters and other people and not so much Kate Bush herself. The strangeness of The Infant Kiss. The revenge drama of The Wedding List. The deceit and mistrust of Babosohka. Regarding All We Ever Look for, Bush said in a 1980 interview this: “Our parents got beaten physically. We get beaten psychologically. The last line – “All we ever look for – but we never did score”. Bush definitely evolving. In terms of getting more serious in a way. Darker too in some ways. Being labelled a sex symbol, there were no lustful or sensual songs. Nothing you must hear on The Kick Inside or ever Lionheart. It is a shame in a way.

However, maybe Bush did force herself to kick against those who wrote her off. Never for Ever went to number one. Bush became the first British female artist to have an album reach the top spot in the U.K. The Dreaming, whilst not a chart-topper, was so much more experimental and darker than what went before from her. Integrating different influences and embracing technology like the Fairlight CMI and influences like Peter Gabriel. Maybe her first two albums were more feminine and female. Perhaps neutral for Never for Ever and this transition. Definitely more masculine for The Dreaming and 1985’s Hounds of Love. 1989’s The Sensual World a definite shift back to the more female. I wonder how influential negative and sexist critical attack was, not only in terms of Bush addressing politics, conflict, violence and breaking away from this idea she was a caricature or hippy. Indeed, as a producer and songwriter, there was a transmutation. One can say that motivation, wherever it came from, resulted in some of Kate Bush’s best music. Many will argue that critics had nothing to do with that and it was Bush naturally evolving and building. That is fair. What is clear how a 1979 NME interview directly impacted Never for Ever which, in turn, was a bridge to a new era or a departure and disconnection from the past. A past that I am very fond of. What hurts most is how this criticism and sexism was seen as normal or cool. Baiting an artist that was so inventive and original because she didn’t’ seem to fit their impression of what music should be. Kate Bush definitely had the last laugh. Her music and influence far outweigh the words or reputation of any of those journalists who attacked or mocked her! If she is seen as this genius and one of the most influential and important artists ever today, that sadly was not the case (in the eyes of some)…

IN 1979.

FEATURE: Spotlight: Revisited: Eliza Rose

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight: Revisited

 

Eliza Rose

__________

A terrific D.J. and artist…

I spotlighted back in 2023, I wanted to come back to her now. Although there has not been an album from Eliza Rose yet, there have been some terrific singles released this year, including Too Slow (All Night). I do think that next year is going to be a huge one for her. “This success has been in the works ever since Eliza began working at Shoreditch’s Flashback Records aged 15, coming to circle East London’s clubs and festivals as a DJ. Inspired by vocal icons including Nina Simone and Amy Winehouse as well as golden age R&B such as Aaliyah and Destiny’s Child, plus the sketchy garage raves she started going to when underage, her love of vinyl found her amassing a collection of her own, digging for gems old and new that she knows will make the dancefloor go off. Now armed with a hybrid DJ-plus-vocals show that pays homage to queer culture’s importance in dance music, and new productions that she’s working on, Eliza is ready for the next chapter. With MOBO and Brit nominations, plaques, magazine covers and a world tour under her belt, she’s straddling both the underground and global superstardom”. That is some biography from Resident Advisor from a couple of years ago or so. I am going to bring things up to date, as there have been some interviews from this year that I think are worth highlighting. If you have not heard Eliza Rose and experienced her incredible music, then do go and follow her and check out her socials.

Before coming to this year and some illuminating interview with Eliza Rose, I want to go back to last year. I think we will get some amazing new interviews and features in 2026. Eliza Rose taking her exciting next big steps. I am going to start out with an interview with COMPLEX that was published last December. They spoke with the phenomenal Eliza Rose about her “No. 1 hit single, “B.O.T.A. (Baddest Of Them All)”, working with Calvin Harris, fame and more”:

Eliza is a product of her East London upbringing, from a fateful work experience stint at a local record store at the age of 15—where she would delve headfirst into a love of vinyls that would then inform her work as both a DJ and producer—to playing at and frequenting the underground basements of Hackney clubs such as Visions and The Alibi, gems that no longer exist as a result of gentrification.

Ahead of her set at Circoloco x The Warehouse Project in Manchester this weekend, we caught up with Eliza Rose to talk newfound fame, staying authentic, and the importance of community.

COMPLEX: Congrats on the release of your new single, “Body Moving”, with Calvin Harris! I understand it all started from a DM Calvin sent you last year, but it’s a big indicator of your fame and popularity—which is a stark difference to the underground scene you were operating in before. How are you finding it all?

Eliza Rose: Acclimatising was difficult at first because, all of sudden, you have all these eyes on you, with all these expectations. In the past few months, I’ve taken back full control of my output with the view of making music that I can look back at in my sixties or seventies and be proud of.

What influences your sound? It has a distinctly London feel to it, for sure.

My parents weren’t really big music heads so I had to go out and find the music I liked. Soul and jazz influences came from the record shop I worked at when I was 15 and stayed at for over a decade. I got into all of this because I loved Amy Winehouse and wanted to delve into her influences, so I got into Nina Simone, Billie Holiday and Esther Phillips. The dance element of my sound was shaped mostly by raving at the age of 15 at places like the Opera House and Rudolph where they were playing garage music in its prime. The fact that garage uses a lot of soulful R&B samples anyway just ties into it. That uniquely London garage sound, fused with soulful vocals, has shaped my artistry in all its facets: how I sing, how I play, and how I produce.

Underground scenes nurture a lot of community in a way that isn’t sustainable in commercial spaces—why is community important to you and your work?

The underground scene, by virtue of it being so much smaller, is easier to hold people accountable in. The people are more open-minded and it’s easier to find pockets of people and communities that align with your morals and values as well as your music taste. Community is important because my music and my shows are all about celebrating authenticity and spreading joy. An Eliza Rose show is an experience for people to feel included and joyful, and community is intrinsic in allowing that authenticity to flourish. I try to live and express myself authentically every day, which is a privilege that I want to enjoy and create in my output.

Although your music taps into ‘90s house and ‘00s garage, it feels more future-facing than nostalgic.

Lady Miss Kier is one of my major inspirations in style and music, who has similar values that I express—it’s just that mine are repackaged through a modern lens. CASISDEAD’s storytelling is so amazing it’s almost cinematic in the drama he creates. Honey Dijon is true to herself and is somebody I always reference when it comes to being an example of authenticity. Doja Cat and Megan Thee Stallion are also an inspiration, in that they’re women doing what they want irrespective of what anybody thinks”.

Just before wrapping up with an interview from July, perhaps her biggest moments was when the single, Weekend, was released in the summer. I do hope that there are more chats with the sensational Eliza Rose next year. Before moving on, CLASH covered Weekend prior to its release:

Cutting her teeth on London’s club scene, Eliza Rose has an innate gift for translating dance tropes into impeccable club moments. Viral smash hit ‘B.O.T.A. (Baddest Of Them All)’ was a breakout moment, a soaring No. 1 success that saw Eliza paired with Intergalactic Criminal.

Since then she’s scored a run of incredible singles, with Eliza Rose pushing herself to the forefront of UK club culture.

For her next move, Eliza Rose is tapping up an iconic name in British dance music – Defected.

“I finally feel like I’m opening a new chapter and entering a really exciting new era…”

‘Weekend’ was built alongside The Trip, and the rave production duo lift Eliza’s voice to the uppermost of the heavens.

“I’m super excited about the release of this track! It’s such an important moment for me in many ways, it’s been a while since I’ve been able to put out music on my own terms and I finally feel like I’m opening a new chapter and entering a really exciting new era, exploring the sounds I love. I am so so happy to share ‘Weekend’ with the world, it’s a song about being able to let go of inhibitions as the weekend approaches once again. I was trying to embody that exciting feeling of freedom, of heady anticipation about what shenanigans me and all my fellow party people will get up to on Friday, Saturday, summer, festivals and those long summer nights that turn into days”.

I have recently spoken to incredible D.J. queens, Rowena Alice and Carly Wilford, and I would love to interview Eliza Rose next year. She has had such a busy 2025 and played some incredible festivals. I wonder what she has planned for 2026. There will be huge worldwide demand to see this modern-day icon. Someone who is going to grow in stature and influence. A queen (or the) of underground Club culture, HUNGER interviewed Eliza Rose back in the summer:

You’ve previously talked about how you find your position in the industry as a Black woman. Are there any fellow Black women in the scene that you can’t wait to see blow up?

Oh, loads. OK Williams is an incredible DJ, my friend Amaliah, Bambi is a great producer and artist. Introspekt was actually one of the first people to put something out on Rosebud [Recordings]. We’ve still got a long way to go, and it feels like we’ve gone a bit backwards — people are not as cautious about making line-ups fair, but there are more and more amazing Black female electronic music artists. There is more space to learn and more female communities. We just have to make sure we’re keeping the lineups there.

In your own journey, where do you see your label, Rosebud Recordings, moving towards?

Really, I just want to keep that DIY ethos. It means I have control over my music and it lets me put out my own weird little shit without worrying. It was never a money thing for me, even if B.O.T.A. came out on it, at first, I didn’t ever expect it to blow up.

‘B.O.T.A.’ was absolutely huge when it came out. How much has your life changed since you hit that viral status?

It catapulted me — meteoric rise and all that malarkey. But it was really like being on a rollercoaster. It really opened my eyes to the fact that music is a business and many people treat it as such. I think the song became bigger than me and I do love it, I’m grateful for it, but I now want people to see Eliza Rose the artist, not just the singer of ‘The Baddest of Them All’.

After playing Glastonbury, what other giants are on your bucket list?

I would really like to put my own events on, maybe a small-cap club somewhere in Hackney, go back to those Plastic People days where it was all about the music. I also want to start touring my live shows, somewhere like Primavera, or do a whole album live at Glastonbury, which is like a spiritual home for me.

Talking festivals, your style is very much mood-board material. What is your fashion inspiration?

I really love the ’60s, ’70s and ’90s, they are key eras for me. Lady Miss Kier has always been an influence to me, but I’m definitely moving into a more grown and sexy era. This Black Kylie Minogue is the realm I want to touch on now, and I feel like my style has really grown a lot. I say, while wearing an acid green adidas top”.

It would also be great to read a detailed interview where Eliza Rose discusses her musical heroes. Those she idolised as a child and when she was growing up. The songs that hit her and why she followed those artists. However, earlier this month, The Guardian spoke with Eliza Rose about the songs that have influenced her. It is interesting discovering the wide array of artists that she selects:

The first single I ever bought

Aaliyah, Rock the Boat. My nan sent me and my cousin to pick up some bits in Dalston and there was some change left over so I went into HMV and bought this CD for £1.99. I shouldn’t have been stealing my nan’s change but I felt so grownup. If my Jamaican dad had found out, he wouldn’t have been happy. I would have got a couple of licks.

The song I’ve streamed the most

Witness (1 Hope) by Roots Manuva. It’s an island track that suits any occasion. If I’m feeling a bit down it gives me some bad girl energy and reminds me to come correct. It also gives me a good adrenaline hit on a run.

The song I can’t help singing
Genius of Love by Tom Tom Club. They had a real influence on my sound and the newer stuff I have coming out soon. I love funky, electronic dance and I also love soulful stuff.

The song I tell people is my favourite

Billie Holiday’s I’m a Fool to Want You. When I started working at a record shop age 15, Billie Holiday was my introduction into music that wasn’t so commercial. I feel like if you say you like Billie Holiday, you sound a bit bougie.

My karaoke go-to song?

Amy Winehouse, You Know I’m No Good. I’m bussing out Amy on any occasion, I’m a diehard fan. This was my anthem at Stoke Newington School where I went. We even had an Amy Winehouse concert. It was an amazing school with a lot of funding for the arts. A plethora of great artists have come out of that school”.

Ever since I spotlighted Eliza Rose in 2023, I have been keeping an eye on her career. Seeing how she continues to grow and is releasing some of her best work. I think next year will see her play some of her biggest festivals sets. Maybe there will be an album or mixtape. Definitely some worldwide touring and incredible collaborations. Someone I know many will tip for success in 2026. A phenomenal artist that everyone should seek out, the fabulous Eliza Rose is…

ONE of our finest talents.

__________

Follow Eliza Rose

INTERVIEW: Nadine Shah (Together for Palestine)

INTERVIEW:

 

Nadine Shah (Together for Palestine)

__________

PERHAPS the most important single…

of this year is out on Friday (12th December). Together for Palestine’s LULLABY has been recorded to raise invaluable and much-needed funds to support Gaza’s children. Displaced and ravaged by genocide, the images we have been seeing from Gaza have been horrific and unforgettable. It is almost biblical in terms of its savagery. Although there has been some activation from the music industry when it comes to raising awareness and calling out Israel’s violence, there has not been as much protest and anger as there should be. Or songs of compassion that raise funds to help those affected by genocide and violence in Gaza. Before removing on, this detail from Peter Gabriel’s official website tells you all that you need to know about a hugely important and vital single that I hope gets to number one for Christmas. It is not an overstatement to say it is the most important single of this year:

Today, the team behind Together For Palestine – the sold-out Wembley concert that raised over £2 million – announces a charity single “Lullaby” that will be released on 12th December via T4P Records and distributed by Empire XX.

PRE-ORDER HERE

This powerful and emotive reimagining of a traditional Palestinian lullaby sees over 15 UK and Palestinian artists come together to send a message of hope and solidarity to the very place where the Christmas story began. For this release, Together For Palestine have a bold aim: to reach Christmas #1 and raise urgent, life-saving funds for Gaza’s children affected by the ongoing bombardment and genocide in Gaza.

The new single was produced by Benji B, Kieran Brunt and Henri Davies, with arrangements by Kieran Brunt and Nai Barghouti, additional lyrics by Mahmoud Darwish and English lyrics written by Peter Gabriel.

The track includes Amena El Abd, Brian Eno, Celeste, Dan Smith (Bastille), Kieran Brunt, Lana Lubany, Leigh-Anne, London Community Gospel Choir, Mabel, Nadine Shah, Nai Barghouti, Neneh Cherry, Sura Abdo, TYSON, Yasmeen Ayyashi and Ysee. The official single artwork was created by visionary Gazan painter Malak Mattar, and inspired by her piece ‘Shelter’ with additional artwork by Cameron JL West.

Fans are urged to pre-order the single (available on BandCamp, iTunes or Amazon) as every purchase of the single sees direct funds donated to these important organisations as well as driving the song towards Christmas #1. Bandcamp and iTunes also allows users to buy the song as a gift – allowing fans to share the beautiful single far and wide – the perfect present at this time of year. Fans are also able to pre-save the single on their favourite streaming platform and stream from 12th December.

Every penny raised from the release will go to Choose Love’s Together For Palestine Fund supporting three Palestinian-led organisations Taawon, Palestine Children’s Relief Fund and Palestine Medical Relief Service”.

There has been some wider coverage of LULLABY in the music press. NME published a feature about Together for Palestine’s single at the end of November. Now that it is out in the world, I would urge everyone to buy it. I am fascinated by the artists who are coming together for LULLABY. I have covered Lana Lubany before on my site and am a big fan of her. Celeste and Brian Eno join Yasmeen Ayyashi, Neneh Cherry and some music greats. Their combined influence, talent and voices, I hope, will help get LULLABY to number one. One of my favourite artists and human beings is Nadine Shah. I have reviewed her music and featured her numerous times, though this is the first interview with her. I was keen to find out more about her involvement in the single and why it is so important that people support LULLABY and help raise funds for children who are affected by genocide in Gaza. Some of the most horrifying scenes any of us have seen, it is clear that this needs to end! With Nadine Shah and her Together for Palestine compatriots uniting on this incredible and powerful song, right now, do make sure that you…

PRE-ORDER this amazing single.

_______________

You were one of the artists who took part of the Together for Palestine benefit concert at Wembley Arena in September. How did you come to be involved with the concert, and did you get an opportunity speak with Brian Eno (its organiser) about the plight of the Palestinian people? If so, what did he say to you?

