Kate Bush
EMI signed Kate Bush in 1974 when she was still a 16 year old
schoolgirl. She was given the deal on the strength of demo tapes
sponsored by David Gilmour of Pink Floyd, but the record company
decided to let her highly personal style - words, music, dance,
mime, squeaky voice - develop in its own good
time.
It would be four years before she made
a record. In the meantime she continued to play small London
venues with her group, The KT Bush Band.
Her record company's patience paid off when Kate's debut single
Wuthering Heights became UK Number One for
four weeks, also topping the charts in
Australia.
The Kick
Inside (1978) was dominated by Bush's startling falsetto and such imaginative songs
as Them Heavy
People, Wuthering Heights and Kite.
Top-notch session men and
Andrew Powell's sparkling production provided a rich setting for
the songs. The record's huge popularity didn't seem to faze
Bush, who returned before the end of the same year with another
well-crafted
album, Lionheart.
Kate
played her first large gig at the Empire Theatre in Liverpool (UK)
on 3 April 1979. Shortly thereafter she released a
live 7-inch EP of four songs from her first two
albums.
Demonstrating new-found studio
expertise, she arranged and co-produced Never for Ever (1980), which yielded three British hits
(Breathing, Babooshka and Army Dreamers) and further
proved her compositional depth. A credit line thanking Richard
Burgess and John Walters for "bringing in the Fairlight" gains significance in hindsight, given how
integral the sampling instrument subsequently became to her
music-making.

Exhausted by the apparently
endless, budget-haemorrhaging sessions for 1982's The
Dreaming - and bruised by its comparative lack
of success - Kate retreated to her 17th century farmhouse in Kent
in 1984 to secretly craft what would become her
masterpiece.
With
Hounds Of Love (1985) she delivered four precise, if typically obtuse,
hits (including the infectiously euphoric The Big
Sky and the Fairlight-driven chamber pop of Cloudbusting).
The
Ninth Wave ate up the whole of the second half of the
record - a dreamlike (and sometimes nightmarish) piece in seven
movements, centred around the waterlogged thoughts of a girl
adrift in the ocean after a storm.
Launched
with much fanfare in September 1985 at that most 80s of London
tourist attractions, the Planetarium, Hounds Of
Love provided the oxygen to revive Kate's
commercial fortunes - debuting at Number 1 - while creatively
cutting her loose to plot future headspinning
experiments.
Kate Bush is too English to
have enjoyed consistent success in America.
Her only Top 40 Billboard
single was Running Up
That Hill (which she reluctantly agreed could
be renamed because radio stations wouldn't play it under its
original title, Deal With God) and she is
probably still best known in the US as the woman who provided the
angelic soprano on Peter Gabriel's Don't Give
Up.
Kate retired into motherhood
in 1993 and twelve years would pass before her next album
release - Aerial (2005).
While
there was relatively little publicity for the album,
it earned Bush nominations at the 2006 BRIT Awards for
Best British Female Solo Artist and Best British Album.
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