FEATURE:
Only Me Skating Fast
IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1985/PHOTO CREDIT: Guido Harari
The Incredible Evolution and Emotional Expanse Kate Bush Achieved By the Time of 1985’s Hounds of Love
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I was re-reading…
Leah Kardos’s 33 1/3 book on Hounds of Love. You can order a copy here. There is a lot of great background regarding Hounds of Love. There are many things about this album that marked a peak for Kate Bush. Leah Kardos notes how, “If one were to put Kate Bush’s first twenty singles in a line-up, from ‘Wuthering Heights’ all the way to ‘Cloudbusting’, one might notice the songs becoming incredibly idiosyncratic and emotive. Simon Reynolds described this evolution as being ‘almost unrivalled for sustained brilliance and escalating oddness,’ adding that he considered ‘only the Beatles, from start to finish, and Bowie, from “Space Oddity” to “Fashion”, (to) surpass it”. That is an interesting through. I do think that Kate Bush was remarkable on her first few albums. In terms of being unconventional and revealing. One cannot say that she was not personal or emotive on 1978’s The Kick Inside and Lionheart. Or 1980’s Never for Ever. She was a young artist who, for a period, was produced by someone else and did not have as much reign and control as she might have desired. Even so, there is truth in how Bush leap to new peaks on Hounds of Love. In an interview with Peter Swales for Musician in 1985, Kate Bush was joined by Del Palmer. This question stands out:
“Once an album finally exists, can you enjoy it or will you have nothing more to do with it?
Kate: "I couldn't with the first two albums as they didn't turn out the way I wanted them to, so obviously when I listened to them it was quite disappointing for me because I kept thinking of all the things I'd have liked to have done. But the third and fourth albums, yes, I could listen to those and be quite critical about them and yet feel quite pleased about some of the things on them. Artistically, I was especially pleased with The Dreaming. I achieved lots more on it than on the earlier ones. But then the songs were, in a way, more accepting of that kind of emotional style because they were so intense and demanding. The new album, which is the one I'm most happy with, was a very different energy.
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It was summer last year and I felt I wanted to write songs that had a very positive energy rather than staying in all that intensity of emotion that was so strong with the last album. I think it's important that each album should be different, otherwise you're not going anywhere and exploring but staying in a rut. But then it takes time to carry yourself over from one energy to another because you tend to get into little riffs and phrases and so on that perhaps you've got as some kind of theme on the last album, even if that's not obvious. And it's important, I think, to start writing in a slightly new style. Now that it's all done, I can sit here and enjoy it, especially here in the studio because this is the optimal way to hear it, because this is where it was all done. As soon as it gets onto vinyl, onto disc, sounds different. And now I can just sit here and relax instead of taking notes, you know, like to remind me I've got to study that bit and so on..."
Del: "Yeah, you should see the notes! There's two files, this thick! Full of notes, you'd never believe it."
Kate: "Yes, they're little memos and scribbles and charts on takes that are good”.
There was definitely this new confidence and ambition. Maybe it is a natural evolution for a songwriter. Though you can see how quickly she had gone from The Kick Inside to Hounds of Love. Bush might have been a bit less personal and revealing for her first few albums. More characters and not putting herself centre of the picture. Hounds of Love is one where she is very bearing her soul.
The Ninth Wave, I always think, is Kate Bush in the water. Realising a nightmare of being lost at sea and how she would cope and what would happen when she is out there, not knowing if she would be rescued. The first side of Hounds of Love is always so emotive and powerful. Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God), Cloudbusting and Hounds of Love. Kate Bush at her peak as a producer and writer. At her most realised and mature. Her songs still have characters in them and there is some emotional separation. Though many of the songs find Bush pouring her heart out. People might disagree with me. What we can’t argue against is how Hounds of Love is Bush tackling with some very grown-up fears and truths. Think about what we find on this album: “images of heroines in peril, tales of terror, witches on trial, spirits in limbo, bodies trapped under ice, little lights and dark depths, mothers, fathers, life, death and rebirth. Discovering who you are, where you belong, how to love better. Finally growing up”. That is what Leah Kardos notes in her Hounds of Love book. There is an observation Kardos makes I had not thought about. Considering earrings, oddly! In promotional videos around The Kick Inside, Bush wore dove earrings. In the ‘white dress’ version of Wuthering Heights we see them. Cut from mother of pearl. The Kick Inside’s Kite has the lines “I’m like a feather on the wind/I’m not sure if I want to be up here at all”. Predicting her sudden rise to fame, Bush had no choice but to be on this wild and exhaustion ride. Those dove-shaped earrings sits well, as Kardos writes, with the kite imagery. Were these earrings a form of calm and protection? Did they symbolise something in Kate Bush? This idea of peace or someone being peaceful and passive? By 1985, her earring choice had shifted. Heavy metal, they can be seen on the Hounds of Love cover. She wore them on photoshoots and promotion around the album’s release. You can see Bush wearing them on Top of the Pops in 1986 when she performed Hounds of Love. “Dragons are mythic creatures linked to forces of chaos, wisdom and magic. Compared to the wide-eyed child with dangling doves, the woman with the gleaming dragons seems far more confident, knowing… and powerful”.