I met Brian two years ago at a charity benefit for Gaza at the Union Chapel, where we both performed. We connected that evening and have been friends since. We often speak about Palestine, but always from a position of “what can we do”. He has been so instrumental in bringing people together to actively DO SOMETHING. I have his words ringing around in my mind like a sort of mantra: 'keep working furiously and be patient'.

A huge amount of money was raised, and there were so many powerful performances and speeches delivered that night. What were your highlights or favourite moments from Together for Palestine? And do you know if this event will be repeated?

My highlight of that evening was spending time with Francesca Albanese. I’ve been a great admirer of her from afar for a long time, for obvious reasons. She is brilliant and relentless. But that evening, I saw another side of her. I saw the person, not the work. She shared my vape, we drank and we danced. There were so many of us there that night who, for over two years of this genocide (and many many more years before it), have been fighting and campaigning for the plight of the Palestinian people. It was the coming together of all of those people in one place that was so special, to be amongst your people when too many times you have previously felt alone and intimidated when speaking out. I can’t say much more, other than it was beautiful and that it served something which recharged everyone’s battery’s to continue.

“…the conversation doesn’t stop there…it has to continue until there is peace, until there is accountability

You are featuring alongside several of the artists who performed for the Together for Palestine concert in addition to others for a very important single. LULLABY is a reimagining of one of Palestine’s most beloved Folk songs. How familiar are you with the song it is based on, and how did the charity single project start its life?

The song was actually meant to be performed on the night; it was intended to be the finale. As the night went on, it was more and more apparent that there would not be time. At one point, I’d even suggested all of us standing outside the venue belting the song out as the audience left Wembley. Luckily that idea was quickly snubbed, and the next day a conversation started about us recording the song instead. All of this came about within the following week; everyone was champing at the bit to make sure this reimagining of the song saw the light of day. For us, it is a continuation of that night, and that’s the whole point: the conversation doesn’t stop there…it has to continue until there is peace, until there is accountability.

Incredible artists like Lana Lubany, Yasmeen Ayyashi and Kieran Brunt are among those that feature on LULLABY, alongside the London Community Gospel Choir. What was the recording like? Did you get much time in the studio with each artist, or were your parts recorded separately across different days?

A bit of both. We had all spent time together previously in rehearsals for the show. In my recording session was Brian Eno, Dan Smith (Bastille), Neneh Cherry, Mabel, Tyson, and Ysee. A good squad.

 “Keeping Palestine at the forefront of public consciousness is important

We are in a moment when the children of Gaza especially are being targeted and destroyed. Was it an emotional experience recording for the single, and how important is it to get funds to Together for Palestine Fund so that they can aid Palestine-led organisations?

The song’s focus is motherhood. Tyson had her baby girl there in the studio when we recorded; she watched her Mammy sing.

I lost my mother in 2020, but unlike so many in Gaza, I was able to say my goodbyes and tell her I loved her one last time. She died. She wasn’t murdered. 

Predicatbly, perineal Christmas favourites like Wham!’s Last Christmas might grab the top spot this year. Why should people ensure LULLABY gets to number one, and what will people’s money go towards funding and supporting?

ALL profits will go to the Together for Palestine Fund, which is held by Choose Love (charity number: 1177927) to support Palestinian-led organisations Taawon, Palestine Children's Relief Fund and Palestine Medical Relief Service. These are life-saving funds for children and families in Gaza.

We do tend to look for something escapist and commercial at Christmas, whereas LULLABY has a more serious heart and intention. Out on 12th December, the public need to realise how important a song like this is in terms of who it is helping and what a difference that will make. What message would you send to someone a bit wary about downloading and buying the song?

Keeping Palestine at the forefront of public consciousness is important. Christmas has been hijacked by capitalism. Let’s not line the pockets of billionaires anymore, ey? Take a day off and give to those in need.

FEATURE: Groovelines: George Michael – Jesus to a Child

FEATURE:

 

 

Groovelines

 

George Michael – Jesus to a Child

__________

I may write…

a thirtieth anniversary feature about Older closer to 13th May. However, I did want to spend time with perhaps its most beautiful and heartbreaking song, as it as released as a single on 8th January, 1996 - so its thirtieth anniversary is not too far away. Jesus to a Child was premiered at the MTV Europe Music Awards in Berlin in November 1994. The third studio album from George Michael, I think Older is one of his most overlooked and under-loved works (it was reissued in 2022). Its sublime and gorgeous lead single is so spellbinding. In terms of George Michael’s vocal and his lyrics. I will drop in what the critics said about this song. On an album that contains Michael classics like Fastlove and You Have Been Loved, I think Jesus to a Child is the standout. I did not know that Michael had secretly donated all of the single's royalties to ChildLine. Money that helped save thousands of children, he wanted to keep it secret. However, after his death in 2016, Esther Rantzen, founder of the charity, revealed this fact. George Michael’s generosity extended beyond the charity. He donated to much to so many causes and people, often without it being made public. It gives Jesus to a Child this extra level of importance. It is a stunning song. It is heartbreaking learning about the song and its inspiration. Jesus to a Child is a tribute to Michael’s Brazilian lover, Anselmo Feleppa. The two met whilst George Michael was performing in Rio de Janeiro in 1991. Feleppa tragically died in 1993 from an AIDS-related brain haemorrhage. Michael could not discuss the song’s subject and inspiration as his homosexuality was not publicly known at that time. It was not until he was very publicly outed by a Los Angeles police officer in 1998 that he could more openly talk about the song. The fact Michael wrote this song but could not talk about his sexuality. Also, when Feleppa was dying, Michael could not travel to e with him through fear of being outed and the backlash that would incur..

I want to move to an article from The Telegraph that was published shortly after George Michael’s death on Christmas Day 2016. We learn about the tragic story behind Jesus to a Child. It starts by recalling what George Michael said to Kirsty Young when he appeared as a guest on Desert Island Discs back in 2007:

It was a strange, strange thing. There have only been three times in my life when I’ve really fallen for anyone. And each time, on first sight, something has clicked in my head that told me I was going to know that person. And it happened with Anselmo across a lobby. So, I met him in that lobby and I didn’t understand why the click happened. This was a man in a Brazilian hotel, I’m never going to see him again, why did that happen? I didn’t understand what was going on. This was the first love of my entire life, this was the first person I ever shared my life with.”

It took Michael until he was 24 to fully realise he was gay, but Feleppa helped him to accept his sexuality: “It’s very hard to be proud of your sexuality when it hasn’t given you any joy,” he told The Huffington Post in 2011, “but once you have found somebody you really love... it’s not so tough.”

Feleppo and Michael embarked upon a freewheeling affair. The Brazilian was a couple of years older than the singer, and more worldly-wise – he showed Michael, who had been brought up by two hardworking, self-made parents, how to enjoy spending his money. He recalled on Radio 4 that he was “still quite afraid, still not knowing how to spend money, I was terrified of my lifestyle removing my ability to connect to what I did.”

They cruised the Caribbean in a yacht, went dancing in New York and Los Angeles’s most glamorous gay clubs, Michael reportedly gave his lover a Mercedes, a Cartier watch, an apartment.

“Anyone who knew me before I met Anselmo would tell you that he opened me up completely – just in allowing myself to trust my intuition,” Michael told The Mirror. “To say to myself, this isn't going to hurt. Life is not going to hurt you if you just open up to it a little bit more. And I am so grateful for that."

"I really believe that he changed the way I look at my life. And I think he changed it because he was such an incredibly positive person. He had a love of life that we just can't grasp in this country. I think he took away that slightly puritanical, Victorian aspect of my upbringing.”

The fug of grief and marijuana rendered Michael creatively dormant. He didn’t write for 18 months, until he did –conjuring up Jesus to a Child in less than an hour. The lyrics, "I'm blessed I know / Heaven sent and Heaven stole / You smiled at me  Like Jesus to a child", seemed oblique at the time, but were actually the first reference Michael made in song to falling in love with a man.

From there tumbled an album, Older, inspired by and wholly dedicated to Feleppa – as he had written in the album sleeve: “This album is dedicated to Anselmo Feleppa, who changed the way that I look at my life."

As Feleppo had shown Michael how to fully embrace his sexuality, so Michael was unashamed in naming his muse: “I made it so clear on that album that I was not going to run away from all the Press reports about Anselmo," he told The Mirror. "Not to put a dedication to him would be ludicrous because so much of it was about him. Bereavement tinges the whole album. It had to be in everything I wrote at the time because I write directly about what has just happened to me."

However, the album – and its tell-tale sleeve – wasn’t released until 1996. Michael wouldn’t come out publicly until 1998, and, while he wasn’t unambiguous about his sexuality, the press were still wary to label his and Feleppo’s relationship as anything more than “close friends”.

Jesus to a Child received its first public airing at the MTV European Music Awards in 1994, when Michael performed during the ceremony in Berlin. It took another two years to be released as a single, Michael’s first in nearly four years, and initially critics were underwhelmed.

“This doesn’t sound like a very inspired start to the next phase of his career”, bemoaned David Sinclair in The Times in December 1995. “A long, maundering ballad, it suffers from a lack of direction and presence. The bittersweet lyric has a certain romantic appeal, but the message of hope comes swathed in layers of introspection and self-pity: "And what have I learned from all this pain?/I thought I'd never feel the same about anyone or anything again."

Jesus to a Child topped the charts instantly once it was released, in the cold new dawn of 1996. Older hit the record shelves five months later, bringing with it speculation about the Brazilian listed in its small-print. At nearly seven minutes long, it remains the longest song to ever grace the top of the UK Top 40”.

Before wrapping up with some critical reviews of Jesus to a Child, there is this interview archive from when George Michael spoke with 8 Days magazine in 1996 about this return into the spotlight. He had not gone anywhere but, fickle as the music press is, they felt like this was a comeback. Published in May 1996, George Michael discussed, among other things, the first single from Older:

His first single off it, ‘Jesus to a Child’ is, he says, the best thing he’s ever done.

“It’s a special song. It was one of those songs that just felt like it was handed to me. I didn’t have to try very hard. It came naturally. It was recorded over five days but written in just a couple of hours.”

The single is a tribute to a close Brazilian friend, Anselmo Feleppa, who died suddenly from brain haemorrhage two years ago.

“Yes, it’s a sad song but I hope it has a positive message too – I didn’t want it to be all ‘woe is me, woe is me’. It is a song about bereavement. But also about hope.”

And hope has been important to the singer in recent years. For the longest time, there was always someone ready to write him off. They did it when he was with Wham! They did it when he went solo. And they have done it on a regular basis the past few years as the singer fought a long and bitter legal battle to free himself from Sony, his record company, which he claimed treated him like a piece of faulty software”.

PHOTO CREDIT: Brad Branson

I am going to finish with a selection of the critical reviews for Jesus to a Child. If some felt it was too slushy and not a naturally commercial hit, there is no denying the popularity of the song. A number one in the U.K. and multiple countries, I think it has not aged in three decades. Still so poignant and moving. I am also including some retrospective reviews, to show how it is seen so many years after its release:

Barry Walters from The Advocate wrote that on the song, "Michael compares the emotion of a now-deceased lover to that of the Lord, who was, after all, a man. The tone is intensely elegiac, and it doesn't take a stretch of the imagination to consider this a love song to a boyfriend who has died of AIDS."  Larry Flick from Billboard complimented it as a "gorgeous, quietly insinuating pop ballad." He noted that the words "are, by turns, melancholic and romantic and are delivered with delicate ease", adding that "musically, Michael layers light, shuffling percussion with mild acoustic guitar lines and sweetly understated strings." Steve Baltin from Cash Box declared it as a "lush ballad", adding that "he's never sounded more Adult Contemporary than he does here. 'Jesus to a Child' is a hit as surely as some sport will strike this year." Daily Mirror named it "George's 'best-ever' song". Sarah Davis from Dotmusic remarked that in the context of the album, "Jesus to a Child" "sets the scene for Michael's current direction—brooding, mature, reflective but not so downbeat as to disallow the good times." Entertainment Weekly gave it a C−, calling it a "dispirited, tortoise-paced ballad, which drags on for nearly seven minutes". The writer added that "there's only one retort—bring back Andrew Ridgeley!" Caroline Sullivan for The Guardian felt it is "the best thing on the album" and named it Single of the Week. She said, "The tune itself is a Michael ballad in excelsis. The likes of 'Careless Whisper' (1984) and 'A Different Corner' (1986) can now be seen as trial runs for this one, which incorporates every GM hallmark from anguished upward vocal inflections to tasteful acoustic guitar."

Swedish Göteborgsposten concluded that here, Michael "showed that he still mastered the craft." Jan DeKnock from Knight Ridder praised it as a "mesmerizing ballad" and a "stunning effort". Paul Lester from Melody Maker said it is "all bossa nova rhythms and Spanish guitar over which George softly whispers a requiem for his departed lover”.

Victoria Segal from NME viewed it as "irresistibly maudlin." In 2017, Dave Fawbert from ShortList named it "one of the most beautiful songs ever written". Eric Henderson from Slant Magazine wrote, "'Jesus to a Child' is among the most haunting of Michael's ballads, and one whose meaning could only fully emerge after his coming out. A slow-motion flamenco cry, written following the death of his lover, Anselmo Feleppa, 'Jesus to a Child' still remains supernaturally clear-eyed about what it means to love and to lose. "I've been loved so I know just what love is/And the lover that I kissed is always by my side/The lover I still miss was Jesus to a child".

On 8th January, it will be thirty years since Jesus to a Child was released. The first single from George Michael’s third studio album, Older, I think that we all need to give the album more of our attention and time. Jesus to a Child is one of Michael’s most beautiful and important songs. Considering its story, what Michael did with the profits from the song and how it has endured through the years, I have loved it since I first heard it in 1996. A typically astonishing song from a masterful artist…

WHO is very much missed.

FEATURE: Oh, Sister: Bob Dylan’s Desire at Fifty

FEATURE:

 

 

Oh, Sister

 

Bob Dylan’s Desire at Fifty

__________

DESIRE is the incredible…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Bob Dylan performs at the Rolling Thunder Review Concert on 8th December, 1975 at Madison Square Garden in New York City/PHOTO CREDIT: Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images

seventeenth studio album from Bob Dylan, released on 5th January, 1976. It is one of his more collaborative efforts. One associates Bob Dylan’s albums with him being at the forefront pretty much on every song. Not quite the case in terms of the cast of musicians he employed for Desire. All songs were written by Bob Dylan and Jacques Levy, except Sara and One More Cup of Coffee, which were solo Dylan compositions. To mark fifty years of a classic, I am going to come to some features and reviews. So that can better understand and appreciate an album that reached number one in the U.S. There were legal disputes between Dylan and Levy’s estate. The estate argued that they were entitled to compensation over the 2020 sale of Dylan's song catalogue. That was against Universal Music Group. It was ruled that Levy’s estate were entitled to royalties only and no further payments. Not a black mark against the album, it does at least add additional context and layers to Desire. I am going to start off with Classic Rock & Culture and their 2016 examination of Desire:

Coming off the comeback success of the recently released Blood on the Tracks, the greatest singer-songwriter of his generation ushered a huge band into the studio to record its follow-up in July 1975. More than two dozen musicians were initially gathered – a violin player, an accordion and mandolin player, even Eric Clapton at one point – to work on Desire, but by the time it was released on Jan. 16, 1976, its scale had lessened by quite a bit.

But it's still one of Dylan's most ambitious records, built around two sprawling narratives (co-written with Jacques Levy, a New York-born psychologist who also was a theater director in addition to being a lyricist). If that wasn't enough, Dylan framed three of the record's other songs around a screenplay based on a forgotten Joseph Conrad novella. After the highly personal Blood on the Tracks, Desire was a return – concerted or not – to the type of songs he was writing back when he was building his legend more than a decade earlier.

