FEATURE:
Kate Bush: Them Heavy People: The Extraordinary Characters in her Songs
IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush during the photoshoot for Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God), the first single from her 1985 album, Hounds of Love/PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush
God (Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God)/’The Man with the Child in His Eyes’ (The Man with the Child in His Eyes)
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WHEN thinking of which Kate Bush…
IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1978/PHOTO CREDIT: Mirrorpix
characters to bring together for this instalment, I definitely wanted to include the first one from Hounds of Love. I have brought in characters from her other albums, yet her most acclaimed album has remained untouched. It contains so many different characters, and I will cover off some more soon. The first is the biggest and most powerful in all of her music. It/he is also the subject of her most-streamed song. One that has ridden high on various iTunes charts and continues to climb in terms of popularity. God is the subject here. I will talk more about religion and the significance of religion or the spiritual in her music. However, it is worth learning more about one of Bush’s most important songs. Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) has had this long influence and regard. It was originally included in 1985’s Hounds of Love. Its lead single, released on 5th August, 1985, it only reached number three in 1985. You may say this is a decent position, however, a song so instantly impactful and iconic should have got to number one. Though it was a great year for music, I am struggling to think of a single released that year as good as Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God). It did then get a new attention and popularity featuring its inclusion in Stranger Things. That meant that a whole new generation and fanbase and, with that, the song got to number one in the U.K. It meant it was a long overdue chart topper that should have captured more of the public love in 1985. Featuring in the final season of Stranger Things, it has meant that the song has surpassed a billion and a half streams. Among its recent honours, Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) reached the top of the European iTunes chart. It also placed in the top twenty of the Official ingles Chart. Doing well on the Daily Global Spotify Top 50, this song continues to have this extraordinary life! I do wonder how much further it can go. I am not sure if it will rise higher in the charts by the time this feature has been published or will dip.
I do like how a song from an album over forty years old can succeed at a time when we have these huge Pop artists and there are so many other artists. Testament to the quality and relevance of this song. I did say this last year when writing a host of features to mark forty years of Hounds of Love. How people could relate to the lyrics. It is this idea of the song’s heroine wanting to do a deal with God so that she and a man could swap places and walk in each other’s shoes to better understand one another. Such a universal desire, what if there was a way of doing that?! I will touch on religion. However, I want to discuss Generation Alpha, Kate Bush in 2026 and darker themes and issues that could apply to the song. Or its lyrics are pertinent in a way. However, before getting there, it is worth bringing in some interview archive where Kate Bush talks about the inspiration behind Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God). Thanks to Kate Bush Encyclopedia for the resource. They provide some background and interview archive:
“Song written by Kate Bush. The song was reportedly written in one evening in the summer of 1983. It was the first song recorded for the subsequent fifth studio album Hounds Of Love. The electronic drums, programmed by Del Palmer, and the Fairlight part were present from the first recording of the song. The lyrics speak of Bush’s impossible wish to become her lover, and he her, so that they could know what the other felt. Kate played the first versions of the songs to Paul Hardiman on 6 October 1983. He commented later: “The first time I heard ‘Running Up That Hill’ it wasn’t a demo, it was a working start. We carried on working on Kate and Del’s original. Del had programmed the Linn drum part, the basis of which we kept. I know we spent time working on the Fairlight melody/hook but the idea was there plus guide vocals.”
The working title of ‘Running Up That Hill’ was ‘A Deal With God’. Representatives at EMI were hesitant to release the single as ‘A Deal With God’ due its use of the word ‘God’, which might lead to a negative reception. Bush relented and changed the title for the single. On the album and subsequent releases the title was ‘Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)’.
This song is very much about two people who are in love, and how the power of love is almost too big for them. It leaves them very insecure and in fear of losing each other. It’s also perhaps talking about some fundamental differences between men and women. (Kate Bush Club newsletter, 1985)
It is very much about the power of love, and the strength that is created between two people when they’re very much in love, but the strength can also be threatening, violent, dangerous as well as gentle, soothing, loving. And it’s saying that if these two people could swap places – if the man could become the woman and the woman the man, that perhaps they could understand the feelings of that other person in a truer way, understanding them from that gender’s point of view, and that perhaps there are very subtle differences between the sexes that can cause problems in a relationship, especially when people really do care about each other. (The Tony Myatt Interview, November 1985)”.
