Countdown to Christmas Post #10

Was reminded of this track the other day when reading the excellent Ghost Of Electricity blog.
This was a Top 30 hit for Kate Bush in 1980, a very successful year for her when she released the wonderful Never For Ever album, which had hits with Army Dreamers, Breathing and Babooshka (which in itself could probably be a Christmas related post, in terms of the Russian legend, though the Kate Bush song itself deals more with the notion of a husband who no longer sees his wife as young, while she is increasingly paranoid). She also contributed backing vocals to Peter Gabreil’s eponymous third album (or should that read third eponymous album?), most noticeably on ‘Games Without Frontiers.’

I don’t know if there was an official video for this single in 1980 (not all songs did get videos made then, remember this is the year before MTV launched in the US and the best part of a decade before it launched in Europe), but this performance from YouTube is pretty great nonetheless.

Kate Bush -‘December Will Be Magic Again.’ mp3

Still the greatest video ever

The other day, the NME were doing a vote on the greatest videos of all time. I was extremely disappointed that they hadn’t even nominated Cloudbusting by Kate Bush, which I consider to be a way better video than ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ or even Hurt by Johnny Cash, or is that just heresy in this day and age?

BTW, am I now the only person out there who still likes the Stay by Shakespear’s Sister video?

Edinburgh Festival is Here

It’s August, which means that it’s the Edinburgh Festival and the Edinburgh Fringe, plus book festival, film festival etc.. Actually, as someone else pointed out, describing the Edinburgh ‘Fringe’ as a ‘fringe’ festival is rather like describing U2 as an indie band or Steven Spielberg as a cult director; it’s been way bigger than the ‘International Festival’ for many years.

As well as the T on the Fringe lineup, for which I have got tickets for many bands, I’ve also been taking in comedy and other shows. Today I went with Mrs. 17 Seconds and our friends Dave and Mark to see the Hull University Big Band, who were fantastic, and not the sort of thing I tend to put on at home, but they were brilliant. On Thursday, another 17 Seconds friend, Rory, had organised tickets for the Ukelele Orchestra of Great Britain. If your vision is something of a whole load of very elderly people playing George Formby songs then you are well, well out of date. They played a whole range of stuff including ‘Teenage Dirtbag’ by Wheatus, Bowie’s ‘Life On Mars’ and Talking Heads ‘Psycho Killer.’ Oh, and ‘Anarchy in the UK’ by the Sex Pistols. A huge amount of fun, and they don’t take themselves too seriously.

Thanks to Mark, I have a few links below for YouTube which have performances of songs done by the Ukelele Orchestra.

The Good, the bad and The Ugly

Wuthering Heights

Life On Mars?

Oh, and seeing as we’ve had those, how about some originals by Kate Bush and David Bowie themselves?

Kate Bush -‘Wuthering Heights.’ mp3

David Bowie -‘Life On Mars?’ mp3

These links will be up for one week only. Go and see the Ukelele Orchestra of Great Britain if you get the chance (and maybe you’ll catch them playing ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’!), and indeed the Hull University Big Band.

A Great, Lost Single #2

Kate Bush-‘Rocket Man (I Think It’s Going To Be A Long, Long Time)’/’Candle In the Wind.’ (1991)

In 1991, a compilation was released featuring the songs of Elton John and Bernie Taupin. Amongst it’s contributors were many whose continued existence flew in the face of everything that punk rock had stood for (Clapton, Rod Stewart, Phil Collins etc..) but one name shone bright above the stodge. Kate Bush.*

Bush had long been an admirer of Elton John, and understood – as I hope you do – that the man has written some fantastic songs. Whatever else is written about the man, in his lifetime he has written songs that are fantastic. Sure, he’s been responsible for some drivel (Nikita, Runaway Train, Can You Feel the Love Tonight, Candle in the Wind ’97 was abominable, but then at least Elton didn’t jump the shark after his second album (hello Oasis)). So, given that an up to date Kate Bush best of has yet to appear (yes, I know there was The Whole Story, but that was 1986) I present the two covers she recorded. Oh, and a fanastic Elton Song, that made the soundtrack of Almost Famous, and was also covered by Ben Folds.

Kate Bush-‘Rocket Man.’ mp3

Kate Bush-‘Candle In The Wind.’ mp3

Elton John-‘Tiny Dancer.’ mp3

These links will be up for one week only. Enjoy, and if you like what you hear, support the artists through your local record shop.

* The album in question was called Two Rooms. I don’t own it.

Underrated albums #5: Kate Bush " The Dreaming" (1982)

That difficult fourth album. Just ask Radiohead (Kid A), the Smiths
(Strangeways Here We Come) or The Cure (Pornography). Actually, ask Kate Bush.

The Dreaming, Kate Bush’s fourth album was released in 1982. It’s fair to say that Britain had never produced a female artist like her. A truly independent artist, who grasped the power of the medium of the music video, who had studied mime and could write amazing songs. Never afraid to tackle difficult themes, including incest (‘The Kick Inside) and homosexuality (‘Wow’ and ‘Kashka from Baghdad’), and drew inspiration from unusual sources (‘Infant Kiss’ was inspired by The Innocents, the filmed version of The Turn Of The Screw). She also began to produce her own records. The sound of her music may have owed almost nothing to punk, but the creative spirit than continues to run through her music has much to do with the creativity, experimentalism and individuality of what has become known as post-punk.

So by 1982, the world should have been hers for the taking. What the record company were probably not expecting, as post-punk faded and the prevailing aesthetic became shiny rather than scratchy, was The Dreaming. The title track referenced aboriginal culture and featured Rolf Harris on didgeridoo. And that kind of experimentalism (or madness, as many fans and critics saw it at the time) wasn’t confined to that track. The braying donkey sounds that close final track ‘Get Out Of My House’ seem designed to unsettle.

Yet though the album only produced one UK Top 40 hit, ‘Sat In your Lap’ with a seemingly demented piano riff that might have unnerved the more MOR end of her fanbase, the songs are gorgeous too. My personal favourite is ‘There goes A Tenner’ which bombed as a single in the UK (though reportedly a Top 10 hit in Ireland). It deserved to be a hit.

It’s a cliche, but maybe the problem with The Dreaming was that it was too ahead of it’s time. It’s dated extremely well, and it’s quirkiness is one of it’s many charms. Yes, it’s bonkers, but then when Bjork’s bonkers it’s considered cool.

The follow-up album is The Hounds Of Love, which she laboured over, concerned about what would happen if she was too bloody-minded (‘Running Up That Hill’ should really have been called ‘A Deal With God’ but her record company talked her out of it, fearing that invoking the almighty’s name would mean that she wouldn;t get airplay. Kate wasn’t Cliff Richard, after all!) It’s the album that consolidated her as a long-term player and meant that every kate Bush album afterwards would be an event when it arrived after an everlong gestation period. But The Dreaming, comparitive commercial flop though it may have been, explains why she is so revered by so many. There’s many who have been influenced by her, not just female singer-songwriters either, but male guitar bands.

And if we have to wait another decade for the next album it will be worth it.

Kate Bush-‘There Goes A Tenner.’ mp3

Kate Bush-‘The Dreaming.’ mp3

Kate Bush-‘Night Of The Swallow.’ mp3

Buy The Dreaming here. These mp3s will be up for one week only. If you like what you hear, go and buy it!