FEATURE: One for the Record Collection! Essential February Releases

FEATURE:

 

 

One for the Record Collection!

IN THIS PHOTO: NAO/PHOTO CREDIT: Lillie Eiger

 

Essential February Releases

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I normally do this a bit earlier…

IN THIS PHOTO: Sam Fender

and look ahead to the following month when it comes to spotlighting albums. However, as we are in February, I want to look at the great albums upcoming. We do not have to wait long. On 7th February, there are some wonderful albums that you will want to get. I am going to select some choice albums. However, you can see a fuller list here. There are three from 7th February that you will want to add to your collection. The first album to investigate is Biig Piig’s 11:11. Go and pre-order this album from an incredible artist. Before moving on, here is an interview from Ticketmaster with Biig Piig. She talks about her incredible upcoming album:

Since bursting onto the scene with her hypnotic, sensual mixture of alt-pop, R&B and dance, tracks like 2019’s ‘Sunny’ and 2020’s ‘Feels Right’ helped ensure her breakthrough translated into sustained success. With infectious basslines to her name alongside her calming, heaven-sent vocals – which are sung in both English and Spanish – she’s crafted a distinct sound, developed over the course of various EPs and mixtapes.

Her recent project was 2023’s Bubblegum, which weaved between hip-hop and liquid drum ‘n’ bass to capture the emotions of her move to LA. Now, eight years on from her first single, Smyth’s debut album has finally arrived, converging on her long-standing affection for dance music – which remains a constant in amongst the turbulence of young adulthood.

We spoke to Smyth about the pace of being an artist in 2025, the road to 11:11 and why she now feels at home in London, after plenty of globetrotting.

Why did the time 11:11 resonate with you as the title of your debut album?

Whenever I catch it on my phone, it’s the only time that I really stop and take a minute to be really present, and reflect on things that I wish were different. It’s also just a really peaceful moment. I was stuck for an album title for so long… I just thought about it one day, and the time came up [on my phone]. Actually, the album is about reflection. It’s about points in the last two years, looking back on relationships with myself, family, friends and my partner. 11:11 represents the moment – looking back through all of that.

Do you find yourself catching it in the morning or the evening?

Morning – always morning! By the evening, I’m not looking at my phone.

When did you realise you were regularly noticing that time, and using it to reflect?

Honestly, it’s been like that for years. It’s something that I’ve been doing since teenhood. Not every day, but when it does happen, I love it. It feels like a moment of getting in touch.

Life can seem to move so fast in 2025 – especially for young creatives. Is it rather telling that you can only take one minute to reflect and be present?

I hadn’t really looked at it like that, but it’s very true. The way the world moves right now is so fast, and it’s quite demanding. There’s a lot of anxious feelings in stopping, because you feel like if you stop, you’ll implode. We’re so onto ‘the next thing’ that it keeps us out of our heads a little bit… sometimes it becomes default to keep going. It’s a bit of a generational thing, as well.

Do you thrive, creatively, in the chaos?

100 per cent. I’ve always been like that since growing up. That’s not to say that I don’t want more quiet moments. As I’m understanding more about the healing process of different things – and also maturing –  you need to be content with just being present, and not running to the next thing all the time.

Did that approach underpin how 11:11 came together?

It was definitely a bit untethered. I started writing it a couple of years ago, and I didn’t know I was writing it at the time. I was just writing music, found a track, and I was like, ‘I want to start making a record.’ There was a lot of stopping and starting. For the best part of a year, I was still confused as to what I was making. You keep writing, and then it starts to make sense… it’s almost like one day, you stop, and you’re like, ‘Oh, my God, it’s done.’

I never thought I would get to a point where I’m content with putting out an album, because I’m so indecisive sometimes. Maybe it’s not even that – I’ve [previously] only wanted to say the story in four or five tracks. This one, I wanted to get a bit deeper with.

Sonically, you’ve already explored a wide range of sound palettes –  what were you going for on 11:11?

It shifted and changed. When I wrote ‘4AM’, I knew that was going to be the opening track from the get-go… I would love to start the album with that first line – “You should have hit me with the bad news first” – and then reflect through how you got there. After that track, I realised I [wanted] to make a hard-hitting club record, but there’s also a softer side that I also want to display. ‘One Way Ticket’, an acoustic track, sitting alongside [the other tracks] was important, also because there’s just different levels of space. I love creating space in songs”.

The next album I want to get to is Heartworms’ Glutton For Punishment. One of the most original and captivating young artists around, I would recommend everyone pre-order the album, as it is going to sit alongside the best of the year. There is not a lot of information available about the album. Instead, I am going to bring in a recent interview from NME. We get a bit of background around the South London artist and her new album:

Even if it isn’t immediately clear what Heartworms sings about, an undeniable darkness seeps into every song. “I feel comfortable in it,” she admits. “I mean, happiness is not even a real emotion to me. There’s joy in a moment, or content. Most of the time, I’m not content – I’m in a dark place and trying to figure things out. That’s just the way I am, and I’m always going to be this way.”

Sometimes, you don’t know whether to be charmed or concerned by Heartworms’ matter-of-fact nature. We arrive at the colossal Avro Lancaster R5868, the steely crown jewel of Hangar Five. She points out its “tattoos”, or the small yellow bombs painted on its side denoting every mission it’s embarked on. The average Avro Lancaster might have been deployed 21 times; tot up the “tattoos” on this one, and you’ll get 137.

“I once met a guy who had a family tie to this,” Orme says casually. “He was crying because he felt the emotions connected to it. It’s such a grand connection because it’s so big. He just came up to me and was like, ‘Can you take a photo?’ with tears streaming… it was such a strange situation.”

That discomfort arises again when we talk about her fascination with military history. It permeates many of the songs on ‘Glutton For Punishment’; lead single ‘Warplane’ documents the tragic death of Spitfire pilot William Gibson Gordon at just 20. A chugging, fizzing bass and grand, operatic chorus see the singer proclaim: “Oh, look up theeeere / We’ll be freeeee!” Meanwhile, follow-up single ‘Extraordinary Wings’ is a sleek, simmering and very definitive anti-war statement: “I don’t wish murder, ‘cause I got no right.” Heartworms’ military obsession can make one feel queasy – but evidently, there’s something deeper in it for her.

PHOTO CREDIT: Jamie Waters for NME

Standing in a hangar filled with bombers, NME notes that there’s a lot of destruction in this room. Heartworms concurs, running through a spiel she’s seemingly prepared beforehand: the planes are machines built by humans and only turned into weapons by humans. What she’s appreciating are simply innocent contraptions, art detached from their artists.

But then she says something more interesting. “It’s easy to make [war] a reality when you’re around these things because you’re not hiding from it,” she says plainly. “You become more aware of it every day.”

“I want people to understand that it’s fine to just be honest about how you feel”

Perhaps Heartworms’ unflinching attitude to conflict can also be explained by her childhood. While ‘Glutton For Punishment’ gives an overview of the general human lust for suffering, the record partially alludes to her difficult relationship with her mother.

She unintentionally kick-started Heartworms’ career by grounding the then-14-year-old for the grave offence of having a boyfriend. Stuck at home for her sins, Orme picked up the guitar, and a beautiful new relationship was born. But the “constant conflicts” forced her to escape, where she bounced between foster homes, couches and the YMCA. As the track ‘Smuggler’s Adventure’ makes clear, Heartworms always had to return to her family’s house”.

The penultimate album from 7th February that you will want to get is Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory’s eponymous album. A new group fronted by an established and legendary artist, this will be a slightly new direction. I would urge people to pre-order the incredible Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory. This is going to be an album already getting a lot of buzz and love. You will want to add this to your collection for sure:

From the off, Sharon Van Etten and The Attachment Theory is sonically different from Van Etten’s previous work. Writing and recording in total collaboration with her band for the first time, Van Etten finds the freedom that comes by letting go. The result of that liberation is an exhilarating new dimension of sound and songwriting. The themes are timeless, classic Sharon – life and living, love and being loved – but the sounds are new, wholly realized and sharp as glass. Reflecting on this new artistic frame of mind, Van Etten muses,

“Sometimes it's exciting, sometimes it's scary, sometimes you feel stuck. It's like every day feels a little different – just being at peace with whatever you're feeling and whoever you are and how you relate to people in that moment. If I can just keep a sense of openness while knowing that my feelings change every day, that is all I can do right now. That and try to be the best person I can be while letting other people be who they are and not taking it personally and just being. I'm not there, but I'm trying to be there every day.”

Sharon Van Etten and The Attachment Theory is a quantum leap in that direction - Lol Tolhurst”.

I will move to 14th February soon. Go and pre-order the phenomenal Cowards from Squid. One of the country’s best bands, their latest album is really intriguing. Even if you have not heard of the band, you will want to check it out. I am fairly new to their brilliance but can recommend them highly. A wonderful group that may be about to release their strongest work yet:

Squid’s new album Cowards is about evil. Nine stories whose protagonists reckon with cults, charisma and apathy. Real and imagined characters wading into the dark ocean between right and wrong.

Cowards is Squid’s most courageous album: simultaneously growing in scope and returning to basics. The band recorded Cowards at Church Studios in Crouch End with Mercury prize winning producers Marta Salogni and Grace Banks. On additional production is longtime shifu and collaborator Dan Carey, who recorded the band’s first two albums. The record was mixed in Seattle by John McEntire, before being compressed by the rich analogue chain of Heba Kadry’s mastering in Brooklyn, New York.

Squid have come a long way since forming in 2016 as an instrumental jazz band for a monthly night in Brighton. Their debut album Bright Green Field (2021) arrived as the world was starting to open up after the pandemic and they broke into the top 5 in the UK chart. In 2023 they released their sophomore album, the brooding O Monolith, which took the band all over the world and broke new ground that hardly seemed possible years prior”.

There are two albums from 14th February that I want to mention. First, a bit of a shift. Doves’ Constellations for the Lonely initially was announced for 14th February but has been moved back to 28th February. Go and pre-order the album. I will bring in an interview now from The Guardian from December. This is a big and very personal album from Doves. Fans and new discoverers of their music alike will want to purchaser it. Constellations for the Lonely sounds like it is going to be amazing:

Just over four years ago, Doves were on the crest of a wave. Their first album in more than a decade – The Universal Want – had been rapturously received, helping them notch up their third UK No 1. All set to perform it live, the tour was suddenly cancelled due to frontman Jimi Goodwin’s mental health – he has since said he is in recovery from substance abuse.

The cancellation “was heartbreaking for us because this is all we’ve ever wanted to do,” explains guitarist Jez Williams, who formed Doves with drummer brother Andy and schoolfriend Goodwin in Wilmslow, Cheshire in 1998. Sat alongside him in a Manchester eaterie, Andy explains: “You can get away with that once, but if we had to pull a tour again it would be curtains.” Thus, in late 2023, with a new album on the way, and Goodwin telling them he still wasn’t up to touring, they made the momentous decision to go on the road without him.

“With Jimi’s blessing,” insists Jez. Fans, too, have been overwhelmingly supportive. In November, with the brothers sharing vocals, a rejigged Doves performed in Hanley, Birkenhead and Hebden Bridge to rapturous receptions. Some fans even flew in from the US and audiences applauded the supportive onstage mentions of the absent frontman. “It felt like Jimi was there in spirit,” says Andy. “He isn’t here at the moment, but is very much a part of us.”

The singer is very much a presence on Constellations for the Lonely, the forthcoming album which ranks with their best work despite – perhaps even because of – the difficult circumstances of its creation. Recording had to take place when Goodwin was well and up for working. The brothers reveal that the singer’s vocal to first single Renegade was laid down as a guide, and not intended for the finished record, but it’s beautifully melancholy. “It’s not a perfect vocal,” admits Andy, “but there’s real emotion. Jimi brings authenticity.”

The trio have been close since school, and are so accustomed to setbacks that Jez jokes about a “curse of Doves”. After they emerged as dance act Sub Sub – reaching No 3 in 1993 with Ain’t No Love (Ain’t No Use) – their studio burned down. “But that gave us the opportunity to start afresh,” he explains. “We’d played instruments as kids and picked them up again. We’d seen how the Beasties Boys transformed themselves from brat-rap and thought: if they can do that, why don’t we have a go?”

Their 2000 debut Lost Souls and follow-up The Last Broadcast in 2002 were both Mercury-nominated, the latter and 2005’s Some Cities reaching No 1. “We’d grown up watching Top of the Pops and suddenly we were on it,” says JezThey toured the US with the Strokes as their support band. “It was party time on the bus like it was someone’s birthday every night. You’ve never done it before, so you get carried away.” Gradually, though, the lifestyle and heavy touring took a toll. “Two day drives and sleeping in a bed moving at 70mph are not natural environments for a human being,” considers Jez. His brother adds: “Throw in drink and drugs and something’s bound to go wrong, isn’t it?”.

The first album from 14th February I want to spotlight is Richard Dawson’s End of the Middle. A truly brilliant songwriter who many people might not know. I hope that people buy his album. You can pre-order it now. Do make sure that you give this album some love. From what we have heard from it so far, it is shaping up to be one of this year’s best albums:

The title of Richard Dawson's new album End of the Middle is a suitably slippery contradiction, one that invites multiple interpretations: Middle-aging? Middle-class? The middle-point of Dawson's career? The centre of a record? Centrism in general? Polarisation? The possibility of having a balanced discussion about anything? Stuck in the middle with you? Middle England? Middling songwriting?

End of the Middle is a wonkily beautiful peer into the workings of the family unit, perhaps several generations of the same family: "I wanted this record to be small-scale and very domestic", Dawson explains, "to be stripped back, stark and naked, and let the lyrics and melodies speak for themselves and for the people in the songs". By paring things right back what is revealed is a suite of remarkably poised, oddly elegant, beautiful music”.

Prior to moving on to albums out on 21st February, I want to highlight The Velveteers’ A Million Knives. This is a band I am recently switched onto. I am really interested to hear what they deliver on their upcoming album. If you want to pre-order it, then you can do so here:

The Velveteers bring a visceral energy to their explosive sophomore album, A Million Knives.

The album is a blistering rock anthem infused with melodic indie songwriting. With Grammy Award-winning producer Dan Auerbach at the helm, the Boulder, CO trio encapsulates the raw, forceful, and profoundly heavy energy of their live performances and laser-focuses a spotlight on tightly crafted songs as they carve out their own distinctive niche.

Driving The Velveteers is the commanding presence of frontwoman Demi Demitro, a no-bullshit, five-foot-something spitfire with thunderous guitar riffs and soaring vocals, backed by the incendiary duo of Baby Pottersmith and Johnny Fig on drums. The band's signature dual drum setup creates a thunderous foundation that propels their gritty, dynamic garage rock sound. On A Million Knives, this setup melds seamlessly with a more modern indie rock influence-the attitude of Wolf Alice, the colossal sound of Queens of the Stone Age, and the singular lyrical voice of Hole.

The Velveteers have built a dedicated following through relentless touring and electrifying performances, sharing stages with renowned acts such as Smashing Pumpkins, The Black Keys, Greta Van Fleet, Guns N' Roses, and Des Rocs. With A Million Knives, The Velveteers offer a compelling testament to their rising stardom, a rock 'n' roll album as beautiful as it is terrifying”.

An album that you will not want to miss out on, IDER prepare to release Late to the World on 21st February. You can pre-order the album here. A duo I have been a fan of for a few years now, I am really excited to hear their new album. Before moving along, I want to drop in this article from CLASH that provides us some useful insight and information about an album that is going to make a big impact:

IDER will release new album ‘Late To The World’ on February 21st.

The alt-pop duo continually twist and turn, with each album representing its own world. Recent sessions with Dann Hume have been exceptionally productive, with IDER commenting that the result album is one they have “always wanted to make.”

Out on February 21st, new album ‘Late To The World’ finds IDER zeroing in on their core values. Megan Markwick explains…

“We had high ambitions for the sound of this record. We talked a lot early on about how we wanted the production to be super intentional. Sometimes when you’re unsure, you shove everything in – you fill it up with every synth sound, every beat, every layer. But actually what feels more mature for us right now, and what mirrors the [album’s] messages, is stripping things back to the essentials. Everything has its purpose.”

The incoming album is available to pre-order, and features previous singles ‘Unlearn’, ‘Girl’, and ‘You Don’t Know How To Drive”.

The next album I want to spotlight is the fourth from NAO. Jupiter is one you will want to pre-order. There is a lot to recommend about this artist and album. She is a tremendous talent. I am going to bring in this interview from The Guardian where NAO talks about Jupiter and living with ME:

Nao is trying to articulate how it feels to be on the verge of releasing a new album. When this thing that’s been yours and yours alone has to be launched into the world. “It feels really similar to being pregnant,” the 37-year-old mum of two decides. Her answer feels apt; we’re currently sitting in an east London cinema cafe hemmed in by buggies while a mum-and-baby screening of erotic thriller Babygirl plays next door. “It’s really exciting in the beginning, then it gets a bit tedious,” she continues. “And you’re stuck in the process because you need to finish it. Get it out.” Sometimes, she says, it can also be just as painful.

Not that you’d know it from listening to this month’s fourth album, Jupiter, a typically featherlight concoction of pillow-soft soul, experimental R&B and airy acoustic ruminations all anchored by her angelic, otherworldly voice. It also carries just a dash of the electronic-leaning “wonky funk” that saw Nao (born Neo Joshua) hailed as one to watch when she emerged in 2015. But Jupiter’s overarching sense of contentment has been hard won after years spent battling an illness that prevented her from touring.

Jupiter is a sequel of sorts to 2018’s Grammy and Mercury prize-nominated second album Saturn, an emotionally tumultuous opus named after the astrological concept of Saturn return, a sort of crossroads a person reaches roughly every 27 to 29 years, before entering the next stage of their life. While that album dealt with the ups and downs of her 20s, 2021’s And Then Life Was Beautiful, released into post-pandemic’s upside-down world, searched desperately for joy. Shortly before it came out, Nao revealed she’d been diagnosed with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), a disabling condition that left her profoundly fatigued and darkened by what she calls a low-grade depression. “You can only do a small percentage of what you were capable of,” she says, nursing a coffee, a rare treat while following a low-carb diet that helps her recovery (she will return to touring later this year). “For example, walking to meet you here, I’d probably have to take a taxi home. And then I’d be in bed for the rest of the day.”

Jupiter’s title was very specifically chosen because it’s “the planet of joy”, she says. “It’s a planet of good fortune and good luck. And I really wanted to bring that into my life.” She singles out the balm-like Happy People, which glides around a sun-kissed Afrobeat lilt, as a key song. “It came from realising who was important to me in my life,” she says. “I think when you’re in your 20s you’re trying to make as many friends as possible. Then you get into your 30s, you have big transitions in life, and actually the fewer people the better.”

Her candour is refreshing. When I say that she is underrated and that collaborations with the likes of Stormzy, Mura Masa, Chic, Lianne La Havas, Disclosure and Ezra Collective should have made her a household name, she doesn’t see it as a compliment. “It’s like saying you’re good enough to succeed but you haven’t quite yet. I get a lot of comments saying I’m underrated, which is fine, but I’ve had to work a lot on what my idea of success is.” While she’d love to “stream in the billions”, she’s also happy with where she’s at. “I just have to become present and think actually you’re doing all right. You’re all the things you wanted to be; you’re, I hope, still credible; you make the music that you want; you still sell out your tours, but also you’re a mum and you get to pick up your kids from school and drop them off.”

She thinks doing things at her own pace – she didn’t sign a record deal until she was 27 – has helped with her outlook. Born in Nottingham and raised mainly in London, Nao saw her early music career take place behind the scenes. At 18 her voice won her a place at London’s Guildhall School , but she struggled to believe in herself. “I’m not really sure how I got in,,” she says. She compares it to the 2014 film Whiplash, in which a jazz drummer is pushed to the brink by his instructor. “I was working at 5am in the morning to basically not be embarrassed and not be humiliated by the teachers. That definitely stayed with me for a long time.” She felt she had to “work and overwork and overwork to be on top of it”.

Before moving onto three albums from 28th February, there are two more from 21st that I want to discuss. The next is Sam Fender’s People Watching. You can pre-order it here. There is precious little written about this album, so I have to go back last year when the album was announced. This article from CLASH tells us a little bit at least:

Sam Fender will release his third studio album ‘People Watching’ on February 21st.

The North East songwriter goes back out on the road this winter, completing an instantly sold out arena tour in December. Set to play a no doubt emotional hometown show in Newcastle, highlights include London’s huge the O2 Arena.

2019 album ‘Hypersonic Missiles’ took Sam Fender to the next level, backed by some titanic live shows. Work on his third LP has been progressing behind the scenes, with sessions spread across two years alongside bandmates Dean Thompson and Joe Atkinson.

The musicians worked firstly in London in 2023 with producer Markus Dravs, and then earlier this year in Los Angeles with The War on Drugs’ Adam Granduciel – Sam is a long-time fan of his work”.

The final album from 21st February you will want to own is The Murder Capital’s Blindness. Another tremendous album from a band that are going from strength to strength, you can pre-order Blindness here. They are a force to be reckoned with. One of the very best bands in this country right now:

Blindness is the vividly realised, clear-sightedly ambitious new album from Irish band The Murder Capital. The sound of a band firing on all cylinders that bristles with energy yet intimate and simultaneously expansive. Eleven songs that don’t hang about in terms of grabbing the listener.

There’s a wider, richer perspective animating the Murder Capital’s new set of songs, brought on from the diverse insights the five members were bringing to the creative process, differing worldviews arising from their literal new positions in the world. Drummer Diarmuid Brennan was living in Berlin, bass player Gabriel “g” Paschal Blake was in Letterkenny, guitarist Cathal “pump“ Roper was in Donegal, and guitarist Damien “irv” Tuit and Mcgovern were in London. The album prioritizes urgency, energy, freshness – all baked into the songs from their earliest incarnations, recorded in la with the help of grammy-winning producer John Congleton”.

One of the biggest albums of this year arrives on 28th February. BANKS’ Off with Her Head is one you will want to pre-order. If you do not know about BANKS or have not listened to her music then I would suggest you to. She is a phenomenal artist. Off with Her Head is one you will not want to miss out on:

California-bred singer-songwriter, Jillian Rose Banks, aka Banks, crafts moody, alternative pop with shades of contemporary R&B. Emerging in the early 2010s with a handful of downtempo, alt-R&B tracks, Banks created a signature sound that helped build a cross-genre audience. Her critically acclaimed and gold-certified debut album, Goddess, featured songs like “Before I Ever Met You,” “Warm Water,” and “Fall Over,” as well as collaborations with producers Justin Parker, Shlomo, and Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs. The album peaked just outside the Top Ten on the Billboard 200. In 2016, Banks released her highly anticipated sophomore album, The Altar, which featured singles “Fuck with Myself,” “Gemini Feeed,” and “Mind Games,” and peaked at number 17 on the Billboard 200.

Banks returned in July 2019 with her third studio album, III, which featured her synth-heavy single “Gimme.” Additional contributors 2 included Francis and the Lights on “Look What You’re Doing To Me” and producer Paul Epworth (Adele, Rihanna) on “Hawaiian Mazes.” She released a short EP entitled Live and Stripped in 2020, followed by her 2022 album Serpentina, which Banks recorded amid the pandemic during months of isolation and is tied to themes of shedding old skin and embracing the new. Banks’s artistry stands out through the rawness and vulnerability that shines earnestly through her music. With so much success under her belt already, Banks is looking forward to an exciting future ahead”.

The penultimate album that you will want to pre-order is Everything Is Recorded’s Temporary. You can pre-order it here. I am really interested to see what the album delivers. Another artist I am quite new to, I am going to listen closely. The list of collaborators on Temporary is really impressive and eclectic:

The third studio album from Everything Is Recorded, the collaborative music project centred around producer Richard Russell.

Temporary features an incredible roll call of collaborators including Sampha, Bill Callahan, Noah Cyrus, Florence Welch, Maddy Prior, Berwyn, Alabaster Deplume, Jah Wobble, Yazz Ahmed, Laura Groves, Kamasi Washington, Rickey Washington, Roses Gabor, Jack Peňate, Samantha Morton, Clari Freeman-Taylor and Nourished By Time. Created over four years from 2020 to 2024, Temporary was recorded at Russell’s own west London Copper House studio, alongside sessions in Tottenham, Cumbria, Dorset, Los Angeles and Las Vegas, and is set to build on previous acclaimed releases including 2018’s eponymous, Mercury Prize-nominated debut album.

On Temporary, Russell reboots his musical DNA: while his music had previously been about rhythm, words and melody in that order, on Temporary he swaps rhythm and melody, the rhythm taking up less space and the melody coming to the fore. Musically some songs are inspired by the sonic thought experiment “what if folk music had ‘gone digital’ in the 80s, just as reggae had?”, while spiritually and lyrically the themes encompass grief and loss. The results – elevated by an intriguing and diverse set of collaborators who sound like the best and freshest versions of themselves – are the most luminous and relaxed compositions of Russell’s career. Every song sounds washed in sunshine and graced by tenderness. More fragile and quieter than previous Everything Is Recorded output, it might be one of the gentlest records ever made about death. In Russell’s own words “making the album was joyous, a way of hallowing life”.

The final February album you will want to pre-order is Sports Team’s Boys These Days. In a month that offers some really strong albums, Sports Team are going to give us an album that will get a lot of critical praise. You can pre-order it here:

Hand-break off, Sports Team are back. With musical pedals to the metal and saxophones at full throttle, the Mercury-nominated six-piece bring us their third studio album, Boys These Days. After their first two, Top 3 records – the Mercury Prize-nominated Deep Down Happy (2020) and Gulp! (2022).

Think Prefab Sprout meets Roxy Music the band ally a seer-like lyrical insight with their most dynamic musical performances to date, Sports Team are piercing the content abyss. A “carousel of 21st-century sins”, this witty and insightful examination of modern life is both a critique and a celebration of its times. Yes, ‘Boys These Days’ takes aim at everything from advertising hype to relationship dysfunction, stationed at the point where the digital tide crashes onto IRL shores, but their perspective is fuelled by immersion in that landscape as Sports Team are scrolling along with the rest of us.

Though recorded in Bergen, the birthplace of black metal, the sessions at the start of 2024 saw Sports Team create their brightest and most beguiling record yet”.

This is a selection of albums out this month that are going to be worth your time and money. Such a packed and exciting one for new music, I hope my recommendations have been useful. The artists and albums listed above prove that February is…

A really strong month.

FEATURE: The Digital Mixtape: A Self Esteem Mixtape

FEATURE:

 

 

The Digital Mixtape

PHOTO CREDIT: Rosaline Shahnavaz/The Guardian

 

A Self Esteem Mixtape

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AHEAD of the release…

of her anticipated third studio album, I wanted to put together a Self Esteem mixtape. The moniker of Rebecca Lucy Taylor, A Complicated Woman arrives on 25th April. There is a pre-sale that I would advise people to check out. Self Esteem has a run at the Duke of York’s Theatre in London from 16th-19th April. On Wednesday at 10 a.m., you can get the chance to be a part of a phenomenal experience. Released in October 2021, Prioritise Pleasure was the second album from Self Esteem. Hugely acclaimed and nominated for the Mercury Prize, I think A Complicated Woman will be among the most acclaimed albums of this year. I want to quote from a recent interview with Self Esteem from The Guardian:

That is no surprise. Like Taylor, the album was funny, frank and highly literate, in both art and pop. Its choreographed live performances nodded to Blond Ambition-era Madonna, while its diary-esque spoken-word lead single I Do This All the Time combined aphorisms about life as a British millennial woman with things that men have said to and about Taylor. “All you need to do, darling, is fit in that little dress of yours / If you weren’t doing this you’d be working in McDonald’s,” runs one vivid couplet. A fan got the line “You’re a good, sturdy girl” tattooed on their arm. Its overall mood was one of defiance, and shortly after its release, in April 2021, it became established as a modern classic. As a result of that song, she says, “everything I ever wanted was offered to me”.

I just worked nonstop; didn’t listen to anyone telling me to have a day off. But obviously, I was burned out

I tell her I feel as if I’m reading her diary when listening to her music, but is that fair? “Ummm,” she replies, then answers firmly. “Yeah. It is.” Her first album, 2019’s Compliments, Please, was the truth, “but I did dress it up in different narratives in order to say it, because I was too scared. Prioritise Pleasure was the first time I didn’t do that. Honestly, I can’t say boo to a goose, but I will say it in a song, and I’ll keep it vague enough so no one can send me a nasty text message. I want them to have that step and go: ‘Oh, is it art?’ But it’s not. It’s me.”

The success of Prioritise Pleasure panicked Taylor into saying yes to everything she was asked to do. “So I just worked nonstop; didn’t listen to anyone telling me to have a day off. And I hate, like, ‘burnout’,” she says, cringing. “But obviously, I was burned out. I really was. I felt nothing. It was horrible.” She had been diagnosed with depression in 2013, and started therapy and medication then, but at the end of Prioritise Pleasure, she went to see a psychiatrist again. “I didn’t feel all right, and I still don’t know what I feel like, really. I’m really low, a lot.” A chronic overthinker, she has been trying to work out why, now she has achieved everything she wanted to achieve, she’s still struggling. “Is that a natural human reaction? Like, be careful what you wish for? Everyone being like, ‘Well, what are you whingeing about, you’ve got everything you’ve banged on about wanting, your whole life?’ But I couldn’t explain it. I just felt nothing. And I flatlined. With the internet, you can diagnose yourself with anything. And now it’s like, burnout, or, you know, dopamine addiction. I probably have all these things, but it doesn’t really help me,” she says. “What do I do now, then?”

The answer is A Complicated Woman, the third Self Esteem album, due at the end of April. It is her best yet. The pop bombast and sloganeering of its predecessors has evolved into a more complex, but no less immediate, beast. It ranges from more spoken word (I Do and I Don’t Care, a natural successor to I Do This All the Time) to anthems about getting your shit together (Focus Is Powerful) and working out how she feels about drinking (The Curse, which builds to a rousing choral climax of: “I wouldn’t do it if it didn’t fucking work”, and sounds like an X Factor winner’s Christmas single from an alternate universe).