The album's centerpieces were rooted in real-life drama. The album's opening track and highlight, "Hurricane," was based on the plight of boxer Rubin Carter, who was charged with three murders in 1966. A decade later, his case was protested by activists, who claimed that racism drove both his arrest and trial. Dylan picked up on Carter's story and wrote an eight-and-a-half-minute song about him, which was both controversial and eye-opening. (In 1985, Carter was released after a judge found that he didn't receive a fair trial 20 years earlier.) It also – surprisingly, given its subject matter and length – became a Top 40 hit, Dylan's second-to-last ("Gotta Serve Somebody" went Top 25 in 1979).

The other track, "Joey," which opened side two, told the story of mobster Joey Gallo, who was murdered in 1972. And like he did on "Hurricane," Dylan paints a compassionate portrait of his subject. But this one was a bit more troubling, given Gallo's violent past. Still, Dylan lays out a defense over 11 winding minutes, and like some of his songs from an earlier era – most notably "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll" – he lets his vivid storytelling set the scene.

It helped that the band – stripped of its huge origin to a quintet that included Dylan, singer Emmylou Harris and violin player Scarlet Rivera, who gives the album its distinctive sound – locked into the grooves. The nine-song set – which also features the great "Mozambique" and the album-closing "Sara," a love letter of sorts to his crumbling marriage – ended up being his last great album before a period of mediocre shrugs, slight rebounds and embarrassing disappointments left him dangling until a career resurrection at the end of the '90s.

Like the two albums before it, Blood on the Tracks and Planet Waves, Desire hit No. 1. It would be his last chart-topping record until Modern Times reached the spot in 2006. Shortly after recording the album, Dylan took most of the group, along with many of his friends and other guest musicians, on the road for the Rolling Thunder Revue, a caravan of sounds that picked up Desire's gypsy troubadour aesthetic. It would be a while, a long while, before his music would contain this much spirit again”.

Prior to coming to a review for Bob Dylan’s Desire, I want to source a Rolling Stone article from 2016. It frames Desire as this exotic masterpiece, it is an album that contains “a gangster, a boxer, and one of Dylan's most personal songs”. I am not as familiar with this album as other Dylan works, but I have been listening a lot to it recently:

Dylan thrived on chaos and chance while making Desire, a process that was a far cry from the heavily labored recording of his prior LP, 1975’s Blood on the Tracks. One night, Dylan was walking around Greenwich Village and was approached by Jacques Levy, a playwright and director who had previously written songs with Roger McGuinn of the Byrds. Dylan invited Levy to hang out that night at the Other End, a long-standing folkie haunt; later on, at Levy’s apartment, they wrote “Isis.” “He said these magic words, ‘I’d like you to write some stuff for me,'” Levy recalled before his death in 2004. They continued work at Dylan’s summer home in the Hamptons, writing songs with a much different flavor than the reflective tone of his last album. “I guess I never intended to keep that going,” Dylan said. “Sometimes you’ll get what you can out of these things, but you can’t stay there.”

Instead, these were sprawling narratives of outlaws and wanderers, with clearer storylines than anything Dylan had written in more than a decade. They included the cowboy-on-the-run tale “Isis” and “Joey,” the 11-minute saga of fallen gangster Joey Gallo. “I thought ‘Joey’ was a good song,” Dylan said in 1981. “I know no one said much about it.” Perhaps it was overshadowed by “Hurricane,” the story of former boxer Rubin “Hurricane” Carter, who had been convicted of triple murder in 1966. “I read his book and it really touched me,” said Dylan. “I felt that the man was innocent.” Though Dylan and Levy’s lyrics were riddled with factual errors (as was “Joey”), the song helped turn public attention to Carter’s case; his conviction was overturned in 1985.

The album’s atmosphere was also affected by a trip Dylan had taken to the South of France, where he had gone to a “gypsy festival” on his birthday. The gypsy imagery marked songs like “One More Cup of Coffee” and “Durango.” “I think ‘exotic’ is a good word to put on it,” said Levy. The only personal song on Desire is perhaps his most personal ever: “Sara,” a plea to his then-estranged wife, Sara Lownds, to return to him. According to Levy, Lownds showed up at the studio the night they recorded the song. “You could have heard a pin drop,” said Levy. “She was absolutely stunned by it.”

During recording, Dylan kept several studios going at once, filled with musicians (including Dave Mason and Eric Clapton) and non-musicians. Says bassist Rob Stoner, “They had opened up all the adjacent studios to accommodate all these hangers-on and buffet tables. It was just like a huge party. And it wasn’t conducive to getting any work done.”

Eventually, the rooms were cleared and a core group cut the entire album over two long nights. “There was just a level of excitement,” says Stoner. “Sessions were called for 7 p.m., and we only stopped at seven in the morning because that’s when they tow your car on that street. We didn’t want to lose the vibe. No drinking, no drugs, no nothing. It was pure adrenaline”.

Last year, Pitchfork wrote this extensive and incredible review of Desire. Revisiting a “wild slice” of Bob Dylan, Desire is “an album whose air of magic and misdirection remains utterly unique in his catalog”. It is arguable it would be a while until Dylan followed something as brilliant as Desire. Blood on the Track in 1975 and Desire in 1976. Two masterpieces. Arguably, it was not until 1989’s Oh Mercy when he regained some of that form:

Desire is not a subtle album, and it does not commence on a subtle note. “Hurricane”—an audacious eight-and-a-half minute recounting of the 1966 arrest and conviction of the middleweight boxer Rubin “Hurricane” Carter on charges of triple homicide—begins with the interweaving and insinuating strains of Dylan’s acoustic guitar and Rivera’s violin. One of seven songs on Desire co-authored with the playwright Jacques Levy, it employs stage directions to set its scenery: “Pistol shots ring out in the barroom night/Enter Patty Valentine from the upper hall.” Intentional or not, the effect of the dramaturgy is to suggest a not-strictly-speaking-literal recounting of events, introducing the queasy sensation that we are being carried along by storytellers whose commitment to the facts is secondary to their impulse to thrill and desperation to deliver a higher truth.

Indeed, Dylan and Levy take considerable liberties with Carter’s biography and the case against him. He was never the “number one contender for the middleweight crown”; by the time of his arrest, he was circling boxing’s drain toward journeyman status. Neither did his long history of violence outside the ring comport with the beatific “Buddha” portrayed in the lyrics. Still, the song is one of Dylan’s greatest. The story’s grim particulars take root in your imagination: the ultra-violent crime, the summer heat and police lights, the racist cops and all-white jury sealing his fate. The band rolls along, a runaway sea of conga fills and furious energy. By the end no reasonable person could doubt Carter’s innocence, questionable though it may be.

Desire follows one epic with another: “Isis,” a bluesy slow-burn odyssey that considers the relative plusses and minuses of stealing from the dead for a living, like Marty Robbins’ “El Paso” by way of Leonard Cohen’s early frozen-song landscapes. Its account of a two-man grift gone wrong and the women caught in between post-dates Humphrey Bogart and pre-dates Better Call Saul, making for a perfect mid-point in that continuum of heroic losers.

Then the weirdness starts in earnest. “One More Cup of Coffee” and “Oh, Sister” are solemn and prayerful, filled with Old Testament dread and the echoes of an antiquity reaching further back still. “One More Cup of Coffee” seems to describe the morning after a confused night of romance, the narrator asking his erstwhile paramour for a shot of caffeine before he disappears into “the valley below.” “Oh, Sister” is one of several tracks on Desire sung in haunting harmony with Emmylou Harris. With its passionate interpolation of sibling and spiritual mandates, it’s one part Freudian fever dream and one part plea for familial oneness—Neutral Milk Hotel invented in four gorgeously unsettling minutes. “Oh sister, when I come to lie in your arms,” goes the first verse, “You should not treat me like a stranger.” I’m no psychologist, but it’s clear Dylan is dissociating here. The music’s leisurely grandeur only heightens the creeping horror.

[Scene 2: Marin County, CA, 1987. The legendary songwriter, now at a commercial and creative low point, rehearses with an iconic group from his 1960s heyday for a joint tour.]

The union of Dylan and the Grateful Dead was auspicious, but the context was strange. Riding an improbable wave of commercial excitement following their MTV hit “Touch of Grey,” the Dead were playing to the largest crowds of their career. Following a run of desultory ’80s-era albums, Dylan was decidedly not. Without the Dead as his backing band, there was no chance he would be playing stadiums at this dysfunctional juncture. During practices, the Dead requested old Dylan songs they might want to try their hands at playing. Dylan, for once in his life, wasn’t in much of a position to refuse. Preposterously, perfectly, and for all to hear on 1989’s live LP Dylan & The Dead, Jerry Garcia requests “Joey.”

A straggling Gemini-twin to “Hurricane,” Desire’s most indulgent composition whinges on interminably and borderline incomprehensibly about the gangland slaying of an objectively psychotic mafia figure named Joey Gallo. Dylan famously coined the aspirational phrase “to live outside the law you must be honest,” a formulation that “Joey” undermines in every way possible. If you wanted to make the case for “Joey” as his worst song, you might begin with the demented portrayal of Gallo as some manner of saint, whose ahistorical indulgences might be more persuasive had Dylan bothered to string them together with a shred of narrative logic. You might move on to the torpid melody, one of the least memorable he’s ever written. But hey, at least it’s 11 minutes long. The twist is, in the nimble, gleefully amoral hands of the Grateful Dead, this dismal composition became supple and agreeable. Somehow the Dead brought “Joey” back to life. There’s your graverobbers right there.

Desire’s final third leans further into Dylan’s obsessions with love, death, ecstasy, and the liminal spaces between. “Hot chili peppers in the blistering sun!” he exclaims on the opening line of “Romance in Durango,” a legitimately goose-skin inducing Tex-Mex boogie replete with the thrill of adventure and the promise of violence, an invigorating update to his 1973 soundtrack to Sam Peckinpah’s Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid. Its lyrics cross the distance between total fantasy and something like a true accounting of events. By the time of the lead cowboy’s inevitable sacrifice-by-desperado, he is so discombobulated that he begins interrogating the libretto itself: "Was it my hand that held the gun?” and “Can it be that I am slain?”

“Black Diamond Bay,” another long story song on an album full of them, is remarkably tuneful, ruefully ominous, and utterly batshit. I have been listening to it for two decades, and I still have no clue what is happening. There is a Greek man, a woman in a Panama hat, a soldier, a tiny man, a volcano. Portends of suicide and disaster percolate: scheming gamblers and sunken islands, betrayals and broken bonds, the kind of Book of Revelation stuff Dylan would get into full-time soon enough. Through some mysterious alchemy, its incoherence yields real beauty, abetted by an incredibly committed performance from his ace backing band—led by bassist Rob Stoner, another musician who figured prominently in Dylan’s career and then seemed to disappear. Try to grasp the details of “Black Diamond Bay,” or just let the imagery carry you away. Like everything on Desire, it’s all misdirection and magic anyway.

[Scene 3: Columbia Records recording studio, midtown Manhattan, 1975. An estranged wife watches her husband sing the song that he thinks will make all the difference. Will it matter?]

Album closer “Sara” is by orders of magnitude the most explicitly biographical song the notoriously private Dylan has ever released. He recounts in forensic detail the fraying of his union to Sara Lownds, his longtime wife and the mother of his children. Even by the contemporary standards of full-frontal psychic nudity, its oversharing is extremely uncomfortable. He conjures their babies playing on the beach. He marinates in his own mythology: “Stayin’ up for days in the Chelsea Hotel/Writin’ ‘Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands’ for you,” name-checking the sprawling closer of 1966’s Blonde on Blonde. He howls her name again and again: “Sara, Sara/Whatever made you want to change your mind?” Talk about blood on the tracks”.

I do hope that there are plenty of retrospective features about Desire ahead of its fiftieth anniversary on 5th January. Undeniably one of Bob Dylan’s greatest albums, it has this cinematic, surreal and sometimes personal narrative. A slight shift in terms of sound and direction, perhaps the greatest moments come from the collaborations with Jacques Levy. Black Diamond Bay and Isis being particular standouts. Fifty years later, and Desire still stands out as one of Bob Dylan’s most distinct and extraordinary albums. For those who feel it is one of Dylan’s lesser or less significant albums, I would say to you that Desire is…

WORTH a listen.

FEATURE: Kate Bush: Them Heavy People: The Extraordinary Characters in Her Songs: ‘The Concierge’ (Get Out of My House)/Lily, Gabriel, Raphael, Michael, Uriel (Lily)

FEATURE:

 

 

Kate Bush: Them Heavy People: The Extraordinary Characters in Her Songs

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush photographed for NME on 13th October, 1982 in London/PHOTO CREDIT: Anton Corbijn/Contour by Getty Images

 

‘The Concierge’ (Get Out of My House)/Lily, Gabriel, Raphael, Michael, Uriel (Lily)

__________

THIS new feature…

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in a promotional photo for The Red Shoes in 1993

finds me pairing characters from Kate Bush’s songs. Her music is packed with these interesting people and characters. I will move to different albums for future editions. In this one, I am pairing The Dreaming with The Red Shoes. For The Dreaming, I am choosing ‘The Concierge’. I shall move to an eponymous character from one of The Red Shoes’ standout tracks. Before that, I am investigating one of Kate Bush’s most influential songs. In terms of this year. I have said before how some of the more experimental, bold and simply out-there music has been influenced by this song. Or The Dreaming. I am going to expand on that theory for a future feature. However, I listen to Get Out of My House and I can detect links to artists like ROSALÍA. Charli xcx for sure. I will end this half by speaking about her. ‘The Concierge’ is essentially Kate Bush casting herself in the song. I am going to come to an interview where she discussed the influence. However, 1982’s The Dreaming has a lot of dark psychology and dread. Kate Bush sunk everything into this album in terms of her time and patience. Working extremely long albums and moving between various studios, it was an exhausting process. War, cigarette smoke, tension and those at the point of danger and death. However, there are songs where Bush is open and personal. My abiding feeling about The Dreaming is this is Kate Bush truly going beyond the realms of the mainstream. An album she looked back on as a crazy time where she sort of went mad, Get Out of My House is the maddest song on a mad album! If some see if is as psychological terror, it is also horror, as it was inspired by Stephen King’s The Shining (1977). The novel was a Stanley Kubrick-directed film that was released in 1980. Whereas Bush drew heavily from film and T.V. for her songs, this was a rare occasion where literature was a driving force. Not the last time (Cloudbusting from Hounds of Love and The Sensual World from the album of the same name are other examples).

I guess ‘The Concierge’ is this spirit. Not a physical presence in this possessed house. It is Kate Bush as this ghost-like spirit warding off intruders and unwelcome guests. If some feel it is a direct nod to The Shining, I sort of get it is about her reaction to the press and her label. Maybe too demanding or critical, this is an artist still in twenties pushing back. Confined and claustrophobic, Bush delivers one of her most charged and exhilarating vocals. It is the vocal layering and the structure of the lyrics. Bush singing a line and then a backing vocal delivers an explosive single word. The urgency and terror through the song is Bush as this horror auteur. When writing for the Kate Bush Club Newsletter in October 1982, she said this about Get Out of My House: “As in ‘Alien’, the central characters are isolated, miles (or light years) away from anyone or anything, but there is something in the place with them. They’re not sure what, but it isn’t very nice. The setting for this song continues the theme – the house which is really a human being, has been shut up – locked and bolted, to stop any outside forces from entering. The person has been hurt and has decided to keep everybody out”. The Shining was one of the first books that truly terrified her. Bush revealed how the track changed quite a bit. Originally a lot longer than the album version (5:25). The second-longest song on The Dreaming (one second shorter than Pull Out the Pin), Bush said this to Company when they interviewed her in 1982: “The idea is that as more experiences actually get to you, you start learning how to defend yourself from them. The human can be seen as a house where you start putting up shutters at the windows and locking the doors – not letting in certain things. I think a lot of people are like this – they don’t hear what they don’t want to hear, don’t see what they don’t want to see”. Perhaps this was Bush taking on so much and trying to put out intrusive and bad people. It is a fascinating song to unpick! I think about her debut single, Wuthering Heights, and the ghost of Catherine Eaernshwaw trying to break through a window to get to Heathcliff. Gothic and frightening, if Wuthering Heights is more like someone trying to grab someone away, Get Out of My House is this chainsaw-wielding spirit. That pre-chorus where Bush sings “I am the concierge chez-moi, honey/Won’t letcha in for love, nor money” in this affected vocal. Kind of sexy and intense at the same time, it is like she is providing this measured and patient warning before the true explosion begins: “My home, my joy/I’m barred and bolted and I/(Won’t let you in)/(Get out of my house!)”.