It is startling that A Deal with God had to become Running Up That Hill. The original title is more relevant than the one we know now. It is more about that spiritual deal than it is about this release. The heroine/woman running up the hill, running up the road – with no problem. If a deal can be done and two lovers could better understand one another, then it would be this revelation and freedom. Maybe it shows a shift today that there would be no issue using ‘God’ in a title. Even a more religious nation like the U.S., perhaps they are not as devour as they once were. In no way is there any blasphemy or anything anti-God. Bush was born into a Catholic family and I feel has retained her faith. She said how her career was a mission from God. She has brought religious figures into various songs through the years. I explored that when I wrote about Lily and four biblical figures that were included in that song. In terms of God. In future features, I am going to explore Them Heavy People. About religious teachings and figures like Jesu and the mystic George Gurdjieff, an early example of spirituality in Bush’s work. That song was included on 1978’s The Kick Inside. The Dreaming’s Suspended in Gaffa mentions God’s name, though it is a brief reference. The Song of Solomon from The Red Shoes is one I hope there is more information about, as I would love to know more about it. Hounds of Love’s Waking the Witch and 50 Words for Snow’s Among Angels also connect to religion and spirituality. However, Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) is the sole song where God is very much at the centre. It joins a select few classic Pop songs where one has to consider the personal and ecumenical. The divine and spiritual around the more humble. I do think that one of the strengths of Kate Bush’s music is her spiritual nature. I guess Madonna was another artist with Catholic roots who did bring religion and faith into her music. A fascinating connection between these artists. However, Madonna never wrote anything like this Kate Bush classic. Rather than focusing on the personal, Bush instead looked at how men and women in love can often make mistakes or there is this communication barrier. If a deal with the Almighty can be struck, then this could lead to harmony.
I think that the song could be updated for today. Many artists covered Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) after it topped the chart in 2022. Among those who have tackled it are Halsey and St. Vincent. I do feel the song is universal, though it is heteronormative. It is a straight couple. We are in a time of huge prejudice, discrimination and misogyny. What is powerful is this idea of two people being able to understand each other if they could swap places. Perhaps not something Kate Bush has ever considered, what is God could grant this wish now, but more to do with the toxicity and abuse that many women and members of the L.G.B.T.Q.I.A.+ community face. Would that ever help?! There is so much ignorance, transphobia and misogyny. Lives of women especially horrendous. They way they are viewed and treated by men online. Image-based abuse and misogyny are rife. I feel there is this epidemic that does require a lot more intervention from governments. Rather than reveal the shocking and disrupting extent regarding women’s safety online, at the base level, there is this need for greater understanding. No saying women ever should need to understand where men are coming from and why they do this. It is the other way around: men absolutely need to put themselves in the place of the women that they think nothing of abusing and degrading! If Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) resonates with people because that idea of swapping places and getting an idea of what someone else is thinking is so powerful and difficult to do, I also feel there is a more wide-reaching relevance. Rather than it being purely about lovers and cutting through tension and ignorance, think about the divisions we have today. In terms of those who spread hate and abuse women and the L.G.B.T.Q.I.A.+ community, what would happen if those responsible for causing distress and harm actually were the people they aim this at?! One feels that it would be a sovereign experience. New dynamics to a classic song. Would a loving and fair God stop such a universal and needed appeal?! Over forty years after the track was released, has it become easier for those in relationships to communicate and emphasise?