She says the album was written “through gritted teeth”, and that in an ideal world, she’d have had two years to think about it. Why not wait? “For money, and time, and the big thing that I’m, sort of, not 25.” She is 38 now, and both strident and self-conscious about it. Not for the first time today, it’s obvious why she has given the album that title. “Also, no one actually said this to me, but I was like, I need a nose job, and I need to do bleepy-bloopy pop girlie. I thought, the only way to capitalise on this is to come back as a hot girlie pop star.”

PHOTO CREDIT: Rosaline Shahnavaz/The Guardian

Taylor doesn’t need me to point out the irony. The project is called Self Esteem. Prioritise Pleasure’s most streamed song, Fucking Wizardry, calls an ex lucky to have got anywhere near her in the first place. She performed it with an expert dance routine on the Graham Norton Show and then explained to Kate Hudson what a Boots Advantage card is. She talked to magazines and podcasts about accepting and celebrating her body, recreating the 1999 Rolling Stone cover of Britney Spears for the NME. Her lyrics have always been more nuanced, but her image was that of an empowered woman, riding high on a wave of self-acceptance. That heightened version of Self Esteem was part Esther Perel, part Barbara Kruger collage, part barmaid at the Rovers Return. You wouldn’t necessarily expect her to have come away from the biggest success of her career deciding to get a nose job and soften her edges.

She is in the middle of buying her first home, a two-bedroom flat. “I’m freezing my eggs, buying a flat, finishing the album. These three things have been what I’ve been doing for the whole of 2024 and none of them are done yet,” she laughs. “So I’ve been going a bit mad. As a very impatient person, it’s been hard.” The flat, she says, is a dream come true. “But the price – it’s insane. I will have to live like I’m living in my 20s. But I’ll have four walls that no one can kick me out of, at least. I’m fucking excited about the idea I might have a kitchen island. That’s more interesting to me than having sex with three different people this week.”

Is she contrary? “Yeah! ’Course! Isn’t everyone, though? I hope you can hear that on the record. The point of the record is to go: it’s never fucking over. It’s not as simple as, ‘boss bitch, here we go!’ It just isn’t. You might exercise for six months every day, and then you might just fucking not for a bit. I still go, oh, there’s this person I should be, and I’m not, and hate myself for that”.

There will be a lot more coming from Self Esteem very shortly. New music and tastes of A Complicated Woman. It will be interesting reading new interviews and hearing what Rebecca Lucy Taylor says about her new material. One of the most loved and respected artists in this country, below is a selection of her brilliance. An artist about to unveil her next chapter, it is going to be fascinating seeing…

WHAT comes next for her.

FEATURE: Spotlight: Friedberg

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight



Friedberg

_________

EVEN though…

they have not released new music since November, there are signs to suggest that Friedberg are going to have a big 2025. Their debut album, Hardcore Workout Queen, was released in November. I am familiar with Anna Friedberg, who I have covered in the capacity of a solo artist. As a band member, I was keen to check out Friedberg. They have some live dates coming up this year, including a spot at The Lexington on 5th March. I think that a lot more eyes will be on Friedberg as we head through the year. The band formed in 2019, though Hardcore Workout Queen is their first album, so many are highlighting them as a new band. Even if they have been on the scene for a while, this year is going to be a new stage. One where they will cover a lot of ground and release new music. I want to start out with this interview from House of Solo, where Anna Friedberg talked about the group and their then-upcoming debut album:

Friedberg was formed in 2019 by Anna Friedberg. Could you share with us the story behind the band’s formation? What brought each of you together, and how did you discover your shared musical vision?

I had written a bunch of songs in Joshua Tree, and when I came back from the U.S., I spent some time in London. I didn’t know anyone there at the time, and I wanted to have a band to play those new tracks live with. A friend recommended Emily, the guitar player, and Emily lived with Laura, the drummer, at the time. I bumped into Cheryl, the bass player, in a bar in Lewisham, and one week later, we rehearsed those new songs for the first time and played a secret gig in a pub in London.

The band’s lineup consists of members from various locations, including London, Berlin, and Austria. How does this diversity influence the band’s creative process and sound?

I think traveling to different places and meeting new people has always been the biggest inspiration for the writing and sound of Friedberg.

Congratulations on the release of your new single, ‘My Best Friend’! Can you tell us about the inspiration behind the song and what it was like working with Dan Carey and the Nüesch Sisters on this project?

Sure. The song is about non-commitment in modern life that I seem to experience more and more. And I’m not a big fan, as you can probably tell from the lyrics. Working with Dan was amazing. I knew it was going to be amazing when I first walked into his studio. We just started to jam with two guitars and a cowbell, and half an hour later, we had written and recorded the first draft of the song. I like that Dan works very quickly and really knows how to capture the energy of that first moment when you write something. Because if you try to recreate that later on, it never really has that same vibe again.

‘My Best Friend’ explores themes of non-commitment in modern society. Could you elaborate on the message you’re conveying through this track?

I feel like in all aspects of life, people tend to commit to anything less and less. Be it a party, relationships, or a simple dinner appointment. I’ve especially experienced this in the U.K., and I’ve also learned that, ‘let’s have dinner at some point’ means ‘let’s never have dinner.’

The music video for ‘My Best Friend’ takes place in the London Underground during rush hour, which sounds like quite an experience! What was the creative process like for developing the concept of the video with the Nüesch Sisters?

When Kim Nüesch first told me about the initial idea of having a rammed Underground and us amidst the chaos trying to perform the song, I thought it was genius. I then suggested bringing in the cowbell theme again (as there’s no Friedberg music video without the cowbell). I especially love the moment when the cowbell falls to the floor and I’m looking for it, crawling between the legs of all the passengers. It was super fun to work with them. The whole video was basically created by all my best mates, so I couldn’t have wished for more.

The chemistry within a band is crucial for creating great music. How would you describe the dynamic between the members of Friedberg, both musically and personally?

I think personally, as well as musically, we are four completely different characters with completely different tastes, styles, and priorities, which is quite funny. Together we cover loads of different things, which makes it so good and fun.

Your debut album is set for release later this year. Can you give us any hints about what listeners can expect in terms of musical style and themes explored in the album?

Noooo, they should have a listen. I’m not going to say any more than that for now.

Your music has been described as having a distinctive sound that’s uniquely Friedberg. How do you approach experimentation and innovation while still staying true to your musical identity?

I’m trying not to think too much about what it should sound like, but just do whatever feels right for each song and have fun with it.

Friedberg has had some remarkable achievements, including having your single ‘Go Wild’ featured in FIFA 2020 and BBC’s Normal People. How do you feel about the reception your music has received from such diverse audiences?

Honestly, it has exceeded my expectations, especially that we got such a good response with only the second single. I couldn’t be happier about that.

Friedberg has garnered a significant following on social media platforms. How do you think platforms like Instagram and TikTok have impacted your music and the way you connect with your fans?

I don’t think it has influenced the music, but it has certainly influenced how you promote your music. Nowadays, as an artist, you not only have to make the art but also promote it yourself (or more or less). Social media has become a powerful tool for musicians to share their work and interact with their audience.

As a band that has already achieved success in Europe and is now making waves in the U.S., how do you see your music resonating with different audiences across various regions?

I have to say that the response we are getting in the U.S. is incredible and probably the most enthusiastic response we’ve ever received in live shows. So I would love to come back here for a headline show as soon as possible.

You’ve had the opportunity to perform at various festivals and venues across Europe and the U.S. Which performance stands out to you as particularly memorable, and why?

I think the tour with Hot Chip and the current U.S. tour as a whole were the most memorable shows so far. NYC, Chicago, and Montreal have always been amazing cities for Friedberg, but every show on this tour has been incredible.

What are your aspirations for Friedberg in the coming years, and is there anything you’re especially excited about in terms of future projects or collaborations?

I’m most excited to release our first album this year. And I’m always super excited about live shows. So yes, it should be a good year”.

Anna F. (is how she is referred to in interviews rather than Anna Friedberg) and Emily Linden talked to Guitar.com about the development of the band’s sound. The interview then went on to explore the use of cowbell in their music. Perhaps not the most obvious instrument, it was interesting what they said (“From there, things started to snowball. Emily notes that while she may be the guitar curator, Anna remains the cowbell curator. “We only started off with one cowbell, which is actually still with us,” says Anna, “and now we need a whole flight case just for cowbells! At our last rehearsal, we were extending some songs, and I was thinking, is this too much cowbell? But, then it’s like… can there ever be too much cowbell?”):

Friedberg’s debut album has been a long time coming. Frontwoman Anna F. led a solo career in a different time, with a different sound – but after a roadtrip across California in 2017, she came back with a set of songs that called for a change in approach. “I had my solo career before that, but I didn’t really want to proceed with that because the new sound of these songs was so different. I thought, I want to have a band. I don’t want to be just ‘Anna F.’”

Upon her return she quickly assembled the lineup for Friedberg (named for Anna’s hometown in Austria) in London, and as she explains, the songs had clearly found their place. “We went to rehearsal, tried the new songs, and it sounded amazing. So the next thing was, just ‘let’s try a gig, just try it out, play a gig in some shitty pub’… well, it turned out it wasn’t actually shitty, it was nice in the end.”

Either way, the project was vindicated by the audience response. “We played Go Wild as the first song, and at the end of it, people were jumping up from the tables and cheering for us – I remember feeling at the time like, ‘oh my god, maybe something’s happening here’”, says Anna.

Following some singles, the band’s debut EP Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah arrived in 2021. But they’re now gearing up to release their first full-length, Hardcore Workout Queen. The album is an awesome collection of angular indie-rock, with propulsive, dancey drumbeats underpinning chaotic, sharp guitar lines. And that guitar-forward approach, for Anna, is something enabled by forming a band rather than keeping Friedberg as a solo project: “The songs just developed in a different direction. I still had a band with me before, two guitarists and so on – but it was a different kind of sound. It wasn’t as guitar-focused – the songs moved into that guitar-heavy direction.”

As for how to pin Friedberg down by genre? Well, Friedberg’s guitarist – and as we’ll discuss later, Anna’s ‘gear curator’ – Emily Linden explains: “It’s hard to say it’s one thing. On some of the new tunes, there’s quite a lot of synth stuff, but then live we have the setup of two guitars, bass, drums and many, many cowbells. And the live performance is different to the recordings, too – we extend things, we put in percussion breaks, and instrumental breaks too.”

“Also live it’s a lot heavier too, at least that’s what many people say after they see us live,” Anna adds. She laughs as she then recalls the last attempt at pinning Friedberg down to a set of standard genre markers: “The latest was ‘alternative rock with slices of dance punk’ – that was our latest attempt!”

PHOTO CREDIT: Lewis Vorn

Gear Curation

When it comes to crafting the band’s live sound, the two guitarists take very different approaches. Emily takes the lead on the more expansive, synthy side of things. “When I first started playing live with Friedberg, the approach was that we didn’t want all the synths to come from a track. ‘If we can get it on guitar, then we get it on guitar’ – so I’ve got a good few pedals to make lots of different sounds, sometimes to replicate synths, sometimes to just add noise and so on. So I’ve got a Strymon BigSky that I use for lots of different reverbs. I’ve also got an EHX Mono Synth – we’ve used that on the record before, and then there’s a TC Electronic one with chorus and flanger in one, the SCF. So I play around with those for different synth sounds.

“And then for the guitar sounds, I’ve got a Cali76 compressor, and also a Fulltone OCD. I want to get rid of my OCD, really. Only because with the new songs we’ve dialled down the amount of distorted, crunchy rock tones. So I want to get something to replace that! I’m using the Spark booster set quite clean really to just give it a low-key crunch.”

Anna adds that she also has an OCD (“and I hate it too!”), but explains that her approach is a lot more straightforward, and basically consists of that OCD as an always-on drive. “I have so much to do on stage – I have to play a million cowbells at the same time, I’m singing, playing guitar and swapping between things. So I basically just have one setting that I use throughout the set.”

When it comes to amps, Emily is also clear on her preference for the analogue approach. “Because we play a lot of gigs in Germany and Austria and we’ve been to America a few times, I was always thinking that it’d be so much easier to fly with a Kemper – everything’s all set. But I just missed the analogue thing. You can become limitless with a digital board. The realms of possibility are massive. But… when you bring it down and you are limited, and trying to get as much as you can from what you’ve got – I love doing that.”

Anna concurs. “Yes, it’s always better, that limiting – there are so many options in these current times. Like everything – 10 oat milks and so on,” she adds, and laughs – “but there’s definitely more excitement, more potential for something unexpected to happen with the analogue stuff.”

Emily’s passion for her gear has clearly let her slide into a natural role within Friedberg, as Anna explains: “Emily is basically my pedal curator , because I’m not a geek about it at all – I’ve got a lot of other things on stage, so I’m always happy to hand that over to her!”

As for actual guitars, Anna has a similarly straightforward approach, in that she’s found her number one guitar and has stuck with it since. “I have a Duesenberg Starplayer – and I like the sound of it. I’ve had it for 10 years now, back in another time when I had another curator! I just asked, what guitar should I get? And he said this one, so I did – and I love the sound of it. Whenever I have to use another guitar live, if I break a string or something, the guitar lines don’t sound as good”.

I am going to move on to an interview from New Noise Magazine from last year. The most recent interviews I can find are from 2024. I think we will start to see some more as Friedberg head out on live dates. Get an update regarding their plans and what comes next for them:

Hardcore Workout Queen has a pretty funny spin on living up to impossible standards, a concern that a lot of musicians will sing about more gravely. What sort of headspace were you and your bandmates in when you were making the record? Or were you caught in between two headspaces?

Anna: I started it on a road trip from the East to West Coast, following the path of Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and the other Beat poets. [Hardcore Workout Queen] ended up being a good album to listen to while you walk around the city, or drive around in a car, maybe along a coastline.

The humor helps me stay sane too. I’m actually super anxious most of the time, but I try to always tell myself ‘life is a game, life is a game’ and try to make it more fun for myself. I like to watch fun stuff where people don’t take themselves too seriously; that’s also where the video ideas came from.

Speaking of road trips, how does the touring experience change from Europe to America, as a European artist? There are spots like the petrol stations here that you’ve expressed a fondness for, whereas so many Americans will go to Europe and feel relieved not to see them everywhere.

Anna: Yeah, it’s great, it’s so insane. First of all, how big it is, how many different landscapes, how many different people…and then you’re in the middle of nowhere and there’s only petrol stations and you can’t get anything healthy to eat. It’s literally crazy. But also, I remember, once I fell asleep in the desert, and woke up and it was green everywhere. I find it inspiring to be on the move constantly, and just looking out the window and seeing all this craziness.

All the things you get to see between the big cities where we play the shows…I found crazy little cowboy cafes in the middle of nowhere. And then I’m like, “Okay, I have to go in there. Even if it’s a bit scary, I just have to see what’s inside.

You’ve cited British exports like Wolf Alice and Wet Leg as influences on the album, and that comes through not just on the lyrical front but in the instruments. What of those influences would you say came from your British bandmates in Cheryl, Emily, and Fifi, vs. being in a new place and hearing different artists on the airwaves?

Anna: How it always worked from the beginning…I wrote and even recorded most of the songs before I even met the girls. I brought the songs in and we worked on the live arrangements together.

So far, we haven’t really done lots of studio work together, but we always come up with all the crazy live arrangements, which are quite different to the recordings: much more energetic and heavy. We also do extended versions with long percussion breaks and stuff like that.

Given that you had the songs written before meeting the rest of the band, are there any songs where you look back on when you wrote it, and it’s taken on a new meaning from when you first envisioned it?

Anna: Some of the songs are brand new. But for some of the songs that are older, like “Hello” and “My Best Friend,” it was interesting because you never, ever normally get the opportunity to record something, and then play it live, and then record it again.

Usually you release a record and then you start touring it. And then you think “ah, fuck, it’s so much cooler now that we’ve played it live, it would be a good time to record it now.” But we actually did that with a few songs, because we didn’t release them yet. They were a few years old and we played them several times.

Most bands don’t have the opportunity that we did. We had that chance since we took such a long time with our record.

Yeah, that definitely comes across. In particular, I think the cowbell you guys use is such a great live instrument. It just has a way of getting people moving, a je ne sais quoi to it. A few studio tracks off HWQ sound like the cowbell was decided on after a great live take.

Anna: We tried also to do full takes of drums and bass together, not edited too much, just like jam sessions. I learned that from Dan Carey, who [produced and co-wrote] “My Best Friend.” He only works like that. He has the band do a full live take; even if there are mistakes, leave them in. Just get that energy on the record and do some additional stuff on top.

A couple closing questions. I know you don’t want to impose anything too preachy on the listener, but what do you hope people can take away from the record?

Anna: Hmmm…maybe that the record could be a safe space, for however long it is, to escape on a nice little trip where the world is a better, saner place. I dunno. Maybe that.

What’s next for the band? Having toured, and then released the album, is there another round of touring planned?

Anna: Yes, we’re already planning lots of shows for next year! I hope we will come back to the U.S. very soon, because we have some very hardcore fans who have our cowbells tattooed. Touring the U.S. might be my favorite thing so far. We’ve got an agent in the U.S. now, so I hope we can work it out.

My dream is to tour with LCD Soundsystem, but whose dream isn’t that?”.

I am going to end with a review for Hardcore Workout Queen. Crucial Rhythm spent some time with one of the best debut albums of last year. I think that they will go from strength to strength. A group that you will want to keep an eye out for. I am keen to see them perform this year. I might try and catch them in London. This is a band with a bright future:

Alt-rock outfit Friedberg is back with their debut album, Hardcore Workout Queen, set for release on November 8, 2024, via Clouds Hill. With Hardcore Workout Queen, Friedberg steps boldly into the alt-rock scene with a spirited, genre-spanning debut album that celebrates imperfection, humour, and introspective road-trip anthems. Frontwoman Anna Friedberg and her bandmates—Emily Linden, Cheryl Pinero, and Fifi Dewey—have crafted a debut that feels both deeply personal and universally relatable, blending indie-rock, psychedelia, dance-punk, and pop hooks into a seamless journey that’s as much about self-discovery as it is about having a good time.

The album opens with the lengthy track, “100 Times,” a pulse-quickening track that sets the tone with driving rhythms and candid lyrics, inviting listeners into Friedberg’s world—a place where self-reflection is met with a wry sense of humour. The title track, “Hardcore Workout Queen,” epitomizes this balance. It’s simultaneously an homage to the driven “workout queens” and a cheeky anthem for those who'd rather cheer from the sidelines. With a solid bass line and dreamy production, Anna’s lyrics portray a playful rivalry between different lifestyles, embodying the album’s ethos of self-acceptance. This track in particular captures Friedberg’s skill in combining infectious, festival-ready energy with introspective themes.

“So Dope” offers a contrasting perspective by critiquing the shallow nature of social media, the perpetual “highlight reel” that many present online. The song’s upbeat melody plays against its critical lyrics, crafting a piece that’s as catchy as it is thought-provoking. Anna’s commentary on the pressure to display a flawless self feels refreshingly honest and introspective, balancing the album's high-energy tracks with a raw look at the pressures of modern life.

A couple of the album's earlier singles “Hello” and “My Best Friend” make their appearances as pillars of the band's debut album, showcasing Friedberg’s knack for creating catchy, memorable tunes. "My Best Friend," in particular, leans on humour with its music video—a playful take on magazine fitness covers where the band strikes ironic poses as “lazy” workout warriors. This satirical take reinforces the album's message of self-acceptance and staying true to oneself in a society obsessed with appearances.

The introspective journey continues with “Pull Me Off The Passing Line” and “Venice 142,” tracks that invite the listener to slow down and reflect. Anna describes Hardcore Workout Queen as a “road trip with no destination,” and these tracks amplify that feeling, creating the perfect soundtrack for a late-night drive or a conversation-filled road trip.

With production spanning studios from Berlin to Los Angeles, and sessions with renowned music producers like Dan Carey and Oli Bayston, Hardcore Workout Queen encapsulates a unique global sound that retains Friedberg’s signature European indie-rock sensibility. The result is a polished yet raw album that sounds equally at home in the studio and live on stage.

Friedberg’s Hardcore Workout Queen is a thoroughly enjoyable debut album that plays with the line between sincerity and irony, making it a perfect soundtrack for those who take life seriously without always taking themselves seriously. It's an album for the road, for endless conversations, and for embracing both the active and lazy sides of life”.

I shall wrap things up. If you art not aware of Friedberg, then make sure you check them out. A brilliant and incredible close-knit group (Anna Friedberg (writer, vocals, cowbell, guitar, and more cowbell), Emily Linden (guitar, vocals), Cheryl Pinero (bass, vocals) and Laura Williams (drums) that are producing music that stands out and marks them as an incredible proposition, I think they will stick together and put out phenomenal music…

FOR many more years.

_______________

Follow Friedberg

FEATURE: The Anonymous Emily: Kate Bush’s Wow at Forty-Six

FEATURE:

 

 

The Anonymous Emily

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1978/PHOTO CREDIT: Gered Mankowitz

 

Kate Bush’s Wow at Forty-Six

_________

I will repeat…

some information I have included before prior to moving on. As Kate Bush’s Wow turns forty-six on 9th March, it is worth spending some time with one of her greatest singles. I shall end with some links to features where Wow was ranked highly in the list of the best Kate Bush tracks. The second single released from Bush’s underrated second studio album, Lionheart, Wow reached number sixteen in the U.K. It was a bigger chart success than its predecessor, Hammer Horror. I love that Wow features Brian Bath, Del Palmer and Paddy Bush. Close friends and family. Players in the KT Bush Band. Bush originally wanted her band and players for Lionheart but they were replaced by Andrew Powell’s suggestions. Musicians who performed on The Kick Inside. I love the fact that the video for Wow was censored by the BBC because the song was considered risqué. The video depicts Kate Bush patting her bottom while singing "he's too busy hitting the Vaseline”. Before I move along, I want to bring back in some interview samples where Bush spoke about Wow and its inspiration:

I’ve really enjoyed recording ‘Wow’. I’m very, very pleased with my vocal performance on that, because we did it a few times, and although it was all in tune and it was okay, there was just something missing. And we went back and did it again and it just happened, and I’ve really pleased with that, it was very satisfying.

Lionheart Promo Cassette, EMI Canada, 1978

‘Wow’ is a song about the music business, not just rock music but show business in general, including acting and theatre. People say that the music business is about ripoffs, the rat race, competition, strain, people trying to cut you down, and so on, and though that’s all there, there’s also the magic. It was sparked off when I sat down to try and write a Pink Floyd song, something spacey; Though I’m not surprised no-one has picked that up, it’s not really recognisable as that, in the same way as people haven’t noticed that ‘Kite’ is a Bob Marley song, and ‘Don’t Push Your Foot On The Heartbrake’ is a Patti Smith song. When I wrote it I didn’t envisage performing it – the performance when it happened was an interpretation of the words I’d already written. I first made up the visuals in a hotel room in New Zealand, when I had half an hour to make up a routine and prepare for a TV show. I sat down and listened to the song through once, and the whirling seemed to fit the music. Those who were at the last concert of the tour at Hammersmith must have noticed a frogman appear through the dry ice it was one of the crew’s many last night ‘pranks’ and was really amazing. I’d have liked to have had it in every show.

Kate Bush Club newsletter, Summer 1979”.

There is surprisingly little written about Wow. One of Bush’s signature songs, it would be nice to see more articles published. I am going to feed in some details from an article I have referenced before when investigating Wow. It is a shame also that people write off Lionheart and feel it is a bad album. I think it is a wonderful album that has a few real standout songs…and the rest is pretty solid. It is a pity and regret that Bush was not given more time by EMI. She could have created something richer where she could write all new songs. As it was, Lionheart’s ten tracks features only three new songs. Wow is an older track that I think would have been considered for The Kick Inside. I want to come to an article from The Guardian that talked about the amazing and wonderful Wow:

In late 1978 the 20-year-old Bush still seemed an ingenue and it was always going to be tough following an album that contained Wuthering Heights and The Man With the Child in His Eyes. She later complained she felt under pressure from EMI to release Lionheart too early, a problem she made sure she never experienced again. But Wow was always a song that stood on its own merits. It contains many of her trademarks: enigmatic intertextual lyrics, unfeasibly high-pitched vocals that fall unexpectedly to an absurd low note (the last "wow" of each chorus is particularly amusing), tantalising verses followed by a cascading chorus. Musically, Wow is typical of her early work, with pretty woodwind, piano and strings complementing a lyrical bass line.

The song, as far an anyone other than its author knows for certain, appears to be about struggling actors and the disappointments of fame. In the video its most famous lines – "He'll never make the scene/ He'll never make the Sweeney/ Be that movie queen/ He's too busy hitting the vaseline" – were expressed through her much-parodied mime-the-lyrics dancing style. The word "Sweeney" was accompanied by her firing a gun and "hitting the vaseline" by her tapping her backside. Viewers were invited to draw their own conclusions.

Bush is such a singular talent it has become too easy to dismiss her as an eccentric, peripheral figure. It was around the time Wow was released that the pastiches began, most famously by Pamela Stephenson on Not the Nine O'Clock News. But those memories would not do justice to her achievements in carving out a career of complete artistic independence and integrity after starting out as a teenager in a male-dominated world, chaperoned by members of England's prog-rock elite. Her influence on so many female (and male) songwriters, musicians and performers since has been enormous, even if they don't know it themselves”.

The critical response for Wow was largely sexist and dismissive. Sounds were appallingly crude and insulting in their review: “I hear this mediocre chanteuse crooning her way through this silly song. (…) I realise that a lot of people would like to go to bed with her, but buying all her records seems a curious way of expressing such desires”. Record Mirror felt that the song was eerie and interesting but the “verses still sound a little muddled but get better with playing”. That was one of the more generous assessments. In years since, Wow is rightly hailed as a brilliant song. One of the gems from Lionheart. I am not sure if I have quoted from Dreams of Orgonon and this take on Wow:

Bush understands true fandom, where someone gets to enjoy the beauty of a creator’s work in private. It also pertains to going out and seeing them in concert, having your favorite singer onstage in front of you and hearing your favorite songs live. This is the kind of invigoration that’s present in a number of Bush’s songs of the period: allowing yourself to be a swooning fangirl.

“Wow” is the paragon of Bush’s sometimes loopy and adolescent enthusiasm, in the vein of “Violin.” Its chorus of “wow, wow, wow, wow, wow, WOW! UnbelIEVable!” sounds like scribblings on an asylum wall, bolstered by the singing of a dame who’s had a bit too much MDMA. It’s almost like Bush is asking to be made fun of, with her play at wide-eyed innocence at the wonders of showbiz. Yet Bush is clearly winking at the audience, as her all-too-knowing performance in the song’s music video makes clear. In this era, Bush has a habit in videos of staring directly into the camera like she expects to shatter the lens with the sheer power of her gaze (she later supplants this strategy by staring past the camera longingly). As memorable as her early videos are, a lot of their longevity comes from Bush’s goofy miming. This may be why the “Wow” video has the reputation it has, with Bush flailing her arms around in circles while repeatedly crying “wow” like a maniac. The song is sheer mad giddiness, sounding like Nina Hagen let loose in the Hammersmith Odeon.

The elation of the chorus is belied by the knowing facetiousness of the verses, with the shit-eating grin they flash at showbiz. Bush’s sweet-natured delivery of “we think you’re amazing!” efficiently hides the fact those lines are probably written with gritted teeth. It’s not that “Wow” is bitter, but it’s taking a few potshots as it falls through showbiz. The first verse is rife with tension, laden as it is with the song’s intro, acting as something of a rehearsal for the chorus. There’s a clash of the rehearsed tendencies of the song with Bush’s more communal ones. To her, creativity is a collaborative act, where the audience and artist unite to move each other. “We’re all alone on the stage tonight” sounds like Bush’s invitation to the audience, as if the stage is an arena for both player and spectator”.

I have asked before who the ‘Emily’ is Kate Bush mentions right at the start of the song. I am not sure if she has been asked about that before. Wow has risen in critics’ estimation since its release. Last year, when ranking her fifty best songs, MOJO placed it ninth (“TOTP dimmed the lights when she sang “Vaseline” and patted her bum. Whether or not the period’s pisstaking about her hippy-throwback exclamations of “Wow!” and “Amazing!” provoked the song, she made the most of it with a grotesque Guignol demolition of showbiz bullshit flattery and backstabbing (“We’d give you a part, my love/But…”). The staying power comes from the emotional distance between those squealing to grande-dame-contralto chorus “Wows” and the melancholy strings when she hesitantly begins and then fades to vanishing at the end with the fear-ridden, “We’re all alone on the stage tonight”). In 2020, when The Guardian ranked Bush’s singles, Wow came in thirteenth. In 2023, this is what PROG said about Wow: “‘We’re all alone on the stage tonight,’ sings Bush in her musings on the highs and lows of a life in showbusiness, as an actor dreaming of stardom endures ignominy and being used for sex, cheekily implied in the lyric about ‘hitting the Vaseline’. Robin Armstrong, Cosmograf: “It’s super-proggy in terms of theme and modulation yet somehow manages to stick to a pop record structure. It’s a masterclass of concise epics. The lyrics are so poignant, and to me they speak of a tortured artist, underappreciated, and forced to live up to expectations as an entertainer. “I think she’s one of the most underrated piano players ever. I’m always drawn in by her beautiful chord structures and motifs. She just has a way of laying down this beautiful carpet of piano for her vocals”. Last year, Classic Pop ranked Kate Bush’s forty best songs. Wow came in seventh.

I am going to end with this feature from Far Out Magazine. They discussed Wow and its merits back in January. After a somewhat disappointing chart position for Hammer Horror (forty-four in the U.K.), there is no telling what could have been if Wow had done poorly. Would a third album be possible? Would Bush’s career have ended? Even if Wow didn’t quite do anything as dramatic as save her career, it did show that she could not be written off. Someone able to engage the public in spite of parody and criticism from the press:

As with all sophomore releases, the label normally wants the product as fast as possible, which means digging in the vaults to pull out songs that might not have been able to be fleshed out for the first record. Although Bush could still whip any idea into something magical, ‘Wow’ is one of the stranger offerings that she made around that time.