The song intensifies and builds. Those not heading her warning are feeling the full affect. This person throwing up the shutters and bolting the door. Yelling out to those trying to get in: “This house is full of m-m-my mess/(Slamming)”. There are some extraordinary vocals on the song. Bush’s voice at once smoky and alluring; then it switches to this demonic and ecstatic scream. Paddy Bush providing backing vocals. Some ‘drum talk’ from the prodigious Esmail Sheikh. Perhaps the song’s defining moment comes when Bush and Paul Hardiman ‘eeyore’ together (as Bush changes “into the mule”). Referencing a moment in Disney’s Pinocchio where boys are turned into donkeys on Pleasure Island, a trap run by the sinister Coachman where misbehaving kids are cursed to become donkeys for slave labour; Pinocchio's friend, Lampwick, fully transforms, while Pinocchio escapes with donkey ears and a tail. This idea of Bush’s concierge kicking out these unwanted guests by transfmorgidtiny into a donkey. Like an animal letting out a cry or roar, it is the moment this person – either dead or alive – is at their most intense. In 202, Dreams of Orgonon discussed the track and its deeper meanings. Trigger warning to anyone reading the full post as it does discuss sexual and domestic abuse:

Uncertainty pervades “Get Out of My House,” The Dreaming’s brutal culmination. Catalyzed by its beleaguering yet urgent drumbeat and a lacerating lead guitar part from Alan Murphy, it is confrontational and purgative in its spectacular vocal menagerie, all in dialogue (often call-and-response) with one another yet seemingly not of an accord, as the bombastic and tremulous delivery of “when you left, the door was…” is answered by the siren-like, low-mixed B.V.’s crying “SLAMMING!” Adhering mostly to 4/4, “Get Out of My House” revolves through dizzying sequences of repetitive chord changes, with its first verse in G# melodic minor, confined to a progression of i-IV (G# minor – C#), moving to the natural minor in Verse Two with a progression of i-iv (G# minor – C # minor), signaling a domination of brutal repetition and minor keys without catharsis. With one of Bush’s most agonized vocals carrying the refrain (a genuinely harrowing and throaty “GET OUT OF MY HOUSE!”), the song emits agony, trauma, and expulsion.

All this is clear-cut and blunt. The house is protecting itself from violation. Bush’s defense is cathartic madness, flamboyantly hee-hawing her way out of the song (evocative of Jack Nichsolon’s brays of “Daaaaaaannyyyyyyy!” near the end of The Shining). Trauma is unleashed as a weapon against its instigator. The house has a chance to fight back at last, or realizes it has the gumption to. The sexual abuse metaphors don’t need to be expanded on greatly — having a woman scream for her freedom from a hostile man or, chillingly, say “no stranger’s feet will enter me” speaks for itself. It is frightening and immediate, even moreso than “Breathing,” and a culmination of Bush’s sometimes half-baked and flawed but usually noble revolutionary instincts

Backing tracks laid down at Townhouse Studios, Shepherd’s Bush, London in May ’81. Overdubs recorded at Odyssey Studios, London in August ’81, and at Advision Studios, Fitzrovia, London from January through March ’81. Mixed at Advision from March through May ’81”.

Before we close this first side, it is worth noting how this song has taken on a new light in 2025. I mentioned Charli xcx earlier. Her incredible track, House, which features John Cale delivering this dark and gravitas-filled spoken part. Then we witness this explosion and change of tone. Cale’s delivery is wonderful. Line I can see influenced by Get Out of My House: “Let it be perfect/Am I living in another world?/Another world I created/For what?”. Charli xcx then mirrors the same sort of dark and demonic tone Kate Bush does in Get Out of My House during the chorus: “I think I'm gonna die in this house”. Many fans noted the similarities not only in terms of the title of both songs. Charli xcx’s House will feature on the soundtrack to Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights soundtrack. The fact it is Wuthering Heights obviously has this Kate Bush connection. I can see House picking up from Get Out of My House and applying it to Wuthering Heights. Maybe Charli xcx embodying Catherine Earnshaw. The endless relevance of Kate Bush and how she is inspiring and shaping modern-day queens. Get Out of My House is perhaps not Bush’s most emotionally raw track, yet it is her most violent and frightening. Never performed live and not released as a single, it is one of those what-ifs when you imagine how she would stage this song. Taking inspiration from Stephen King’s The Shining, it is this under pressure artist taking advice and criticism in equal measures. People pushing and pulling her. This is almost a musical retaliation. Bush wanting her privacy and space and letting out a more animalistic side. Bush, as the person whose house is under threat, The Concierge, is at her most exhilarating here. Phenomenal production and a spellbinding vocal, this is one of the standouts from, I think, her most influential modern album. In terms of how influential it is to contemporary artists.

In terms of emotion and the sonic palette, Lily is a lot warmer. If Get Out of My House is all wind, rain, fire and shades of black, red and brown, Lily is warmer and more spiritual. Yellows, oranges and blues perhaps. This is an occasion of Kate Bush naming a song after a real-life person. A friend of hers. Faith, spirituality and realms beyond the physical and earthly are a big part of Bush’s musical tapestry. Woven from paganism, Celtic myth, Eastern mysticism, and a deep connection to nature, exploring themes of transformation, the divine feminine, consciousness, the unknown and mythologised, Bush has also covered and explored broader spiritual concepts like reincarnation and witchcraft. Although Lily is this mantra and prayer that Bush used as the opening song for her 2014 residency, Before the Dawn, its title nods to the late great Lily Conford. Bush immortalised Cornford because she was touched and impressed by her huge knowledge and intuition and kindness. Cornford was a proponent of mental colour healing. If considered pseudoscience by many, mental colour healing, or chromotherapy, is a holistic practice using colours and light to influence mood, energy, and mental well-being, based on the idea that different hues carry specific vibrational energies affecting the mind and body, often linked to chakras and ancient traditions. The idea of religion, spirituality and different beliefs in Kate Bush’s work could have its own chapter. Raised a Roman Catholic, Bush was never especially religious. However, she has said in interviews how, early in her career, she was on a mission from God. This mission to record music and be a success. Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) is Bush talking to this divine spirit. Imploring that men and women can swap places to better understand one another. From Jesus and Gurdjieff in The Kick Inside’s Them Heavy People (who I will reference in a future part of this series), to Buddhist mantras in Strange Phenomena (from The Kick Inside again), to divine experiences and catching a glimpse of God in Suspended in Gaffa (from The Dreaming) to spiritual struggles you can hear on songs like Hounds of Love’s Cloudbusting, Bush has never espoused one philosophy or belief.

Her mention of astrology, the paranormal, the mystical and mythical and New Age philosophies has definitely influenced other artists. In terms of not being dogmatic and single-faith. Exploring different cultures and religions, I think Lily is much more personal. Bush putting her faith in the hands of this extraordinary woman who Bush befriended in the 1990s. The Red Shoes was released in 1993. Lily is the sixth song from her seventh studio album. Interestingly, it follows The Song of Solomon. This song uses  lines and themes directly from the biblical book, known for its intense, sensual poetry between lovers, often interpreted allegorically as Christ and the Church. But celebrated by many as pure human love. I am adapting that from an A.I.-generated search, though there are fan theories about this song. This interpretation argues that the track is “about The Song of Solomon, itself about a man's passionate love for a woman expressed through words, and her love which she gives him physically. "Comfort me with apples, for I am sick of love" "give me your poetry in motion...and sing it with a kiss". There is spirituality and divinity running through the opening verse of Lily: “Oh thou, who givest sustenance to the universe/From whom all things proceed/To whom all things return/Unveil to us the face of the true spiritual sun/Hidden by a disc of golden light/That we may know the truth/And do our whole duty/As we journey to thy sacred feet”. Bush sings about life blowing a hole right through her. Rather than seek comfort in escapism or succumbing to addiction and darkness, Kate Bush turns to this spiritual healer. The lines, “Gabriel before me/Raphael behind me/Michael to my right/Uriel on my left side/In the circle of fire” seem to have biblical connotations.

Michael and Raphael are prominent archangels mentioned in The Bible, though Raphael appears only in the Deuterocanonical Book of Tobit, considered scripture by Catholics and Orthodox but not Protestants. Michael is the warrior angel, leader of God's armies, mentioned in Daniel and Revelation, fighting Satan and defending God's people. Raphael is the healer and guide, helping Tobias in Tobit, using a fish's organs to cure blindness and bind a demon, embodying God's healing power. Gabriel is the name of an archangel in The Bible, known for delivering crucial messages from God, such as announcing the births of John the Baptist and Jesus. Rather than Lily being this healer who can cure Bush and lead her to the light, she is instead providing guidance. The song is this dialogue between Lily Cornford and Kate Bush. Lily very sagely saying to take what she says, “with a pinch of salt”. This plea to “protect yourself with fire”. Protect yourself with fire could refer to using the principles found in the Bible, often associated with the Holy Spirit and divine power, for spiritual protection. Although I am leaning a lot on the feedback and suggestions from search engines, I wanted to go deeper. I never connected Lily too heavily with The Bible and religion. I always assumed it was more about faith healing and a more general spirituality. However, the biblical imagery seems to be about Bush connecting with faith. Those written about in The Bible who were tested or those who endured these struggles. Lily Cornford sadly died in 2003. However, and thanks to Kate Bush Encyclopedia, we can discover more about this wonderful person:  “Together with Joseph Leech she established the Maitreya School of Healing in 1974. Lily has investigated many different aspects of healing but her primary area of interest was in direct, color healing-using her mind and her heart and her own hands directly with people.”.

If Get Out of My House is about dark spirits and is more demonic, Lily is more about angels and trying to find light and strength. For the Kate Bush Club Magazine in 1993, Bush said this about the wonderful Lily Cornford: “She believes in the powers of Angels and taught me to see them in a different light, that they exist to help human beings and are very powerful as well as benevolent forces. She taught me some prayers that I found very useful (particularly in my line of work), she helped me a lot and I guess I wanted to pass on her message about our Angels – we all have them, we only have to ask for help”. Before wrapping up, I have sourced before an interesting article from 2014, that discusses Kate Bush’s Shivaism, Dionysian and druid philosophy, and it opens by referencing Lily: “This song lyrically is an explicit magical ceremony, a literal invocation/initiation, in the style of the Rosicurician Orders, à la the Golden Dawn school of the western magical tradition. “Gabriel is before me, Raphael behind me ….. In the circle of fire”. This is key to understanding Kate. She has her own cult, her own mystery school tradition. Her unique strand of Shivaism, Dionysian and Druid philosophy, loosely wrapped up in a song and dance tradition. It’s part magical realism, overt nature spirituality and art house”. In future editions, I will reference real-life characters in songs from Kate Bush. Whether directly name-checking real figures or fictional people, the songs of Kate Bush are replete with these wonderful and curious people. Characters that are not necessarily human. The otherworldly and divine.

I love Lily, as it is this combination of a real-life friend of Kate Bush’s, though, there are biblical references and figures from The Bible. I have not mentioned Uriel. Though not referenced in The Bible, he is mentioned in apocryphal texts such as the Book of Enoch and 2 Esdras. He is identified as a prominent archangel, the ‘angel of wisdom’ or ‘fire of God’, who warns Noah of the Flood and enlightens the prophet Ezra. Lily has the rare honour of featuring on three Kate Bush albums. The original version from 1993’s The Red Shoes. A reworked (and arguably stronger) version on 2011’s Director’s Cut. It also appears on the live album for Before the Dawn, released in 2016. The Before the Dawn version has this rocking and harder edge compared to the version on The Red Shoes. Kicking off this feature with two incredible central characters and a few biblical support acts, it allows me to explore Kate Bush songs more deeply. Shining a light on corners that people might not have considered before. I am not sure what characters will feature in the second edition, though I think I will definitely go to The Kick Inside. I may even pair that with a character from Aerial or even Never for Ever. There is such a vast array to choose from! I must say a huge thanks to Joan LeMay. Initially, I was going to write a Kate Bush book that looked at characters in her songs and connected them with musical and culture references and inspirations. Chronological, album by album, I was going to approach each album like a film. The cast of characters in each. I may instead write a book about The Kick Inside ahead of its fiftieth anniversary in 2028. Quantum Criminals: Ramblers, Wild Gamblers, and Other Sole Survivors from the Songs of Steely Dan came from LeMay. Noticing the diverse characters in the Steely Dan world and that notion of exploring them. The text was written by Alex Pappademas, whilst Joan LeMay produced the beautiful artwork. Bringing these Steely Dan characters to life. Rather than replicate Joan LeMay’s idea, I am going to diversify and build in other elements for future parts. Connect cultural touchstones, historical moments and influences (musical and otherwise) and incorporate them into these character profiles. My exploration of the wonderful people ion the songs of…

A peerless artist and true original.

FEATURE: Groovelines: The Pogues (ft. Kirsty MacColl) – Fairytale of New York

FEATURE:

 

 

Groovelines

 

The Pogues (ft. Kirsty MacColl) – Fairytale of New York

__________

THIS is a Christmas classic…

IN THIS PHOTO: Kirsty MacColl and Shane MacGowan/PHOTO CREDIT: Tim Roney/Getty Images

that does not get talked about as much as others. Written by the late Shane MacGown and Jem Finer, it features the wonderful vocals of Kirst MacColl. It is sad that the two artists who sing on the track are no longer with us. However, there is this timelessness when it comes to Fairytale of New York. Released on 23rd Nov ember, 1987, this song went through a troubled development. Losing its original female vocalist and with these aborted attempts, it was eventually completed in October 1987. I want to start out with an article from The Guardian published in 2012. They look at the story behind Fairytale of New York. I am not including the whole feature, though there are parts of it that I feel are relavtrna and iolluminating:

That song, Fairytale of New York by the Pogues, has just been reissued to mark its 25th anniversary; it has already re-entered the Top 20 every December since 2005, and shows no sign of losing its appeal. It is loved because it feels more emotionally "real" than the homesick sentimentality of White Christmas or the bullish bonhomie of Merry Xmas Everybody, but it contains elements of both and the story it tells is an unreal fantasy of 1940s New York dreamed up in 1980s London. The story of the song is a yarn in itself: how it took more than two years to get right and became, over time, far bigger than the people who made it. As Pogues accordion-player James Fearnley says: "It's like Fairytale of New York went off and inhabited its own planet."

Appropriately for a song that pivots on an argument, there is disagreement as to where the idea originated. Fearnley, who recently published a memoir, Here Comes Everybody: The Story of the Pogues, remembers manager Frank Murray suggesting that they cover the Band's 1977 song Christmas Must be Tonight. "It was an awful song. We probably said, fuck that, we can do our own."

Singer Shane MacGowan maintains that Elvis Costello, who produced the Pogues' 1985 masterpiece Rum, Sodomy & the Lash, wagered the singer that he couldn't write a Christmas duet to sing with bass player (and Costello's future wife) Cait O'Riordan.

Either way, a Christmas song was a good idea. "For a band like the Pogues, very strongly rooted in all kinds of traditions rather than the present, it was a no-brainer," says banjo-player and co-writer Jem Finer. Not to mention the fact that MacGowan was born on Christmas Day 1957.

The Pogues had formed amid the grimy pubs and bedsits of London's King's Cross in 1982. Although their name ("Pogue mahone" means "kiss my arse" in Gaelic) and many of their influences were Irish, most of the band weren't, and their interest in folk songs and historical narratives roamed far and wide. They aspired to timelessness.

