FEATURE:
The Day Writes the Words Right Across the Sky
IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 2005/PHOTO CREDIT: Trevor Leighton
The Spread of Kate Bush’s Music
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CONNECTED to my features…
IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1978/PHOTO CREDIT: Gered Mankowitz
about Kate Bush that concern her legacy and how relevant she is today, it is worth noting how her work has spread through the years. Many artists influence certain types of sectors and corners of culture. There are a few greats that go beyond that and have made a huge impact right across the board. Their music has been used on T.V., film and there is this enormous spread. Kate Bush is definitely someone who can stand alongside the very best in that sense. I am going to mention some of the people who were in attendance in 2014 for Before the Dawn. As the live album turns ten in November, I am thinking about the residence and how significant it was. One of these once-in-a-generation things that truly blew people away. Kate Bush’s music, in the 1970s and 1980s, definitely had this legacy. It was influencing artists and being played around the world. However, the advent of the Internet definitely helped bring it to new places. She is not one of these artists who agrees to every request that comes her way when it comes to using music in film and T.V. However, there have been occasions when T.V. shows have used her songs to incredible effect. Of course, Stranger Things and Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God). That was in 2022. That same song has also appeared in Pose, It’s a Sin, GLOW, The Lake, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Clique, The Real World Homecoming and others. You do wonder how Bush decides which shows can use the songs. That is quite a broad range of shows with different fans and followings. No too much connects those shows. However, each time that song appears, it will connect with those who watch the shows. Her music scoring scenes across these eclectic and fascinating T.V. series/shows. This Woman’s Work has been used in Alias, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, The Handmaid's Tale, The Pact, and films including A Man Called Otto and The Mother.
Cloudbusting featured in Gossip Girl and Palm Springs. Hounds of Love was in Shadow in the Cloud. Babooshka has been played in Happy Valley. The Man with the Child in His Eyes was in Ashes to Ashes. Wuthering Heights in Behind Human. The Simpsons used π. The Morning Fog was in The Bear. Hello Earth showed up on Miami Vice. Under the Ivy used beautifully in I Hate Suzie. Think about all the different audiences who have watched those films and shows. How diverse those productions are. Beyond that, to the stage, there are tribute shows and cabaret performance. Dance and performance art shows. Orchestral performances too. In terms of the spread of her music, there are few artists who have had this music used in such a wide-ranging way. Again, maybe a sprinkling of legends, but it is a rare accomplishment. Her music has featured on shows like The X Factor. It is commercial enough that it can be brought to the screen on these mainstream shows. However, it can also sit on a show like The Handmaid's Tale. Something that is not especially mainstream and glossy. That is the power and adaptability of Bush’s music. In terms of artists who have covered her, again, it is a broad spread. Placebo, CMAT, The Last Dinner Party, Ra Ra Riot, The Decembrists, Georgia, Maxwell, The Puppini Sisters, The Staves, Gemma Hayes, Dusty Springfield and Saint Saviour are just a selection of artists who have covered her music. If Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) remains the most popular in terms of the number of covers, Suspended in Gaffa, Love and Anger and Wuthering Heights have been covered. I am always gladder when someone covers a lesser-known song. Maybe that is the one blind spot or negative: people not really going as deep as they should. Songs that are not covered and used in film and T.V. The fact The Bear used The Morning Fog was great. The Simpsons’ inclusion of π. If you were to draw this diagram about all the different artists, shows, films and theatre productions that have used her music or covered it, then it would be such a broad map! Dance acts like Utah Saints, The Prodigy, E-Clypse and Blue Pearl have sampled her work. A Folk heroine, she is also hugely adored in the worlds of R&B and Hip-Hop. I am sourcing from Graeme Thomson’s Under the Ivy: The Life and Music of Kate Bush, where he discusses how far and wide Bush’s work has reached. Prince and Tupac Shakur were fans. Big Boi is a massive champion. Tricky loved her music.
I do think that Kate Bush gets narrowed down and seen as a particular artist. That her music has only reached a certain type of audience. I am glad that she got this new focus through Stranger Things. However, Bush’s work has always appeared on screen. It has been covered so many times. Perhaps there is the temptation for people to go for more obvious songs, though the sheet variety of people who have tackled her music is stunning. Rita Ora, St. Vincent, Nerina Pallot and Solange you can also toss in there. When it came to those in attendance in Hammersmith for Before the Dawn in 2014, we had members of Pulp, Orbital, Pet Shop Boys, Prefab Sprout and Sparks. Kiera Knightley, Daniel Craig, Miranda Richgardson, Terry Jones, Dawn French, Tim McInnerney and Frank Skinner. From comedy to the big screen through to music, that was just a small selection of the incredible names that flocked to see one of their favourite artists, Lauren Laverne, Björk, Annie Lennox, Grace Jones, Paul McCartney, Florence Welch and Elton John. Madonna was reported to be in attendance. Mani, Kate Moss and Stella McCartney were there. The world of fashion showing their love. Bush’s music has long been used in fashion shows. Designer Greg Myler used Bush’s music for his Milan show. Bush was nominated in thew British Style category for the 2014 British Fashion Awards. Phoebe Philo opened her Céline show with This Woman’s Work and was wearing a Kate Bush T-shirt (that she bought at Before the Dawn days earlier). Authors who attended Before the Dawn included David Mitchell, Philip Pullman and Jeanette Winterson. The unique nature of Kate Bush’s lyrics resonated with authors. They are also universal lyrics. That paradox that means her work spreads so far and wide!
Her influence continues to grow and spread. The L.G.B.T.Q.I.A.+ community hold her up as an idol. Bush’s charity work and raising money for War Child means that she is also seen as this humanitarian figure. Or at the very least, someone who is hugely charitable and benevolent. This has inspired other artists and people throughout culture to do likewise. To user their platform and music to help raise awareness. People responding to her uniqueness and vision. Her singularity and openness. I have spoken about the need to recognise her influence in terms of the artists who cite her as important. Where you can hear Bush’s impact in their own work. I do feel a larger project should reflect Bush’s influence. Maybe a documentary (which I have pitched). Rae Morris, Peaches, Guy Pearce and Gemma Arterton. You can go on forever and ever looking at all the people who count Kate Bush as an idol or someone they admire. This has intensified over the past few years. I guess there is the temptation for every filmmaker to ask Bush for permission to use her music, as they want a viral moment. However, there is also that respect and affection. Not anting to bombard her. Bush is quite discerning, though she also is happy for her music to be used if done right. If she feels it adds to a scene. Lauren Mayberry and ANGELINAÏ covered Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) last year. Kate Bush’s music continues to be celebrated through high-profile orchestral tribute tours, specialized cover performances, and a resurgence driven by new media, particularly surrounding a 2026 “Wuthering Heights” movie adaptation. Charli xcx wrote the soundtrack and has mentioned her love of Kate Bush. Star Margot Robbie has. There are new covers of Army Dreamers. Considering the bloodshed and warfare around the world, that song influential and powerful to this day -over forty-five years since it was first heard. We have Cloudbusting in Paris, Cloudbusting - The Music of Kate Bush, Classically Kate Bush Tour, club nights and listening parties that have happened or will happen his year. One cannot deny just how vast her legacy is. Stretching and growing in terms of where her music reaches and how it is being represented and used, this will continue to grow for generations more. So many artists today who you can feel Kate Bush running through. That kind of power and genius reserved only for a select few. It is a major reason why so many people love…
THIS music great.