Despite the chorus itself being singled out for repeating the same word over and over again, Bush is seething about the pressures that come with being in the music business. Since her mentor, David Gilmour, already knew the ins and outs of what the industry had to offer, seeing her ridicule the corporate suits for only wanting a piece of her and not caring about the music is the closest thing to a punk rock statement she was ever going to make.

In the background, though, Bush was already looking to move things around. If the industry didn’t have her best interests in mind, she was going to build her own company around her, eventually working out deals where everything was kept in-house, whether that was her putting together her one and only major tour or having complete freedom whenever she made another record.

And musically, ‘Wow’ is also a sneak preview of what Bush would be doing on some of her later records. Nothing that she ever made could be considered safe and radio-friendly from front to end, but given its weird structure and often-parodied chorus, there are bits and pieces of the studio wackiness that would appear on albums like The Dreaming later, especially when she starts singing outside of her usual range.

But that’s the beauty of Bush’s music, to begin with. Most people can stare on in stark amazement at someone willing to have the guts to do something so weird on the world’s stage, but Bush never seemed to make some kind of bold leap unless she had a good reason. That way, the music was less about the commercial appeal and more akin to a spirit that was being driven out of her.

So when people look back on the music video and her wild dance moves, they might want to look a little bit closer. Anyone can look at that kind of performance once and think it looks a little bit goofy, but if they start listening to what the song is about, Bush is being fairly on the nose about becoming a borderline puppet for whatever some so-called “commercial music expert” wants to see out of their talent”.

With a shorter single edit compared to the album version (about twenty seconds shorter), I think that Wow remains underplayed and under-discussed. Even if it did get parodied and there was this sense of ridicule from some., there is no denying the brilliance of the song. Perhaps the standout song off of Lionheart, it stands proudly alongside Kate Bush’s best records. An idiosyncratic and memorable single that was an international chart success. A simply unbelievable song, it still sound startling and phenomenal all of these years later! If Hammer Horror took Bush slightly into the critical and commercial shadows, Wow brought her right back to…

CENTRE stage.

FEATURE: The Digital Mixtape: Karen Carpenter at Seventy-Five

FEATURE:

 

 

The Digital Mixtape

IN THIS PHOTO: Karen Carpenter photographed in 1981/PHOTO CREDIT: Harry Langdon

 

Karen Carpenter at Seventy-Five

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ON 2nd March…

IN THIS PHOTO: Richard and Karen Carpenter in Copenhagen in 1974/PHOTO CREDIT: Jan Persson/Redferns

the music world marks what would have been Karen Carpenter’s seventy-fifth birthday. She sadly died in 1983 at the age of thirty-two. A phenomenal drummer, she formed Carpenters with her older brother Richard. As the lead, these incredible and timeless songs were blessed with the sublime vocals of Karen Carpenter. Although she died young, her legacy will endure for generations to come. She is one of the most remarkable singers ever. One of the best and most underrated drummers ever. Because her seventy-fifth birthday is approaching, I wanted to salute her brilliance with her a mixtape of Carpenter songs. Prior to that, IMDB provide a biography of an artist that left us too soon:

Born in New Haven, Connecticut, Karen Carpenter moved with her family to Downey, California, in 1963. Karen's older brother, Richard Carpenter, decided to put together an instrumental trio with him on the piano, Karen on the drums and their friend Wes Jacobs on the bass and tuba. In a battle of the bands at the Hollywood Bowl in 1966, the group won first place and landed a contract with RCA Records. However, RCA did not see a future in jazz tuba, and the contract was short-lived.
Karen and Richard formed another band, Spectrum, with four other fellow students from California State University at Long Beach that played several gigs before disbanding. In 1969, Karen and Richard made several demo music tapes and shopped them around to different record companies; they were eventually offered a contract with A&M Records. Their first hit was a reworking of 
The Beatles hit "Ticket to Ride", followed by a re-recorded version of Burt Bacharach's "Close to You", which sold a million copies.

Soon Richard and Karen became one of the most successful groups of the early 1970s, with Karen on the drums and lead vocals and Richard on the piano with backup vocals. They won three Grammy Awards, embarked on a world tour, and landed their own TV variety series in 1971, titled Make Your Own Kind of Music! (1971).

In 1975 the story came out when The Carpenters were forced to cancel a European tour because the gaunt Karen was too weak to perform. Nobody knew that Karen was at the time suffering from anorexia nervosa, a mental illness characterized by obsessive dieting to a point of starvation. In 1976 she moved out of her parents' house to a condo of her own.

While her brother Richard was recovering from his Quaalude addiction, Karen decided to record a solo album in New York City in 1979 with producer Phil Ramone. Encouraged by the positive reaction to it in New York, Karen was eager to show it to Richard and the record company in California, who were nonplussed. The album was shelved.

In 1980, she married real estate developer Thomas J. Burris. However, the unhappy marriage really only lasted a year before they separated. (Karen was to sign the divorce papers the day she died).
Shortly afterward, she and brother Richard were back in the recording studio, where they recorded their hit single "Touch Me When We're Dancing". However, Karen was unable to shake her depression as well as her eating disorder, and after realizing she needed help, she spent most of 1982 in New York City undergoing treatment. By 1983, Karen was starting to take control of her life and planning to return to the recording studio and to make public appearances again. In February of 1983, she went to her parents' house to sort through some old clothes she kept there when she collapsed in a walk-in closet from cardiac arrest. She was only 32. Doctors revealed that her long battle with anorexia nervosa had stressed her heart to the breaking point
”.

When discussing Karen Carpenter, there is always this note of tragedy. People focusing on her early death and health issues. People not discussing her drumming, vocals and artistry. The people she has inspired. This Wikipedia article discusses the legacy of Karen Carpenter:

Reacting to Carpenter's death, songwriter Burt Bacharach said that she "had a sound in her voice that was very unique, that I haven't heard before."

Carpenter's singing has attracted critical praise and influenced several significant musicians and singers, including Madonna, Sheryl Crow, Pat Metheny, Sonic Youth's Kim Gordon, Shania Twain, Natalie Imbruglia, and k.d. lang. Paul McCartney has said that she had "the best female voice in the world: melodic, tuneful and distinctive". She has been called "one of the greatest voices of our lifetime" by Elton John. In the BBC documentary Only Yesterday: The Carpenters Story, her friend Nicky Chinn said that John Lennon walked up to her at a Los Angeles restaurant and told her "I want to tell you, love, that you've got a fabulous voice." Her drumming has been praised by fellow musicians Hal Blaine, Cubby O'Brien and Buddy Rich, and by Modern Drummer magazine. She appeared in the drummer rankings of every Playboy annual music poll from 1974 to 1980; Playboy's readers voted her as high as tenth best drummer in 1975 and tenth best pop/rock drummer 1976”.

As this music legend was born on 2nd March, 1950, I want to mark her seventy-fifth birthday. Collate songs that are enriched by her singular vocal talent. Although she died young, what she recorded and left the world was immense. The wonderful Karen Carpenter left behind…

AN enormous legacy.

FEATURE: Live and Let Live: Could Kate Bush Ever Step Back on the Stage?

FEATURE:

 

 

Live and Let Live

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush performing Under Ice (from Hounds of Love’s The Ninth Wave) during the 2014 residency, Before the Dawn/PHOTO CREDIT: Gavin Bush

 

Could Kate Bush Ever Step Back on the Stage?

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THIS is a question I have asked…

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush on stage for 1979’s The Tour of Life/PHOTO CREDIT: Jorgen Angel/Redferns

a few times before. There was a time, fairly recently in fact, that this possibility seemed remote to impossible. I can’t remember the last time is that I wrote about it. What it would be like if Kate Bush returned to the stage. Rather than speculate as to what a live set now would look like and how it would be constructed, I am asking whether the possibility is more alive now than recent years. Back in October, there was reaction to an interview that The Guardian conducted with David Gilmour. One question asked was whether Kate Bush would perform live again:

I’ve tried persuading her recently. Gently.” Pink Floyd legend David Gilmour has been trying to encourage his friend and former protégé Kate Bush to play live shows again

David Gilmour wants to see Kate Bush back onstage, won't be sharing a stage with former bandmate Roger Waters again, ever

David Gilmour says that he's been “gently” encouraging his friend and former protégé Kate Bush to play live shows again.

Gilmour 'discovered' Bush, the sister of a friend of a friend, when she was just 15, and paid for her to professionally record three songs at Air studios in London with producer/arranger Andrew Powell, and engineer Geoff Emerick, who worked with The Beatles at Abbey Road. Gilmour selected which three songs - among them The Man with the Child in His Eyes - the teenage singer should record from “40 or 50” Bush compositions he had heard and helped broker a record deal for her with EMI.

“I was convinced from the beginning that this girl had remarkable talent,” Pink Floyd's vocalist/guitarist told The New Statesman in 2005.

The two musicians have remained friends ever since, memorably appearing onstage together in 1987 to perform Running Up That Hill at the Amnesty International benefit show The Secret Policeman's Third Ball at the London Palladium”.

Emma Barnett raised the subject of live performance and name-checked that interview from The Gurdian. The two spoke late last year when Bush released the Little Shrew (Snowflake) video and announced she was open to working on a new album. Rather than shoot down the possibility of live music, Bush said that she was not there yet. A bit of a wink or laugh in her voice. That does not mean Kate Bush is planning something. Think about how intense her two live productions have been. 1979’s The Tour of Life saw her perform around the U.K. and Europe. Huge shows that were intense and energetic. Some nights she was almost lifted off stage and could not stand up. It is understandable she would not want to repeat that experience in a hurry – even if she did actually enjoy the tour. In 2014, Before the Dawn was mounted. I will talk about it for another feature shortly. This was a residency at the Eventim Apollo, Hammersmith. A nerve-wracking proposition where Bush and her team were pretty much on edge until the shows finished, it did take a lot out of her. Not only in terms of the twenty-two performances. Just conceptualising the show. Figuring out how it was all going to come together. Perhaps a more rigorous and labour-intensive proposition in 2014 compared to 1979! Nearly eleven years after she announced her residency, one asks what circumstances have to change for Bush to consider more live work. Touring would definitely be out of the question.

IN THIS PHOTO: Albert (Bertie) McIntosh during 2014’s Before the Dawn/PHOTO CREDIT: Gavin Bush

She is now sixty-six and is definitely not going to travel far to perform. If she did do something then one would imagine it would be at a London location. There would be multiple considerations. What albums would she play songs from? Would she need to realise another album first to have that impetus? Could she do another big live prediction without repeating herself? Does she have that desire anymore? Kate Bush knows that she has a new generation of fans. Those who have never seen or live or never got the chance. Even if she has not confirmed any plans to perform again, I was intrigued by her response to Emma Barnett last year. An answer that was open-minded and not definitive. The music industry is still ageist. When an older artist like Madonna goes on tour, there are articles that ask if she is too old. Criticising her and thinking she is embarrassing herself. It affects women more than men. There was some ageism and misogyny towards Kate Bush when she announced Before the Dawn. The reason for The Tour of Life was expectation. After releasing two studio albums in 1978, there was demand. Bush was definitely keen to perform live. There were various rumours and plans before 2014. Bush wanting to perform live and tour in the 1990s. It was her young son Albert that persuaded her to perform live for Before the Dawn. Encouragement to his mother at the time. He is in his twenties now, so there would not be that same impetus. Bush wanting to do something for her fans but also knowing her son thought it was a good idea. I guess new popularity and love of her music could see her given that push. You know that, if she did do more live work, it would be the final time. I don’t think Bush would want to do any live performance after a hypothetical next residency.

Would it be a residency? Bush said how nervous she was during the shows. She loved the audiences and they were a dream. However, it was a massive undertaking and I think, after releasing two albums in 2011 (Director’s Cut and 50 Words for Snow), doing something new was very much in her mind. That was a big motivation. After releasing two albums, that desire to do something different and fresh. A project that would not tie her to the studio. Wanting to connect to an audience. If anything was going to get Kate Bush back on stage, then it would be her fans. The love and admiration they expressed every night in 2014. Bush could release two more albums and then decide. However, things are different now to 2014. In terms of how there has been this resurgence. From the success of Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) in 2022 and the whole Stranger Things success. This younger generation now discovering the music. Bush also did not perform songs from 50 Words for Snow and Director’s Cut (technically Bush reworking songs from The Sensual World and The Red Shoes). Well, she did perform Among Angels (50 Words for Snow). However, new albums would not necessarily be the ammunition for live work. More than it being about new material to showcase on the stage, it is the need to connect with her fans. The pandemic has happened since 2014. Her music has been shared on social media and her career has enjoyed this new phase. One where she is tempting us with possible new music. Maybe after that is complete she would be in the headspace to think about live work.

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush captured during 1979’s The Tour of Life/PHOTO CREDIT: Jorgen Angel/Redferns

I realise that circumstances are different now to how they were in 1979 and 2014. The motivations different today. Bush has spent a long time working on the Little Shrew (Snowflake) video. She directed and wrote it. If she is working on new material, when might an album materialise? This year or next one would imagine. Would live work be a possibility before, say, 2027? Bush knows that artists in their sixties and seventies can perform live. Many of her musical idols have. People like Elton John and Paul McCartney show that there is still desire from fans. She might cast her mind back to 2014 and how she felt before each show. The sheet effort of bringing Before the Dawn to life. I don’t think there is any question as to whether she could go back on stage. Physically and emotionally she would be more than capable of delivery something spellbinding. I guess it is the question of whether she would. I don’t think she has closed the door on that possibility. However, now is a time when she is more in album mode. Maybe once that has been completed then she will be more open-minded to live work. I have never seen Kate Bush perform live, so obviously there is that selfish desire. Perhaps we would need to wait until albums were out. Bush keener to be in the studio for the time being. I don’t think we can rule out Bush returning to the stage. Though it would be impossible to give a date or say when. David Gilmour has gently tried to persuade her, so she knows that people want to see it happen. As she is not there at the moment, perhaps other factors needs to change. A new reason to embark on another huge live project. Maybe the swell of new fans and people picking up her music. Bush coming up with a new concept or wanting to do one final residency or even a single show. Perhaps a small run of dates. Kate Bush being Kate Bush, it may never happen or it could be announced at any moment! She does keep us all on our toes that is for sure. That image of Kate Bush once more being on the stage as the audience before her goes wild and shows her such love. We would all dearly love to…

SEE the day.

FEATURE: Her Deal with Gods: Kate Bush and the Spiritual Divine

FEATURE:

 

 

Her Deal with Gods

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in a promotional image for 2011’s Director’s Cut

 

Kate Bush and the Spiritual Divine

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IT is not a revelation…

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1983 (recreating the cover of Depeche Mode’s 1982 album, A Broken Frame)/PHOTO CREDIT: Brian Griffin

to say that Kate Bush has woven spirituality and religion through her music. There are cases of Bush’s putting God(s) and religion through her music. If you think about her most famous song, Running Up That Hill. Originally called A Deal with God, it was ridiculously changed because it was feared that the title would cause offense. That it was blasphemous somehow. Now, there would not be a hesitation putting out a song with ‘God’ in the title. However, Bush’s song was not insulting or blasphemous. Indeed, she was doing a deal with God. That men and women could swap places and know what the other was going through. Share the experience, as it were! Bush was raised as a Roman Catholic and although her music is not especially devout or religious in tone, faith and spirituality has been a part of her music from the very beginning. That compromise with Running Up That Hill. Bush was told that at least ten countries would not play the song if it was called A Deal with God. It was one of the few compromises she had to make for the sake of her career. Bush has said that when she was younger she felt like she was on a mission from God. That music was really her calling and she had a bigger purpose. I will explore different sides of Bush’s spirituality and creative curiosity. How she is someone who is very spiritual and compassionate yet is not necessarily tied to one viewpoint or belief. Someone who has in fact woven aspects of different religions through her music. Although Bush was raised in a Roman Catholic household, she didn’t feel that the Church was the right fit for her. Although Bush has mentioned God in her music and in interviews now and then, I think that Bush’s music is her attempt to become more complete and understanding. That is what you get from Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God). Bush using that plea. An opportunity to speak with God and do a deal. In a larger sense, it is about understanding and making humans more empathetic. Spirituality has clearly been a big part of Kate Bush’s life.

This creativity was a way of filling an emptiness. That mission from God. Rather than her literally doing her own deal with God or there being this religious destiny, I think Bush did feel that her creative drive and love of music was connected to religion. She has said how Breathing was a case of something working through her. She observed: “When I was writing it, it felt like: Hang on, I don't think I'm writing this–this is a bit too good for me! Rather than the song being my creation, I was a vehicle for something that was coming through me”. I want to widen this out and think of Bush in spiritual terms. Even though her Roman Catholic upbringing gave her a sense of destiny and drive – and she felt God working through her for some songs -, you can also feel Bush embracing multiple faiths. Consider the fact that she put the words “Om mani padme” in The Kick Inside’s Strange Phenomena. It is part of a Sanskrit mantra that is central to Tibetan Buddhism. It is associated with Avalokiteshvara, the Bodhisattva of Compassion. Bush has expressed interest in several spiritual paths and throughout her life. These include astrology, the paranormal, and New Age beliefs. There is no one path or option that has struck her hardest. In an interview with Q from 1999, Bush remarked the following: “People who create feel a great empty sense of hunger, a feeling of emptiness in life. And by being able to create, you can somehow express yourself in a way that maybe you can't in the ordinary realms of life...so many people are looking for God...In your creativity there can be quite deep attitudes, and I think it's got to be linked somehow with the subconscious that you're tapping into”. If it is not necessarily spirituality that Bush projects and promotes, it is a curiosity for things bigger than us. The unknown.

I have written about this before. How ghosts, mythical creatures and oddities are fascinating to Bush. Ghosts and spirits especially have been the subject of several of her songs, from Wuthering Heights to Get Out of My House. A Yeti or mythical creature in Wild Man. The afterlife and Heaven coming into Blow Away (For Bill) from Never for Ever. I see a lot of spiritual and religious influence through Hounds of Love. The Ninth Wave where the heroine is lost at sea and struggles to stay alive. Moments where she is floating above the water or a sense she is watching from high above to the sea. Maybe trying back to Bush’s upbringing. If she has not explicitly aligned herself to one religion or is a particularly religious writer, one can see God, the spiritual and the divine in nearly all of her albums. Bush has noted that there’s a lot of suffering in Roman Catholicism. ”You hear that in “Running,” the quiet desperation to its sound, a yearning that seems like it has just about given up hope, much like Max” (Max Mayfield is played by Sadie Sink on the Netflix show, Stranger Things). I did cover this in 2020. However, rather than repeat that feature, I wanted to look more about spirituality. This love and compassion for multiple faiths. How many other artists have done this in their career? It can be quite divisive if you put religion or faith in your music. Bush never does it explicitly or overtly. There are sprinklings here and there. This feature asked if Bush was a Rosicrucian (Rosicrucianism is a spiritual and cultural movement that arose in early modern Europe in the early 17th century after the publication of several texts announcing to the world a new esoteric order):

Is she actually a lifelong Rosicrucian? I could make a list fifty items long. Her appeal crosses age, gender, taste; she’s taken on a quite distinct mythic life in our collective dreaming. People who would usually have nothing to do with mainstream rock music (like Rushton) are smitten. She has a huge gay following (queer pagans, radical faeries). Ex-punks and one-time surly troublemakers line up to hymn her praises, when not so long ago she would have been the very model of everything they professed to despise, what with her taste for fuzzy ‘spirituality’ – ley lines, yetis, orgone energy – and tendency towards heavy concept albums. (One side of Aerial has both a Prelude and a Prologue.)”.

One of my favourite aspects of Kate Bush’s writing is how she can write personally and about universal feelings but also go beyond that. To a more spiritual plain. Bush has said how she believes in angels. Although she could have been referring to angelic people, 50 Words for Snow’s Among Angels offers these lines: “I can see angels around you/They shimmer like mirrors in summer”. I am going to move on, though I want to refer to Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) one more time. This feature offered a spiritual perspective on the song’s video:

The chorus has the power of a mantra which I bet many of you found yourself repeating incessantly, switching roles with the singer only to realize by the end of the song that you too made a deal with God.

A deal with God, in this case, represents a karmic soul contract between Kate and her lover which would allow them to attain a better understanding of each other.

The scenes in which Kate Bush dances with Michael Hervieu seem to take place in an aesthetically pleasing purgatory. A place not of this realm, in between lives. That is why both of them are dressed in gray, to emphasize their lack of earthly individuality. The dance is a visual representation of how the “swapping of places” occurs. Both of them are wearing hakamas, a traditional Japanese garment worn by samurais, a detail which emphasizes through the garment’s symbolism that the pact is official.

In my view, the deal with God is already made, and the video shows not only the symbiosis between the two but also her confusion and fear when she’s swept away by the current of her and his potentialities getting ready for incarnation. By that moment she doesn’t know who she is. She can’t recognize herself in her energy, represented by the extras that wear masks of her and neither in his energy, represented by the men wearing masks of Hervieu”.

 IN THIS PHOTO: Katre Bush shot for The Ninth Wave (the conceptual suite on the second side of 1985’s Hounds of Love)/PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

One cannot escape a certain divinity and spirituality running through The Ninth Wave. I always think of that suite as less about human survival and strength and this being more like a woman experiencing death and a rebirth: “Kate Bush experiences a death and rebirth, though hers is in the water. According to Carl Jung, water symbolizes the subconscious mind into which one must descend before aspiring to the heights of enlightenment. In dreams, the conscious mind fights the pull of water, just as Bush does. Like the subjects of Jung's analysis who though "spirit" comes from above, Bush is disturbed to be in the midst of the water, "the fluid of the instinct-driven body, blood and the flowing of blood, the odor of the beast, carnality heavy with passion." For Bush, the water is another vehicle for an introspective ordeal”. Maybe, and not in a corny way, Bush’s greatest intrigue is other people. Faith in other people. The human spirit. Whilst Bush does look beyond our world and one can summon fairies, ghosts, spirits and mythical beasts, one of Bush’s greatest strengths is empathy and compassion. Not only a positive writer who promotes the joys and understanding of people. Such empathy and love. The more I have been researching around Kate Bush, religion and spirituality, the more I realise how positive that aspect is. When Martin Glover (Youth) saw Bush during her Before the Dawn residency in 2014, he made some interesting observations. Glover played on Hounds of Love and is Bush’s friend. He wrote about her Shivaism, Dionysian and Druid philosophy:

Opening with Lily was a clue …This song lyrically is an explicit magical ceremony, a literal invocation/initiation, in the style of the Rosicurician Orders, à la the Golden Dawn school of the western magical tradition. “Gabriel is before me, Raphael behind me ….. In the circle of fire”.

This is key to understanding Kate. She has her own cult, her own mystery school tradition. Her unique strand of Shivaism, Dionysian and Druid philosophy, loosely wrapped up in a song and dance tradition. It’s part magical realism, overt nature spirituality and art house ….( Hard to pull off in cynical, post modern narcissistic Britain).

She not only pulled that rabbit out of that hat but also managed to convert each and every one of us to her own personal church of the big sky….a church whose priests are owls, ravens, trees and clouds.
When asked once who her favourite singers were, she replied “Nightingale, Blackbird and Thrush” There is a barrenness in religions today, whether in Christianity, Islam or false prophet new age gurus, humanity is rudderless, bedazzled by materialism. Kate’s communion with nature is the antidote, it is a call to joy, a celebration of the sublime ….it’s about the intoxication of love and the ecstasy that follows… is where wisdom lies, hidden deep within its mystical and poetic roots.

Kate’s “Religion” is the tiny spark of light that defeats the dark forces that seek dominion over the natural world, it’s tooth and claw and blood on the floor …She exemplifies English pagan beauty. A dark timelessness and stillness surrounds her wild abandonment, whilst her voice charges at you like Boudicca returned, riding a golden chariot of weird melody, harmony and bitter dissonance.

Shape shifting her artistry, she played with archetypes. She can access our primordial memory, when we were fish and birds. Her voice, a vehicle for multiple characters. She invokes the triple goddess. Athena, virginal, sensual innocence. Aphrodite, loaded with sexual power or Nimue, motherly, nurturing and “oh so tender ” and finally the Hag, Raven seer.Hecate, Queen of the witches, the dark half of the moon. Terrifying Kali the Crone or Macha in a frenzy, unleashing the furies upon us. All this choreographed into one ritualised, magical, shock and awe vision of an imagined future, all in one performance…..Very elemental, light and shade, earth and fire”.

When promoting Director’s Cut in 2011, Bush spoke with Sinéad Gleeson for the Irish Times. A promotional image of her dressed in what looked like a Tibetan dress and necklace (see the first image in this feature). Maybe a nod to Buddhism. When Bush visited Japan in June 1978, she was seen “attending a Shinto shrine and (apparently) conducting herself with characteristic etiquette”. There is a whole chapter to be written about Bush’s connection to or reference of various faiths and cultures. Her Roman Catholic faith (whether lapsed or strong) and how a sense of spiritual curiosity sets her aside from other artists. Religion and spirituality can be heard through her early work. On Symphony in Blue from 1978’s Lionheart: “When that feeling of meaninglessness sets in/Go blowing my mind on God/The light in the dark, with the neon arms”. Bush’s music has refers to purgatory, Heaven and Hell. She has also incorporated biblical references into some of her songs. I love the more unusual aspects of Bush’s music. How Waking the Witch (from Hounds of Love’s The Ninth Wave) is about Bush's interest in witch hunting and how she believes the practice is rooted in sexism. Bush’s love of all faiths and people. How substantial Tibetan themes can be heard on 2011’s 50 Words for Snow. Bush posted a note to her website in November 2011 for the Tibetan people. A non-political artist, Bush’s exploration of various faiths and spiritual alternatives always intrigues me. It makes her music so much richer and wide-reaching. Someone whose faith and compassion for people is matched her respect for various religions and practices. I will leave things there. A side of Bush’s character and writing that I have been thinking about a lot recently, I do hope someone writes more fully (and authoritatively) than me when it comes to Kate Bush and spirituality. Religion and faith through her music. Going beyond those realms and investigating the paranormal and mythical. Someone whose mind is open to the inexplicable or unexplained. Rooted in all of this is her compassion for people. A fascination of humans. A big reason why Bush is so loved and revered. It is not a coincidence that her most-streamed song, Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God), is about this burning desire to do a deal with a deity. If two lovers could swap places or be in each other’s shoes, they would have a better understanding. It goes beyond that and speaks to people in general. More tolerance and understanding. So many examples of Bush searching for harmony, connection and empathy through her music. And when it comes to experiences, that is…

AN one worth having!

FEATURE: Feels So Different: Sinéad O'Connor’s I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got at Thirty-Five

FEATURE:

 

 

Feels So Different

 

Sinéad O'Connor’s I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got at Thirty-Five

_________

FOR this feature…

IN THIS PHOTO: Sinead O'Connor performs on Saturday Night Live on 29th September, 1990/PHOTO CREDIT: Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images

I am marking the upcoming thirty-fifth anniversary of the late Sinéad O'Connor’s I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got. The second studio album from the Irish icon, it was released on 20th March, 1990. The album was nominated for four Grammy Awards in 1991, including Record of the Year, Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, and Best Music Video, Short Form for Nothing Compares 2 U. I want to get to some reviews and retrospective features about this phenomenal album. I am starting out with this feature from 2023 that states, on her second studio album, Sinéad O'Connor communicated the truth:

When Sinéad O’Connor released her second album, I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got, in 1990, I was 15. Although too young to really understand it, the album was unlike anything I had ever heard.

Her death on July 26 at 56 brought back those early first impressions. As a teen, this album felt shocking. It left an indelible mark on how I perceived music. Through her voice, I found music could be much more than about love, hate, and relationships strewn across sets of lyrics, a bridge and a chorus. O’Connor was trying to actually say something. What it was I wasn’t sure, but I knew enough to realize she was misunderstood, that her basic freedoms and rights were under attack. Singing was how she communicated her feelings. Her courage in creating such an honest and personal album taught me that it’s OK to speak up even when you think no one is listening, even when others don’t agree.

After years of listening to a broad cross-section of radio hits—groups like Tears For Fears, Wham!, the Pet Shop Boys, Phil Collins, the Beatles; female pop artists like Janet Jackson, Blondie, and Madonna, and “alternative” music like the Clash—O’Connor intrigued me. I was enthralled by her vocals on “I Want Your (Hands On Me)” and the acrobatic way she skewed and bent her words.

She was nothing like her female contemporaries on MTV who were splashed across Teen Beat magazine. Cyndi Lauper was kitschy and colorful and fun. Madonna courted controversy, yes, but made infectious dance and pop hits channeled through provocative images based on sexual desires. Stevie Nicks seemed surrounded by a mystical shroud, while Joan Jett was just one of the guys.

O’Connor shaved her head and wore plain, drab clothes. When she performed, she gesticulated wildly as if possessed. She was not a material girl at all. I needed to know more.

The opening track of I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got, “Feel So Different,” set the tone and established her unique, bold style and unabashedly laid out powerful convictions. When I heard her bare voice set against the swirling strings of an orchestra on the opener, I never felt so alone. O’Connor stretched out words like “so” and “different” until hearing it became nearly uncomfortable. Whatever she was going through, it was massive.

As I listened, I began to understand how these songs were highly provocative for the time as well as steeped in Ireland’s history. “I Am Stretched On Your Grave” is based off a 17th century Irish poem “Táim sínte ar do thuama” from this compilation; in the passage “From the Cold Sod That’s O’er You,” the writer never “severs” from the dirt that lays over their loved one. The mental image of a secret tryst over a grave was jarring. Even more so was using a James Brown sample from “Funky Drummer.” The slowed drum pattern enshrouds the song in a darkness and a depth that threatened to bury whoever was singing. As the rain and wind weathered her body away, she stayed. Unearthly collisions of drums and clanging get louder and more insistent, as her body wears down to the bone. The last measures collide noisily with a riot of strings—chaotic and powerful, it goes on endlessly, then is silent.