Finer first tried writing a song about a sailor missing his wife at Christmas but that was dashed on the rocks by his own wife, Marcia Farquhar, who called it "corny", says Finer. "So I said OK, you suggest a storyline and I'll write another one. The basic plotline came from her: this idea of a couple falling on hard times and coming eventually to some redemption." He says there's a "secret history" to the story: "a true story of some mutual friends living in New York."

MacGowan, whose contribution to this piece comes in the form of a dialogue written by long-term partner and biographer Victoria Mary Clarke, declines to elaborate: "Really, the story could apply to any couple who went anywhere and found themselves down on their luck."

While Finer retained the uptempo reel from his abandoned maritime tale, MacGowan worked on the slower verses and chorus. The singer had never seen New York but it was on his mind. As the Pogues toured Europe in autumn 1985, they almost wore out a video of Once Upon a Time in America, Sergio Leone's epic tale of Jewish mobsters in interwar New York. (Ennio Morricone's elegiac title theme seeped into Fairytale's opening melody: don't all good fairytales start with "Once upon a time"?)

In Here Comes Everybody, Fearnley writes: "A stable perception was never reachable as to whether Shane was a genius or a fucking idiot." There is the public image of MacGowan as a wayward alcoholic with a bombsite of a mouth and a wheezing ghost of a laugh. Then there is the clever, diligent craftsman who sweated for two years to make Fairytale of New York perfect.

The first demo was recorded by Costello at the same time as The cinematic romance of A Rainy Night in Soho, MacGowan's first song to draw on his love of Frank Sinatra and Judy Garland. When he brought that song into the studio in early 1986, Fearnley remembers: "He meant business, much more than before. It was awe-inspiring to see him in the rehearsal room with his suit on and an attitude."

A short time later, in February 1986, the Pogues finally made it to New York itself, to start their first ever US tour, and they weren't disappointed. "It was a hundred times more exciting in real life than we ever dreamed it could be!" says MacGowan. "It was even more like New York than the movies!" After their debut at a club called the World, their backstage visitors included Peter Dougherty, who came to direct the video for Fairytale of New York, and actor Matt Dillon, who appeared in it. MacGowan remembers Dillon, the rising star of Rumble Fish and The Outsiders, kissing his hand and saying: "I dig your shit, man, I love your shit!"

It was a year later that Murray approached U2 producer Steve Lillywhite to helm the next Pogues album. The sessions at London's RAK studios in the unusually hot summer of 1987 went so well that the band decided to have another crack at Fairytale. When they said they were struggling to blend MacGowan and Finer's sections, Lillywhite's solution was absurdly simple: record them separately and edit them together later. "It was a beautiful time," says Lillywhite. "I got the Pogues when they were really firing and before too much craziness got involved. As long as I got them early in the day it was great."

Fearnley was tasked with arranging the strings (a job completed by Fiachra Trench) and colouring in the scene- setting piano part, drawing on Tom Waits, Aaron Copland and Leonard Bernstein's score for On the Waterfront. "I wanted to get American music into it," he explains. MacGowan originally wanted the orchestra to interpolate the refrain from Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas but "Phil Chevron [Pogues guitarist] told me that was a bad idea. He was right."

Only one hurdle remained. Cait O'Riordan had left the band in October 1986, leaving nobody to complete the duet. "I think at some point almost any female with a voice was a contender," Finer jokes, mentioning fellow RAK clients Chrissie Hynde (feasible) and Suzi Quatro (less so). "One person I certainly hadn't thought of was Kirsty [MacColl] and I don't think anyone else had."

"To be honest they weren't 100% convinced that Kirsty was the right person," says Lillywhite, who was married to MacColl. She was well-liked but her solo career was becalmed due to stage fright and contractual problems. Lillywhite suggested recording MacColl's part at his home studio over the weekend and seeing what the band thought. "I spent a whole day on Kirsty's vocals. I made sure every single word had exactly the right nuance. I remember taking it in on Monday morning and playing it to the band and they were just dumbfounded."

But MacGowan, who was so impressed that he re-did his own vocals, insists: "I was madly in love with Kirsty from the first time I saw her on Top Of The Pops. She was a genius in her own right and she was a better producer than he was! She could make a song her own and she made Fairytale her own." (Since MacColl's tragic death in 2000, her part has been taken by singers including Sinéad O'Connor, Cerys Matthews, Katie Melua, Victoria Clarke and Jem Finer's daughter Ella.)

In the finished version the story finally acquires the ring of truth, but it's still teasingly elliptical. Does the argument take place after the man leaves the drunk tank or does the whole song unfold in his sozzled head? After all, Once Upon a Time in America is told almost entirely in flashback. And while the "cars big as bars" and the singing of Galway Bay (a 1948 hit for Bing Crosby, beloved of Irish immigrants) place the action in the 1940s, MacGowan suggests that the characters are much older, remembering their glory days.

And can we trust the narrator anyway? "The guy is a bum who is living on the street," says MacGowan. "And he's just won on a horse at the unlikely odds of 18-to-one, so you're not even sure he is telling the truth." He says that both characters are versions of himself. "I identified with the man because I was a hustler and I identified with the woman because I was a heavy drinker and a singer. I have been in hospitals on morphine drips, and I have been in drunk tanks on Christmas Eve."

The song's brilliance is sealed by its final verse when MacGowan protests, "I could have been someone", and MacColl shoots back: "Well, so could anyone." Then MacColl accuses, "You took my dreams from me," and MacGowan responds, with all the warmth he's been withholding: "I kept them with me babe/I put them with my own." So in its final iteration the chorus is no longer a tauntingly ironic reminder of better times but the tentative promise of reconciliation. "You really don't know what is going to happen to them," says MacGowan. "The ending is completely open."

The Pogues shot the video in New York during Thanksgiving week. The air was bitterly cold and fairy lights twinkled in the trees. Matt Dillon played the NYPD officer who arrests MacGowan but he was too nervous to manhandle him until the shivering singer snapped: "Just kick the shit out of me and throw me in the cell and then we can be warm!" Contrary to the lyrics, the NYPD didn't have a choir, so Dougherty hired the force's pipe band instead. When it turned out that they didn't know Galway Bay, they mouthed the only lyrics they all knew: the Mickey Mouse Club chant”.

It is clear that Fairytale of New York is unorthodox. In terms of its lyrics and sentiments, it differs from the more traditional songs. The argumentative and occasionally bitter nature of the song clashing against the more optimistic and wholesome images projected in Christmas songs. However, that is what makes Fairytale of New York so special. In 2023, The New York Times published a feature about this enduring classic:

Fairytale of New York” was a departure, quite literally in one sense: If England was for seeking work, America was for seeking dreams. (“They’ve got cars big as bars/ They’ve got rivers of gold.”) It was also a move away from documenting the reality of their lives. Mr. MacGowan had apparently never been to New York when he started writing it but dreamed up an enchanted place and a down-on-their-luck couple who’d tried to make it there and failed.

The song’s title was inspired by a novel of the same name by the Irish American writer J.P. Donleavy. Some of what we know about the song is somewhere between fact and lore: There was either a bet, from Elvis Costello to Mr. MacGowan, that he couldn’t write a downbeat Christmas song, or the band’s managers had simply appealed to them to write a hit. Jem Finer, the band’s banjoist, initially wrote the music as a maudlin sailor’s song, but his wife, Marcia Farquhar, nudged him toward the version we know. Mr. MacGowan wrote the lyrics in a feverish struggle with pneumonia in Malmo, Sweden.

The lines Mr. MacGowan trades with the singer Kirsty MacColl are as much fencing (“You took my dreams from me”) as dance (“I kept them with me, babe/I put them with my own”). It’s as intimate and uneasy as hearing an argument through thin walls, and yet it’s epic, too, conjuring the snowbound canyon streets of Manhattan. It rejects the Christmas song as snow globe fantasia as effusively as it rejects the delusion of youthful, dewy-eyed romance.

That it is a duet is a perfect expression of another thing that made the Pogues great. The magnetic force of opposites: punk and folk; love and destruction; beauty and brutal honesty; falling snow and pools of vomit.

It’s a fairy tale in the manner of the Brothers Grimm, an unsparing lesson in how life is rather than how it should be. Years wasted in dead-end, badly paid jobs. The self-obliteration that follows in the free time you do have. The falling-apart surroundings and the vulnerability of needing someone else (“Can’t make it all alone/I’ve built my dreams around you”). It’s a song of exile, too. But it’s not necessary to leave the country you’re from for it to mean something to you. You don’t even have to leave home — age will do it.

Some of the London-Irish pubs of the ’80s that the Pogues would have known are still the same today, but the workplaces and digs around them have changed — new precariousness for newer migrants. And “Fairytale” is no longer a cult, alternative Christmas song; it’s ubiquitous. But there are still moments when a line from it can steal upon my soul (“When the band finished playing/They howled out for more”) and remind me of the lesson I first half-wittingly gleaned as a kid in that record store. The life in all of us is worthy of a song”.

I am ending with a review of Fairytale of New York from The Mix Review that looks more at the composition and the complexity of the music. In terms of its structure, it is not as straightforward as you might imagine. One of the best Christmas songs, I guess we need to finish by talking about some of the controversy:

First off, the song’s structure is unusual in many respects. To be honest, the traditional ‘verse/prechorus/chorus’ section labels feel a bit inadequate here, but just for the sake of discussion let’s say we have verses at 0:10 (“It was Christmas Eve”), 0:44 (“Got on a lucky one”), and 2:48 (“I could have been someone”); prechoruses at 1:29 (“They got cars big as bars”), 1:41 (“You were handsome”), and 2:15 (“You’re a bum, you’re a punk”); and choruses (“The boys of the NYPD choir”) at 1:53, 2:27, and 3:13. Broadly speaking, that leaves us with the following basic song layout:

  • Verse 1

  • Verse 2

  • Prechorus 1

  • Prechorus 2

  • Chorus 1

  • Instrumental based on the Prechorus

  • Prechorus 3

  • Chorus 2

  • Instrumental based on the Verse

  • Verse 3

  • Chorus 3

  • Outro

Honestly, I can’t think of any other song quite like it, and things are made even more unorthodox by the transition from slow 4/4 simple time for the opening two verses into a faster 12/8 compound time of the remainder of the song – in particular, I love the way this recasts the verse material in compound time at 2:48. Not that this kind of tempo/metre gearshift is uncommon in the folk music styles from which The Pogues drew so much inspiration. It’s just that this tactic has so rarely made its way into the charts! There’s also a metric flexibility here that I strongly associate with the folk-music traditions of many different cultures. For example, The Pogues aren’t afraid to drop a beat from the end of the second verse, thereby starting the little intro recap at 1:17 a little earlier than expected – or indeed to drop three beats from the end of that intro recap compared with its initial two-bar statement at the very start of the song. And then when the verse section repeats in its compound-time version at 2:48, it’s extended by a beat instead, effectively building anticipation towards the final chorus.

I also like how the chorus always feels like it’s going to be four bars long, but each time its fourth bar is kind of stolen to be the first bar of the subsequent song section, in other words the instrumental prechorus at 1:53, the instrumental verse at 2:36, and the outro at 3:22. And, in a sense, this same technique is at play with that shortened intro recap, where the intro section’s original second-beat move to the tonic D major chord is repurposed in the recap as the first downbeat of the 12/8 section.

Another great feature of this song is that, although it only uses pretty straightforward DGA, and Bm chords, their harmonic rhythm (ie. the rhythm with which those chords change) greatly improves the musical impact and interest. A lot of songwriters aren’t very imaginative in this respect, sticking to some kind of regular rhythmic pattern for the whole timeline. Maybe they’ll use a simple chord-per-bar scheme, as in Harry Styles’ 'As It Was'; or two bars per chord like Wham’s ‘Last Christmas’; or two chords per bar like Imagine Dragons’ 'Radioactive'. And there’s an army of songs that alternate straight and pushed chords – just off the top of my head I can think of Billie Eilish’s 'Everything I Wanted', Ed Sheeran’s 'Thinking Out Loud', Otis Redding’s '(Sittin' On) The Dock Of The Bay', the Spin Doctors’ ‘Two Princes’, and Tracy Chapman’s ‘Fast Car’.

The Pogues, on the other hand, are much more inventive, contrasting the general chord-per-bar feel of their verses with the faster chord-per-beat prechoruses, but also speeding up the chord changes towards the end of each verse section as a kind of structural punctuation as well. The chorus is my favourite moment in this regard, however, with a cool sort of accelerating harmonic rhythm where a full bar of G is followed by two half bars of D and Bm and then a chord-per-beat rhythm for the remaining DG and A chords.

So all in all, I think I can see where MacGowan was coming from when he referred to this song as the band’s ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, because I think there’s a lot of musical nuance hiding under its veneer of simple Christmas singalong”.

The controversy around Fairytale of New York centres on homophobic slurs and strong language used in the lyrics, depicting a drunken, bitter argument between a man and woman, leading to debates about artistic freedom, censorship, and cultural sensitivity, with the BBC controversially censoring or editing the words for radio play, despite listener backlash and The Pogues’ defence of the song's authentic, albeit harsh, portrayal of marginalised characters. Whatever you think about the homophobic content of the song and whether Fairytale of New York should remain unedited, there is no denying the fact it is a classic. One that I feel is as strong as any other Christmas song. Even though it is not going to win any chart battles, it is this alternative favourite that it has been great learning more about. Even though Shane MacGown and Kirsty MacColl are no longer here, their legacy and incredible voices remain. Their chemistry on the track is clear. They released something magical thirty-eighty years ago. Go and put on Fairytale of New York and…

PLAY it loud.

FEATURE: The Digital Mixtape: Emma Bunton at Fifty

FEATURE:

 

 

The Digital Mixtape

PHOTO CREDIT: Mark Hayman

 

Emma Bunton at Fifty

__________

I have to mark…

IN THIS PHOTO: Emma Bunton alongside her fellow Spice Girls, Geri Halliwell, Mel C, Victoria Adams and Mel B, in 1996/PHOTO CREDIT: Universal Music Group

the upcoming fiftieth birthday of a music giant. One-fifth of the legendary Spice Girls, Emma Bunton has also released some incredible solo music. Though people will know her best for her work alongside her fellow Spice Girls. There is hope that the quintet will reform one day. Do some more live work. I am not sure what it will take for them all to be on the same page, but you feel something might happen soon. The group’s debut single, Wannabe, was released on 8th July, 1996, so there may be some thirtieth anniversary celebration. As Emma Bunton turns fifty on 21st January, I have assembled a mixtape of some of the best Spice Girls moments and some solo cuts. Before that, AllMusic provide a biography of Emma Bunton and her fascinating career:

English singer/songwriter Emma Bunton is best known as one fifth of the turn-of-the-century pop group the Spice Girls. After capping a whirlwind global takeover with their blockbuster late-'90s albums, the members pursued various solo paths that fit their personalities and musical upbringings. For the former Baby Spice, this meant a focus on bright dance-pop inspired heavily by 1960s French pop and Motown. Bunton issued her debut A Girl Like Me in 2001, following with a pair of efforts that carried her into 2006 with Life in Mono. Working behind the scenes with other artists and participating in various Spice Girls-related reunions and activities over the years, she released her first official album in over a decade, My Happy Place, in 2019.

Emma Lee Bunton was born on January 21, 1976, in Barnet in north London. She kept busy with extracurricular activities such as modeling and doing commercials. Bunton's time spent at St. Theresa's Roman Catholic primary school was typical, yet her passion for her hobbies turned full scale as she spent her formal theater years at Sylvia Young Theatre School. Already a natural in front of the camera, she left secondary at 16 and began studying drama at Barnet Technical College. It would be several years later that she met the group that would make her a star.

Bunton was still a young, bubbly teenager when she was christened Baby Spice in 1994. The rest of the decade was a whirlwind of winning the world over with the Spice Girls' infectious pop energy. Five years spanned a career in entertainment, and at the dawning of the new millennium, Bunton had other ideas. She was now a woman in her twenties with a bright mind full of creative ideas. Her soul sisters were already moving on with solo projects and Baby Spice wouldn't be left behind.