I think that is it, essentially: Kate Bush was where she wanted to be and had that control. Her bespoke home studio was completed by the start of 1984. Bush would produce Hounds of Love alone, against the desires of EMI. She proved them wrong when the album reached number one and gained huge critical applause. The production on Hounds of Love is miles away from her earliest work. It is, as Kardos writes, “strikingly oriignal for its time: poised, element, ethereal”. Unique and unusual for its time, as very few female artists had access to hi-tech recording equipment. When Hounds of Love became this phenomenon, Bush had very few female peers doing it like she was. Her 48-track studio was back at her family home. I do think that is one major reason why the album seems so powerful, open and emotionally revealing. She was surrounded by family and no doubt the memories of her childhood and home infused the songs. Feeling less guarded than she would be at a studio in London and on the clock, Hounds of Love benefits from that space and freedom. Some of the album written in Ireland, the country her mother was born in. The progress Bush made as an artist and producer in such a short time was hard-earned. It was not like it came easy. She battled exhaustion, record label doubts, critical backlash and challenges. It was her determination and faith in her own vision and path that led to Hounds of Love. I don’t think it is the first album where we truly hear what is inside of Kate Bush’s heart and mind. You can pick songs from her four albums before then. Examples on each album. All the Love from The Dreaming (1982), arguably her most revealing or personal to that point. Yet Hounds of Love is popular, partly as we connect with Kate Bush more as a person. Less guarded and hidden behind others. I do think the woman in the sea on The Ninth Wave is her. So many insights into her throughout that suite. Waking the Witch dealing with, among other subjects, sexism and misogyny. How a woman’s power is doubted and seen as evil. The Morning Fog is where she embraces life and family after being rescued. I have theorised that this moment is her struggle in the industry to prove herself and do things on her own terms. By building a studio next to her family home and having her family alongside her, she was able to achieve perfection and release a masterpiece.
Perhaps I am over-reaching, but I was flicking through Leah Kardos’s book on Hounds of Love. You can see this is her best album and her best as a producer. But I am thinking about the emotional impact of the album. Whether one of the secrets of its success is because Kate Bush is more at the centre. The cover for The Kick Inside sees her pinned to a kite and this small figure, seemingly flying high and unsure of where she would land. A degree of uncertainty and unpredictability. Lionheart is Bush in a lion costume on a toy chest. This idea of playfulness but also childhood. Never for Ever is a sketch of Bush with her skirt lifted and all these figures flying from it. Like ideas coming from her, it is busy and chaotic too. The Dreaming, where she has a key on her tongue to pass it to Houdini (depicted by Del Palmer on the cover) so he can escape a death-defying trap. All of these symbolise elements of risk, a lack of security or a semblance of disorder and wildness. Those dove earrings that might be interpreted as passive and about someone in flight. A softness. Hounds of Love brought dragon earrings and a cover where Bush was front and centre. Flanked by sleeping dogs, Bonnie and Clyde, she looks calm, happy, in control and fierce. The sign of a masterful songwriter and producer who was at her absolute peak. I feel every song says something about her. Even Mother Stands for Comfort. You get Bush expressing fears and doubts and not running away. Even on Hounds of Love’s title track, she eventually turns to face the chasing hounds. The heroine in the water who bravely battles and gets rescued. Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) about swapping places with someone. If we could do that we could run up that hill, that road, that building…with no problems. Defiance and strength. After overcoming an exhausting process of recording The Dreaming, something was unlocked in Bush. Building her own studio and being surrounded by nature and home. Inspired to write in a different way and more comfortable putting more of herself in tracks. Thinking larger and wider. It is true that, alongside The Beatles and David Bowie, this continued brilliance and oddness. Hounds of Love is undeniable one of the greatest albums…
EVER committed to tape.