Conversely, Sinéad O’Connor also created simplicity and quiet on this album. She strummed chords so that every string was heard, and used precious space to let her words breathe and take new shape. It was chilling. She sounded beautiful and ugly and raw at the same time. She whispered words, and sang them as loud as she could. “You Cause As Much Sorrow,” has a melancholic melody with piano and softly plucked acoustic notes that was only slightly brighter than the tone on “Stretched,” but which still left the protagonist tortured.

In “The Last Day of Our Acquaintance,” O’Connor talks in clinical tones about severing ties in a divorce. The tension spills over and explodes into the chorus that echoes, “I’ll talk but you won’t listen to me / I know your answer already.” It shattered me. Now as a mother, I understand “Three Babies” more fully than I did as a clueless teenager. Saying you’ll lay down your life for your child isn’t an outrageous statement—that’s just your job. But singing about gathering your energy from inside, refusing basic nutrients, it sounded radical at first. The song’s meaning remains unclear. The babies’ “cold bodies” hint at miscarriage. Maybe she’s unable to let them rest. These babies were ripped from her for unknown reasons—because the subject was being violent, or was protesting something, and was maybe called a “bad mother.” Much of the lyrics are sung in first person, so it’s difficult to separate the singer from the unknown person in the song. Her first son, Jake, was still quite young when the album was released, and she later had custody battles of her own. Last year, her son, Shane, 17, ended his life, and O’Connor was devastated.

“Nothing Compares 2 U,” penned by Prince, was a worldwide success, but I was more interested in the tunes with global messages that revealed her social activism. On “Black Boys on Mopeds” she unapologetically took her critique to British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. She shattered the image of a proper and good England and replaced it with the reality: that its underlying culture was draped in racism and deceit. She was well aware she would face opposition for stating her beliefs. Her lyrics proved eerily telling: “These are dangerous days / To say what you feel is to dig your own grave.”

On the a cappella title track, she carefully and measured out every whispered word upon a quiet canvas. Walking through an arid hell to reach some enlightenment, she imagines an ocean and a bird. When she discovers the bird is her, it turns worn and faded. But O’Connor is not deterred. “I am not frightened although it’s hot / I have all that I requested / And I do not want what I haven’t got,” O’Connor says plainly.

O’Connor’s death, days before that of Paul Reubens, another misunderstood “outcast” who is being remembered for his unique style of comedy and love for life, is a reminder that the people we should treasure most are sometimes treated the worst.

Sinéad O’Connor bared her soul to us, yet we’ll never really know her pain. Thank you, Sinéad, for the beautiful music you gave us”.

I am going come to this 2020 feature from Albumism. They celebrated thirty years of I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got. It is sad that she cannot see people’s reaction to this album now. O’Connor died in 2023. She left us with one of the most distinct and extraordinary bodies of work in music history:

There are moments in history that will forever remain unforgettable, no matter the age or generation. Moments that shape an era, a genre or a decade. In January of 1990, an Irish singer by the name of Sinéad O’Connor released a cover of Prince’s “Nothing Compares 2 You,” a song deeply rooted in emotion and despair which would go on to certify O’Connor and that song as one of music history’s most unforgettable moments.

O’Connor’s second album I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got was not only home to the aforementioned cover, but it also saw a shift in the singer’s attitude. The torment that prevailed on her debut, 1987’s The Lion And The Cobra, was still there. But like all things, O’Connor’s maturity started to come through on this album, giving way to a kind of hopefulness, rather than outright anger.

Listening to this album again is a walk down memory lane, but also a reminder of the depth and beauty in O’Connor’s music. Whilst this album’s breakout star most certainly was “Nothing Compares 2 You,” it may also be the standard that O’Connor never truly surpassed again on any other subsequent album. The simplicity of the video, which featured O’Connor with her trademarked shaved head, allowed for not only the singer’s beauty to be placed firmly in the spotlight, but more importantly, the emotion that O’Connor conveyed with an unabashed rawness was placed front and center. Very few have been able to achieve this since.

Moving away from the album’s standout hit and it is clear to see that O’Connor’s foot is firmly set in mostly folky types of tracks that make her voice the primary focus of each and every song. The album’s opener is the prayer-like “Feel So Different,” submerged in an initial spoken strength (The Serenity Prayer) that plays on the fact that this could easily be for an old flame, but could equally be an approach to questioning a higher power, something O’Connor has never shied away from.

O’Connor’s approach to religion has been well documented over the years, but as the singer herself stated in a recent interview with Tommy Tiernan, “I have always been interested in theology since I was a kid, because we all grew up in this theocracy and I wanted to know what was this book they were using to oppress my Granny.” O’Connor isn’t afraid to go deep with spirituality, and with this sense of curiosity comes a crossover effect that permeates into and throughout her music. I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got is living proof that just having a great song won’t cut it—the subject matter will always be the core that resonates with people.

At its core, there is no denying that this album is about loss and the conflict associated with love lost and the possibility of conflict with a higher power, whatever that higher power may be —the government, society and yes, even God. The album’s second song “I Am Stretched Out On Your Grave” is a 17th century Irish poem translated to English and covered by O’Connor with an old school hip-hop base that works beautifully with her vocals on this grief-stricken track. “The Emperor’s New Clothes” shows a conviction that is part anger and part middle finger to the never-ending judgement the singer faced at the time with her star sky rocketing, scrutiny around her Catholic faith, and her role as a newly single mother.

Politics play a part on this album too, with the song “Black Boys on Mopeds” taking a firm swipe at the Thatcher government as well as the death of a black youth at the hands of the police. A strong reminder that although this album was released in 1990, the conversations that were had then seem to be ones that we are still talking about today. O’Connor’s personal struggles extend far beyond her broken heart and she wasn’t afraid to step into the harsh reality of a world that may not have affected her directly, but most definitely surrounded her as evidenced in this song.

It is no secret that O’Connor’s struggles with mental health and controversies surrounding her relationship with religion have sometimes been at the forefront of her public image, as opposed to her music. But sensationalism aside, O’Connor was—and still is—a woman who was unafraid to sit in front of the world and bare her soul. I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got serves as a reminder of O’Connor’s brilliance, expecting nothing more in return other than to listen and question what didn’t or possibly doesn’t feel right.

On the album’s closing title track, O’Connor speaks with a gentle wisdom, reflecting, “I have water for my journey / I have bread and I have wine / No longer will I be hungry / For the bread of life is mine.” Whilst redemption radiates throughout this song and some may say, most of the album, O’Connor managed to deliver an incredible follow-up that extended her curiosity into the unknown with a fearlessness and honesty that has rarely been matched since.

I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got remains a compelling document of a true talent that paved the way toward introspection for other artists to follow, while ensuring her legacy as a singer-songwriter committed to laying things out for all to see, uncomfortable as that may be sometimes”.

I am going to finish with a couple of reviews. AllMusic provided their take on Sinéad O'Connor's second studio album. Although there are different release dates provided online, I am pretty sure it was 20th March, 1990 that is was released (rather than 12th March). In any case, it is a monumentally powerful album that still takes me back and creates shivers:

I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got became Sinéad O'Connor's popular breakthrough on the strength of the stunning Prince cover "Nothing Compares 2 U," which topped the pop charts for a month. But even its remarkable intimacy wasn't adequate preparation for the harrowing confessionals that composed the majority of the album. Informed by her stormy relationship with drummer John Reynolds, who fathered O'Connor's first child before the couple broke up, I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got lays the singer's psyche startlingly and sometimes uncomfortably bare. The songs mostly address relationships with parents, children, and (especially) lovers, through which O'Connor weaves a stubborn refusal to be defined by anyone but herself. In fact, the album is almost too personal and cathartic to draw the listener in close, since O'Connor projects such turmoil and offers such specific detail. Her confrontational openness makes it easy to overlook O'Connor's musical versatility. Granted, not all of the music is as brilliantly audacious as "I Am Stretched on Your Grave," which marries a Frank O'Connor poem to eerie Celtic melodies and a James Brown "Funky Drummer" sample. But the album plays like a tour de force in its demonstration of everything O'Connor can do: dramatic orchestral ballads, intimate confessionals, catchy pop/rock, driving guitar rock, and protest folk, not to mention the nearly six-minute a cappella title track. What's consistent throughout is the frighteningly strong emotion O'Connor brings to bear on the material, while remaining sensitive to each piece's individual demands. Aside from being a brilliant album in its own right, I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got foreshadowed the rise of deeply introspective female singer/songwriters like Tori Amos and Sarah McLachlan, who were more traditionally feminine and connected with a wider audience. Which takes nothing away from anyone; if anything, it's evidence that, when on top of her game, O'Connor was a singular talent”.

I am going to end with this review from SLANT. Without doubt one of the best albums of the 1990s, I would encourage anyone who has not heard this album in a while to listen to. Ahead of its thirty-fifth anniversary on 20th March. O’Connor would follow her second studio album with 1992’s Am I Not Your Girl? It is an album that got some negative press. A collection of covers, it is very different from I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got:

I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got found Sinéad O’Connor bruised but determined, disappointed yet hopeful. The cause was a combination of burgeoning fame and a nasty breakup (with John Reynolds, drummer and father of O’Connor’s son), and the result was one of the most politically, socially, and spiritually charged breakup albums of the ’90s, if not the entire 20th century.

The album opens with the gorgeous orchestral pop of “Feel So Different,” a meditation on said fame and relationship: “I am not like I was before/I thought that nothing would change me.” O’Connor’s relationship woes are invariably linked to her career, and her breakup with Reynolds is likened to a business transaction on the stunning “The Last Day of Our Acquaintance.” Anger, sadness, relief, and despondency are simultaneously bundled up in O’Connor’s voice on these two tracks, as it is throughout most of the album. Her voice is flawless in its technical imperfections; she begins each song delicately but ultimately erupts with the ferociousness of a punk.

The singer’s greatest vocal achievement is perhaps her interpretation of Prince’s “Nothing Compares 2 U,” a classic torch song she quite simply owns. While it’s the only track on which O’Connor received production assistance (Nellee Hooper gives the song a minimalist yet modern appeal), it sits comfortably among songs like the hip-hop-beats-meet-Celtic-melodies of “I Am Stretched on Your Grave,” and the acoustic protest-folk of “Black Boys on Mopeds” (on which O’Connor’s lyrics now sound prophetic, both personally and politically: “These are dangerous days/To say what you feel is to dig your own grave”).

Throughout the album, O’Connor struggles with these personal tribulations amid the oppression of the world around her: “I will live by my own policies/I will sleep with a clear conscience,” she sings on “The Emperor’s New Clothes.” The disc ends even more sparely than it begins; the a cappella title track brings the singer back to a place of prayer and hopeful redemption, but whether it’s God or a lover she seeks on her “journey,” this is clearly the voice of someone who will never stop searching”.

Three years after the release of her magnificent debut album, The Lion and the Cobra, Sinéad O'Connor released another original and personal masterpiece. Her death has left a huge void in music. However, we can remember her through her work. An album like I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got. Every time I listen to it I am moved and in awe. What a brilliant and fearless artist Sinéad O'Connor was. It is clear she will never be forgotten! She was at her peak on her…

ASTONISHING second studio album.

FEATURE: Heading Through the Morning Fog: Ranking Kate Bush’s Penultimate and Final Track Combinations

FEATURE:

 

 

Heading Through the Morning Fog

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1980

 

Ranking Kate Bush’s Penultimate and Final Track Combinations

_________

IN terms of Kate Bush’s…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush shot for Q magazine in 1993/PHOTO CREDIT: John Stoddart

albums and dissecting them, I have produced a few features around them. In terms of track order. I have ranked her best album openers. I have also looked at the final tracks. One feature ranked the best first side closers and second side openers. That important combination. In terms of combinations, I have not yet looked at the one-two of the penultimate and closing track. I don’t think there is any other pairing I can look at, so this might be one of the last types of features like this I’ll put out. It is important to leave the listener on a high. Closing an album in style. Kate Bush is brilliant when it comes to sequencing. However, as mentioned in similar features, some albums are better sequenced than overs. Making sure the opening couple of tracks are brilliant. A strong middle and a wonderful final couple of songs. I am focusing on that latter partnership. Ten studio albums to rank. Which one has the best final two tracks. There is tough competition! I am not only taking into consideration the quality of the tracks but how they fit together and the impact they make. Many might disagree with my rankings. However, there is my opinion of which Kate Bush albums have the best…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush watching the rushes during filming of The Line, the Cross and the Curve in 1993/PHOTO CREDIT: Guido Harari

PENULTIMATE and final tracks.

_______________

TEN: The Red Shoes (1993): Why Should I Love You?/You’re the One

Bush was in a strange place when she met the Purple One. Her close friend and guitarist Alan Murphy had just died of AIDS-related pneumonia, she was going through the motions of a relationship breakdown, and was teetering on the cusp of a break from music, which, when it came, would actually last for 12 years. Prince, on the other hand, was going through one of his many spiritual rebirths. He had just emerged from the murky shadows of The Black Album, a creation he withdrew a week after release because he was convinced it was an evil, omnipotent force. He vaulted out of that hole, into a period of making music that was upbeat, pop-tinged and pumped up. In essence, the two artists’ headspaces could not really have been in more opposite places; Prince, artistically baptised and ready to change the world, and Kate Bush, surrounded by a fog of melancholia and disarray.

Prince had been a huge Kate Bush admirer for years. In emails exchanged in 1995 between Prince’s then-engineer Michael Koppelman and Bush’s then-engineer Del Palmer, Koppelman says that Prince described her as his “favourite woman”. But despite both artists being active since the 70s, it wasn’t until 1990 that they actually met in real life. Bush attended a Prince gig at Wembley during his monumental Nude Tour, asked to meet him backstage, and the rest is God-like genius collaboration history.

Perhaps it was the sheer distance between their headspaces at the time that led to what happened. Bush asked Prince to contribute a few background vocals to a song called “Why Should I Love You”, which she had just recorded in full at Abbey Road Studios. But when Prince received the track, he ignored the intructions and dismantled the entire thing like a crazed mechanic taking apart old cars on his backyard. He wanted to inject himself into the very heart of it, weaving his sound amongst her sound, giving it a new soul entirely. As Koppelman explains, “We essentially created a new song on a new piece of tape and then flew all of Kate’s tracks back on top of it… Prince stacked a bunch of keys, guitars, bass, etc, on it, and then went to sing background vocals.”

Despite being the lovechild of two of humanity’s greatest music minds, the resulting track is not often mentioned on your average BBC3 pop retrospective presented by Lauren Laverne. It’s startlingly brilliant, with sometimes bizarre, musical depths. It begins as a typical Kate Bush creation; her stratospheric vocals rising across a strange organ melody and tumbling drums. But then, about a minute through, it mutates like an unstable element being dropped into boiling water. Prince invades in a huge wave of gospel sound, the pair singing in unison: “Of all of people in the world, why should I love you?” By the time it reaches the 2-minute mark, it has been completely permeated with that Paisley Park flavour; smatters of electric guitar and rich walls of vocals spilling over its borders. The purple sound arrives like a tsunami, seemingly too vivid to suppress” – VICE

It’s alright I’ll come ’round when you’re not in
And I’ll pick up all my things
Everything I have I bought with you
But that’s alright too
It’s just everything I do
We did together
And there’s a little piece of you
In whatever
I’ve got everything I need
I’ve got petrol in the car
I’ve got some money with me
There’s just one problem

You’re the only one I want
You’re the only one I want
You’re the only one I want
You’re the only one I want

It’s alright I know where I’m going
I’m going to stay with my friend
Mmm, yes, he is very good looking
The only trouble is

He’s not you
He can’t do what you do
He can’t make me laugh and cry
At the same time
Let’s change things
Let’s danger it up
We’re crazy enough
I just can’t take it

You’re the only one I want
You’re the only one I want
You’re the only one I want
You’re the only one I want

I know where I’m going
But I don’t want to leave
I just have one problem
We’re best friends, yeah?
We tied ourselves in knots
Doing cartwheels ‘cross the floor
Just forget it alright

Sugar?…
Honey?…
Sugar?…

Credits

Drums: Stuart Elliott
Bass: John Giblin
Guitar: Jeff Beck
Hammond: Gary Brooker
Vocals: Trio Bulgarka
Fender Rhodes, keyboards: Kate
” – Kate Bush Encyclopedia

NINE: Director’s Cut (2011): And So Is Love/Rubberband Girl

Versions

There are two versions of ‘And So Is Love’: the album version from 1993, and the version from Bush’s album Director’s Cut in 2011, on which the key lyric ‘But now we see that life is sad’ is changed to ‘But now we see that life is sweet’.

Music video

The music video for ‘And So Is Love’ was also used in the movie The Line, The Cross and The Curve and features Kate singing the song in a dark room lit only by a candle.

Performances

After the release of the single, it climbed to number 26 in the UK singles chart. The chart entry marked Bush’s first appearance on the chart show Top Of The Pops in nine years. It was a straightforward performance with Kate lipsynching the song in front of the studio audience with two female backing singers by her side” - Kate Bush Encyclopedia

When Kate returned in 1993, reviews of the lead single of The Red Shoes were positive but not ecstatic.

This is Bush at her most direct… rhythmic, almost raunchy workout with the occasional outburst of rock guitar, strange lyrics – and a wired vocal impression of said office accessory being stretched. It is also a very commercial rejoinder.

Alan Jones, Music Week, 28 August 1993

Perhaps a little too up tempo for my tastes – I prefer my Bush all dreamy and mysterious. A minus the drums… but it still has enough kookiness to draw me under. And she’s still the only artist for whom the word “kooky” isn’t an insult.

Everett True, Melody Maker, 11 September 1993

I thought the original ‘Rubberband’ was… Well, it’s a fun track. I was quite happy with the original, but I just wanted to do something really different. It is my least favourite track. I had considered taking it off to be honest. Because it didn’t feel quite as interesting as the other tracks. But I thought, at the same time, it was just a bit of fun and it felt like a good thing to go out with. It’s just a silly pop song really, I loved Danny Thompson’s bass on that, and of course Danny (McIntosh)’s guitar. 

Mojo (UK), 2011Kate Bush Encyclopedia

EIGHT: The Sensual World (1989): Rocket’s Tail/This Woman’s Work

Rock music was really in some state of transition at the time, even though Kate seems always to have functioned on some outer edge wherein the rules did not apply. So many tracks on this album stand out, and it feels like the very personification of Autumn to me.

“Never Be Mine” is filled with the bittersweet yearning of “they’re setting fire to the corn fields as you’re taking me home” which resolves with “the smell of burning fields will now mean you and here/and this is where I want to be, this is what I need/but I know that this will never be mine.” Beautiful and sad. Fall is the time when we put the past to bed and settle in for winter’s nap, or at least a nice cup of tea by the fire. This album is glorious, and is heard to best effect this time of year.

My favorite track from the album is “Rocket’s Tail” for many reasons, but it sets itself indubitably in a particular time by announcing it happened one November night from the very first line. The track opens with the sinuous harmonies of Trio Bulgarka. The ethereal beauty of Kate’s voice threads nicely through the confounding tones of the Bulgarian voices, to magnificent effect.

That November night, looking up into the sky
You said hey wish that was me up there
It's the biggest rocket I could find
And it's holding the night in its arms
If for only a moment
I can't see the look in its eyes
But I'm sure it must be laughing

I once heard that Rocket was Kate’s cat, but it doesn’t really matter, because it’s such a pretty story. I mean, it MUST be true, right? Anyone who’s seen cat zoomies can attest that they’d shoot across the sky like a meteor if they could, and who better than a cat can demonstrate a tail on fire?

But it seemed to me the saddest thing I'd ever seen
And I thought you were crazy wishing such a thing

I saw only a stick on fire
Alone on its journey
Home to the quickening ground
With no one there to catch it

The poignance of this set of lines blew me away, that where the intrepid cat saw excitement and adventure and the sheer thrill of adrenaline-inducing hijinks, the speaker would see isolation in the vast chill of space.

Oh, but then she joins in the fun:

I put on my pointed hat
And my black and silver suit
And I check my gunpowder pack
And I strap the stick on my back
And dressed as a rocket on Waterloo Bridge
Nobody seemed to see me

Nutty lady on London’s Waterloo Bridge making like a bottle rocket? I’m down with this. Can I play, too?

Then with the fuse in my hand
And now shooting into the night

A fretless bass has wound through the proceedings at this point. He is not credited on this track, but I feel this can only be Mick Karn, who played on another track on the the album whence this track originates. Superb. Mick Karn was pure magic. Gone far too soon. Just like him to blend into the shadows and let his music coil through the dance.

And still as a rocket
I land in the river
Was it me said you were crazy?

And then we get the full glory that can only be the guitar of David Gilmour. How did this thing go from glorious to impossibly wonderful? Yes. Just like this.

I put on my cloudiest suit
Size five lightning boots too
'Cause I am a rocket
On fire
Look at me go with my tail on fire
Tail on fire
On fire

Between the otherworldly vocals and the stratospheric squealings of David Gilmour's guitar, this track is one for the sci-fi ages. We’re imagining ourselves elsewhere. We’re dreaming and we’re reaching. If we aspire to take the night in our arms, who is there to stop us?” – Raconteur Press

John Hughes, the American film director, had just made this film called ‘She’s Having A Baby’, and he had a scene in the film that he wanted a song to go with. And the film’s very light: it’s a lovely comedy. His films are very human, and it’s just about this young guy – falls in love with a girl, marries her. He’s still very much a kid. She gets pregnant, and it’s all still very light and child-like until she’s just about to have the baby and the nurse comes up to him and says it’s a in a breech position and they don’t know what the situation will be. So, while she’s in the operating room, he has so sit and wait in the waiting room and it’s a very powerful piece of film where he’s just sitting, thinking; and this is actually the moment in the film where he has to grow up. He has no choice. There he is, he’s not a kid any more; you can see he’s in a very grown-up situation. And he starts, in his head, going back to the times they were together. There are clips of film of them laughing together and doing up their flat and all this kind of thing. And it was such a powerful visual: it’s one of the quickest songs I’ve ever written. It was so easy to write. We had the piece of footage on video, so we plugged it up so that I could actually watch the monitor while I was sitting at the piano and I just wrote the song to these visuals. It was almost a matter of telling the story, and it was a lovely thing to do: I really enjoyed doing it - Roger Scott Interview, BBC Radio 1 (UK), 14 October 1989

That’s the sequence I had to write the song about, and it’s really very moving, him in the waiting room, having flashbacks of his wife and him going for walks, decorating… It’s exploring his sadness and guilt: suddenly it’s the point where he has to grow up. He’d been such a wally up to this point - Len Brown, ‘In The Realm Of The Senses’. NME (UK), 7 October 1989” – Kate Bush Encyclopedia

SEVEN: The Kick Inside (1978): Room for the Life/The Kick Inside

Room for the Life” is that rare thing in Kate Bush’s early discography: a song presenting a dialogue between two women. You’d think this would be particularly refreshing, but there’s something odd about “Room for the Life”: nobody ever talks about it. That’s not to say there’s not a single person in the world who doesn’t enjoy the song — it’d be astonishing if in the four decades since The Kick Inside was released nobody had liked “Room for the Life.” But the song is hindered by the fact it’s not any good. It’s easily the worst track on The Kick Inside: ham-fisted, embarrassing, and just plain forgettable.

Musically, “Room for the Life” is a trainwreck. Its verse blends into the rest of The Kick Inside, offering little in the way of standing out, and the chorus does little to liven up the song, with its tepid use of beer bottles as an instrument only succeeding in making the track sound flaccid. The worst comes at the end of the chorus, with Bush chiming “mama woman aha!” obnoxiously. This culminates in the song’s outro, with Bush imitating… what is she doing here exactly? Percussionist Morris Pert’s boo-bams (a kind of bongos) bring a light world music flavor to it, amplified by Bush’s grating “OO-AH”s. It’s one of the most tasteless moments on an otherwise sophisticated record, and releasing a track like this instead of “Frightened Eyes” is a downright baffling move on Bush’s part.

In addition to its musical tastelessness, “Room for the Life” is out of touch. Bush has identified herself with male artists, admitting that a lack of interesting female songwriters was the reason (she cites Joni Mitchell, Billie Holliday, and Joan Armatrading as exceptions). When she writes about two female characters in “Room,” things fall apart (this isn’t always the case — my favorite Kate Bush song is a woman-centered dialogue, as we’ll see). The song is addressed from one woman to another, telling of the magical power of women, expressed as a singularity with the oddly agrammatical phrase “because we’re woman.” It’s an oddly naïve little song, and one with strange conclusions on how to be a woman. “Lost in your men and the games you play/trying to prove that you’re better woman,” Bush chides her friend. How dare she try to get ahead of men. The audacity of it” – Dreams of Orgonon

The song The Kick Inside, the title track, was inspired by a traditional folk song and it was an area that I wanted to explore because it’s one that is really untouched and that is one of incest. There are so many songs about love, but they are always on such an obvious level. This song is about a brother and a sister who are in love, and the sister becomes pregnant by her brother. And because it is so taboo and unheard of, she kills herself in order to preserve her brother’s name in the family. The actual song is in fact the suicide note. The sister is saying ‘I’m doing it for you’ and ‘Don’t worry, I’ll come back to you someday.’ - Self Portrait, 1978

That’s inspired by an old traditional song called ‘Lucy Wan.’ It’s about a young girl and her brother who fall desperately in love. It’s an incredibly taboo thing. She becomes pregnant by her brother and it’s completely against all morals. She doesn’t want him to be hurt, she doesn’t want her family to be ashamed or disgusted, so she kills herself. The song is a suicide note. She says to her brother, ‘Don’t worry. I’m doing it for you.’- Jon Young, Kate Bush gets her kicks. Trouser Press, July 1978” – Kate Bush Encyclopedia

SIX: Lionheart (1978): Coffee Homeground/Hammer Horror

[‘Coffee Homeground’] was in fact inspired directly from a cab driver that I met who was in fact a bit nutty. And it’s just a song about someone who thinks they’re being poisoned by another person, they think that there’s Belladonna in their tea and that whenever they offer them something to eat, it’s got poisen in it. And it’s just a humorous aspect of paranoia really and we sort of done it in a Brechtian style, the old sort of German [vibe] to try and bring across the humour side of it - Lionheart Promo Cassette, EMI Canada, 1978” – Kate Bush Encyclopedia

Resultingly, Bush’s engagement with Epic Theater is a purely audible one. “Homeground” owes more to Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya than it does to Brecht, as it’s their sound Bush pillages. Bush’s trill becomes a half-spoken warble as she strives to sound like Lenya for a track. It’s not a bad impression — sure, it sounds nothing like Lenya’s voice, but Bush doesn’t do the worst job of imitating her speech patterns. Musically, the strongest resemblance to Brecht and Weill’s work here is the morbid subject matter applied to carnivalesque scoring. The melody contains huge leaps and never sounds quite the same, as the intro and bridge repeat essentially the same phrase in a different key every time they appear. There are little discordant details such as the use of the non existent #VII chord of B flat (A), which doesn’t appear in B flat major or B flat minor. The pre-chorus will make a play at being in A before transforming into some mode of B (possibly mixolydian, or anything with a flattened seventh). Even if “Homeground” lacks conceptual clarity, it’s far from banal.

The decrepit house of “Homeground” is as much a stage for the song itself as it is for Bush. In a period where she’s torn between the obligations of touring and her desire to give her songs the time they need, “Coffee Homeground” is the sort of song Kate Bush is bound to produce. Her shortcomings and her ambition clash violently, and the result is as fascinating and vexed as anything she’s ever made. This has been a challenging period for Bush, and as we’ll see in the next two weeks, it’s about to climax” – Dreams of Orgonon

The song is not about, as many think, Hammer Horror films. It is about an actor and his friend. His friend is playing the lead in a production ofThe Hunchback of Notre Dame,a part he’s been reading all his life, waiting for the chance to play it. He’s finally got the big break he’s always wanted, and he is the star. After many rehearsals he dies accidentally, and the friend is asked to take the role over, which, because his own career is at stake, he does. The dead man comes back to haunt him because he doesn’t want him to have the part, believing he’s taken away the only chance he ever wanted in life. And the actor is saying, “Leave me alone, because it wasn’t my fault – I have to take this part, but I’m wondering if it’s the right thing to do because the ghost is not going to leave me alone and is really freaking me out. Every time I look round a corner he’s there, he never disappears.”

The song was inspired by seeing James Cagney playing the part of Lon Chaney playing the hunchback – he was an actor in an actor in an actor, rather like Chinese boxes, and that’s what I was trying to create - Kate Bush Club Newsletter, November 1979” – Kate Bush Encyclopedia

FIVE: Aerial (2005): Nocturn/Aerial

For instance, the lyrics of Nocturn is a beautiful description of awakening to – or at least intuiting – Big Mind. God as all and ourselves as That.

Interpreting can only detract from it, but here is a go at it…

Nocturn

On this Midsummer night
Everyone is sleeping
We go driving into the moonlight

Could be in a dream
Our clothes are on the beach
These prints of our feet
Lead right up to the sea
No one, no one is here
No one, no one is here
We stand in the Atlantic
We become panoramic

No one is here – this probably means that there were no others there, but can also be seen as the realization that there is no “I” – there is no one here. I am gone, and there is only God. We become panoramic – the world world is within us.

We tire of the city
We tire of it all
We long for just that something more

Yes, a longing for discovering our true nature. As that which is, with no “I” anywhere. As consciousness and all its manifestations.

Could be in a dream
Our clothes are on the beach
The prints of our feet
Lead right up to the sea
No one, no one is here
No one, no one is here
We stand in the Atlantic
We become panoramic

The stars are caught in our hair
The stars are on our fingers
A veil of diamond dust
Just reach up and touch it
The sky’s above our heads
The sea’s around our legs
In milky, silky water
We swim further and further

The universe happens within and as us, and the stars are caught in our hair and the stars are on our fingers. The can be seen as a beautiful expression of the play of the absolute and relative, as ourselves as Big Mind and a human self.

We dive down… We dive down

A diamond night, a diamond sea
and a diamond sky…

When the realization of no “I” pops, there is indeed a diamond quality to it all. It is brilliantly clear, stainless.