Free Me

She guested on Tin Tin Out's "What I Am" in 1999, but two years later, a fresh-faced Bunton returned with her debut album, A Girl Like Me. Its first single, "What Took You So Long?," shot to number one on the U.K. Singles Chart during its first week of release in mid-April, sustaining a two-week reign. Bunton became the only Spice Girl to have a solo single stay at number one for more than one week. Her chart success continued into 2003 with "Free Me" and "Maybe," two singles from her second effort, Free Me. The sophisticated pop sound caught on with fans and earned Bunton her third hit, "I'll Be There," in 2004. Free Me was released in the States in early 2005, and her third album, Life in Mono, in 2006.

Greatest Hits

The Spice Girls re-formed in 2007, releasing a Greatest Hits album and embarking on a sold-out worldwide tour. They later launched a musical, Viva Forever, based on their songs, and performed at the 2012 London Olympic Games. A second reunion tour, sans Beckham, was announced for 2019; in the months preceding it, Bunton launched her own fourth solo album, My Happy Place. Produced by Metrophonic and heralded by the '60s-style single "Baby Please Don't Stop," it was composed almost entirely of cover versions of some of Bunton's favorite songs by the likes of George Harrison, the Bee Gees, and Norah Jones

Many happy returns to Emma Bunton for 21st January. Part of this historic group that were a massive part of the 1990s and inspired so many other artists, let’s hope there is more music from her at some point. My Happy Place was in 2019, so you would imagine there are some new songs ready to be put onto an album at some point. Because this fantastic artist turns fifty on 21st January, below is a mixtape of some standout solo and Spice Girls songs. Few have had a career more illustrious and successful…

THAN Emma Bunton.

FEATURE: A Masterpiece of a Title Track: Kate Bush’s Hounds of Love at Forty

FEATURE:

 

 

A Masterpiece of a Title Track

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush and Gow Hunter in the video for Hounds of Love/PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

 

Kate Bush’s Hounds of Love at Forty

__________

WE had…

some incredible Kate Bush celebrations last year. Hounds of Love, her fifth studio album, turned forty on 16th September. It did garner a lot of new interest in this masterpiece. There are two singles from the album that are forty this year. I will look at The Big Sky closer to its fortieth on 21st April. However, Hounds of Love’s title track turns forty on 17th February. There is a lot to note about the song. Kate Bush wrote the title track at her house early on in the recording process for Hounds of Love. It reached eighteen on the U.K. singles chart. It seems incredibly low for such a remarkable song. Many critics see it as her greatest song. Hounds of Love has this remarkable video that Bush directed. The first time she directed herself, though she did co-directed and assist on videos before this. I have written about this song quite a few times. I am going to repeat some information that I have used in other features. Kate Bush discussing the song and what influenced it. However, as it turns forty on 17th February, there are new things to bring in. Thanks to the Kate Bush Encyclopedia. We get some interview archive about this astonishing song:

[‘Hounds Of Love’] is really about someone who is afraid of being caught by the hounds that are chasing him. I wonder if everyone is perhaps ruled by fear, and afraid of getting into relationships on some level or another. They can involve pain, confusion and responsibilities, and I think a lot of people are particularly scared of responsibility. Maybe the being involved isn’t as horrific as your imagination can build it up to being – perhaps these baying hounds are really friendly.

Kate Bush Club newsletter, 1985

The ideas for ‘Hounds Of Love’, the title track, are very much to do with love itself and people being afraid of it, the idea of wanting to run away from love, not to let love catch them, and trap them, in case the hounds might want to tear them to pieces and it’s very much using the imagery of love as something coming to get you and you’ve got to run away from it or you won’t survive.

Conversation Disc Series, ABCD012, 1985”.

I do wonder why Hounds of Love was not considered as the first single from the album. As strong as Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) is, I wonder if Hounds of Love would have got a stronger chart position is it was released first. I think the video is one of Kate Bush’s very best. Although Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) was the first song Kate Bush wrote for Hounds of Love, its title song led to that album title. It is such an interesting idea for a song. That idea of portraying love in this way. I wonder how many other artists before that used animals as metaphors for love. If you look at the album cover – shot by her brother, John Carder Bush -, Bush is lying down and embracing her two hounds, Bonnie and Clyde. They are sleepy and non-threatening, so it maybe offers an opposite take on the title track. The connection between the cover and the track. Maybe the cover shot is Bush taming those chasing hounds. Although we do not see dogs chasing Bush in the video, there is that suggestion that something in the dark is chasing her. Perhaps not literal hounds, there is this spirit or psychological shadow that seems like hounds baying for blood. Instead of talking about heartbreak and doubts in a traditional or cliché way, Kate Bush took this different approach. The fear of commitment and being committed was something preying on her mind. Rather than run from these chasing hounds, perhaps they are friendly and are not scary. It is this idea that I have not really heard other artists exploring. Such a clever angle from Kate Bush! As much as I love other title tracks, there is something about Hounds of Love that stands aside. Bush seemingly running away from love but also towards it. She was dating Del Palmer at the time she wrote the song. Perhaps, a point in life when others her age might have been getting married and having children, that might have been looming in her mind. Bush maybe committed to music and work and putting her relationship aside. It is wonderful to pick Hounds of Love apart and what compelled her to write the song.

I will round things off soon. When MOJO ranked Kate Bush’s fifty greatest tracks for their feature, they put Hounds of Love at number one. I think a lot of journalists today would share that love and opinion. From its writing, performance and production, this is a masterpiece that will always be relevant. Themes and thoughts that so many people can identify with. There are so many takeaways from the lyrics. I shall come to that:

No matter how refined the circumstances of its creation – built at leisure in Bush’s new 48-track studio – or how newfangled its production – still tangible in the hi-tech stabs and pads of Fairlight, and the crispness of Jonathan Williams’ cello – Hounds Of Love is red in tooth and claw, its breathless, atavistic fear of capture mixed with almost supernatural rapture. Love is thundering through the psychosexual woods, hunting down somebody terrified of what it means to surrender to another person. The song opens with a quote from British horror film Night Of The Demon but that’s the only moment it feels like theatre. From then on, Hounds Of Love maintains a dizzying emotional velocity, the relentless double drumming of Charlie Morgan and Stuart Elliott stamping down on the accelerator. Bush’s voice might dip and soften, but those drums are merciless, while the strident backing vocals, like a hunting horn call, goad her on if introspection threatens to slow her down. It never lets up, every line heightening the pitch, closing the distance between song and listener. It ends with a suddenness that makes it seem like she’s hit the ground and you’ve hit it with her, breathlessly waiting for an answer to the question: “Do you know what I really need?” The uncertainty, however, is not reflected in the confidence – the perfect, dazzling completeness – of the song’s execution. On Hounds Of Love, Kate Bush is going at full pelt, chasing the horizon, running her vision to ground. Not really the hunted, but the hunter all along”.

In terms of lines that stay I your head, there are so many: “Among your hounds of love/And feel your arms surround me/I’ve always been a coward/And never know what’s good for me”. Also: “Take my shoes off/And throw them in the lake/And I’ll be/Two steps on the water”. The poetry in those lyrics. Whilst other artists would offer something more basic and ordinary, Kate Bush’s choice of language is fascinating. More cinematic and visual than anything. Writing a song that she definitely wanted to see visualised. It is a shame that I could not get a ticket for 2014’s Before the Dawn and see Kate Bush perform this live. It is one of those songs that is not talked about as much as others, yet it is perhaps her crowning achievement. I might pick apart the lyrics for another feature. When it comes to a lyric I just referenced, Bush explained its meaning to Doug Alan in 1985: “In the song ‘Hounds Of Love’, what do you mean by the line ‘I’ll be two steps on the water’, other than a way of throwing off the scent of hounds, or whatever, by running through water. But why ‘two’ steps? Because two steps is a progression. One step could possibly mean you go forward and then you come back again. I think “two steps” suggests that you intend to go forward. But why not “three steps”? It could have been three steps – it could have been ten, but “two steps” sounds better, I thought, when I wrote the song. Okay”. I did not know about the 12” version of the song and how it is different to the album version. I prefer the version we hear on the album, though it is really interesting hearing this other version. Even though I do not like their take, Futureheads covered it in 2004. I said this when discussing the song last year for a run of features around the fortieth anniversary of Hounds of Love. How the band suck all the power and drama out of the song and turn it into this weird versions that is more dancey and jokey. Quirky and just odd. I am not sure why people love this cover! Listen to the only version that matters: the one Kate Bush recorded. Turning  forty on 17th February, I wanted to spend some time with this incredible song. One that is always going to hold this amazing resonance and gravity. It send shivers down the spine when you play it! Whilst some might argue, there are many who consider this iconic title track…

HER finest work ever.

FEATURE: Kate Bush in 2026: How Do We Keep Potential Fans Engaged Without Any Big Anniversaries?

FEATURE:

 

 

Kate Bush in 2026

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in a promotional photo from 1989

 

How Do We Keep Potential Fans Engaged Without Any Big Anniversaries?

__________

NEXT year…

IN THIS IMAGE: And If I Only Could I’d Make a Deal With God by Susie Hamilton

is going to be very different to this one when it comes to Kate Bush. As I have said in another feature, this one has been pretty busy in terms of album anniversaries. We have celebrated forty-five years of Never for Ever, forty years of Hounds of Love and twenty years of Aerial. Kate Bush gave an interview earlier in the year about the animated video for Little Shrew (Snowflake). She has posted updates and there has been a lot of activity. Bush put out Best of the Other Sides. This was released because of fan demand. There was War Child Presents Sound and Vision and Kate Bush bringing together fifty-two artists to interpret a lyric from Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God). I have missed some stuff out. The point is, there has been a lot happening this year. In 2027, it will be the forty-fifth anniversary of The Dreaming (her fourth studio album) and fifty years since she signed with EMI. 2028 is going to truly huge. However, what comes next year? I have written a feature about the fortieth anniversary of Hounds of Love’s fortieth anniversary. The Dreaming’s Sat in Your Lap turns forty-five. No big album anniversaries. Kate Bush cannot really remaster anything more. In terms of other anniversaries, I guess there is some stuff from 1976. Apart from Kate Bush taking her driving test twice in 1976, there is not too much we can celebrate from that year. However, that EMI deal is a milestone: “Kate finally settles a recording deal with EMI. The contract is for four years, with options at the end of the second and third year. Kate receives a 3,000-Pound advance [and 500 Pounds for publication rights]. EMI are content for Kate to take time to write songs, sharpen her lyrics, train her voice and generally have time to "grow up". Kate pursues her dancing, first at the Elephant and Castle, South London. But after seeing Lindsay Kemp perform in Flowers, she attends his classes at the Dance Centre in Covent Garden. After Kemp goes to Australia, Kate trains with Arlene Phillips, choreographer of Hot Gossip. [It is probably at this time that Kate's association with Gary Hurst and Stewart Avon-Arnold, her longtime dancing partners, begins.]”. This year has provided us some treats. I do like Best of the Other Sides, so I wonder whether there could be any reissues or compilations that could satisfy fan demand.

After Stranger Things used Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) and its streaming numbers were given another boost – something I will focus on in another feature -, there is building interest in Kate Bush. More and more fans coming her way. We cannot know for sure whether Bush will release a new album next year. She may wait until 2027. Of course, there will be opportunities for Kate Bush to post to her official website. I am sure that there will be stuff happening. Maybe another project like she did with artists creating images based on some famous lyrics. That was tied to Hounds of Love turning forty or Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) very much being in the spotlight. I can see nothing coming next year that would provoke celebration and a lot of new fan interest. Journalists tend to tie any celebration and specials around album anniversaries. Rarely spotlighting albums and work unless there is a big anniversary or something like the Stranger Things boom. 2026 is going to be a bit sparse in that sense. Kate Bush is aware that a lot of new listeners have discovered her work, so they will need to look back and do their own research and digging. Will Kate Bush give any interviews and will there be any news coming? Maybe not. I think there will be a lot of requests from filmmakers to use her music, though I don’t feel we will get any big viral moments where one of her songs has this new lease because it is used on the small or big screen. I don’t know if any Kate Bush books will be published, so it is all up in the air at the moment. Unless there is new music released, will there be a bit of an issue keeping new fans engaged or recruiting new ones?

I guess it is not a major concern. The momentum Kate Bush’s music has at the moment and the fact many modern-day huge artist are inspired by her and cite her as such means that this will keep some heat on her. However, next year is one where there are few natural and notable opportunities to keep her music in the spotlight. I am sure that Kate Bush will be active in other ways. I did get the impression, when she spoke with Emma Barnett at the end of last year, that she was done when it comes to retrospection and anything other than new music. That keenness to do something new and engage in the recording process. If we don’t get an album until, say, 2027, what fills the gap in 2026? I would say it is a perfect opportunity to remind people about Kate Bush’s music in general and how we do not need to peg everything to big anniversaries or wait for these viral moments. I do hope there is more exploration of songs and albums not talked about as much as others. I have been looking more closely at The Sensual World and how fascinating that period was. In 1989, as we headed to the end of a decade where Kate Bush released four albums, Bush was releasing some of her most remarkable work. I do hope that we get a documentary or two. Kate Bush is probably not keen to feature in any of them, but I know for a fact one that I am involved in comes out next month. Maybe there will be books about her. Perhaps another entry in the 33 1/3 series (after Leah Kardos’s Hounds of Love book from last year). It is vital that we keep hooked those who may have discovered Kate Bush through Stranger Things. Or younger listeners that have discovered her in other ways. Also, hook in those who do not know about her. 2026 is not going to have many anniversary opportunities and these projects where Kate Bush’s name will be out there. It is going to be hard to follow…

SUCH an eventful 2025.

FEATURE: Butterfly Kisses: Exploring the Possibility of Mastered Version of Kate Bush’s Early Demos

FEATURE:

 

 

Butterfly Kisses

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush as a child was photographed by her brother, John Carder Bush. This photo would appear in his book, Cathy (first published in 1986)

 

Exploring the Possibility of Mastered Version of Kate Bush’s Early Demos

__________

PERHAPS this could never happen…

but I think the early recordings and demos from Kate Bush should be remastered and given a layer of gloss. Kate Bush has remastered her studio albums and recently brought out Selections from the Other Sides. I wonder how many people know about these earliest recordings. Maybe going back as far as 1972. There is a sense of privacy about them. Bush never wanting them to be heard by the public. There have been some unauthorised and bootlegged albums with Kate Bush demos and early recordings. As Kate Bush Encyclopedia say in this article, Alone at My Piano was released in 1988. It is fascinating thinking about these tracks. Maybe hit and miss in terms of quality, I do feel like there is a case to make some available more widely. Perhaps Kate Bush would not want this to happen. Think about all the artists coming through that are inspired by Kate Bush, I feel like having access to these early recordings would be really inspiring. It gives us insight into this incredible artist as a teenager or child. There have been so many bootlegs through the years. This article is about another 1988 compilation. This time, concerning live performances. Also, in this article, we learn more about the first volume of the Cathy Demos. I would love to hear a remastered version of A Rose Growing Old. Such fascinating lyrics: “Slipping past the chimney-pots/Down among the ashes, away from old times/Why must I self-indulge in memories?/I should be celebrating to a moving melody/But it hurts me, it hurts me/Honey, honey, it hurts me/And I’m feeling like a rose growing old/Old, old, old, old”. This demo from 1976 might have been considered for Kate Bush’s debut album, The Kick Inside, though it was never realised officially.