Before moving on, it is worth thinking about Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) and how it is spearheading this fandom and love of Kate Bush. Generation Alpha (those born in the rearly-2010s) are discovering Bush through this song. I wonder whether the nature of God and doing a deal with something unknown and invisible has affected them. I do think that the youngest and newest Kate Bush fans are among the most impassioned and curious., Bush set records when Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) reached number one in 2022 The longest time between number ones for an artist (forty-four years and eighty-three days). Bush became the oldest female artist to have a U.K. number one (sixty-three years and 342 days). In 2023, the song became the first solo recording by a female artist from the 1980s to surpass a billion streams on Spotify. Bush was sixty-four. Few female artists of that age are highly regarded and have the same opportunities as younger artists, so one would also hopes ageism could be tackled if those marginalising older women could swap places and see the damage that does. It is humbling and inspiring that so many young people are discovering Kate Bush. I hope that it is not a homogenised focus on Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God). I am an atheists, though I do feel that it is important to have faith, religion and spirituality explored through music. It is vital that music represents everyone. Religion less and less common in music. One powerful aspect of Kate Bush’s 1985-released work of genius is that Bush is turning to God. Rather than point the finger and tear the other person apart, she is reflecting on all the anger – “Is there so much hate for the ones we love?” – and wanting it to be resolved. This patience and different perspective that was not explored in music at that time. It is also not something you hear now. Taking these personal and intense emotions and almost praying for some sort of realisation and mutual understanding. “Let me steal this moment from you now/Oh, come on, angel/Come on, come on, darlin'/Let's exchange the experience“. Rather than praying to God or invoke his name in a rather ordinary or familiar way, he is almost this arbiter and proxy. Someone who can help men and women – or lovers of all genders and orientations – put themselves in each other’s places so they can see the hurt they are causing. Such a powerful and timeless message and feeling.
If the first ‘character’ – it seems odd referring to God as such! – is mysterious and anonymous because he has never been seen and is this spirit rather than an actual person, the next character I want to bring in is anonymous and mysterious for a different reason, Because we do not really exactly know who the person is. The Man with the Child in His Eyes is the eponymous character in the song from The Kick Inside. The second U.K. single released from Kate Bush’s debut, there might be misconceptions around the title. I have previously written how Bush has this positivity for men. In music, there are few artists completely positive and understanding regarding the opposite sex. Men often torn apart and cast aside. However, Bush is someone who has always been positive towards men. The idea of the ‘child in his eyes’ is not to do with children or anything sinister. Instead, it is the way men retain this child-like curiosity and quality – if you could ever say this is positive?! – through their life. Bush had so much wonder for men and loved them. Found them very attractive and sexy. Growing up with two brothers and a very supportive father, she had positive male role models right from childhood. David Gilmour was her mentor and paid for her first professional recording session. Bush played almost entirely with male musicians, so there were very few moments where she was ever angry or accusatory towards men in her music. Here, we get some interview archive where Kate Bush discusses the inspiration behind The Man with the Child in His Eyes:
“The inspiration for ‘The Man With the Child in His Eyes’ was really just a particular thing that happened when I went to the piano. The piano just started speaking to me. It was a theory that I had had for a while that I just observed in most of the men that I know: the fact that they just are little boys inside and how wonderful it is that they manage to retain this magic. I, myself, am attracted to older men, I guess, but I think that’s the same with every female. I think it’s a very natural, basic instinct that you look continually for your father for the rest of your life, as do men continually look for their mother in the women that they meet. I don’t think we’re all aware of it, but I think it is basically true. You look for that security that the opposite sex in your parenthood gave you as a child.
I just noticed that men retain a capacity to enjoy childish games throughout their lives, and women don’t seem to be able to do that.
If the single version starts with the enticing and thrilling “He’s here!” echoing, the album version does not include that. It is a shame. This was one of three songs that was recorded at AIR Studios in London in June 1975. Bush was sixteen when the song was recorded. In terms of the lyrics she wrote and what she was talking about, it was exceptionally mature. I discussed Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) and how other Pop artists of the day were not discussing God or relationship compromise through the same lens as Kate Bush. In 1978, when The Man with the Child in His Eyes was released as a single, there was really nothing like this. A couple of points to note regarding the ‘Man’ from the title. Many people assumed that it was David Gilmour. It is not really a song about a particular relationship and this odd love. Think about how Buch weas writing about love for The Kick Inside and there is a lot that is quite classical. It could feature in centuries-old novels or older romantic fiction. Poetic, sensual, literary and gothic, we get this vision of a man “lost on some horizon”. Perhaps this explorer or sea-farer, this is not a conventional or run-of-the-mill song of desire or lost love. In fact, I think the song is more imagined. “I hear him, before I go to sleep”, “Nobody knows about my man”, and “Listening to a man I’ve never known before” seems to suggest an imagined man or this fantasy. Bush immersing herself in the pages of a book of poems. My favourite line is “And he’s so aware of all my situations”. What situations are these?! That specific phrasing is fascinating. “And when I stay up late/He’s always waiting, but I feel him hesitate”. Is that her literally in bed with this person and a physical hesitation, or is it this more detached and less personal viewpoint?