We dive deeper and deeper
we dive deeper and deeper
Could be we are here
Could be in a dream
It came up on the horizon
Rising and rising
In a sea of honey, a sky of honey
A sea of honey, a sky of honey

And here is the bliss that comes with an awakening. The sea and sky of honey that comes with the release from the previous contractions.

The chorus:
Look at the light, all the time it’s a changing
Look at the light, climbing up the aerial
Bright, white coming alive jumping off of the aerial
All the time it’s a changing, like now…
All the time it’s a changing, like then again…
All the time it’s a changing
And all the dreamers are waking

Finding ourselves as the ground, as that from and as the world of form arises, as emptiness dancing, we see clearly how the world of form is always changing. And there is no need to hold onto anything.

This is the dreamers waking. And each one of us is the dreamer waiting to awaken” – Absentofi

The dawn has come
And the wine will run
And the song must be sung
And the flowers are melting
In the sun

I feel I want to be up on the roof
I feel I gotta get up on the roof
Up, up on the roof
Up, up on the roof

Oh the dawn has come
And the song must be sung
And the flowers are melting
What kind of language is this?

What kind of language is this?
I can’t hear a word you’re saying
Tell me what are you singing
In the sun

All of the birds are laughing
All of the birds are laughing
Come on let’s all join in
Come on let’s all join in

I want to be up on the roof
I’ve gotta be up on the roof
Up, up high on the roof
Up, up on the roof
In the sun

Credits

Drums: Steve Sanger
Bass: Del Palmer
Guitars: Dan McIntosh
Keyboards: Kate
Percussion: Bosco D’Oliveira
” – Kate Bush Encyclopedia

FOUR: 50 Words for Snow (2011): 50 Words for Snow/Among Angels 

Years ago I think I must have heard this idea that there were 50 words for snow in this, ah, Eskimo Land! And I just thought it was such a great idea to have so many words about one thing. It is a myth – although, as you say it may hold true in a different language – but it was just a play on the idea, that if they had that many words for snow, did we? If you start actually thinking about snow in all of its forms you can imagine that there are an awful lot of words about it. Just in our immediate language we have words like hail, slush, sleet, settling… So this was a way to try and take it into a more imaginative world. And I really wanted Stephen to read this because I wanted to have someone who had an incredibly beautiful voice but also someone with a real sense of authority when he said things. So the idea was that the words would get progressively more silly really but even when they were silly there was this idea that they would have been important, to still carry weight. And I really, really wanted him to do it and it was fantastic that he could do it. (…) I just briefly explained to him the idea of the song, more or less what I said to you really. I just said it’s our idea of 50 Words For Snow. Stephen is a lovely man but he is also an extraordinary person and an incredible actor amongst his many other talents. So really it was just trying to get the right tone which was the only thing we had to work on. He just came into the studio and we just worked through the words. And he works very quickly because he’s such an able performer. (…) I think faloop’njoompoola is one of my favourites. [laughs]

John Doran, ‘A Demon In The Drift: Kate Bush Interviewed‘. The Quietus, 2011 Kate Bush Encyclopedia

The title track is the highlight and possibly the most baffling piece of music to be heard all year. Stephen Fry is an unusual choice of guest as he intones 50 different synonyms for snow over a dense tribal backing. These terms for snow are mostly made up, and go from the beautiful (‘blackbird braille’), to the ridiculous (‘Boomerangablanca’). A lot of thought has clearly gone into these linguistic creations and a read of the lyric sheet is strongly recommended. It is an utterly bonkers piece but it encapsulates everything that is so unique and fascinating about Bush” – DIY

Among Angels’ is a song written by Kate Bush. It was originally released on her tenth studio album 50 Words For Snow in 2011.

Versions

There is only one studio version of this song.
A live version appears on the album
Before The Dawn.

Performances

The song was performed live as the last encore on Kate’s Before The Dawn shows in London, 2014.

Cover versions

‘Among Angels’ was covered by Grimeland.

Lyrics

Only you can do something about it
There’s no-one there, my friend, any better
I might know what you mean when you say you fall apart
Aren’t we all the same? In and out of doubt
I can see angels standing around you
They shimmer like mirrors in Summer
But you don’t know it

And they will carry you o’er the walls
If you need us, just call
Rest your weary world in their hands
Lay your broken laugh at their feet
I can see angels around you
They shimmer like mirrors in summer
There’s someone who’s loved you forever but you don’t know it
You mi
ght feel it and just not show it” – Kate Bush Encyclopedia

THREE: Hounds of Love (1985): Hello Earth/The Morning Fog 

‘Hello Earth’ was a very difficult track to write, as well, because it was… in some ways it was too big for me. [Laughs] And I ended up with this song that had two huge great holes in the choruses, where the drums stopped, and everything stopped, and people would say to me, “what’s going to happen in these choruses,” and I hadn’t got a clue.

We had the whole song, it was all there, but these huge, great holes in the choruses. And I knew I wanted to put something in there, and I’d had this idea to put a vocal piece in there, that was like this traditional tune I’d heard used in the film Nosferatu. And really everything I came up with, it with was rubbish really compared to what this piece was saying. So we did some research to find out if it was possible to use it. And it was, so that’s what we did, we re-recorded the piece and I kind of made up words that sounded like what I could hear was happening on the original. And suddenly there was these beautiful voices in these chorus that had just been like two black holes.

In some ways I thought of it as a lullaby for the Earth. And it was the idea of turning the whole thing upside down and looking at it from completely above. You know, that image of if you were lying in water at night and you were looking up at the sky all the time, I wonder if you wouldn’t get the sense of as the stars were reflected in the water, you know, a sense of like, you could be looking up at water that’s reflecting the stars from the sky that you’re in. And the idea of them looking down at the earth and seeing these storms forming over America and moving around the globe, and they have this like huge fantasticly overseeing view of everything, everything is in total perspective. And way, way down there somewhere there’s this little dot in the ocean that is them - Richard Skinner, ‘Classic Albums interview: Hounds Of Love. Radio 1 (UK), aired 26 January 1992” – Kate Bush Encyclopedia

Well, that’s really meant to be the rescue of the whole situation, where now suddenly out of all this darkness and weight comes light. You know, the weightiness is gone and here’s the morning, and it’s meant to feel very positive and bright and uplifting from the rest of dense, darkness of the previous track. And although it doesn’t say so, in my mind this was the song where they were rescued, where they get pulled out of the water. And it’s very much a song of seeing perspective, of really, you know, of being so grateful for everything that you have, that you’re never grateful of in ordinary life because you just abuse it totally. And it was also meant to be one of those kind of “thank you and goodnight” songs. You know, the little finale where everyone does a little dance and then the bow and then they leave the stage. [laughs] - Richard Skinner, ‘Classic Albums interview: Hounds Of Love. Radio 1 (UK), aired 26 January 1992Kate Bush Encyclopedia

TWO: Never for Ever (1980): Army Dreamers/Breathing

Since we’re used to Bush being asleep to political infrastructure and class, we can at least turn to her complex politics of domesticity. While she doesn’t interrogate the structural causes of political violence, she’s still centering a song around the vulnerable people whose lives are destroyed by it. Never for Ever is populated by mothers and wives. Five of its eleven songs explicitly focus on maternal and uxorial figures, and that’s if we don’t count the broadly familial “All We Ever Look For.” Bush’s wives and mothers tend towards fatigue over their familial roles, experiencing emotions that contradict their outward actions or social operations. Bush’s mothers are an intrinsic good whose absence or loss is a tragedy, and whose losses are a social catastrophe. Key to the mother’s characterization in “Army Dreamers” is absence. She bemoans not merely her lost son, but his lost opportunities and the things she couldn’t provide for him. “What a waste of army dreamers,” muses Bush, in a ritual mourning of military casualties, which treats them as a cessation of dreams.

Most impressive is the way “Army Dreamers” treats the mother as an individual while also stressing her importance to her family. Stripped of her duties to her son, she is left with no more motherhood to perform. This suggests that while war is horrible, the people who are left behind have their own experiences of it. Men get sent off to die, and the women they leave behind are expected to grieve dutifully. Yet they’re prescribed a performative kind of grief — the actual effects of trauma are widely besmirched and ignored by the jingoistic reactionaries who send civilians off to die. Women are usually seen as broken when their soldiers fail to come home — this isn’t quite what Bush does. Is the mother broken? No, of course not. Has she had a vital part of her life snatched from her? Utterly.

There’s a touch of sentimentalism to this, if at least a grounded and humanitarian one. Violent deaths are often devastating because they cut short the lives of unsuspecting civilians who’ve been planning to go live their lives as usual the next day. Bush’s anti-militarism is hardly strident, but “Army Dreamers” has an edge to it even in its understatedness, blaming the services of “B.F.P.O” for overseas tragedies (although interestingly, her son’s death appears to be an accident — there’s little fanfare of death, no suggestion of the glory of battle). The horror of the death is largely its silence — all the things that couldn’t happen, no matter how much saying them would make them so.

The politics of the situation are left understated, as is typical for Bush, and yet with a light inimical rage, as if Bush is finally turning to the British establishment and shouting “look at what you’ve done!” While “Army Dreamers” is far from an indictment of the military-industrial complex (indeed, it has more to do with the British Army’s consumption of Irish civilians than anything else), its highlighting of war as futile is striking. “Give the kid the pick of pips/and give him all your stripes and ribbons/now he’s sitting in his hole/he might as well have buttons and bows” is a line of understated condemnation that spits on military emblems (pips are a British Army insignia) and consolidates trenches and graves. “B. F. P. O.,,” intone Bush’s backing vocalists again and again. In interviews, Bush backpedals from any perceived anti-militarist sentiments in her work (“I’m not slagging off the army…”), but her song tells a different story: nothing comes with B. F. P. O. except carnage” – Dreams of Orgonon

It’s about a baby still in the mother’s womb at the time of a nuclear fallout, but it’s more of a spiritual being. It has all its senses: sight, smell, touch, taste and hearing, and it knows what is going on outside the mother’s womb, and yet it wants desperately to carry on living, as we all do of course. Nuclear fallout is something we’re all aware of, and worried about happening in our lives, and it’s something we should all take time to think about. We’re all innocent, none of us deserve to be blown up - Deanne Pearson, ‘The Me Inside’. Smash Hits (UK), May 1980

When I wrote the song, it was from such a personal viewpoint. It was just through having heard a thing for years without it ever having got through to me. ‘Til the moment it hit me, I hadn’t really been moved. Then I suddenly realised the whole devastation and disgusting arrogance of it all. Trying to destroy something that we’ve not created – the earth. The only thing we are is a breathing mechanism: everything is breathing. Without it we’re just nothing. All we’ve got is our lives, and I was worried that when people heard it they were going to think, ‘She’s exploiting commercially this terribly real thing.’ I was very worried that people weren’t going to take me from my emotional standpoint rather than the commercial one. But they did, which is great. I was worried that people wouldn’t want to worry about it because it’s so real. I was also worried that it was too negative, but I do feel that there is hope in the whole thing, just for the fact that it’s a message from the future. It’s not from now, it’s from a spirit that may exist in the future, a non-existent spiritual embryo who sees all and who’s been round time and time again so they know what the world’s all about. This time they don’t want to come out, because they know they’re not going to live. It’s almost like the mother’s stomach is a big window that’s like a cinema screen, and they’re seeing all this terrible chaos - Kris Needs, ‘Fire In The Bush’. Zigzag (UK), 1980” – Kate Bush Encyclopedia

ONE: The Dreaming (1982): Houdini/Get Out of My House

Houdini” is the face of The Dreaming. It’s one of the only Bush sleeves where the image is supplied by the song. Its aspect, another creation of fraternal mainstay John Carder Bush, is a sepia photograph in medium closeup depicting a slightly agrestal Bush with her head tilted to the right, with her mouth open wide revealing a key on her tongue, which she passes to a faceless Del Palmer. This image derives from the lyrics of “Houdini,” which impart the fictionalized yet broadly historical experience of Bess Houdini, widow of premier escapologist Harry Houdini, who tries to contact her late husband through necromancy (“I wait at the table/hold hands with weeping strangers/wait for you/to join the group”). The relevant lyric “with a kiss I’d pass the key/and feel your tongue, teasing and receiving,” is unique among pop lyrics, as the overwhelming majority of them don’t contain idle recollections of Frenching a deceased spouse. It’s a bald-faced and ostentatiously move that flags how uninterested in notions of “normality” Bush is. 

This furthermore indicates the subversive narratology Bush is pursuing. It’s quite boldly literal in the Carder Bush photo, where Del Palmer’s face is turned away from the frame. There’s an occlusion of “great man” narratives to “Houdini.” It’s named after one of the 20th century’s great performers, but it’s largely defined by his absence. As a result, the story has to be about the widowed Bess and her grief. Impressively, “Houdini” avoids elegy for the accomplishments of a Great Man, opting instead for the love Bess Houdini bore for her husband and the ecstatically weird lengths she went to demonstrate that. 

The song is far from a stringent one. “Houdini” is fueled by anguished conniptions rather than melodic coherence. The verse initially sounds like “The Infant Kiss” or some other perfectly normal song with its piano balladry in Eb minor with a progression that finishes on a major tonic chord. It commences as a séance with mourners preparing to reach into the ether (“the tambourine jingle-jangles/the medium roams and rambles”). The refrain is the apex of Bush shrieks, culminating in a gravely, agonized “WITH YOUR LIFE/THE ONLY THING IN MY MIND/WE PULL YOU FROM THE WATER!” The result is hardly melodic — it’s willfully ugly, produced by Bush eating lots of chocolate and drinking milk to sabotage her own voice. Whether or not the experiment works, it doesn’t seem like Bush cares — she wants this to sound raw and ugly” – Dreams of Orgonon

Uncertainty pervades “Get Out of My House,” The Dreaming’s brutal culmination. Catalyzed by its beleaguering yet urgent drumbeat and a lacerating lead guitar part from Alan Murphy, it is confrontational and purgative in its spectacular vocal menagerie, all in dialogue (often call-and-response) with one another yet seemingly not of an accord, as the bombastic and tremulous delivery of “when you left, the door was…” is answered by the siren-like, low-mixed B.V.’s crying “SLAMMING!” Adhering mostly to 4/4, “Get Out of My House” revolves through dizzying sequences of repetitive chord changes, with its first verse in G# melodic minor, confined to a progression of i-IV (G# minor – C#), moving to the natural minor in Verse Two with a progression of i-iv (G# minor – C # minor), signaling a domination of brutal repetition and minor keys without catharsis. With one of Bush’s most agonized vocals carrying the refrain (a genuinely harrowing and throaty “GET OUT OF MY HOUSE!”), the song emits agony, trauma, and expulsion.

***

The man who was my father often pontificated about his love for me. Shedding the crocodile tears of a consummate sentimentalist, he would frequently expatiate about how proud he was of me and what a good person I was. This would inevitably happen after he mocked me for my everyday behavior, berated me for having opinions contradictory to his own, treat himself as an authority talking down to a stupid and helpless buffoon, call me a prick, and shooting down pretty much every attempt I made to be my own person. Such is paternalism masquerading as parenting.

In the latter half of 2017, as I was inching away from the upbringing I’d endured and the boy I once was, I was bundled up in my then-father’s living room, watched The Shining for the fifth or seventh or tenth time. I was intimately familiar with the movie, but something felt different this time. I was emotionally attuned to the nuances of Shelley Duvall and Jack Nicholson’s performances that went beyond visual literacy. The scene that deeply impacted me this time around was Jack’s one scene alone with Danny. It is loveless, leering, and utterly terrifying. “You know I’d never hurt you, don’t you?” says Jack to the child whose arm he broke three years ago. It is not a question, but at once a lie and a threat. Jack clearly means “You’d BETTER know that.” I shuddered,  and for the first time I wept over a horror movie. In the tepid comfort of my sperm donor’s living room, Jack Nicholson’s sneered declaration of love struck intimately close to home.

***

Stanley Kubrick’s film version of The Shining touches on intergenerational abuse, trauma, systemic violence, and spatiotemporal dyschronia more than Stephen King’s novel does. While King labors under the delusion that his story is about a broken alcoholic’s tragic descent into madness, Kubrick’s film presents washed-up writer, domestic abuser, alcoholic, and axe murderer Jack Torrance as a capricious, mean-minded, narcissistic, mendacious, gaslighting bastard. While King has railed against Kubrick for bowdlerizing Jack’s humanity, Kubrick and Jack Nicholson in fact make Jack a more rounded character. While Stephen King’s idea of characterization is two-dimensional (consisting of a crucial flaw and a noble virtue), Kubrick and his actors sketch character in terms of behavior and small gestures that reveal the nature of the Torrances. As a result, Jack’s smug maliciousness in the film is more psychologically choate than his counterpart in the book” - Dreams of Orgonon

FEATURE: A Sea Full of Fish People: A Desire for a New Kate Bush Fanzine, Community or Website

FEATURE:

 

 

A Sea Full of Fish People

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1993 during filming of The Line, the Cross and the Curve (wearing the same T-shirt she wore when signing copies of The Dreaming in 1982)/PHOTO CREDIT: Guido Harari

 

A Desire for a New Kate Bush Fanzine, Community or Website

_________

WHEN writing about Kate Bush…

through the years, I have thought about what it would be like if there was a fan club. It might seem outdated and something that would take a lot of money and time. However, as Kate Bush is growing in popularity and there is this new generation of fans, it does seem a shame that this connection exists only online. I know that people hold small Kate Bush events and there are websites dedicated to her. However, as her fan collective – Fish People is what I would name us – is so loving and has this shared bond with an amazing artist, there is a real opportunity to connect us in a direct way. I know there have not been any large fan conventions for years. Bush would not attend one herself, yet it would be nice if there was a gathering. Not to say there is an absence of togetherness and celebration. Tribute acts, tribute shows and special evens are held all year round. However, I do like the notion of naming the fanbase and returning to times past. There did used to be a Kate Bush fan club. A newsletter that she would contribute to. Today, Kate Bush contributes to her official website and posts updates. It is good that we get this interaction. However, I have been looking through a books that collected together old issues of HomeGround. That was the Kate Bush fanzine, It published its last edition in 2012. Not only are old editions a treasure trove of information, career highlights and writing about Kate Bush. I also think that they show how widespread the fanbase was. Today, it is as broad as ever. How wonderful it would be to have a monthly or even yearly fanzine. Fans could contribute writing. There could be news and features. I have mused about this before. Some would argue the cost of making it happen would not make it worth the effort. Fans could pay towards the publication. I do love when magazine articles feature Kate Bush. However, with such a loving and loyal fanbase, having us show that love and appreciation in a fanzine would be amazing. So many people would be on board.

Other than that, an official fan club would be something that could recruit an army of Fish People. Annual events and get-togethers. I am sure Kate Bush would be thrilled. It would be more than annual gatherings or some form of convention. Someone could head it up. There would be this base. A chance to expand things. If Kate Bush were not running it, there is a limitation in terms of instant or obvious benefits. Many fan clubs are designed so that fans gain exclusive information or merchandise about an artist. That could work for Kate Bush. Getting exclusives about her and any music developments. That would be so cool. Also, fan-designed clothing and goodies. Again, people could say it is nostalgia and not realty relevant in the current climate. How everything is digital. Many major artists have fanbases and fan clubs. There are Swifites for Taylor Swift. Kylie Minogue has her Lovers. As I have written before, Kate Bush has her unofficial Fish People. I have also been thinking about another website. There is Kate Bush’s official website, Gaffaweb and the Kate Bush Enclcyopedia. Most of it is archive. All useful information, though there is a lot of modern-day information and details that could be included. Bush’s official website has merchandise and news. Something fresh that collates everything together. All the archives, videos, albums, merchandise, plus a tonne of other stuff. The essential site that fans could contribute to. There is a lot of new love and interest in Kate Bush. This will continue for years. It would be fitting to pay tribute to that somehow. Rather than is being divided online and there being this small pockets of fandom. Events that are quite small. I am thinking wider and larger. Maybe an annual Kate Bush convention or event. Where writers, artists and academics could speak about Bush and her music. Read essays and present talks. All this love and energy for Kate Bush should be channelled somewhere.

 IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush photographed in 1989 in an outtake for the cover shoot of The Sensual World/PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

How do we go about that in a modern age where digital rules everything? The music print media is still alive, yet it is expensive to maintain. A lot of money needed. How could a fanzine realistically survive? I do know that fans would pay to make it happen. There are some fascinating archives and lots of contemporary news that could be collated. HomeGround covered a lot of it, yet they ended over a decade ago. Archive websites that have maybe stopped archiving and have not been updated for years. Not really any blogs dedicated to Kate Bush. Kate Bush News is perhaps the only website that caters to fans in this way. They have been going for years and do great work. I have been a little restless. This growing legion of fans. A fan club or fanzine could get contributions from high-profile names. At the very least, we do need to name the fan collective. Whether Bush would be on board with Fish People. Is another name more appropriate? As a lot of people are leaving social media and we are become less connected, there should be new initiatives. An official annual convention. Something bigger than what is out there at the moment. A new website that could work alongside Kate Bush News and is full of everything Kate Bush-related. Also, something oldskool. Newsletters or something in the post. Bush herself loves her fans and is so pleased that she is being discovered by new people. How some consider her to be a new artist! There are great websites and books out there. I think there could be a little more. Bringing fans together. Having all the Fish People united would be an incredible thing to see. Conventions around the world or this worldwide fan club that we could all be part of. We do not know when a new album will arrive or what this year holds. However, it is going to be exciting. Great things will happen. A fan club, fanzine or new website would truly show Kate Bush…

HOW much she is loved.

FEATURE: The Blacker the Berry: Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly at Ten

FEATURE:

 

 

The Blacker the Berry

  

Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly at Ten

_________

ONE of the biggest albums…

PHOTO CREDIT: John Francis Peters for The New York Times

of the 2010s has an anniversary coming up on 15th March. Kendrick Lamar’s third studio album, To Pimp a Butterfly, turns ten. A move up and switch from Lamar’s 2012 album, good kid, m.A.A.d city, To Pimp a Butterfly blends Jazz, Funk, Hip-Hop, Soul and other genres. It was his most ambitious and eclectic album to that date. Lamar focuses on politics, inequality, racial tensions and depression. It is both personal and universal. It is no surprise that it was highly acclaimed by critics. Ahead of its tenth anniversary, I wanted to spotlight a masterpiece from one of Hip-Hop’s legends and leaders. A number one album in the U.S. and U.K., To Pimp a Butterfly features contributions from George Clinton, Snoop Dogg, Rapsody, Dr. Dre, George Clinton and a range of wonderful musicians and producers. An album that was compared to the best work of Sly and the Family Stone, Marvin Gaye and Curtis Mayfield, many noted how Kendrick Lamar was angrier than them. In terms of highlighting the realities of modern America. The racism and inequality that remains. A fearless album with an immense scope, it still sound so relevant a decade later. At a time when America is changing and Donald Trump is President once more, you feel like the themes Kendrick Lamar addresses are back under the spotlight. I am going to come to a few reviews of To Pimp a Butterfly before finishing up with a feature that discusses the legacy and impact of Kendrick Lamar’s magnum opus. Celebrating a dense, mournful, powerful, wry and theatrical follow-up to good kid, m.A.A.d city, this is what Pitchfork observed about a modern Hip-Hop masterpiece:

Kendrick Lamar’s major-label albums play out like Spike Lee films in miniature. In both artists’ worlds, the stakes are unbearably high, the characters’ motives are unclear, and morality is knotty, but there is a central force you can feel steering every moment. The “Good and Bad Hair” musical routine from Lee’s 1988 feature School Daze depicted Black women grappling with colorism and exclusionary standards of American beauty. Mookie’s climactic window smash in 1989’s Do the Right Thing plunged its characters into fiery bedlam, quietly prophesying the coming L.A. riots in the process. In these moments, you could feel the director speaking to you directly through his characters and their trajectories. Lamar’s records, while crowded with conflicting ideas and arguing voices, have a similar sense of a guiding hand at work.

Lamar’s new album, To Pimp a Butterfly, doesn’t explicitly bill itself as a movie like Good Kid, M.A.A.D City did, but the network of interlocking dramas explored here feels filmic nonetheless, and a variety of characters appear across the album’s expanse. The opener, “Wesley’s Theory,” turns the downfall of action-star-turned-convicted-tax-dodger Wesley Snipes into a kind of Faustian parable. Snoop drops by on “Institutionalized”; Dre himself phones in on “Wesley.” The mood is wry, theatrical, chaotic, ironic, and mournful, often all at once: On “For Free? (Interlude)” an impatient woman ticks off a laundry list of material demands before Kendrick snaps back that “This dick ain’t free!” and thunders through a history of Black oppression, spoken-word style, as if to say, “This money you crave, it’s blood money.” The album is dotted with surreal grace notes, like a parable: God appears in the guise of a homeless man in “How Much a Dollar Cost,” and closer “Mortal Man” ends on a lengthy, unnerving fever-dream interview with the ghost of 2Pac.

The music, meanwhile, follows a long line of genre-busting freakouts (The Roots’ PhrenologyCommon’s Electric CircusQ-Tip’s Kamaal the AbstractAndré 3000’s The Love Below) in kicking at the confines of rap music presentation. There’s half a jazz band present at all times; pianist Robert Glasper, producer/sax player Terrace Martin and bass wizard Thundercat give Butterfly a loose, fluid undertow every bit as tempestuous and unpredictable as the army of flows at Kendrick’s disposal. The rapper’s branching out, too, exploding into spastic slam poetry on “For Free?,” switching from shouty gymnastics to drunken sobs on “U” and even effecting the lilt of a caring mother on “You Ain’t Gotta Lie (Momma Said).” It turns out Kendrick’s new direction was every direction at once.

Despite all this, he’s still toying with a narrative on the sly: Just beneath the surface lies a messianic yarn about avoiding the wiles of a sultry girl named Lucy who’s secretly a physical manifestation of the devil. Kendrick refuses to dole out blame without accepting any, however, and on the chaotic free jazz excursion “U” he turns a mirror on himself, screaming, “Loving you is complicated!” and suggesting his fame hasn’t helped his loved ones back home. Kendrick’s criticisms, as they did on Good Kid, come with powerful, self-imposed challenges. As Bilal quips on the chorus to “Institutionalized”: “Shit don’t change until you get up and wash your ass, nigga.”

Kendrick’s principle of personal responsibility has treaded dangerously close to respectability politics lately, especially after a prickly remark about the Mike Brown shooting in a recent Billboard interview that seemed to pin the death on the victim, but To Pimp a Butterfly avoids that trap. (Mostly.) “Complexion (A Zulu Love)” is a tender note of appreciation for women of all skin tones with help from North Carolina rapper Rapsody (whose slickly referential guest verse contains a nod to “Good and Bad Hair”). This is an album about tiny quality of life improvements to be made in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds. It might not be the message we want in a year where systemic police and judicial inequality have cost many the ultimate price, but that doesn’t bankrupt it of value.

To Pimp a Butterfly pivots on the polarizing lead single, “I.” Upon release last autumn, the sunny soul pep talk came off lightweight and glib. When it appears deep in the back end of Butterfly, though, “I” plays less like the jingle we heard last year and more like the beating heart of the matter. To push the point, the album opts for a live-sounding mix that ditches out midway through, giving way to a speech from the rapper himself. In tone, the speech is not unlike the legendary 1968 concert where James Brown waved off security and personally held off a Boston audience’s fury after news broke that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had been assassinated. “How many niggas we done lost, bro?” Kendrick shouts over the crowd. “It shouldn’t be shit for us to come out here and appreciate the little bit of life we got left.” Underneath the tragedy and adversity, To Pimp a Butterfly is a celebration of the audacity to wake up each morning to try to be better, knowing it could all end in a second, for no reason at all”.

The Verge were full of love and passion for Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly in 2015. Saluting Black America’s Poet Laurette, they had no notes. In the sense the album is perfect. Their observations are illuminating and thought-provoking. It is evident that this album has an incredible legacy. If you have not heard this album before then make sure you do right away:

To Pimp a Butterfly isn’t just another album, and Kendrick Lamar isn’t just another rapper. Kendrick is different. His first major label album, good kid, m.A.A.d city is one of the greatest rap albums of all time. The last two artists who debuted with albums that redefined the genre were Kanye West (The College Dropout) and Jay Z (Reasonable Doubt). Good kid, m.A.A.d city, was an autobiographical masterpiece that vocalized the struggle of growing up in dire circumstances in Compton and how it affected Kendrick’s perception of the world. It was brilliant and clever, a concept album that still told Kendrick’s "how I got here" story. He could have used the same blueprint for his second album. It worked once, and Kendrick is talented enough to make use of it again. Rappers rapping about their upbringing will never end, but Kendrick Lamar isn’t conventional in the least.

We knew Kendrick was going with a new concept for this album. It wasn’t going to be your traditional 808-laden, two-club-hits-and-a-love-song hip-hop album. But Kendrick was never that to begin with. It was going to be soulful — conscious as they say. He gave us "i" back in September, an uplifting track about self-love — there’s an updated (see: much better) version of "i" on the album that sampled The Isley Brothers. We got a taste of the new musical arrangements back in December on The Colbert Report when he performed an untitled song that if released would probably have been the best song of 2014 (it didn’t even make the album). Then we got the artwork for To Pimp a Butterfly. If the direction of the album wasn’t clear before, it was now. This is about to be some social commentary / Black Excellence music. I wasn’t scared that Kendrick would deliver a flop. I was afraid that he would only dip a toe into the pool of Black Excellence music, that he would hesitate to speak on social issues, or succumb to label pressure to provide a few radio-friendly records. He didn’t. Not one bit.

To Pimp a Butterfly is perfect. There’s no other adjective that can properly convey its greatness. To Pimp a Butterfly is an immaculate amalgamation of rap, jazz, funk, soul, and spoken word. It cannot be restricted by a single genre. It’s the latest evolution of Black Music, and it’s nothing short of genius. (Black Music, inhabited by the likes of Curtis Mayfield, James Brown, Prince, the Fugees, Andre 3000, and D’Angelo. A land where the natural barriers of music don’t exist. A place where the main goal is the advancement and protection of the culture.)