I am not sure whether Kate Bush would be as against the idea of releasing her demos as she might have been a few years ago. Even if they are scratchy and a little lo-fi, most are out there anyway. People can access them. Wouldn’t it be better to have these available in a better form? I guess it would technically not be a remaster, as these are demos and not studio recordings. Kate Bush’s videos have not be upgraded to HD or 4K, so it might be a leap to think she would go back fifty years and bring out a compilation of her demos. The fact we are talking about 1976 means that a fiftieth anniversary retrospection next year would be desirable. You can read more about the history of her demos here. We can go back as far as 1972. This was when Kate Bush was thirteen/fourteen. She was probably not be referred to as ‘Kate#. More likely her full name, Catherine, or Cathy. This school-aged child putting to tape her very earliest ideas. 1976 is when we are talking about the fifth recordings. You can read more about them here. Discogs have some tracklisting here. Maybe an odd anniversary to mark, it is worth exploring 1976 and significant events happening then. Bush signed with EMI in 1976. These are all really important moments. In 2011, Record Collector examined the cutting room floor. The demos and early recordings that many fans might not know about. They look at, among other things, the pre-fame, post-signing period between 1976 and 1977:

A four-year contract was signed in 1976 and Kate was given time out by EMI to develop. She explained on the BBC’s Tonight show in March 1978, “I signed the contract and there was just feelings that we weren’t sure how to handle it. I myself felt I was very young and not capable of handling the business… And I think they were also worried that I was too young, and that they were looking on it as a long-term project.” Kate moved to London, where she shared a house with her brothers and continued to develop her vocal style at the honky-tonk piano she had bought with some of her EMI advance. She studied dance in Covent Garden under Bowie’s former mentor Lindsay Kemp, and would later recall her daily schedule. “I’d get up in the morning, I’d practise scales at my piano, go off dancing, and then in the evening I’d come back and play the piano all night. And I actually remember well the summer of ’76… we had such hot weather I had all the windows open. And I just used to write until, you know, four in the morning. And I got a letter of complaint from a neighbour who was basically saying ‘Shut up!’, because they had to get up at like five in the morning, they did shift work, and my voice was being carried the whole length of the street I think, so they weren’t too appreciative.”

In 1989, a batch of demos from this period surfaced, representing the first significant leak of Kate’s demo material. Initially dubbed the Phoenix collection, they went under this moniker as the recordings were originally broadcast on Phoenix radio station KSTM by former EMI employee John Dixon, who had been instrumental in plugging The Kick Inside to America. Confusingly, the broadcast seems to have taken place some seven years prior to the leak, so it seems uncertain as to why the tapes took so long to reach wider circulation. It consisted of 22 piano demos including five songs that turned up in more developed form over her first three albums: The Kick Inside and Oh To Be In Love, on The Kick Inside; Hammer Horror and Kashka From Baghdad on Lionheart; and Violin on Never For Ever. Three tracks from The Early Years tape also appeared in more refined form – Something Like A Song, The Gay Farewell and Disbelieving Angel – while the other 14 remain unique to this collection. There has been some debate over the correct titles of these tracks and they have circulated under a bewildering variety of names. Fortunately the titles were read on air during the Phoenix broadcast, presumably from the original tape box, and we present those titles here as they are, most likely, the titles as written by Kate: The Kick Inside (Brother)/Hammer Horror/It Hurts Me/Stranded At The Moonbase/Kashka From Baghdad/Surrender Into The Roses/Oh To Be In Love/Rinfry The Gypsy/On Fire/Inside A Snowball/Dali/Where Are The Lionhearts/Violin/ The Craft Of Love/The Gay Farewell/Something Like A Song/Frightened Eyes/The Disbelieving Angel/Nevertheless You’ll Do/Come Closer To Me Babe/So Soft/The Rare Flower/While Davy Dozed. The set first appeared in cassette form and suffered from major quality degradation: the tracks ran too slowly and the levels were muddied. However, a series of bootleg EP releases titled The Cathy Demos – issued in five 7” volumes over the following few months – had clearly been pressed from the master recordings as they had a remarkably clear sound and none of the speed issues horribly clear on the tapes. As a final surprise, the fifth volume debuted a song titled Organic Acid, a lengthy piece consisting of Kate singing and playing to accompany brother John’s reading of one of his poems.

It wasn’t present on any recordings from the Phoenix broadcast. It’s unfortunate that bootleg CDs of this collection – issued under many titles such as Cathy’s Home Demos, Practise Makes Perfect, Alone At My Piano, Shrubberies, If You Could See Me Fly, Passing Through Air – have all been sourced from inferior quality tapes, all of which run far too slowly and are compromised by audio deterioration. The best, Alone At My Piano, comes from a fairly acceptable version of the Phoenix tape. The worst are taken from bad vinyl pressings of the inferior tape sources. More than 21 years from their appearance, the best source remains the five 7” Cathy Demos EPs. In December 1993, Kate was questioned at length about the possible official release of the demos on the Toronto radio show Modern Rock Live. Her response: “Um, no.” Having mastered her vocal style and with a clutch of finished songs at her disposal, the next step was public performance, so with the help of her brothers, Kate recruited a group, The KT Bush Band. Their pub sets mostly comprised standards from the Stones, The Beatles, Marvin Gaye et al, but James & The Cold Gun, a track which appeared on The Kick Inside and which presumably exists as a piano demo, was debuted at these gigs. We can be confident that some of the shows were recorded because in 2009, Del Palmer posted a recording of the band performing Come Together in surprisingly good quality on his MySpace page. And while Kate isn’t at her best covering The Beatles, a greater insight into the brief live history of The KT Bush Band would be more than welcome and evidently possible”.

I do love the demos and things that she did before her first professional recordings. However, so many of these songs are in such a basic format. It is a shame that there is not this desire to master/remaster them. You could say that most artists have early demos and they do not make them publicly available. However, there is such this fascinating body of work before her professional career that I think are really important and could be made more widely available. A fifty year loom back at those Cathy Demos and those songs. In terms of the quality and endurance of these songs, there are some that maybe are a little similar and will pass you by. However, there are some real diamonds. Kate Bush might be totally against the notion. She has remastered her albums and has no issue looking back. These demos are a vital part of her legacy, and there are so many people that would love to hear these home-recoded songs in better condition. These are remarkable recordings and show where Kate Bush would soon head. A glimpse into…

WHERE this genius began.

FEATURE: The Original Red Shoes… Will We See a Kate Bush Memorabilia Auction in 2026?

FEATURE:

 

 

The Original Red Shoes…

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1993/PHOTO CREDIT: Guido Harari

 

Will We See a Kate Bush Memorabilia Auction in 2026?

__________

THERE are a lot of questions…

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 2011 in a promotional for 2011’s Director’s Cut/PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

and theories I am going to put forth when it comes to Kate Bush in 2026. I shall not expand on this here, as I am will do so in another feature, but next year is going to be a quieter one regarding Kate Bush. In terms of album anniversaries and big events, there is not as much potential as there was this year. However, I have been thinking of non-album events and anything connected with Kate Bush. I have written about Kate Bush in terms of an exhibition or museum. How you should have this exhibition that celebrates her work. Kate Bush is a big David Bowie fan and has been since she was a child. Bowie has had this V&A exhibition and celebration. Spotlighting this icon and his incredible legacy. Maybe she would find that too exposing. However, I do think there is scope to have a photo exhibition or something bigger. However, I don’t think it is the case that there is nothing in the vaults. Kate Bush has ac auctioned stuff before, though it tends to be signed stuff. Occasionally, you get rarities and things that have not seen the light before. In terms of memorabilia, you can go to auction sites and find signed things and rarities too. Not a lot that would really stand out. I mean like set designs from The Tour of Life (1979) or anything from her video shoots. I can’t believe that everything has been destroyed or given away. I do feel like there is this archive or artefacts and incredible things that could raise much-needed money for charity. I am thinking more in terms of costumes and possessions that appeared during her career but that time has passed. Perhaps Kate Bush would see this too as exposing, but as it would be for charity and she could make money for incredible causes, I am curious why this has not been done before.

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1979 during The Tour of Life/PHOTO CREDIT: Rob Verhorst/Redferns

In a previous feature, I have asked whether outfits from photoshoots or things that appeared in The Tour or Life were kept. You imagine they must be somewhere. Look at the music videos through the years, and you can see all of these amazing visuals. Whether it is the set or what Kate Bush is wearing, has everything been given away? Most artists have relatives or estates that do keep stuff like this. Rarer recordings or things that have not been announced. It is great that Kate Bush will sign albums and that can raise money, though fans would probably bid more for something more oriignal and deeper. It would not be this lurid thing, fans vying for outfits and costumes. As Kate Bush will probably not have enough in storage where there could be this Bowie-like exhibition, surely there are a few things that she has kept aside that could raise money. For me and so many others, it is a chance to own a piece of Kate Bush history. She has remastered and reissued albums. Perhaps the priority is on that side of things. However, Kate Bush has not really given much away when it comes to anything personal outside of music. The average fan might not be able to afford many of the artists that would be auctioned. However, we have this visual and audio archive on Kate Bush and you sort of wonder whether anything physical remains. If there is nothing in the vaults regarding unheard music or outtakes, does Bush have a similar attitude when it comes to memorabilia and artefacts? Not wanting to put anything out there that is not authorised or complete.

Kate Bush is a huge supporter of charities like Crisis and War Child. She has raised money for the latter recently, and I believe she will want to keep this going into next year. How will she do that? She could sign some albums, though I feel like this has been done enough and it seems a bit basic. Also, and maybe I am alone, but I do not find an autographed album that exciting. It is a lot of money to spend on something with a squiggle on it. However, a unique piece of clothing, set or anything related to Kate Bush is much more tantalising. If next year is going to be a very quiet one, I think that Kate Bush will think about charity and something bigger. Maybe this has been done before, though I have been looking on search engines and trying to find something. Maybe back in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, there were these times when fans could get their hands on some Kate Bush memorabilia. Beyond the T-shirts, albums and signed things. I don’t have a specific list, yet there are items I hope exist that I would love to bid on. I mentioned The Tour of Life, so any of these costumes or, better, designs or even original programmes would be really amazing. I love the hat Bush was wearing in the Them Heavy People video. I think it is a fedora. As that was nearly fifty years ago, you would imagine that has been disposed. You hope that Bush had foresight that she needs to keep some of this stuff but has never talked about it. A lock-up or somewhere these items have been stored. Even as recent as 2014’s Before the Dawn. For those who were not there – including me -, there are items from that residency that would be great to own. I do wonder where it all goes, and my fear is that a lot has been destroyed. However, Kate Bush is full of surprises and you can never say for sure that she would not have kept things that could be auctioned. War Child would benefit hugely if there was this memorabilia auction. Let’s hope, next year, that some of these wonderful items…

COME to light.

FEATURE: No Nostalgia Here: Why Talk '90s to Me Strikes a Personal Note

FEATURE:

 

 

No Nostalgia Here

IMAGE CREDIT: Podmasters

 

Why Talk '90s to Me Strikes a Personal Note

__________

ONE of the best new podcasts…

IN THIS PHOTO: Miranda Sawyer/PHOTO CREDIT: Sophia Evans/The Observer

out there is Talk '90s to Me. You can see the podcast on YouTube and listen to it on Audible. Follow it on Instagram and TikTok. It is hosted by the brilliant Miranda Sawyer, whose brilliant book, Uncommon People: Britpop and Beyond in 20 Songs is out now. I have listened to the audio version. Sawyer interviewed a lot of Britpop/1990s artists, though her most notable and talked-about one might be when she spoke with Oasis’ Liam Gallagher in 1995. Gallagher said he hoped Blur’s Damon Albarn and Alex James would die of AIDS. That quote made front-page news. Her new podcast is really incredible. I was a teenager in the 1990s, and I think that there are misconceptions about the decade (Miranda Sawyer was a guest on this recent podcast, answering the question around how we remember the '90s). Rather than it being a nostalgia podcast or a show like Fearne Cotton’s Sound of the 90s, this is one that examines and explores different aspects of '90s culture. It is a shame not that much is written about it. The Guardian did select it as one of their picks ahead of the first episode of the podcast in August: “Miranda Sawyer gets into full-on nostalgia mode in this series dedicated to the days of Cool Britannia, Girl Power, Trainspotting and much more. If you’ve not had your fill of Oasis yet, her first episode is a loving deep dive into fandom and how one Mancunian outfit went where no 90s band had gone before. Says former Q editor Ted Kessler, it all came down to the Gallaghers’ undeniable strain of “electricity … chaos and anarchy”. Miranda Sawyer is an incredible journalist, and she wrote about Cool Britannia earlier in the year for Tatler, as Oasis reformed and hit the road. For Talk '90s to Me, Sawyer spoke with Blur’s Dave Rowntree, and we do get some perspectives into Britpop and that time. The podcast does correct some misconceptions and mis-impressions. Rather than guests talking fondly about the time and there being no depth, we get this wider examination of the decade.

From musicians to comedians and authors, the range of episodes already out there is incredible. Aside from music, Miranda Sawyer and her guests have talked about iconic films, culture moments and T.V. shows. Sawyer is a brilliant interviewer and dives really deep. Incredible research and this amazing rapport with her guests, I do hope that the podcast lasts for a very long time. I do think that I get a bit nostalgic about the 1990s and what it was like. I hope a future episode explores what it was like for women and the realities for them. In terms of the tabloids and the imbalance and discrimination that was rife through the decade. I have been thinking about festival headliners and how few women were headlining. It is clear that the 1990s was a blast and a hugely memorable time. In terms of pop culture especially, it was monumental. The music was particularly fine and influential. I have blocked out a lot of the '90s and what was happening. Getting insights into events like the KLF burning a million quid, the different boybands that were around in the decade, to the significance of shows like Seinfeld, I have reassessed the decade and connected with things I had forgotten. I wonder if there is a book that looks more generally about these topics. A wider look at the 1990s. I want to move to The Times and their four-star review of Miranda Sawyer’s Talk '90s to Me:

If you’re my age, listening to people talk about the 1990s is rather like being forced to endure a conversation about a legendary party you weren’t invited to. You might term the affliction generational fomo. Look, I’m glad you all had a marvellous time taking Ecstasy and voting for Tony Blair, but do you have to rub it in? I find myself assuming a glazed expression. “A pervasive sense of cultural optimism, you say? Oh, [wincing] that sounds wonderful … and the music was brilliant too? How nice for you. And low house prices as well? [grimacing now] … well I’m glad you had such a good time … but if you’ll excuse me I have to wail despairingly to myself in that corner over there.”

I would very much like to believe the Nineties were not all they were cracked up to be. Maybe the reasonably priced houses and inexorable spread of liberal democracy had a downside? Alas, the journalist Miranda Sawyer’s brilliant (but upsettingly joyful) new podcast Talk ’90s to Me confirms it was indeed a blast. Damn it.

“There is an optimism throughout the Nineties,” she observes to her second guest, the Trainspotting author Irvine Welsh (what Nineties podcast would be complete without him?). Welsh suggests the decade “really started in ’87 [or] ’88”. The crucial factor was rave. “People just started dancing in fields and factories.” Sawyer suggests that in the rave scene “you got that mix of characters that wouldn’t have met … spotty students, football hooligans”. That discovery of unexpected unity among different kinds of people led to “a certain optimism that kick-started that decade”. Unity …? Optimism …? Truly, the past is another country. We millennials prefer to subsist in ever tinier cultural niches while using the internet to abuse anyone even slightly different from ourselves.

At least I can console myself with the thought that I would have loathed raving and taking drugs in fields. Blissfully dancing outside experiencing a sensation of ecstatic oneness with thousands of my fellow human beings sounds like hell on earth to me. It’s one aspect of Nineties fun I’m glad I missed out on. In some ways I suppose it’s nice to belong to a generation for whom introversion and social incompetence are de rigueur. And compared with that of your average pasty, porn-addled, bed-bound, TikTok-hypnotised Gen Z misanthropist my social life looks like something out of The Great Gatsby.

Welsh is rather stern on the dullness of the young. “I was at a festival outside of Dublin at the weekend,” he says. “And I’m thinking, I’m having a good time and I’m … I’m dancing. But the drug intake, the alcohol intake compared to how this would have been 20 odd years ago is just, it’s practically nothing.” It’s a weird unnatural inversion of the old days when puritanical elders used to chide the young for their fast-living ways. Instead, Welsh thinks young people should “be getting out and having a bit of fun and causing a bit of mischief, you know?” Have fun? Cause mischief? Absolutely not.