Others feel the song is about an early love of hers, Steve Blacknell. Dating him when she was a teenager, he did once have in his possession the original hand-written lyrics of The Man with the Child in His Eyes. In hot pink felt tip pen, it is something I would like to own more than anything. The lyrics were auctioned off and I wonder who has them! These lyrics are “lost on some horizon” themselves! It is not a new thing where people guess the identity of people mentioned in songs. Who was Carly Simon referring to in You’re So Vain? Tracks from high-profile artists where they mention someone who wronged them always gets people speculating. However, here, people knew very little about Kate Bush. She was not as high-profile as she would become, so the possibilities of options were limited when it came to this man. However, rather than it being a paen to a special lover, it is more a general look at men and the way they have this child inside them. Also, in terms of The Man with the Child and His Eyes, it would be problematic assuming it to be literal. As Bush was only sixteen when she recorded the song, if it was released today and we reads the lyrics to be about this girl who was waiting to her older lover to return, that could cause controversy. Another mystery around The Man with the Child in His Eyes relates to the age Bush was wen she wrote it. Many assume she was only thirteen when it was written, though Bush herself has said she was sixteen. There are some incredible female artists who wrote stunning songs of immense beauty very song. Can anyone claim to have written something as unusual, profound and poetic as Kate Bush at the age of thirteen?! So many major artists take years to write something this good. They work with collaborators and other songwriters. Even The Beatles were mostly doing cover versions in their early years. However, Kate Bush wrote originals and was writing in this extraordinary unusual way. Unusual in terms of how different she was to artists around her.
It makes me think about Kate Bush’s earliest songs and the critical impressions. In 1978, she was subjected to so much sexism, misogyny and patronisation. Critics dismissing her because she was young and a woman. Often highlighting her lyrics as being juvenile and weird, there has not really been this reassessment and reappraisal. People do not really discuss now how incredible these earliest songs are. It is ironic that critics in 1978 were harsh on Bush’s lyrics considering what was around then. The basic and rather one-dimensional Punk lyrics. The mainstream not exactly offering up songs that were so insightful, fascinating and rich with possibility. They were direct, largely unsophisticated and sloganeering. There were some amazing artists offering something different, but Kate Bush was so far ahead of her time. People also need to talk about how influential The Kick Inside is today. In terms of the artists who clearly take similar directions and perspectives. We discuss Hounds of Love and its influence, though The Kick Inside is such an important and influential album. The Man with the Child in His Eyes is such an accomplished work from someone so young. Bush proving her genius right from the off! If Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) is a song about a very specific inspiration who everyone has a different visual impression of, The Man with the Child in His Eyes is perhaps misconstrued. People assuming it was about a boyfriend or someone close to Kate Bush. Instead, it is more about all men. How Bush viewed them. Celebrating and cherishing their child-like innocence, the narrative has changed. How many artists discuss the opposite sex in this way? There is positivity in Pop, yet there is still a lot in the way of recrimination, disagreement, division and isolation. The Man with the Child in His Eyes is like poetry. Performed on SNL in the U.S. in 1978, it was her only appearance on the show. Considered to be one of her best songs, I would love to see this given a chance to appear on the small or big screen at some point. So many standout lyrics. “Maybe he doesn’t love me/I just took a trip on my love for him”. Almost psychedelic in the way she “took a trip on my love”. So much to dissect and discuss. It is an indescribably beautiful and moving song from…
A teenage prodigy.