Crafted with a live band consisting of Bilal, Thundercat, Terrace Martin, and Anna Wise — all talented artists in their own right — To Pimp a Butterfly pulls no punches. The first track, "Wesley’s Theory" featuring George Clinton and Thundercat and produced by Flying Lotus sets the tone, opens with a sample of Boris Gardiner’s 1974 song "Every Nigger is a Star." On "Wesley’s Theory" Kendrick tackles consumerism and rampant debt that plagues black entertainers, something that he has (so far) seemingly avoided. Speaking first from the perspective of a young black musician forecasting his downfall into the trap of wealth and greed ("When I get signed, homie I'mma act a fool / Hit the dance floor, strobe lights in the room"), and then from the perspective of "Uncle Sam" who encourages him to buy everything on credit ("What you want you? / A house or a car? / Forty acres and a mule, a piano, a guitar? / Anything, see, my name is Uncle Sam on your dollar / Motherfucker you can live at the mall").

To Pimp a Butterfly succeeds D’Angelo’s Black Messiah as the most important album in black culture right now. In the face of Ferguson, police brutality, and widening economic disparity, Kendrick Lamar tackles social issues through music and does so exceptionally well. It’s a dark album for dark times, right in line with recent projects from Drake and Big Sean, but To Pimp a Butterfly is miles ahead of the competition in its quality and its message.

On "For Free", Kendrick employs spoken word with double and triple entendres better than Jay Z could ever dream of doing. The song is unbelievably complex. It can be interpreted as chastisement of America for its treatment of African Americans, or a Black Excellence anthem, or just as a fight with a girlfriend. It’s a true work of art whose meaning will be debated for years. "For Free" is To Pimp a Butterfly encapsulated in one song. There is no single definition of this album. There is no single genre. There is no single flow. It is unlike anything I’ve heard before.

"u," produced by Sounwave, is a direct contrast to the uplifting "i." Kendrick is speaking to himself, depressed and broken, repeating the hook 10 times ("Loving you is complicated"), and admonishing himself, despite his accomplishments. With "u" and "i," Kendrick depicts the struggle of expressing black self-love better than any artist has done in recent memory — the highs and lows, the inner joy, the self-hate, the bravado, the blame. Kendrick told Rolling Stone "u" was one of the toughest songs he’d ever written. "There [are] some very dark moments in there. All my insecurities and selfishness and letdowns. That shit is depressing as a motherfucker. But it helps, though. It helps." Sequencing is crucial on To Pimp a Butterfly— right after "u" we get the anthemic "Alright" to pull us out of the doldrums. And that it does.

Even though it’s not an album designed for a wide audience ("I’m not talking to people from the suburbs. I’m talking as somebody who’s been snatched out of cars and had rifles pointed at me," Kendrick told The New York Times), To Pimp a Butterfly has wide appeal, thanks to the excellent beats and production that inject energy into consequential records. The funky bass line turns deep records like "King Kunta" into party songs. "Alright," produced by Pharrell Williams, is a certified hit rap-along. The jazzy "Complexion (A Zulu Love)" featuring Rapsody will make your grandmother shimmy, even with its powerful lyrics ("Dark as the midnight hour, I'm bright as the mornin' sun / Brown skinned, but your blue eyes tell me your mama can't run").

To Pimp a Butterfly is the best album of the 21st century, the best hip-hop album since Notorious B.I.G.’s Ready to Die and Nas’ Illmatic in 1994, and it cements Kendrick Lamar’s spot as an all-time great. Those whispered conversations about Kendrick’s spot in hip-hop history can begin in earnest. The last artist who debuted with two classic albums was Notorious B.I.G. That’s where we’re at. That’s where Kendrick Lamar has brought us”.

The immediate impact of To Pimp a Butterfly is explored in this Wikipedia article. The fact that it is inspired artists like David Bowie shows how powerful and important it was. An album, as mentioned, that it is still relevant. The world not learning from Kendrick Lamar’s words. I hope tenth anniversary retrospective leads to cultural and political change:

The album's immediate influence was felt as "a pantheon for racial empowerment", according to Butler, who also argued that the record helped create a respected space for conscious hip-hop and "will be revered not just at the top of some list at the end of the year, but in the subconscious of music fans for decades to come". Writing for Highsnobiety, Robert Blair said, "[To Pimp a Butterfly] is the crystallized moment in time where Kendrick became a generation's most potent artistic voice.” Uproxx journalist Aaron Williams said the album "proved that left-field, experimental rap can function in both the critical and commercial realms". Jazz saxophonist Kamasi Washington said that the album "changed music, and we're still seeing the effects of it [...] [the album] meant that intellectually stimulating music doesn't have to be underground. It just didn't change the music. It changed the audience." To Pimp a Butterfly was an influence on David Bowie's 2016 album Blackstar. As its producer Tony Visconti recalled, he and Bowie were "listening to a lot of Kendrick Lamar [...] we loved the fact Kendrick was so open-minded and he didn't do a straight-up hip-hop record. He threw everything on there, and that's exactly what we wanted to do

I am going to finish off in a minute. I wanted to highlight this Rolling Stone review. The Compton-born MC’s second major label album is full of “fiery outrage, deep jazz and ruthless self-critique”. Without doubt one of the best albums of the 2010s. Some might say Kendrick Lamar reached the same peak on 2017’s DAMN. and 2024’s GNX:

Hashtag this one Portrait of the Artist as a Manchild in the Land of Broken Promises. Thanks to D’Angelo’s Black Messiah and Kendrick Lamar‘s To Pimp a Butterfly, 2015 will be remembered as the year radical Black politics and for-real Black music resurged in tandem to converge on the nation’s pop mainstream. Malcolm X said our African ancestors didn’t land on Plymouth Rock, Plymouth Rock landed on us. The cover of Lamar’s second major-label LP flips that maxim with a fantasia of bare-chested young hoodrocks flashing cash and booze on the White House grounds, Amerikkka’s Most Unwanted victoriously swarming a toppled symbol of pale-skinned patriarchy.

The party begins in earnest with George Clinton’s blessings and bassist Thundercat’s love for Bootsy Collins. “Wesley’s Theory” is a disarming goof that’s also a lament for the starry-eyed innocence lost to all winners of the game show known as Hip-Hop Idol. “Gather your wind, take a deep look inside,” Clinton says. “Are you really who they idolize?” Lamar’s got plenty of jokes and jeremiads to launch at himself, us and those malevolent powers that be. “I want you to recognize that I’m a proud monkey,” he raps later on. “You vandalize my perception, but can’t take style from me.”

He’s also made hella room for live jazz improv on this furthermucker, from the celestial keys of virtuoso pianist Robert Glasper to the horns of Terrace Martin and Kamasi Washington to Thundercat’s low end. Black Musicians Matter majorly here – their well-tempered orchestral note-worrying a consistent head-nod toward Sun Ra, which producers including Flying Lotus and Lamar’s right-hand Sounwave smush into a lush volcanic riverbed of harmonic cunning and complexity. Only a lyricist of Lamar’s skills, scope, poetics and polemics would dare hop aboard it and dragon-glide. His virtuosic slam-poetic romp across bebop blues changes on “For Free?” harkens back to LA’s Freestyle Fellowship.

Clearly, this is Lamar’s moment to remake rap in his own blood-sick image. If we’re talking insurgent content and currency, Lamar straight up owns rap relevancy on Butterfly, whatever challengers to the throne barely visible in his dusty rear-view. He relishes and crushes the gift he’s been handed by CNN in the national constabulary’s now weekly-reported racist tactics, 21st-century apartheid American style: “It’s a new gang in town, from Compton to Congress/…Ain’t nothing new but a flow of new Demo-Crips and Re-Blood-licans.” This tactic is nowhere more resonant than on the studio-rigged beyond-the-grave convo with 2Pac he conjures up on ”Mortal Man,” letting Pac deliver the album’s most-fatalist mad-prophetic zinger: ”Next time it’s a riot, there’s gonna be bloodshed for real. . .I think America thinks we was just playing, but it’s gonna be murder. . .like Nat Turner 1831 up in this muthafucka.”

But Lamar’s own fears of assuming a messiah position are upfront and personal. “I been wrote off before, I got abandonment issues,” he says on “Mortal Man.” “How many leaders you said you needed then left ’em for dead?/Is it Moses, is it Huey Newton, or Detroit Red?” You can imagine Chuck D or Dead Prez going in as hard and witty against white supremacy as Lamar does on “The Blacker the Berry” and “King Kunta” – but you can’t picture them exposing the vulnerability, doubt and self-loathing swag heard on ”Complexion (A Zulu Love),” “u,” “For Sale?” and “i.” What makes Lamar’s bully pulpit more akin to Curtis Mayfield’s or Gil Scott Heron’s than any protest MC before him is the heart worn on his hoodie’s sleeves”.

I am going to end up by quoting heavily from a 2020 retrospective feature from High Snobiety. They wrote about how Kendrick Lamar’s masterpiece changed music, culture and lives. Go and invest some time in this album today. It is such a moving and unforgettable listen:

The beginning of 2015 was a transitionary period for hip-hop. As much of the East Coast’s new breed mourned A$AP YAMS, Pro Era’s Joey Bada$$ was coming of age on his major label debut. Heading southward, internal conflict between Lil Wayne and Birdman became public knowledge, while Young Money’s golden child Drake racked up another triumph with If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late.

Amid these tremulous events, and with Big Sean’s Dark Sky Paradise holding court at the top of the charts, a crucial component of what made the genre vital was missing. Previously defined by Chuck D as “black America’s CNN,” most of the biggest hip-hop albums in recent years had felt apolitical or, at worst, consciously apathetic.

Lacking its informative might, hip-hop’s retreat from the frontlines of social discourse was incongruous at a time when Black Lives Matter’s hashtag activism and police brutality demonstrations had reached a fever pitch. Overrun by triviality and self-obsession, relief would come in March 2015, courtesy of a Compton-born artist who used his platform as his forebears had intended. Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp a Butterfly arrived with the force of a sledgehammer, remaining just as (if not more) impactful now as it did on first arrival.

“I started this album already knowing what I wanted to talk about, just based off the idea of feeling like you’re being pimped and manuevered in the industry,” Lamar reflected to MTV. “Thinking ‘how can I make that something positive for my community?’ As I’m doing this, all these events are happening. Trayvon, Ferguson… I couldn’t write these songs after these events, it’s too intricate.”

Rather than mimicking the formula that had taken him from obscurity to superstardom with Good Kid M.A.A.D City, Kendrick funneled his energy into crafting a musically and thematically rich project which surveyed a crumbling society and all of its grotesque, systemic ills.

Nowadays, most albums are ingested by their intended audience before being discarded to the wayside. Routinely overloaded with material in order to flood the market and maximize streaming revenue, everything from Drake's Scorpion to Migos' Culture II has lived and died on the strength of name recognition as opposed to a clearly-defined sense of purpose. Yet in the case of Kendrick’s enthralling Butterfly, the project has refracted in so many directions over the past five years that its allure and central message has only magnified with time.

No enduring piece of artistry was made without a degree of risk. But when it came to the musicality of Butterfly, Lamar threw caution to the wind like few before or since. Dabbling with horns and other brassy inflections on both his breakout mixtape Section 80 and Good Kid M.A.A.D City, Kendrick renounced the relative safety of the 808-laden bombast that defined his work in favor of a sound that more closely resembled the former project’s "Ab-Soul Outro." A fusion of hip-hop and jazz orchestrated by Terrace Martin, it was this decorated multi-instrumentalist who first acknowledged Kendrick’s unconscious tendencies.

“He was like, man, a lot of the chords that you pick are jazz-influenced,” Lamar told GQ. “You don't understand: You a jazz musician by default... he just started breaking down everything, the science, going back to Miles, Herbie Hancock.”

Incorporating dashes of blues, soul, funk and spoken word, Butterfly’s emphasis on eclecticism culminated in a sound that essentially doubled as a whistle-stop tour through the history of black music in America. After unveiling The Isley Brothers-sampling, self-love anthem "i" as a prelude to the album, Ron Isley and Kendrick discussed “the experiences his mother had with our records” that wouldd pave the way for his contribution to the sorrowful album-cut "How Much a Dollar Cost?"

Meanwhile, another icon was forced to place his preconceived biases aside while at work on the project. Before providing an uproarious vocal on the Flying Lotus-produced “Wesley’s Theory," P-Funk originator George Clinton had only heard Good Kid’s "Bitch Don’t Kill My Vibe" and thought "it sounded silly as hell.” After grasping Kendrick’s vision, his perception changed, stating “he was saying things in brand new metaphors that I knew was going to fuck people up.” Operating in a reciprocal space between genres, time periods, and demographics, this intersectionality would be key in sculpting both the album as well as the diverging branches of its legacy.

“[Butterfly] changed music, and we’re still seeing the effects of it,” proclaimed Lamar-collaborator turned jazz titan Kamasi Washington. “It meant that intellectually stimulating music doesn’t have to be underground. It just didn’t change the music. It changed the audience."

By enlisting virtuosos who were “as fluent in J Dilla and Dr. Dre as in Mingus and Coltrane,” Butterfly uplifted the careers of those who aided in its inception while simultaneously broadening the scope of what modern hip-hop can co-mingle with. Prior to Butterfly’s arrival, the swell in non-specialized engagement with jazz that precipitated Washington’s instant notoriety on 2015's The Epic wouldn’t have been imaginable, while Rapsody’s verse on "Complexion (A Zulu Love)" had a similar effect in plucking the Carolina MC from obscurity. Now revered as a generational great, she’s been candid with DJ Booth about how “everything snowballed” after she accepted the summons from K-Dot.

 PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images/Scott Dudelson

Enlisted as both a musical focal point and a welcome flourish throughout, no one reaped the rewards of their toil on Butterfly quite like Thundercat. “Pretty much on the entire album,” the presence of his bass at the heart of the project raised his profile to such an extent that 2017’s Drunk peaked 144 chart places higher than his previous albums. On a personal level, the profound effect the album had on him far outweighed any success that it’s yielded since: “I just broke down in tears when I got home after hearing it,” Thundercat recalled. “So much information was passed and conveyed... There wasn’t a misfire. Everybody put their best work forward, and you could feel it, I think.”

As we now know, this was an understatement on his part. Rather than just feeling it, Butterfly became a conduit through which the disenfranchised and grief-stricken contextualized their own experiences. No where was this more evident than the liberating refrain of "Alright." Essentially a "The Times They Are a-Changin'" for the era of Eric Garner, Sandra Bland, and Alton Sterling, it became a familiar rallying cry at Black Lives Matter demonstrations, as well as emanating from speakers in suburbs and section-8 housing alike. Unsurprised by its resonance, Kendrick felt that the song’s jubilant tone amid such injustice tapped into an ancestral coping mechanism.

“Four hundred years ago, as slaves, we prayed and sang joyful songs to stay level-headed with what was going on," Lamar told NPR. “We still need that music to heal. And I think that 'Alright' is definitely one of those records."

Defiant and rousing yet quietly cognizant of the uphill battles that still need to be waged, "Alright" isn’t a piece of music so much as a public service announcement appealing for calm amid a time of crisis. A record that he was “sitting on” for six months after Pharrell crafted the now iconic instrumental, Kendrick’s cultural presence grew alongside the track and, in turn, allowed him to understand how its power surpassed all traditional barometers for a ‘hit’ song.

Tackling hypocrisy, drug abuse, societal entrapment, mental health, imposter syndrome, and Demo-Crips & Re-Blood-licans across the project’s immersive hour-plus runtime, To Pimp a Butterfly was rightly awarded the Grammys that had previously eluded him, and it was instrumental in informing David Bowie’s final album Blackstar. Yet while the late icon and producer Tony Visconti strived to “avoid rock & roll,” Butterfly wasn’t born of some self-congratulatory whim to stretch artistic horizons. Instead, it aimed to expand minds and empower those who had borne the brunt of this uncaring and hostile world”.

On 15th March, it will be ten years since Kendrick Lamar released To Pimp a Butterfly. I am interested to see how the music press writes about this album ahead of the anniversary. New context and meaning. Still relevant and always influential. The supreme and mesmeric To Pimp a Butterfly

A flawless album.

FEATURE: Kate Bush: The Tour of Life: Kate Bush and the Album Overlap

FEATURE:

 

 

Kate Bush: The Tour of Life

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in December 1979

 

Kate Bush and the Album Overlap

_________

THERE is this trend…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in a promotional photo for 2011’s Director’s Cut/PHOTO CREDIT: John Carder Bush

that occurred through Kate Bush’s career that interests me. I have written about it before, but 1978 was a year when Kate Bush was promoting The Kick Inside and also working on her follow-up, Lionheart. Album overlap occurred for quite a while. In 1978, it was very much EMI putting pressure on. This commercial drive to capitalise on the success of The Kick Inside. It was a shame that Bush was not afforded time to properly write for her second album. Instead, she was being pulled around the world promoting and had only a short amount of time to do any preparation for Lionheart. I think The Tour of Life in 1979 was a chance for Kate Bush to (briefly) break this circuit. Rather than being pushed straight into a third album and promoting that heavily and then doing another one, Bush went on tour. It gave her chance to do something that she had control over. However, once she started work on her third studio album, 1980’s Never for Ever, there was to be this period of overlap again. I do wonder whether Bush was keen to be in the studio and was excited to do the albums or there was this pressure to keep momentum going. A particularly busy and difficult period came during 1980. I do think there was a very deliberate decision after 1982 to take longer working on albums. Bush was working on The Dreaming (released in 1982) before Never for Ever was released in 1980. Working at her farm studio in August 1980, Bush was starting in earnest this ambitious fourth studio album. A month later, she would release her third studio album. One can see parallels between 1978 and 1980. Either side of The Tour of Life, Bush was recording albums whilst promoting the previous one. In 1980, Never for Ever came out and saw Bush promote widely and prominently. It was a hectic time. Also, whilst she was managing promotion, she was in the studio putting together the first steps for The Dreaming!

It was not the case that Bush was promoting endlessly and did not get any time off. She did have breaks. However, when she did have breaks, she was working on The Dreaming. If 1978 was a year when the label were almost making Bush record a new album whilst still promoting her debut, perhaps Bush felt that she needed to have this overlap in 1980. The last time she would overlap with her albums and have two projects in her head at the same time was in 2011. I shall come to that. I think about Kate Bush in 1980 and that juggling act. Keeping The Kick Inside alive and talked about as 1978 ended but also having to promote Lionheart. Effectively recording her second album shortly after promoting her debut. Barely any period in the middle. In 1980, Never for Ever was out and it would be in the public consciousness until the following year. What Bush was creating for The Dreaming was very different to what was on Never for Ever. If the 1978 overlap was strange because of the heaviness of promotion and rushing a second album, Bush was in a different headspace through 1980 and 1981. Two very different albums in different parts of her brain. I have talked about this before, so apologies for any repetition. Think about the late stages of 1980 through to 1981. Bush had this success from Never for Ever (it reached number one in the U.K.) and there were single releases and promotion. At the same time, she was leaping to a new plain. Producing solo for the first time, the recording for The Dreaming would be more intense than it was for Never for Ever. Even so, it would have been difficult trying to create something new whilst still talking about your current studio album. In 1981, the Sunday Telegraph published an opinion poll where Bush was deemed the ‘most liked’ and ‘least liked’ British female singer. If it weren’t enough that she was balancing disparate and eclectic albums and also promotion and new recording, she also was in a position where she seemed to be loved by half the popular and disliked by the other!

1979 was a chance for Bush to perform live and find time away from promotion. There were new fans in her camp after that who made Never for Ever a success. However, there still was a feeling that Bush was this odd and divisive artist. I know that is one opinion poll, but all these emotions must have been running through her head. There was a period when Bush experienced writer’s block. It is not surprising when you consider how intense things were and how she didn’t have chance to focus on anything particular. Spread too thin maybe. She did get rid of that block when she saw Stevie Wonder in London and she then wrote Sat in Your Lap. That was the first single released from The Dreaming and it came out in 1981 – a year before the album arrived. However, the more I think about album overlapping and Bush not having too much time to detach, the label once more comes to mind. I have painted EMI as a villain in a number of features. It is unfair considering the money they put behind her and how they stuck with her. A lack of commercial success from The Dreaming’s singles might have been a disaster for any other artist. Bush released Hounds of Love in 1985 and this huge wave of critical acclaim greeted it. Bush knew her own music and knew what was best for her. Moments where she was at odds with the label about various release but proven right. However, when it came to keeping her in the public eye, she did not have that much leverage. A hot new wave of exciting female Pop artists were coming through in 1980 and 1981. Kim Wilde and Altered Image’s Clare Grogan for instance. Nervousness that Bush released an album in September 1980 and a year later no new album. Sat in Your Lap was a chart success and a big departure from anything she had done before. Perhaps my feature should be about Bush competing with artists around her. EMI wanted albums out so they could make money and could keep this artist in their charge. However, there was this sense of rivalry and competition.

If other artists were scoring big chart hits and were in magazines and on T.V., Bush was in the studio working on an album that seemed to be the antithesis of the mainstream Pop sound. Songs that would not grace the radio playlists too much! Bush did take the odd break during The Dreaming’s creation and release. You get the feeling she never truly relaxed or could find peace. The media asking where she was and writing her off. The public divided about whether they loved or hated her. 1978 was an intense period because Bush was new and juggling two albums. Things were different in 1980 and 1981. With a third album out and Bush expected to talk about it, she was also spending days off and evenings putting together a fourth album. That intense year of 1981 when Bush was just about clear of Never for Ever and The Dreaming was very much at the forefront of her mind. 1983 and 1984 was a chance to recharge and change. No album overlap. She would focus on her fifth studio album. Because Bush could focus and work on one project without having to promote another album, Hounds of Love is this extraordinary work that Bush put her all into. The artist taking longer to release albums. Three years between The Dreaming and Hounds of Love. Four years between Hounds of Love and The Sensual World; another four before 1993’s The Red Shoes. At each stage, there were these media pieces and polls. Where Bush was and whether she had retired. Trying to create an album and make it as good as possible but also this feeling that she was invisible. Scandals and rumours printed. It would have been a struggle for her. One could say that albums overlapping meant that Bush had some energy and momentum from the previous album and bring it straight into a new one. Without much time to stop and rest, she could keep the creative juices running. Longer gaps followed. Bush not keen to pump albums out or balance two different projects. She would have to again in 2011. However, this was very much her decision. Kate Bush re-recording songs from The Sensual World and The Red Shoes for Director’s Cut. That came in May 2011. Bush talking about that album at the same time she was recording and finishing up 50 Words for Snow. That came out in November 2011. It was another year like 1978 or 1980, however the stakes were different and the situation not the sane.

I wanted to focus on this fascinating subject. Album overlapping. I didn’t really consider the reasons why Bush was expected to do this. The larger culture of the 1970s and 1980s. Especially for a female artist, that pressure to do more than their male counterparts to be seen and heard. This sense of rivalry and relevance. A first professional year where Bush was trying to put a second studio album together but still promoting her debut. 1980 and 1981 saw overlap. A third album promise with a fourth being recorded. 2011 found Bush revisiting the past and updating older songs whilst also working on a tenth studio album that was vastly different to Director’s Cut. Parallels with 1980 in terms of two vastly differing albums being promoted/recorded. I don’t think we can rule out another album overlap or period where Bush works on two albums at the same time. I never really considered the factors behind albums overlapping and whether it was largely label pressure or a case of Bush having to prove herself. If this sort of promotional/recording cycle benefitted her in the long run or was detrimental. I can appreciate a label being unhappy with an artist taking a few years to follow up on an album with another. However, it must have been very strange in 1978, 1980, 1981 and even 1982 with Bush never truly being able to hone in and concentrate on a single album. She was dragged back down again in 2011. Having to accomplish this balancing act and, in the process, two very dissimilar albums in her head. Look at everything Kate Bush has achieved and one cannot say confidently that if her early career was conducted differently when it came to expectations and recording albums then she would have been better off. However, I do think of Kate Bush back then and even in 2011. Whether led by a label or her own desire to satisfy fans and herself, it is interesting to imagine how…

DIFFERENT things could have been.

FEATURE: The Digital Mixtape: Peter Gabriel at Seventy-Five

FEATURE:

 

 

The Digital Mixtape

PHOTO CREDIT: Nadav Kander

 

Peter Gabriel at Seventy-Five

_________

I am looking forward to…

 PHOTO CREDIT: Nadav Kander

13th February. That is when Peter Gabriel turns seventy-five. One of music’s giants, I am a big fan of his. I am going to end this feature with a playlist mixing hits and deep cuts. I know I have compiled a Peter Gabriel playlist before but I want to do another one. It will include songs from his recent album, 2023’s i/o. Before getting to a mixtape, AllMusic have provided a detailed biography of a music innovator. Someone who is still so far ahead of other artists. Let hope there are more albums from Gabriel in the future:

Peter Gabriel combines the theatricality of his time as the leader of Genesis in the early '70s with widely appealing sounds and songwriting, making him an international star with the credibility of a cult hero. With his eponymous debut solo album in 1977, he explored dark, cerebral territory, incorporating avant-garde, electronic, and worldbeat influences into his music. The record, as well as its two similarly titled successors, established Gabriel as a critically acclaimed solo artist, and with 1982's Security, he began to move into the mainstream; "Shock the Monkey" became his first Top 40 hit, paving the way for his breakthrough So in 1986. Accompanied by a series of groundbreaking videos and the number one single "Sledgehammer," So became a multi-platinum hit. Instead of capitalizing on his sudden success, Gabriel founded the Real World label, which proved an invaluable channel for international artists of every stripe to ply their trade. All this and his shepherding of political causes such as Amnesty International gained him a reputation as a true nobleman of the pop world, a role he has continued to fill well into the 21st century, as he worked on i/o, his eighth album of original material that finally appeared in 2023, 21 years after Up.

Following his departure from Genesis in 1976, Peter Gabriel began work on the first of three consecutive eponymously titled albums; each record was named Peter Gabriel, he said, as if they were editions of the same magazine. In 1977, his first solo album appeared and became a moderate success due to the single "Solsbury Hill." Another self-titled record followed in 1978, yet received comparatively weaker reviews. Gabriel's third eponymous album proved to be his artistic breakthrough, however. Produced by Steve Lillywhite and released in 1980, the record established Gabriel as one of rock's most ambitious, innovative musicians, as well as one of its most political -- "Biko," a song about a murdered anti-apartheid activist, became one of the biggest protest anthems of the '80s. "Games Without Frontiers," with its eerie chorus, nearly reached the Top 40.

In 1982, Gabriel released Security, which was an even bigger success, earning positive reviews and going gold on the strength of the startling video for "Shock the Monkey." Just as his solo career was taking off, Gabriel participated in a one-shot Genesis reunion in order to finance his WOMAD -- World of Music, Arts and Dance -- Festival. WOMAD was designed to bring various world musics and customs to a Western audience, and it soon turned into an annual event, and a live double album was released that year to commemorate the event. As Gabriel worked on his fifth album, he contributed the soundtrack to Alan Parker's 1984 film Birdy. His score was highly praised and it won the Grand Jury Prize at Cannes that year. After founding Real World, Inc. -- a corporation devoted to developing bridges between technology and multi-ethnic arts -- in 1985, he completed his fifth album, So.

Released in 1986, So became Gabriel's commercial breakthrough, largely because his Stax homage "Sledgehammer" was blessed with an innovative video that combined stop-action animation with live action. So climbed to number two as "Sledgehammer" hit number one, with "Big Time" -- featuring a video very similar to "Sledgehammer" -- reaching the Top Ten and "In Your Eyes" hitting the Top 30. As So was riding high on the American and British charts, Gabriel co-headlined the first benefit tour for Amnesty International in 1986 with Sting and U2. Another Amnesty International Tour followed in 1988, and the following year, Gabriel released Passion: Music for The Last Temptation of Christ, a collection of instrumentals used in Martin Scorsese's film. Passion was the furthest Gabriel delved into worldbeat, and the album was widely acclaimed, winning the Grammy Award in 1989 for Best New Age Performance. In 1990, he released the hits compilation Shaking the Tree.

Gabriel labored long on the pop music follow-up to So, finally releasing Us in the spring of 1992. During the recording of Us, Gabriel went through a number of personal upheavals, including a painful divorce, and those tensions manifested themselves on Us, a much darker record than So. For various reasons, not the least of which was the fact that it was released six years after its predecessor, Us wasn't as commercially successful as So, despite positive reviews. Only one single, the "Sledgehammer" knockoff "Steam," reached the Top 40, and the album stalled at platinum sales. In 1993, Gabriel embarked on the most ambitious WOMAD tour to date, touring the United States with a roster including Crowded HouseJames, and Sinéad O'Connor, with whom he had an on-off romantic relationship. The following year, he released the double-disc Secret World Live, which went gold. Later in 1994, he released the CD-R Xplora, one of many projects he developed with Real World. For the rest of the decade, Gabriel concentrated on developing more multimedia projects for the company and working on a new studio album.

Up was released in 2002, a full decade after Gabriel's last studio effort. Dense, cerebral, and often difficult, the record peaked at number nine but failed to sell well in America. It fared slightly better in Canada, where it went gold. He then turned his attention to a host of different projects, although the release of Big Blue Ball -- a compilation of collaborative performances recorded at Real World Studios during the '90s -- helped placate fans while Gabriel focused his energies elsewhere. He eventually returned to the studio for another album, 2010's Scratch My Back, which featured orchestral covers of songs originally performed by RadioheadArcade FirePaul SimonDavid Bowie, and others. Gabriel uncharacteristically delivered the sequel to Scratch My Back quickly, releasing New Blood -- a collection of orchestral reinterpretations of his own songs -- in the fall of 2011. The following year, Gabriel held a lavish celebration of the 25th anniversary of So, releasing several deluxe editions of the record -- the largest being a four-CD, two-DVD, two-vinyl box -- and launching the Back to Front tour, where he played So in its entirety.