I liked Welsh’s semi-mystical explanation for why the decade was so enjoyable. “The Nineties was the last party,” he says. In the same way that before a “tsunami the animals know that something’s coming”, people had an intuitive sense that “the internet was coming”, with the impending tyranny of algorithms, AI, big tech and the hollowing out of the cultural industries. So people thought, “Let’s take everything from every era we’ve enjoyed … because it might be a long time before we can have it again.” Nonsense, of course, but a compellingly eerie thought”.

Not that I have any cache to talk about anything from the 1990s but, for me, it was the music and the physical media. The magazines and the tangible nature of music and how that fostered my love of music. So much of what has already been covered on the podcast has really hit me on a personal level. In terms of the music episodes, my favourites have been around Madonna and George Michael. Guests John Sizzle and Jack Guinness sharing their expertise and insights. I am going to wrap up in a minute. I want to bring in this review before I wrap up:

Journalist and broadcaster Miranda Sawyer had a front seat to the various cultural machinations that defined the ’90s. She has recently captured this time perfectly in book form with her fantastic Britpop book, Uncommon People, and so she is uniquely placed to provide a fresh viewpoint on a decade that has already been poured over ad nauseum across several mediums. And so, it makes sense for Sawyer to return to the decade again with her new podcast, Talk ’90’s To Me…

While many of the topics covered so far are well worn touchstones by now (Oasis, Princess Diana, Nirvana etc), Sawyer also shines a light on some of the darker, less well-travelled corners of the ’90s with episodes on George Michael, The Prodigy and Madonna, and while some of the topics she chooses are clearly alien to her (she must be the only person of her generation not to have an in depth knowledge of Friends), the addition of various guests ensures that there is always at least one expert on hand to provide compelling insight.

The guests cover the full gamut of ’90s pop culture with musicians (Dave Rowntree from Blur), writers (Ted Kessler, Andrew Harrison) and fashionistas (Plum Sykes) and this holistic view is what ensures that Talk ’90s To Me never feels like a podcast that is treading over the same old ground. While there is definitely an absence of working class voices (Sawyer herself sounds almost comically posh – her pronunciation of ‘Blur’ as ‘Blurrrrrrrrrgh’ is particularly jarring), this is also a reflection of the lack of the working class representation in the arts in general, although the ’90s was a lot more diverse in terms of class within the arts than the cultural landscape we find ourselves in now.

Talk ’90s To Me works for both grizzled ’90s survivors such as myself and for newcomers alike. I can’t wait to see where it goes from here. It has the potential to become the most essential ’90s podcast since Quickly Kevin, Will He Score?”.

I do think that there are these deep-rooted impressions of the 1990s. Maybe we get too misty-eyed or nostalgic. Whilst Talk '90s to Me is positive and we do get to hear guests talk about amazing films, shows, music and events from the decade, there is a deeper side. Some of the darker elements. The podcast has this rolling playlist (which I am including at the bottom), where a guest selects their '90s track. Mine would be Charles and Eddie’s Would I Lie to You? If you have not heard or seen the podcast then do go and check it out, as I really love it! Rather than this blast of empty nostalgia, Talk ‘90s to Me is, in its own words, a podcast that is about “Diving deep into a wild decade of chaos, creativity and hedonism – from Oasis to ‘Friends’, from grunge to girl power, from Kate Moss to alcopops to ‘Trainspotting’ and beyond. Join award-winning Observer journalist and Smash Hits graduate Miranda Sawyer as she meets the people who were really there for the decade of Cool Britannia, Cantona and the Chemical Generation”. Spend some time in this wonderful decade celebrating….

THESE common people.

FEATURE: Spotlight: Absolutely

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

PHOTO CREDIT: Emily White for NOTION

 

Absolutely

__________

EVEN if I do not like…

 PHOTO CREDIT: Emily White

her musical moniker, there is no denying the fact Absolutely is a remarkable talent who is going to have a massive 2026. I am new to her, so I wanted to include Absolutely here. Before getting to a new interview, I want to go back to 2024. In 2023, Absolutely released her debut album and supported RAYE on her 21st Century Blues World Tour. NOTION spoke with Absolutely about her incredible rise and debut album, in addition to her love of fantasy and sci-fi:  

In a universe where genres collide together and innovation sparks, Abby Keen, known by her stage name Absolutely, creates music that seems to transcend time itself. Her other-worldly R&B melodies echo as if journeyed from a distant future, before gracefully landing at their rightful destination: Earth.

Absolutely has previously worked behind the scenes, co-writing hits for big name artists like Normani, Saweetie, David Guetta, Anitta, and Tinashe, to name a few. But now, she boldly steps into her own celestial spotlight as a solo songwriter. Her debut album, Cerebrum, released in 2023, pushes back against conventional music, elevating her creativity to new heights.

Growing up in a musical household with her Ghanaian-Swiss mother and English father, Absolutely and her older sister, global star Raye, developed a deep love for gospel, soul, jazz, and church music. Inspired by her upbringing and guided by her profound connection to God, spirituality and the cosmos – Absolutely is light-years ahead, creating her own distinctive world of experimental beats and bold dreamy soundscapes. 

Congratulations on the release of your debut album, Cerebrum. You described each track on the album as corresponding to a different room or chamber of your mind. What inspired you to take this conceptual approach?

Although the thirteen songs on Cerebrum are all sonically and lyrically very different, they all co-exist in the same world. I view the songs as an artistic translation of everything that goes on in my mind. They all inspired different feelings in me and so each song is my expression of that particular feeling. I find it difficult to express myself verbally, but speaking in music comes naturally to me – I always say that music is like my first language. I speak through melodies and the words come after.

Do you draw inspiration from any other sources, such as in literature, film, or personal experiences?

I love everything about sci-fi and fantasy. I’ve always had quite a big imagination and I grew up loving fairy–tales and fictional stories. I even used to make my own little story books. I think that childlike imagination never left me, it’s just expanding and evolving. I love to create new worlds, visually and sonically, into something that doesn’t already exist so that I can escape. My friends and family have always said that I’m a big daydreamer and I space out a lot, that is probably because I mentally run away to these places in my head, places that nobody else can see but me. I’m excited now that the more I create, I’m able to share these worlds with fans.

Could you describe the emotions you hope your listeners will feel as they immerse themselves in your musical journey?

A huge goal of mine, for the music I’m creating, is that I want it to wake up every cell in our bodies so that we snap out of the trance that life has us caught in. It’s so easy for us to take for granted the beauty within the small details of the world and I believe that we were created to immerse ourselves in the many wonders of God’s creation. However, the leaders of this world want us to be stuck in a system that benefits them, where we are numb to our surroundings and we go through the motions in a version of the world where everything is grey and where every day feels the same. I want my music to make us remember that we are here to enjoy our lives and to spark something in people that they may have forgotten ever existed. Through my music, I hope people can feel seen and free to just be”.

There are a few more interviews that I want to cover off before closing. CLASH chatted with Absolutely in August about sisterhood, All Points East and maintaining honesty. Even though she released her debut album in 2023, I think 2026 is going to be the biggest year for her yet. I believe she is going back on the road with RAYE for her new tour:

A self-expressed introvert, it took Absolutely – Abby-Lynn Keen – some time to truly find herself onstage. It took a disastrous support slot with FLO – when myriad technical difficulties forced her offstage – and a pep talk from her loving father for Absolutely to come into her own. “Oh I was so scared!” she recalls. “But then my Dad took me to one side, and just said: look, what’s the worst that can happen? And I just let go. I let go of all those thoughts, and realised that I’m just here with people.”

It’s this everyday girl-next-door charm which makes Absolutely such a riveting figure. She’s writing as much for her peers, her friends, as herself and this lets her lyrics resonate with honesty. Take ‘I Just Don’t Know You Yet’ – an undoubted breakout moment, it came from a daydream at home.

“I was in my bed thinking really heavily about my future husband,” she laughs. “It was just really on my heart, and I had this spiritual connection to him somehow, without knowing who he was or why I was thinking about him… so it was really strange.”

When she went to the studio with Dave Hamelin, the two clicked into this emotion, and the song “just poured out… it honestly came together really easily.”

“I feel like he’s not like chasing anything,” she says of her studio comrade. “A lot of producers I’ve worked with feel like they’re trying to chase something that sounds like a hit. But he’s led by his freedom of creation. And it’s really fun, because I love creating whatever I feel like.”

Reflecting on her 2023 debut, she notes that “I wasn’t paying too much attention to the story and the lyrics. I just went, well alright… and whatever came out, came out. But now I’m focussed on what I want to say on each song – which takes longer, but the songs are deep, and intentional.”

With a flurry of live shows – and a fashion week event with her sisters – coming up Absolutely is itching to get back into the studio. “I’m gonna try and make more music,” she says firmly. “I feel like I’ve been in a space for the first time where I haven’t been creating as frequently. Usually, I’m prolific, so I want to get back to that space.”

As a kid, Absolutely adored the vocal range of Ariana Grande, but more recently she’s been vibing with Imogen Heap and Caroline Polachek, in addition to mainstays like Stevie Wonder. This is what soothes her, and inspires her – these are the people who she views as embodying success.

“Success is me being able to be 100% myself and not compromising that,” she notes. “And sometimes I feel like I have to do a little bit of that… you know, to play the game of the industry. But I want to get to a place where I can just do me whenever I want to”.

This interesting interview from PRINCIPLE that I want to drop in. Next year is a really busy one for Absolutely. She is supporting RAYE and Reneé Rapp. There is also possibility of a second studio album. The Tooting-born artist is one that everyone needs to listen to. She is a major talent who is rightly being seen as someone to watch closely:

Despite no headline shows yet, you’re still very booked and busy. Next year, you are supporting RAYE and Renee Rapp in huge venues across Europe and North America. Does the aspect of performing to crowds that big now just excite you? You had the taste of an arena show last year when you supported RAYE at The O2. Now you’ll be playing there six times!

I’m honestly really excited. I feel like the O2 Arena show felt like my music belonged there. I feel like my music is so anthemic and huge that when I performed it at The O2, it was like, ‘Oh, okay, this is where my music’s meant to be.’ And I felt oddly really comfortable on that stage more than in the theatres. I’m excited to do an arena tour. I’ve been wanting to do that for a long time.

Your new single, “I Just Don’t Know You Yet,” went down a storm at All Points East. It’s quickly become your biggest song to date and has introduced your music to a new audience who are now probably going back and listening to your catalogue. What’s it been like seeing the song grow?

It’s been pretty crazy. I was on tour with BANKS when the song started getting a lot of attention. It was really surreal. I was just seeing millions of likes, millions of views, all happening so fast. And then even seeing in real life when I would go into a random gas station in the middle of America, where people would be like, ‘Oh my gosh, you’re Absolutely!’ Like, that is so crazy and random. It happened so quickly. Within a week of teasing it, everybody demanded that I release the song. I was kind of in a tough situation with my team, trying to get everything done. But yeah, it was surreal and it is still surreal, but exciting.

What is it about the song that you believe has captured people’s attention?

Well, for me, when I was writing it, it was so pure and honest. And I think it was one of the first times that I had written a song based on a concept that I had, which was my future husband. I had him really heavy on my heart for some reason. That was like the first time where I had that feeling of really wanting to talk about it. The message is just so pure and authentic. I think a lot of people relate to the feeling of wanting that true partner. It’s also just a really big power ballad that’s very emotional. It’s a good song to scream in the car.

You mentioned a new album there, which you have talked about in other interviews. Is it done and ready to go?

I have all the songs. There are maybe two songs that I have to tweak and add a couple of things, but it’s pretty much done. I have to decide which couple of songs I’m gonna have to let go of, which is very difficult. It’s a couple of songs too many right now, but I’m very close.

How many songs do you have right now, and what is the number you want to whittle it down to?

I think I have 15 now, and I want to get it down to 13. It costs a lot of money, and I have top dog producers now, so I’ve got to get them paid right. 15 might just be a tiny bit too much.

Now that your career is reaching new heights, have your goals shifted?

I think even at the end of this album stage, like finishing this album, I’m now in a different space, which is that I want to not cover my voice so much. I feel like a lot of the music I’ve made previously has a lot of vocal effects. I’m not gonna get rid of that because that’s part of my sound, but I wanna make sure that my voice is cutting through because I think my voice is what really connects with people and not just the busyness and the production. I think the next phase after this second album is gonna be a lot more upfront vocals that are less busy with great songwriting”.

Let’s end with a brilliant new interview from Rolling Stone UK. Absolutely (Abby-Lynn Keen) talks about her second studio album, Paracosm. “For Keen, the album is a reminder, a motto to not lose sight of your child-like imagination. “I realised that I needed to reignite that wonder again and I think I managed to do that,” she recalls. As she scribbled down lyrics and slotted in studio sessions around a busy schedule, Keen started to notice her album come together. Her lead sin-gle, ‘I Just Don’t Know You Yet’ amassed a cult following online, with fans asking her to release a studio version, as well as a live one. She became more confident with developing new skills, like production, and putting her twist on her music”:

Your first album, CEREBRUM, came out in 2023. How has the world-building and creative process been different for your upcoming record? 

The process of creating it was very different to the first one. [CEREBRUM] kind of made itself. I would go to the studio, do melody passes, write lyrics, and later I’d come back one day to finish it. We made the whole album in a few months, but with this second album, I definitely paid way more attention to detail. It’s been two years since I started making it, and it has been so many different versions of itself. I have a whole [record’s worth of songs] that didn’t make the album that’s sitting in my untitled folder. I spent a lot more time making sure that everything was intentional. I spent multiple sessions going back in and seeing how many layers could be added and reinterpreted. 

Albums are expensive, and touring is costly as well. Little Simz famously talked about the difficulty of financing tours and new projects. What have been your biggest industry obstacles? 

There’s a lot of pressure, but I think my love for music just overrides everything. I love making music so much. I love songwriting. I love the whole art of putting a song together and creating visual worlds. There are some difficult aspects – of being in the public eye and doing interviews. 

You’ve got an album on the way and a new single, ‘No Audience’, out very soon. What are you hoping fans will take away from your next project? 

I hope people hear the album, because I spent so much time on it, I would just love lots of people to be able to hear it. I’d like it to help people reignite their imagination again. I don’t know if I’m hoping for anything in particular, because everything that I want is already happening, like the tours. I’m really excited about my album coming out. Everything’s already mapped out”.

I am going to end there. Anyone who is unfamiliar with Absolutely needs to seek her out. Ahead of the release of her second album, go and check out what has come before. 2026 is going to be her year. After laying down these foundations, support RAYE and establishing herself as this incredible and distinct artist, the future is looking very bright. Be certain to put Absolutely…

ON your radar.

___________

Follow Absolutely

FEATURE: The Digital Mixtape: Selections from NME’s 50 Best Songs of 2025

FEATURE:

 

 

The Digital Mixtape

IN THIS PHOTO: Chloe Qisha/PHOTO CREDIT: BLACKSOCKS for NME

 

Selections from NME’s 50 Best Songs of 2025

__________

THERE are polls coming out now…

IN THIS PHOTO: Sam Fender/PHOTO CREDIT: Press

and more we will see this month that collate the best songs and albums from the year. I will not cover all of them, though I was intrigued by NME and their top fifty songs of the year. There are tracks in there from the likes of Chloe Qisha, Sam Fender, and Florence Road. It is a brilliant selection of the best cuts from this year. I would agree with a lot of the selections, so that is why I am including them here. Rather than all fifty, I have whittled them down to my favourites from the list. However, do go and check out their article and the fifty songs. It is an amazing representation of one of the strongest years for music for years. I am excited to see what new and existing artists offer up…

IN THIS PHOTO: PinkPantheress/PHOTO CREDIT: River Callaway

IN 2026.