In 2014, Gabriel was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as a solo act, joining Genesis, which had been inducted four years earlier. He also released the concert album Back to Front: Live in London that year. Gabriel rounded up a bunch of his stray songs in 2019 via the compilations Rated PG and Flotsam and Jetsam; the former contained songs he gave to films, the latter focused on B-sides and non-LP tracks. After a 2022 appearance on the Blue Note-issued Leonard Cohen tribute Here It Is, Gabriel kicked off 2023 with "Panopticon," the first single from his next studio album, i/o, an outing he began in the early 2000s not long after the release of Up. Over the course of two decades, Gabriel steadily worked on the record, taking the occasional break to pursue other projects or tend to personal affairs. He finally finished the 12 songs comprising i/o in early 2022, then spent the course of 2023 doling out the tracks as a series of singles while touring the material all before the December release of the full album”.

As Peter Gabriel is seventy-five on 13th February, I have put together a mixtape of many of his best-known songs and deeper cuts. There are few artists quite like Gabriel. This mixtape will show that. From his early eponymous albums through to his most recent album, the music on display shows that Peter Gabriel is…

A true genius.

FEATURE: Line Up: Elastica at Thirty

FEATURE:

 

 

Line Up


Elastica at Thirty

_________

ON 13th March…

it will be thirty years since Elastica released their phenomenal debut album. Elastica was nominated for the 1995 Mercury Prize. Hitting number one on the U.K. album chart, it was, at the time, the fastest-selling debut album since Oasis’ Definitely Maybe (1994). Come the end of 1995, Elastica had sold approximately one million copies worldwide. The album was a big success in the U.S. About half of the million sales were from the U.S. I am going to get to a few reviews of Elastica. Prior to that I want to bring in an NME feature from 2016. They provided the full story of Elastica’s phenomenal self-titled debut:

The token girl playing guitar in the back”: that’s how a fed-up Justine Frischmann described her stint in Suede, the band she’d formed with then-boyfriend Brett Anderson in 1989. At personal loggerheads with Anderson after she left him for his arch-rival, Blur’Damon Albarn, she formed her own group in 1992 with drummer Justin Welch (another early Suede outcast), bassist Annie Holland and guitarist Donna Matthews. That may all sound like a Britpop version of EastEnders, but Elastica soon proved they had something far more substantial to offer. The succinct punchiness of early singles ‘Stutter’, ‘Line Up’ and ‘Connection’ quickly turned heads – ex-NME journo Steve Lamacq, in particular, began championing them on his BBC Radio 1 show and signed them to his label, Deceptive Records.

The story behind the sleeve

Renowned German fashion photographer Juergen Teller, who has worked with artists including Sinéad O’Connor, Björk and Elton John, took the black-and-white snap for Elastica’s debut – a cover that, with its sparse, sparing style, stood apart from the elaborate and conceptual sleeves favoured by Blur and Suede.

Did you know?

1. Now-defunct music paper Melody Maker ran a competition asking fans to name Elastica’s debut LP, but reader’s suggestions – including ‘Edible Liar’ and ‘Tie Me Up And Give Me Toast’ – were all rejected by the band.

2. Another title, ‘Keys, Money And Fags’ – a lyric from ‘Line Up’ – was also nixed due to fears that American fans would have a different interpretation of the word ‘fags’.

3. Damon Albarn contributed keyboards to ‘Elastica’, but the band chose not to credit him with his real name – the pseudonym Dan Abnormal was used instead.

4. Donna Matthews has claimed that the mysterious acronym of the track ‘SOFT’ stands for ‘Same Old Fucking Things’.

5. The Stranglers and Wire took issue with Elastica’s debut: Wire claimed that both ‘Line Up’ and ‘Connection’ ripped them off, while The Stranglers alleged that ‘Waking Up’ borrowed from ‘No More Heroes’. Both bands received out-of-court settlements as a result of the legal disputed.

Lyric analysis

“My heart’s spaghetti junction/Every shining bonnet/ Makes me think of my back on it” – ‘Car Song’

Justine’s saucy, JG Ballard-style tribute to getting steamy in motor vehicles.

“Drivel head knows all the stars/Loves to suck their shining guitars” – ‘Line Up’

Having been in the orbit of both Blur and Suede, Justine was no stranger to groupies. Here, she takes a pot shot at those fans desperate to cop off with a musician.

“We were sitting in waiting/ And I told you my plan/ You were far too busy writing/ Words that didn’t scan” – ‘Never Here’

This was reportedly written about Frischmann’s split with Anderson, taking a vengeful sideswipe at his songwriting.

What we said then

“Fun, loveable and exciting, Elastica’s debut burps out of the speakers like a pissed kid on a spacehopper.” Johnny Dee, NME, March 3, 1995

What we say now

It deserves to be celebrated just as much as Britpop contemporaries like ‘Different Class’, ‘Definitely Maybe’, ‘Dog Man Star’ and ‘Modern Life Is Rubbish’: punchy and acidic, full of catchy-as-fuck singles and not an ounce of fat.

In their own words

“I think we’ve made a record you can put on from start to finish without feeling like you want to kick the cat. You could put it on as you’re going out, before you go to sleep or when you’re having sex.” – Justine Frischmann, 1995

The aftermath

Momentum can be squandered far more easily can it can be gained. Just ask Elastica: after the success of their debut, they took their sweet time to make a follow-up. Matthews and Holland both split before the record was released, and the rest of the band decided to re-record all the material in 1999 (with new contributions from The Fall’s Mark E Smith and Damon Albarn again). By the time the patchy ‘The Menace’ was released in 2000, the Britpop bubble had long burst. The band amicably called it a day the following year, and Frischmann turned her back on music to become a visual artist in the US”.

It is amazing to think that Elastica came out on the same day as Radiohead’s second studio album, The Bends. What a day that was for record buyers back in March 1995! Although they are very different albums, they are among the best of one of the best years for music ever. I am going to move to a feature from Stereogum that marked twenty years of a classic debut back in 2015:

It’s oddly appropriate that Elastica’s self-titled debut came out on the same day as The Bends, Radiohead’s classic sophomore album. Those two records represent opposite sides of British rock in the mid-’90s. The Radiohead of The Bends was a sober band, one that took itself seriously. They played big, longing, starry-eyed melodies over layered guitars, and their sound was vast and layered and complex. They were still very much a rock band at the time, but they were drawing on prog and postpunk and shoegaze and dream-rock — the most elliptical sounds rock had to offer, basically. You could never be quite sure what Thom Yorke was singing about. And the band held themselves somewhat aloof from the Britpop explosion that was happening far away from their Oxford hometown. Elastica, meanwhile, were the opposite in just about every way. They were hard and pointed and just mercilessly hooky. Their songs were short, sharp shocks. They used guitars and keyboards as stabbing instruments. They probably owned a lot of the same postpunk records as Radiohead owned, but they took different things away from them. It wasn’t that hard to tell what Justine Frischmann was singing about; “Car Song,” for example, was about fucking in a car. And they were all up in the Britpop scene; Frischmann and drummer Justin Welch were defectors from Suede, and Frischmann, at the time, was dating Blur’s Damon Albarn, who played keyboards, under an alias, on the Elastica album. They were a beautiful, gleaming hook machine. And, sure, The Bends is a better album. But it’s closer than you think.

Elastica, amazingly enough, has not aged at all since it came out 20 years ago, possibly because it already seemed perfectly out-of-time the moment it arrived. There was a bit of dance-pop in the synths on the album, especially on the big single “Connection,” but they were mostly utterly uninterested in sounding like they belonged in 1995. Instead, they were a streamlined, weaponized version of a British band from that circa-1979 era where postpunk was turning into new wave. The sounds all come, sometimes directly, from that era, but they’re not weighed down with political struggle or cultural angst. Even at the band’s most psychedelic and furthest-out — the half-acoustic murmur “Company,” say — everything exists to serve the hook. Elastica is one of those albums that sounds like a greatest-hits collection right out of the gate — which is appropriate enough, since the band wouldn’t do much after its release. It’s a giddy 38-minute burst of wound-up guitars and dizzy melody and ice-cold snarl. And right now, off the top of my head, I can’t think of a big major-label alt-rock record that’s been as purely fun.

Elastica were rip-off artists, of course, and they had to pay piles of cash in out-of-court settlements as a result. Wire pointed out, quite rightly, that the central riff in “Connection” was a bald and direct bite from their own 1977 song “Three Girl Rumba,” while “Line Up” has a suspiciously similar chorus to Wire’s 1978 single “I Am The Fly.” The Stranglers got in on it, too, noting that “Waking Up” was distinctly similar to their 1977 single “No More Heroes.” This wasn’t a “Blurred Lines”/Marvin Gaye situation; these songs were direct and provable bites. But in every one of those situations, Elastica improved on their source material. They stole melodic elements, but they made those melodic elements harder and meaner and more direct. They aimed those melodic elements straight at the pop-music jugular. “Three Girl Rhumba” and “I Am The Fly” are great songs, but even peak-era Wire couldn’t take those riffs and hooks the places that Elastica could. For example, word got around in my high school that you could play the “Connection” riff on a touchtone phone: 3-233-3-233-3-233-6-322. (Try it! It sort of works!) Nobody was saying that about the “Three Girl Rhumba” riff, even though it’s the exact same riff. And none of the bands from the Wire/Stranglers era could work up a shimmy as sprightly as the one on “Hold Me Now,” the Elastica song that was a crush-mixtape staple of mine for years.

If Elastica had gone away forever after Elastica, it would’ve been one of the all-time great pop-history one-and-dones. They almost did. They made videos for five of the album’s 15 songs, and they served as token Brits on that summer’s Lollapalooza tour. (I saw their set, but I don’t remember anything about it, possibly because I was preoccupied with the urgent need to get high before Cypress Hill came on.) As soon as they got home from that tour, they went through a chaotic years-long series of lineup changes and personal issues and false-start recording sessions. In 2000, they finally got around to releasing their flop of a sophomore album, The Menace, which flirted with electroclash and which was pretty good but nowhere near as good as their debut. A year later, they broke up forever. These days, Frischmann is an abstract painter in the Bay Area. It’s hard to say they had any direct influence on the music that followed, since their own music was a distillation of its own influences. Savages has a similar visual aesthetic and set of influences, but they mine those influences for confrontational power, not for hooks. And even though SPIN called the Is This It-era Strokes the “male Elastica” in 2001, the comparison doesn’t really do justice to either band. (At their best, the Strokes were closer to being the male Go-Go’s, anyway.)

But Elastica’s influence does linger in some weird, indirect ways. For one thing, 13, one of Blur’s best albums, is entirely about Albarn’s painful breakup with Frischmann. As it happens, Albarn stopped trying to write punchy guitar-pop anthems at pretty much the exact time that he and Albarn split, and that can’t be a coincidence. Meanwhile, when Elastica toured North America behind The Menace, they brought along a young videographer named Maya Arulpragasam to document the tour. As this great Pitchfork piece points out, Frischmann would go onto become a sort of mentor to Arulpragasam, and together they made the squiggly bare-bones beat to what would become “Galang,” M.I.A.’ first single. There may not be a direct line of influence between Elastica and Arular, but the band did set in motion a few things that are still reverberating around pop music today. More importantly, though, they made one of the great mercenary guitar-pop albums of all time. Radiohead can claim a lot of victories, but they can’t claim that”.

In 2020, The Quietus looked back at Elastica’s debut twenty years after they released their second and final studio album, The Menace. After that 2000 album, that was it. It is important to look at the context of music in 1995. It was male-dominated and this tabloid era. One of laddishness and scandal. There were not many bands like Elastica around in 1995. Led by Justine Frischmann, she took her band into battle in a cultural that celebrated men and Offred sexism and misogyny to women:

I don’t think it’s possible to overstate just how grimly blokey culture was in the mid-1990s. For those of tQ’s readers who haven’t read my other articles on the matter, here we go again: the media loved Oasis’ cartoonishly boorish antics. Blur had sniffed the wind and followed them into a dull interpretation of provincial masculinity (as Frischmann would later say of Albarn, "I think for Damon it was about becoming a yob. Finding his football friends and becoming quite playful about it. Just starting to assume the character of the insensitive yob and letting that get you through"). Every Friday Chris Evans turned up on TFI Friday to take the piss out of celebs, humiliate his colleagues, and present a dismal train of live sets from bands of lads with guitars. There was the constant air that all the wazzocks were just desperate for post-Take That Robbie Williams to be gay, just so they could take the piss out of him. Against this, Elastica’s insouciant androgyny was a revelation. We had Jarvis Cocker, sure, but he was a sort of weird beacon of hope for the unconventionally attractive male. Suede of course, but for all the blurring of gender in Brett Anderson’s personae, they were still all men. Elastica had something else – I am probably not alone in buying their debut album in a lusty haze for the record sleeve. The Jurgen Teller photographs of three boyish women and a cute twinky lad on the cover and inside the booklet might not look revelatory in an age where gender fluidity is everywhere, but my God they were then.

Yet Elastica’s gender play was quite at odds with what was happening elsewhere in leftfield music at the time, with none of the rage of Huggy Bear, Hole or PJ Harvey. You could argue that ‘Line Up’s tale of a groupie called ‘Drivel Head’ who "knows all the stars / Loves to suck their shining guitars / They’ve all been right up her stairs" isn’t terribly sisterly. Similarly, Frischmann had little time for the Riot Grrrl movement, in a 1994 Vox interview saying that "I went to a couple of gigs and couldn’t make head or tail of it. I just thought, ‘Go home and do something you can do!’ Really, it’s not that hard being a girl in music. In fact, there are lots of advantages to it, and it’s that kind of optimism I’d like to get across rather than moaning about what sex you are." Perhaps this frustration at Riot Grrl’s default amateurism stemmed from the frustration of being a member of Suede in their lean and hopeless pre-fame years –"Apart from anything, I couldn’t deal with being the second guitarist and having this strange, Lady Macbeth role in it, along with being general mother to four blokes," she reflected in 2003. These days the well-off privately-educated daughter of an engineer who worked on London’s Centrepoint tower would no doubt be told to check her privilege for her Riot Grrrl comments (and indeed in later years she largely went back on them).

Instead, it’s when we look to Frischmann’s lyricism that a more interesting, nuanced picture emerges. If most male rock and indie music is the driven by sexual frustration and bitterness, then Elastica exudes a suave confidence. Two of the landmark albums of the period, Suede’s debut and Blur’s heartbroken 13 were written by men about Frischmann. Where Brett Anderson’s lyrics for the likes of ‘Animal Lover’ were the snarl of the wronged party, Albarn’s ‘Tender’ felt like a desperate plea for healing as his relationship with "the ghost I love the most" slipped away. Frischmann’s words on her band’s debut album, on the other hand, displayed no such angst, instead exploring sexuality with explicit wit and a twinkling eye. She is always in control and the men are proving hapless in songs that range from the Viz-like puerile ("when you’re stuck like glue / Vaseline!") to a the recurring theme of erectile dysfunction – the party man who’s kept her "sitting here waiting / yeah, and it’s getting frustrating" in all ‘All Nighter’ to another flopping disappointment in ‘Stutter’ – "And it’s never the time, boy / You’ve had too much wine to stumble up my street". It’s a rather delicious antidote to the braggadocio of Oasis’ "feeling supersonic / drinking gin and tonic". Combined with Elastica’s tight aesthetic (black clothes, DMs, flouncing hair), it was a deeply seductive package for all of us kids trying to work through our sexualities.

While some critics churlishly complained about Elastica‘s lack of originality, it became one of the fasted-selling debut albums in UK chart history. Hundreds of thousands couldn’t give two hoots about how original these songs were – and neither did Elastica themselves, always perfectly frank in interviews about how they enjoyed making music that paid tribute to the artists they loved. Honesty was always part of the appeal. In an age when so many of their peers were taking downwardly-mobile trips in class tourism, Elastica were refreshingly honest about their origins, Frischmann never trying to hide her languid upper-middle-class drawl. You could say it was part of the band’s sonic identity and Elastica were, like many of the best British groups, a complex mix – Frischmann’s family came to the UK as refugees from the Holocaust, and the rest of the band were from working class backgrounds. A pursuit of class authenticity is frequently as reductive as complaints of magpie tendencies in musical creation.

Elastica was a record that almost propelled the foursome to great heights. Pulp, Oasis, Suede and Blur all failed to break America – indeed, it became a bogey country that in the case of Suede and Oasis would break them. Elastica, though, were subject to a frantic record label bidding war in the US that led to them signing a deal with Geffen and flogging half a million records in a year. And then… silence”.

On 13th March, it is thirty years since Elastica released one of the biggest, most popular, important and enduring debut albums of the 1990s. One that no doubt has influenced so many artists today. This year, we mark some stunning albums turning thirty. I do hope that there is a lot of attention paid to Elastica. From a band that sadly burned brightly for a short time, their legacy remains. Entering a music scene geared to male artists, they made an impact and stood out. No doubt paving the way for bands led by women or featuring all women. This incredible album still sound amazing and vibrant…

THIRTY years later.

FEATURE: Stepping Out, Off the Page: Exploring More of Kate Bush's Albums in Book Form

FEATURE:

 

 

Stepping Out, Off the Page

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush on the set of the video for Babooshka (1980)

 

Exploring More of Kate Bush’s Albums in Book Form

_________

I am wondering…

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush performing in Paris in 1979/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

what this year will provide in terms of new books about Kate Bush. There have been biographies about Bush. As I have written before, I am not sure whether there is much more room for anything in that sense. There are definitely ideas for Kate Bush books. An encyclopedia or a photobook. Something that looks at her career and genius from a new angle. I also would love to see more in the way of magazine articles. I suspect there will be a few published later in the year as some of her albums approach big anniversaries. I have waxed lyrical about how I am enjoying Leah Kardos’s new 33 1/3 book on Hounds of Love. I am pouring through the pages and getting so much inspiration. I am going to write a few features around that book. Some around The Ninth Wave and one or two on the album in general. I also love how that book explores her songs in analytical detail. Not just looking at the lyrics. Dissecting various bits of instrumentation, effects and musical observations. It not only gives us more depth about the songs and we see them in a whole new light. It also shows what an extraordinary producer Kate Bush is. How she brought all these sounds and tones together. So many people have written about Hounds of Love, though Leah Kardos’s new book give background to the album. The time period leading up to it. Perfect context and some real exploration of where Kate Bush was in her career and why Hounds of Love was so significant. We also get some writing about its impact and how it has influenced artists since.

I have covered this briefly in another feature. The Kate Bush albums that are available in book form. Laura Shenton wrote about The Kick Inside and The Dreaming. They are essentials if you are Kate Bush fans. That said, seven of her studio albums are not explored through books. There would still be scope to update ones about The Kick Inside and The Dreaming. I have been thinking about the 33 /13 series and how Kate Bush was long overdue representation in that series. It is amazing that Hounds of Love has been given this passionate and compelling love note. Something that is so analytical and deep. It made me hungry for more books in that series that are about Kate Bush albums. There are four that come to mind. I do think that The Kick Inside would be perfect for 33 1/3. That would join three other books. I would see Never for Ever, The Sensual World and Aerial as worthy of deeper inspection and investigation. The Kick Inside because there is all that background and history beforehand. A chance to go deep with the songs and all the layers of them. A bit about how the album has inspired and influenced. Why it remains so respected and acclaimed. Never for Ever is an underrated album but also a historic one. It went to number one and, with it, Kate Bush because the first ever album by a British female solo artist to top the U.K. album chart. That would provide a focal point. It is an album that so many people do not know about. As Bush would follow 1980’s Never for Ever with 1982’s The Dreaming, we can see how she was growing as a producer and songwriter. Some might say, as it is not as big as Hounds of Love, it would be very difficult to fill a book. I would disagree. Maybe not something in the 33 1/3 series. Though it does deserves its own book. The same can be said of The Sensual World.

Still underrated in my view, it followed Hounds of Love. Released in 1989, it saw a new musical direction. The first album Bush released in her thirties. New perspectives on people, life and love. So much rich conversation and possibilities. Some of her very best songs. Not only can the book approach the songs and go into detail. Like books written about other Kate Bush albums, there is also historical context. Looking at events happening around Bush or how her life was changing. I think that nobody would argue against the fact that 2005’s Aerial is the one album that would easily owe itself to a book. A double album, there are acres of possibilities. Maybe hard to cram all into a 33 1/3 book, though I think it could happen. Nothing to say that it will not happen in the future. I do hope that someone puts together a book around Aerial. It is such a magical album and one of Kate Bush’s very best. Not to exclude any other studio album, though there may be less appetite for something around 1993’s The Red Shoes or even 2011’s 50 Words for Snow. Maybe The Dreaming could well sit alongside Hounds of Love in the 33 1/3 series. As three of her albums only have been given special treatment – unless anyone else can think of another album that has been brought to life through a book? – there is definite scope. What the 33 1/3 Hounds of Love book shows is that there is definite appetite.

I don’t think I would write a good book. However, I do recognise that there would be demand if there were more books about Kate Bush’s albums. A revisit for The Kick Inside that could also nod to its follow-up, Lionheart (!978). A Never for Ever book could include a bit about The Dreaming, though that album could also be revisit. There would be fresh looks at The Sensual World and Aerial. I have been so engrossed in Leah Kardos’s Hounds of Love book. Authors such as Graeme Thomson have covered Hounds of Love in their writing, though there is still potential for that album to be expanded on once more. Especially The Ninth Wave. The most fascinating section, in my view, of the 33 1/3 book concerns The Ninth Wave. As such a fan of The Kick Inside, something could sit alongside Laura Shenton’s book. I would love a pocket-size book about The Kick Inside where we get all of this detail. So long as it did not repeat what Shenton has written. The absence of books about Kate Bush’s albums is glaring. Many people assuming Hounds of Love is her only worthy album. The very reason to write about her albums is to make people aware of them. It might be dangerous assuming that would create demand. I think that enough Kate Bush fans would buy books about her albums. There is a whole new generation that only knows her music on the surface. A good way to appreciate the albums and what they represent is to learn more about them. Sure, there are interviews and articles written about each of them. However, a more concentrated book that one could purchase for a good price that is not too long would definitely engage people. Never say never this year. Something might come this year. It would be a thrill to discover Kate Bush’s albums in a new way. A real dive. Stepping out...

OFF the page.

FEATURE: Spotlight: Rose Gray

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

  

Rose Gray

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THIS is…

PHOTO CREDIT: Yana Van Nuffel

a rare occasion where I am including the same artist twice in a Spotlight feature. Because she has done so much since I last featured her (in April 2022), I wanted to revisit this sensational artist. One that is tipped as among the very best and brightest of 2025. Rose Gray is someone who is going to be a massive name very soon. I am going to get to a review for her stunning album, Louder, Please. Already staking its claim as one of the best albums of the year. I am going to come to some recent interviews soon. Before that, this Fred Perry is one of the older ones online. It gives a good insight into the musical highs, loves and memories of Rose Gray:

Name, where are you from?

Rose Gray - Walthamstow (North East London).

Describe your style in three words?

Colourful, honest, soulful.

What’s the best gig you’ve ever been to?

It would have to be seeing Prince in Birmingham. My best friend managed to get us tickets on the day of the show. So we raced up with three hours to go before it started. We somehow got taken to the front for the intro music to Purple Rain. Prince blew my mind that night, I compared his stage presence to Beyonce. Something otherworldly.

If you could be on the line up with any two bands in history?

The Beatles and Blondie. I love these two bands so much. I grew up on the Beatles. I always just thought that’s how a song should sound. And Blondie, because Debbie Harry is the definition of an icon.

Which Subcultures have influenced you?

Girl group Motown.

Stacked vocals, catchy melodies. Soul music. Powerful female vocalists and tight harmonies. I'd definitely love to play with these elements in my music.

Neo-psychedelia/'90s indie dance-pop music.

I have been devouring '90s dance records recently, songs which I didn’t have the pleasure of partying to. I feel quite influenced by the '90s. To be specific - Neo-psychedelia. It brings those familiar 1960s band sounds fusing synths and sharp keys but mixing it with soulful melodies similar to Dusty Springfield. I’ve been experimenting with bringing some of these elements into my music.

If you could spend an hour with anyone from history?

John Lennon. I would love to share poetry or ask John to play something on his white grand piano. I think we could write something beautiful... try and put the world to right.

Of all the venues you’ve been to, which is your favourite?

Brixton Academy in London. I love this venue. The sound and atmosphere, the way the floor is raised so even if you're near the back you have a perfect view.

Your greatest unsung hero or heroine in music?

Of course Amy Winehouse. I grew up loving Amy, her lyricism and honesty had me in awe from a young age. I related to her, I felt like I'd never listened to a female being so honest about love and loss. But also - Melanie. She went pretty under the radar in the '60s/'70s and should have been huge.

The first track you played on repeat?

'F*ck You' - Lily Allen

Apart from playing the Spice Girls and Christina Aguilera on repeat as a young one, I have a real memory of buying 'It's Not Me, It's You'. I remember breaking up with my boyfriend who was the definition of the guy described in 'F*ck You' so it just became my vent song.

A song that defines the teenage you?

'With Every Heartbeat' - Robyn.

If I listen to this I am 14 again dancing around my room.

One record you would keep forever?

'A Brand New Me' - Aretha Franklin (song - 'Angel' The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra version)
I grew up on Aretha Franklin. She had a true voice of an angel. I think I will love this album for the rest of my life. The Royal Philharmonic version of this record is so beautiful

I am going to move to an interview from Vogue. Speaking with Rose Gray back in September, it was built around the announcement of the then-forthcoming, Louder, Please. An album that was hotly anticipated. Now that it has arrived, you know that Gray is going to be booked at many of the biggest festivals around the world:

Yet while Gray today is more about self-preservation than the wild nights of years past, Louder, Please is also, at points, a bracingly candid record, offering a diaristic account of the past few years of her life. “Lots of parties, lots of tears, a bit of heartbreak, a bit of heart-fixing,” she says. “I feel like there’s a few tracks on the record that sound a bit like falling back in love.” (Gray is in a long-term relationship with actor Harris Dickinson, making them something of a British bright-young-thing power couple.) On the standout track “Hackney Wick”—think Burial meets Lily Allen—she offers a blow-by-blow account of a night out in east London through a kind of hushed spoken word. “Breaking into Victoria Park, having a snog under the stars, going to another party where my mate was DJing,” she says. “I can't play that to anyone who knows me because I hate hearing myself speak, though.” Elsewhere, the record is peppered with the sort of snippets and whispers you’d hear in club bathrooms. “I think as a songwriter, I’m a bit of a sponge,” she adds. “Which is quite exhausting, really.”

The moment Gray realized the puzzle pieces of her first album were coming together was when she began working with Justin Tranter, the songwriter behind some of Selena Gomez and Justin Bieber’s biggest hits. After the two jumped on a Zoom in the early months of lockdown and found themselves waxing lyrical about Madonna, Tranter led Gray through something of a masterclass in songwriting, encouraging her to home in on her tangle of ideas and feelings. “I’ve never experienced writing like what I’ve experienced with Justin,” she says. “It’s quite magic.” Elsewhere, her collaborators on the record include the white-hot electronic producer Sega Bodega, electroclash queen Uffie, and house DJ Alex Metric—but even with all these cooks in the kitchen, the outcome feels distinctly Gray. “I feel like I’m pretty headstrong in sessions,” she notes. “I know what I do and don’t like.”

Just as unequivocal is the visual world Gray has constructed around the album: a wonderland of seedy glamour and fun in the sun that harks back to the glory days of ’90s Ibiza, and the work of photographers like Martin Parr and Elaine Constantine, who captured the electric energy of those underground nightlife scenes with striking, saturated color. “When I spoke to the photographer, I wanted it to be like a ’90s Prada campaign, but starring Dido,” Gray says, with a cheeky grin. (She also describes the look as Kylie Minogue’s iconic “Slow” music video mixed with Jonathan Glazer’s Sexy Beast—you can see the vision.) On the album cover, Gray stands on a beach in Barcelona while lovers canoodle in the sand and seagulls squawk above her head; with a Walkman attached to her bikini bottoms and headphones in her ears, she lets out a scream. “It’s a little bit tacky, but also quite glamorous,” Gray adds. “I think British dance music has always had that element, which I love, and

Like Charli and Shygirl (the latter of whom Gray has collaborated with and supported onstage), Gray has also been hitting the club to spread the gospel of her upcoming music. Last month, she kicked off a series of DJ nights titled Gray Selects which she hopes can both invite new listeners into her world and spotlight the work of up-and-coming musicians she admires. “I just want to start getting us all together and playing out each other’s music,” she says. It’s a warm, communal spirit that courses through the record, too, which sounds like the sort of thing you’d listen to on your friend’s portable speaker while getting ready for a night out, sipping a lukewarm vodka Red Bull while the smell of straightener-fried hair and Impulse body spray hangs in the air.

“I hope I’ve made the kind of record that me and my best mates would absolutely play until we’re all sick of it,” she says. “Getting ready, going out, getting dolled up for a festival. But I also hope it’s something that people can listen to when they’re traveling to work. I don’t think it’s just a party or a club record. Everyone I’ve played the record to has a different favorite song, which I think is a good thing.” It’s true: while the album does feel like a statement of intent, it’s in the more ambiguous moments—where the sweary meets the seductive, or where heartbreak meets the euphoric highs of the dancefloor—that Gray truly shines. With Louder, Please, she’s ready for the big leagues”.

I will finish with two reviews I think. Four-star recommendations of Louder, Please. Proof that Rose Gray is capturing the kudos and imagination of critics. In an interview published yesterday (20th January), DORK chatted with an amazing young artist who lost hundreds of songs to label politics but is now back with even bigger purpose and drive. This is someone that you need to follow:

Rose thrives when left to her own devices. Writing five to ten songs weekly, either in sessions or collaborating with peers, her journey to a debut was inevitable. Pleading her case to her label, with her sackful of songs in tow, “I was just like, ‘Guys, I have to put out an album. I’m literally bursting’,” she laughs.

‘Louder, Please’ brims with life. Having collaborated with Justin Tranter (Lady Gaga, Chappell Roan), Sega Bodega, and Zhone (Troye Sivan), it captures a dance-laden weekend with friends getting into mischief and love, emerging from a period of self-discovery. “A lot of people’s first albums are coming-of-age albums,” says Rose. “But this to me – because I have been making music for so long, and it’s taken a while to get my first album out – is the stage after that. Being in my mid-20s, dating, falling in and out of love, and moving houses feels like the stage above the coming-of-age record.” That’s not to say she’s moved past ‘Louder, Please”s chapter. “I’m definitely still in this era of my life,” she laughs. “But I do look back at it and feel a little tingle of nostalgia because it definitely has captured this little snippet of my life.”

The visuals and aesthetics for her debut stem from a trip to Barcelona with her friends. She wanted to inhabit the world of Louder, Please authentically. The album’s artwork shows Rose on the beach, taken by a friend, embodying the all-or-nothing spirit within. “With this, I was like, I just want it to just be real,” she professes. “I actually want us to be on the beach with my mates; let’s have music on. Let’s be drinking!”

While crafting ‘Louder, Please’, Rose immersed herself in research. With friends in the club scene, she’d venture out most weekends to experience clubbing firsthand. Shazaming tracks and witnessing people dance to Charli xcx’s brash pop bolstered her confidence in her own project: “It was really interesting because that album [‘BRAT’] came out, and my album was completely done, and I do see some similarities with pop writing over heavier beats. It was great to see how much people loved that because it made me think, well, they’re gonna love my record then!” She’s continued her clubland ventures since announcing ‘Louder, Please’ and its first singles ‘Free’ and ‘Angel Of Satisfaction’. “I’ve been playing lots of clubs, like a full-time job, actually,” she smiles. “Just once or twice a week, little slots at club nights, nothing huge. Sometimes, I don’t announce them. It’s very rewarding seeing people dance to music, especially stuff that’s not even released yet.”

For Rose, her debut album exceeds her expectations. After everything she’s weathered, this is her moment to savour. “I feel confident in the music and the world I’ve created. I love it,” she gushes. “And I almost feel a bit like whatever happens with it, however it’s reviewed, I know it’s the kind of music that I want to party to, that I want to listen to, that my friends want to listen to.” And that’s what matters. The world’s too dark to overthink everything. So head to the darkened dance floors, where Rose Gray likely lurks either physically or in spirit, having the time of her life – the outside world be damned. “I’m sure it won’t be everyone’s cup of tea, but they do say whenever you make something you should make sure that you’re in love with it, which I am”.

Before wrapping up, I am going to get to some critical reviews for Louder, Please. The Guardian noted how Louder, Please is an album that is escapist and joyful. One that is alive and fizzing with inventiveness. An album I think will stand alongside the most important albums of this year. It is proof that Rose Gray is one of our finest artists. Nearly three years after spotlighting Rose Gray, it is amazing to see her take massive strides and put out an incredible statement with Louder, Please:

The last few years have proved tricky for female-fronted dance-pop, with interesting artists wasting away as guest vocalists on songs credited to male DJs with perfect teeth, or siloed into dead ends soundtracked by an efficient amalgam of drum’n’bass and sticky-floor EDM.

Thank goodness, then, for London’s Rose Gray, whose sweat-soaked debut album fizzes with inventiveness. She’s clearly a fan of dance music’s more experimental potential – opener Damn is an aggressively filtered jungle onslaught, while collaborators include producer Sega Bodega (Caroline Polachek, Shygirl) and electropop cult figure Uffie. But Gray also understands pop, with the campy Angel of Satisfaction stomping around a keening, early Gaga-esque chorus. The house-inflected Party People, meanwhile, would have nestled nicely on an 00s Ibiza Classics compilation mixed by Kaskade.

Hedonism is a key lyrical theme – Wet & Wild, all smile-inducing house pianos and breathy, Kylie-esque vocals, should come with its own bottle of room odouriser – but on tracks like Switch, about a tricky long-distance relationship, Gray looks inwards, searching for new ways to sustain a connection. Equally atmospheric is the spoken-word Hackney Wick, which charts a night out but focuses on relatable communion rather than focus-grouped exhortations to put your hands up.

There’s a comedown of sorts on the mid-tempo Everything Changes (But I Won’t), which saturates Gray’s voice in so many effects that its emotional impact is somewhat diluted. She’s better on tracks like Free, with its mantra-like chorus “The good shit in life is always free”, creating escapist dance-pop anthems that pierce the heart”.

I am going to end with a review from NME. They provided their views on this wonderful album. An artist who I think we will be talking about for years to come. If you have not heard of Rose Gray then make sure you check her out. This is an artist you will not want to miss out on:

Born on New Year’s Eve, there’s a touch of destiny about the way Rose Gray has embraced club culture. The vocalist, producer and DJ, who hails from Walthamstow, London, spent her teen years chasing a flawed pop star dream, before realising that the image she was being moulded into – and the accompanying music – didn’t represent her true self. But when London’s rich electronic scene came calling at the turn of her twenties, there was no looking back.

She has since grown to live and breathe that lifestyle, which has effortlessly shaped the palatable house and sultry rave-pop on her latest EPs ‘Synchronicity’ (2022) and ‘Higher Than The Sun’ (2023). These sound palettes pierce even deeper into the underground on Gray’s debut album ‘Louder, Please’, which lands as her stock continues to rise, following collaborations with TSHA, Ben Helmsley and a personal invite from Mel C to perform at Sporty Spice’s 50th birthday party.

Mysterious, discomforting opener ‘Damn’ is worlds apart from the summery sounds we’ve become used to, as Gray’s voice distorts like a whining toddler: “Won’t you turn it up a little louder, please?” Meanwhile, that familiar sunny euphoria returns in the form of the escapist ‘Free’ and the Ibiza-friendly ‘Wet & Wild’, which balances its mouthful of a verse with a swirling chorus.

The loved-up throbbing bounce of ‘Just Two’ might be Gray’s most addictive track to date, although the following one-two of ‘Tectonic’ and ‘Party People’ – an ode to those strangers who become the main characters of your night out – risks the album falling into rinse and repeat territory for a moment. ‘Angel Of Satisfaction’ dispels that notion, carrying a pulse that would give every bassline on Dua Lipa’s ‘Future Nostalgia’ a run for its money.

‘Hackney Wick’ – perhaps east London’s answer to Confidence Man cult classic ‘C.O.O.L. Party’ – is refreshingly immediate and lucid (“I hear the bass, the music, and I succumb”), while ‘First’ represents Gray’s confident first foray into the liquid drum ‘n’ bass sound that has blown up the likes of Charlotte Plank and Venbee.

On ‘Louder, Please’, Gray’s music has finally caught up with her lifestyle. The crackly sounds of the underground finally have their unfiltered moments, while her long-standing pop sensibilities still retain their place through respectable chorus hooks and addictive melodies (her classical vocal training is also clear for all to see). Gray has too many strings to her bow to lay down one overarching, definitive statement. As such, ‘Louder, Please’ is more of a dare than an instruction: follow her down this rabbit hole, and brace yourself for where she ends up”.

I will wrap things up there. Rose Gray is an artist I have admired for years now. Her future is going to be hugely successful and exciting. I am thrilled to see where she heads next and how her career unfolds. A mighty talent with an original voice, this is a Pop artist who can stand shoulder to shoulder…

WITH the best around

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Follow Rose Gray

FEATURE: The Digital Mixtape: Dr. Dre at Sixty

FEATURE:

 

 

The Digital Mixtape

Dr. Dre at Sixty

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ONE of music’s…

most important people turns sixty on 18th February. Born in Compton, California, Dr. Dre is the founder and CEO of Aftermath Entertainment and Beats Electronic. He is also the co-founder of Death Row Records. Many know Dr. Dre as a successful solo artist, though he started out with World Class Wreckin’ Cru and then was part of N.W.A. The group were synonymous with explicit lyrics that exposed and explored the violence and life on the street. Dre is credited with popularising West Coast G-Funk. Dr Dre. has also produced on so many iconic, important and acclaimed albums. I am going to end with a playlist of Dr. Dre songs (from his solo career) and songs from albums he has produced (or co-produced) for other artists. To start, AllMusic provide a biography of a music icon:

Dr. Dre’s impact on rap, hip-hop, and pop music in general is nothing short of revolutionary. His production informed the dominant trends for several decades of rap, updating the noisy clamor of Public Enemy’s Bomb Squad-produced tracks by bringing in funky rhythms for his breakthrough work with his group N.W.A., single-handedly inventing G-Funk in the ‘90s by reworking George Clinton’s spaced-out party funk into something aggressive yet still commercially viable, and then abandoning the style when it became too ubiquitous by the early 2000s. Dre’s rap skills were never as impressive as his production, but he played to his strengths by giving game-changing proteges the majority of time on the mike, first introducing the world to Snoop Dogg’s laid-back charisma and then to Eminem’s staggering technical abilities. Dre’s multifaceted role in the music industry saw him forming labels Death Row and Aftermath, the latter of which released massively important records by 50 CentKendrick Lamar, and Anderson .Paak. Along with production duties, label CEO status, and other business ventures like his celebrity headphones-turned-streaming platform Beats by Dre, the good doctor continued to slowly and steadily release music of his own as the years went by, bolstering a discography full of groundbreaking work like his 1992 debut The Chronic with projects like his 2015 full-length Compton, and his six-song EP The Contract, released in conjunction with Grand Theft Auto in 2022.

Dre (born Andre Young, February 18, 1965) became involved in hip-hop during the early '80s, performing at house parties and clubs with the World Class Wreckin' Cru around South Central Los Angeles and making a handful of recordings along the way. In 1986 he met Ice Cube, and the two rappers began writing songs for Ruthless Records, a label started by former drug pusher Eazy-EEazy tried to give one of the duo's songs, "Boyz-n-the Hood," to HBO, a group signed to Ruthless. When the group refused, Eazy formed N.W.A. -- an acronym for N*gg*z With Attitude -- with Dre, CubeMC Ren, and DJ Yella, releasing their first album in 1987. A year later, N.W.A. delivered Straight Outta Compton, a vicious record that became an underground hit with virtually no support from radio, the press, or MTV. N.W.A. became notorious for their hardcore lyrics, especially those of "Fuck tha Police," which resulted in the FBI sending a warning letter to Ruthless and its parent company, Priority, suggesting that N.W.A. should watch their step.

Most of the group's political threat left with Cube when he departed in late 1989 amid many financial disagreements. While Eazy appeared to be the undisputed leader following Cube's departure -- and he was certainly responsible for the group approaching near-parodic levels with their final pair of records -- the music was in Dre's hands. On both the 1990 EP 100 Miles and Runnin' and the 1991 album Efil4zaggin ("Niggaz4life" spelled backward), he created dense, funky sonic landscapes that were as responsible for keeping N.W.A. at the top of the charts as Eazy's comic-book lyrics. While the group was at the peak of its popularity in 1991, Dre began to make efforts to leave the crew, especially after he was charged with assaulting Dee Barnes, the host of a televised rap show, in 1991. The following year, Dre left the group to form Death Row Records with Suge Knight and N.W.A. affiliate the D.O.C. According to legend, Knight held N.W.A.'s manager at gunpoint and threatened to kill him if he refused to let Dre out of his contract.

Dre released his first solo single, "Deep Cover," in the spring of 1992. Not only was the record the debut of his elastic G-funk sound, it was also the beginning of his collaboration with rapper Snoop Doggy Dogg. Dre discovered Snoop through his stepbrother Warren G, and he immediately began working with the rapper -- Snoop was on Dre's 1992 debut, The Chronic as much as Dre himself was. Thanks to the singles "Nuthin' But a 'G' Thang," "Dre Day," and "Let Me Ride," The Chronic was a multi-platinum, Top Ten, Grammy-winning smash, and the entire world of hip-hop changed with it. For the next four years, it was virtually impossible to hear mainstream hip-hop that wasn't affected in some way by Dre and his patented G-funk. Not only did he produce Snoop's 1993 debut Doggystyle, but he orchestrated several soundtracks, including Above the Rim and Murder Was the Case (both in 1994), which functioned as samplers for his new artists and production techniques, and he helmed hit records such as Blackstreet's "No Diggity," among others, including a hit reunion with Ice Cube, "Natural Born Killaz." During this entire time, Dre released no new records, but he didn't need to -- all of Death Row was under his control, and most of his peers mimicked his techniques.

The Death Row dynasty held strong until the spring of 1996, when Dre grew frustrated with Knight's strong-arm techniques. At the time, Death Row was devoting itself to 2Pac's label debut, All Eyez on Me (which featured Dre on the breakthrough hit "California Love"), and Snoop was busy recovering from his draining murder trial. Dre left the label in the summer of 1996 to form Aftermath, declaring gangsta rap dead. While he was subjected to endless taunts from his former Death Row colleagues, their sales had slipped by 1997, and Knight was imprisoned on racketeering charges by the end of the year. Dre's first album for Aftermath, the various-artists collection Dr. Dre Presents...The Aftermath, received considerable media attention, but the record didn't become a hit despite the presence of his hit single "Been There Done That." Even though the album wasn't a success, the implosion of Death Row in 1997 proved that Dre's inclinations were correct at the time. Dre's de facto sophomore solo album 2001 -- which scored him a second Grammy for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group for "Forgot About Dre" -- followed in 1999. That same year, Dre unveiled his next protégé, a young Detroit rapper named Eminem.

Dre's focus then shifted to work with his label and production for other artists. A third, and final, album titled Detox had been announced, but as the producer devoted time to Aftermath artists like 50 Cent and Eminem, the album suffered numerous delays. Work for the GameSnoop DoggJay-Z, and others brought Dre to 2006 when he partnered with Jimmy Iovine and launched the celebrity headphones company Beats by Dr. Dre. After sports figures and other celebrities adopted the headphones en masse, Beats' success skyrocketed. By 2010, the company was valued at just under a billion dollars. Dre dipped back into rapping by dropping two singles: "Kush" featuring Snoop Dogg and Akon and "I Need a Doctor" with Eminem and Skylar Grey. He continued to tease Detox, but ended up returning to the studio to focus on his next big breakout act, Compton's own Kendrick Lamar. At the start of 2014, Beats launched a streaming music service, Beats Music. Beats was acquired by Apple Inc. later in the year, as Dre announced he was the "first billionaire in hip-hop." In 2015, the Academy Award-nominated N.W.A. biographical drama Straight Outta Compton was released in theaters and influenced the producer to scrap Detox in favor of an LP inspired by the film. The album Compton: A Soundtrack by Dr. Dre landed that same year with Kendrick LamarAnderson. PaakIce Cubethe GameEminem, and many more on the guest list.

With N.W.A.'s cultural resurgence and mainstream recognition of their legacy in the history of rap and hip-hop, the group received another honor for their contribution to music with their induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2016. In December of 2021, video game Grand Theft Auto Online used six previously unreleased Dre songs in an updated version of the game. These songs were eventually released in 2022 as EP The Contract. In February of 2022, Dr. Dre performed at the Superbowl LVI half-time show with EminemMary J. BligeKendrick Lamar, and others. Around this time, Dre gave interviews saying he was working on new music with Blige, as well as with Floetry vocalist Marsha Ambrosius”.

To mark the upcoming sixtieth birthday of Dr. Dre, I have compiled a mixtape with his best solo cuts and songs for other artists that he produced or co-produced. One of the most influential people in music history, it is hard to put into words just how much the music world changed because of him. I know the media will mark Dr. Dre’s sixtieth birthday. This is a music salute to…

A music pioneer and genius.

FEATURE: Playing Canasta in a Cold Room: Kate Bush and the Muse of the Dance

FEATURE:

 

 

Playing Canasta in a Cold Room

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush photographed in London in 1978/PHOTO CREDIT: Gered Mankowitz

 

Kate Bush and the Muse of the Dance

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GOING back to the earliest…

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush and Lindsay Kemp whilst filming the short film, The Line, the Cross and the Curve, in 1993/PHOTO CREDIT: Gudio Harari

days of Kate Bush’s career, I was thinking about how important dance was. One thinks of Kate Bush and her incredible music. How she is a wonderful writer and singer. I think that dance and the freedom that it offered her influenced how she wrote and created. Not only was dance important to her videos and live music. She was also very physical in the studio. I know a lot of other artists learned dance and brought that into their repertoire heavily. However, I think Bush was a dancer before she was an artist. I am going to source from a couple of different books. One is Rob Jovanovic’s Kate Bush: The Biography and another is Tom Doyle’s Running Up That Hill: 50 Visions of Kate Bush. I am fascinated by Kate Bush’s love of dance. Going to classes in Covent Garden. What attracted her to that discipline. Maybe artists like David Bowie. Her love of film and the sort of artistic stimulus that was introduced into her world as a child. I feel there was this energy and passion within that needed to come out. Sure, performing and creating music could help with that. However, Bush had bigger ambitions and wider horizons. Always connecting dance directly with her music. Evident when you see the videos for Wuthering Heights. Kate Bush definitely coming across as a dancer more than a conventional artist. If Bush could self-teach the piano and also got some assistance from her father, she needed to go to classes and find tutors when it came to dance. I know she would have carved out some space at her East Wickham Farm bedroom at the family home. Her den where she listen to music no doubt saw a young Bush pirouetting, moving and leaping along to music of the day. Some boogeying to T.Rex or David Bowie. Some cool moves worked out to accompany a song from Elton John or Roxy Music. As someone without dance or ballet training and background, it was not easy for Bush to get a tutor or enrol in a class. A blank C.V., she had to start at the bottom – or the back. When Bush attended St. Joseph's Convent Grammar School, she did not get along with her dance teacher. A such, maybe she did not keep up with her studies. It meant she had some catching up to do!

I am on a slight detour, though I will publish a feature of ‘Kate Bush’s London’. The houses she lived in. The areas she frequented and adopted as her own. Building this map of how Bush covered the capital. I know about Covent Garden and dance classes there. I was not aware of her association with Elephant and Castle. She attended mime class there. During 1976, she attended Adam Darius’s classes once a week. I am not sure whether she was driven there or would hop the bus from East Wickham Farm in Welling. It would have been quite a trek! Adam Darius has evolved his work into a fusion of dance and mine, as Rob Jovanovic writes. Having worked with the likes of Kate Beckinsale and Placido Domingo, Darius recalls how keen and attentive Kate Bush was. An expressive face and a lover of mime, he noted Bush’s sensitivity and intelligence. Even if she was a once-a-week student, her passion and dedication was impressive! Bush would hang back after class and ask questions. No doubt absorbing this so she could practice and hone her craft back at home. Possibly in her record nook where she would have some privacy to maybe mime and move to music. Mime was very important when it came to her music videos and photoshoots. Someone who could express a range of emotions, rather than being a stilted or conventional Pop artist. Bush was always curious and asked questions in the studio. Wanting to learn a discipline so that she could master it and build up her skillset. It was also not a case of Bush being from this comfortable family and being able to afford these luxuries. Not many people in the middle-classes would be interested in mime. It was passion and authenticity from Bush rather than wealth-flexing and something expected of her. In 1976, Bush also saw an advert for Lindsay Kemp’s Flowers. He would become her mentor and the two enjoyed a long friendship. Kemp would briefly feature in Bush’s 1993 film, The Line, the Cross and the Curve, and she dedicated Moving to him – the opening song from her debut album, The Kick Inside (1978), it was also a single in Japan.

Kemp’s classes tantalised the promise of ‘living fabulously through your senses’. Despite being controversial, Kemp had a strong background and reputation. He had hooked up with David Bowie. I am not sure whether Bush knew this before enrolling in the classes. Considering her admiration for David Bowie. Wanting to be like him in some ways. Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust character (which emerged in 1972). Kate Bush was at the final Ziggy Stardust concert in 1973. Maybe this pilgrimage to retrace the footsteps of David Bowie and the origins of Ziggy Stardust. Also, Lindsay Kemp would play David Bowie albums in his class. For Kate Bush, this must have been a heaven! Bush knew that, once she saw Flowers, that she had to do something like this herself. If a single person could produce the music and the performance and create this new form of art that was contemporary and classic, then that opened her eyes and ambitions. The lure of the physicality that could be expressed. Being able to say so much without singing or speaking. The implications, suggestions, movements and flow that was its own language. Lindsay Kemp sadly died in 2018. Bush attended his classes over at The Dance Centre in Covent Garden in 1976. I think initially it was a Fulham church/school hall where he and Bush met and worked together. Again, the young Kate Bush covering quite a lot of London to fulfil her passion and get the training and tutoring that she was looking for! Kemp’s classes cost 50p a time. Bush could learn dramatic arm movements and facial expressions. I can picture her, maybe shyly at the back of the class, being coaxed forward to the front by Kemp. Bush did admire conventional mime yet felt that it was too staid. She wanted to have the sort of flexibility and freedom that Lindsay Kemp offered. Kemp taught Bush that you can express with your body. And, as Rob Jovanovic also observed, she knew that when your body was alive and alert then so was your mind. There would be exercising and routines. Like the class imagining they were all sailors and they were drowning!

It did take a while for Kemp to notice Bush. When she was at his classes at the (Covent Garden) Dance Centre, that is when she made her impression. It took about a dozen or so classes before she was on his radar. As she was at the back of the class – like a child as he recalled; reminiscent in some ways of Wendy or Tinkerbell (from Peter Pan) -, it was a slow realisation. Such large classes, there was a shine and aura coming from Bush that attracted Kemp and alerted his senses! How Bush loved the drama of the classes. I did not know that Lindsay Kemp offered Bush a job in the wardrobe department for the presentation of Mr Punch at the Roundhouse Theatre in London. Kemp unaware that Bush was with EMI and they had designs for this budding star. Bush paid tribute to Kemp’s role. A teacher that filled you up. This empty glass being filled with champagne! Kemp left for Australia six months after Bush started to attend his classes. That said, Bush wanted to keep up with dance, so then joined Arlene Phillips’s class at The Dance Centre in Covent Garden. I wonder what Phillips thinks of Kate Bush’s success now. Phillips had choregraphed for Hot Gossip. They performed on The Kenny Everett Show. Bush loved how she could attend Arlene Phillip’s class because she (Bush) did not have qualifications. Bush was keen and did not need a background or experience. It was very freeing! I want to return to Lindsay Kemp’s class and something Tom Doyle notes in Running Up That Hill: 50 Visions of Kate Bush. Flowers was based on French writer Jean Genet’s autobiographical 1943 novel, Notre-Dame-des-Fleurs (Our Lady of the Flowers). It is about one man’s trek through the demi-monde of Paris, frequented by outcasts and homosexuals. How revealing and provocative this would have been to a teenage Kate Bush!

The array of characters in Kemp’s troupe was varied and colourful. Sailors, criminals, whores, angels and cross-dressers among them. Set to a soundtrack of Billie Holiday, Mozart, Pink Floyd and Al Jolson, although this ‘journey to destruction’ did not always track and makes sense, it definitely made an impression on Kate Bush. Fun and sexy, she admired the combination of music and theatre. How dance was elevated and heightened by the power of music. Maybe she was more used to seeing artists on T.V. and thinking that this was what an artist was and all they could ever be. Her exposure to productions like Flowers influenced how her music would begin and continue to be. Would Kate Bush have been inspired to write about a ghostly Catherine Earnshaw trying to snatch Heathcliff in the night for Wuthering Heights were it not for Lindsay Kemp? Sure, Bush caught a 1967 T.V. adaptation of the novel, though I think it was her experiences with Lindsay Kemp and Flowers that helped give blossom and bloom to the eccentricity and original voice of that song (as Bush had not at that time read Wuthering Heights). Flowers took Bush’s breath away! From that revelation, she knew that music is what she wanted to do. It is that important! Many people do not talk of dance, Lindsay Kemp and that period when it comes to Kate Bush. It is hugely significant! Bush’s brother, John (Carder Bush) noted that a transformation had occurred after his sister returned from seeing Flowers. The young Cathy Bush had now become Kate. Almost like the girl has become a woman and adopted this alter ego!

Going back to Bowie, I think he helped pique Bush’s interest. On the poster for Flowers was a quote from Bowie: “(of Kemp) This it the man that started it all”. It grabbed Bush’s attention! Bowie first met Kemp in 1967 and the two became creatively and sexually entangled. Maybe there was some guilt from Bowie. Whilst with Kemp, there was off-stage drama. The two appeared in a presentation of Pierrot in Turquoise. As the production moved, so too did the bond between. Bowie engaged in an affair with a mutual friend, Natasha Korniloff. Kemp (half-heartedly) tried to end his life. Kemp was taken to hospital, seen by a doctor and, after having a plaster applied to some minor scratches, was told not to be so daft! Bowie talked about Kemp in 1972 and noted how he lived off his emotions. He held admiration for him. Even if their romantic bond was broken, there still was a creative link. Kemp appeared as Starman alongside Bowie at the Rainbow Theatre in December '72. Bowie acknowledging what an important influence Kemp was to him. It was only a few years or so later when Kemp would make his mark on another artist. I love to imagine Kate Bush travelling to dance and mime classes. The excitement and anticipation. Her participating and, sure and soon enough, shining as the star of the class! The rush she gets heading back to East Wickham Farm. Crucially, how she brought those experiences and disciplines to the studio to record The Kick Inside. How she created her own version of Lindsay Kemp’s routines and aesthetics for The Tour of Life in 1979. Maybe even for Before the Dawn in 2014. Theatrics and beautiful set designs can be traced back to him. The way dance and music interlocked and awakened something in Bush. In Moving, the first tracking from The Kick Inside, the line “You crush the lily in my soul” is directed at Lindsay Kemp and how she brought the bravery and expression out of Kate Bush. What he did was turn this promising and eager seed and turned it…

INTO a beautiful flower.

FEATURE: Running Up That Road: Kate Bush: The First Woman

FEATURE:

 

 

Running Up That Road

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1980/PHOTO CREDIT: Patrick Lichfield 

 

Kate Bush: The First Woman

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I am going to write…

 IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush during The Tour of Life in Hammersmith in May 1979/PHOTO CREDIT: Max Browne

a few Kate Bush features where inspiration is pulled from Leah Kardos’s recent 33 1/3 book, Hounds of Love. After the introduction, the first chapter concerns Kate Bush as the ‘first woman’. In that she was the first woman to break a particular record or achieve something huge in music. I had not given too much thought to this. It is amazing considering some of the significant ‘firsts’ that Bush is responsible. Kardos names the times where Bush was the first woman to accomplish something significant. In one case, she was the first person to do something significant that helped reshape live music and its wider horizons. I am going to spend some times with these ‘firsts’. On 17th February, 1978, Kate Bush’s debut album, The Kick Inside, was released into the world. EMI and Bush would not have quite known how popular the album would be. As she was new and had only released one single – Wuthering Heights – at this point, it would have been quite ambitious to think that the album would sell more than a million copies. That is what it did. With this extraordinarily original music, combined with Bush promoting the album heavily around the world, meant that a debut from a teenage artist sold over a million copies! Not only was this an extraordinary feat for an artist with their debut album. Bush became the first woman in Pop history to release a million-selling debut album. That seems remarkable now. I am thinking who could have challenged her in the years before that. Maybe someone like Joni Mitchell. Though her debut, Song to a Seagull (1968), was not as acclaimed and revered as much as Blue (1971). In years since, there have been women who have sold a million copies of an album. Few do it with their debut. I know Amy Winehouse’s Frank, released in 2003, has sold over a million copies. It does not happen that often! Bush clearing a path and pushing down barriers. Showing that women in Pop could not only write their own album but also have it connect in such a way that it sells over a million copies! There is no telling what impact this had on women in music who followed her.

Also tied to her debut, Bush set another record. Many people know about this. Her debut single, Wuthering Heights, reached number one and, in the process, meant Bush became the first woman in music history to have a self-penned single reach number one in the U.K. That single was released on 20th January, 1978. Again, I can’t think of any other female artists before her that could have matched that. Many female artists had others writing for them. There were not many female contemporaries of Kate Bush who were writing their own music. Again, this would have given a lot of inspiration to women that followed. I am not certain how many female artists in the modern day have achieved what Bush did. In that their single, which they wrote, went to number one in the U.K. Probably less common than you think. Yet Kate Bush would have provided such momentum and push to many female artists. This article from 2023 spotlights Kenya Grace and her single, Strangers. That reached number one. She wrote, performed and produced the track. Kate Bush did not produce Wuthering Heights (that was Andrew Powell). However, Bush did write, produce and perform Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God). That hit number one in the U.K. in 2022 when it gained new attention after getting on Stranger Things. Bush was sixty-three when the song went to number one in the U.K. (on 22nd June, 2022). That might be another record in itself. I cannot think of many sixty-three year old women who have a U.K. number one written and produced by them. In an ageist music industry, that was another huge step! Even if Bush was twenty-seven when Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) was originally released (5th August, 1985), she was in her sixties and enjoying this resurgence back in 2022. Bush still able to break barriers and open doors.

I wrote about this recently. How Kate Bush used a wireless microphone to perform. Because she was performing dance and putting a lot of energy into her set, she could not juggle a microphone and focus on her set. It was necessary to manufacture a wireless microphone that means she could sing and move freely at the same time. Even this article says it was Martin Fisher who was a sound engineer who developed and invested the wireless microphone for Kate Bush, I think it is actually Gordon Patterson who is responsible. No matter. I guess there would have been a wireless microphone used in other spheres. In terms of the arts or in the world in general. However, it was new for artists. Imagine how live music could have been different if that wireless microphone was invested sooner. We associate the wireless head microphone with Britney Spears or more obviously Madonna. Many think the Queen of Pop is the person who brought that in. Look at live music now and Kate Bush was not only the first woman to use a wireless microphone. She was the first person! A massive achievement. Bush did not want to lumber a microphone around on stage. Something comparatively lightweight was fashioned. She helped completely change live music. Pop concerts since have utilised this breakthrough. Another first that Bush is responsible revolves around Never for Ever. Her third studio album, it was released in 1980. It reached number one on the U.K. chart. She was the first woman to achieve that. Bush was twenty-two when she held that record. Since, many women have reached number one on the U.K. album chart. Kate Bush was the first. All of these achievements helping to change the culture and inspire women coming through. Amazing that no other woman had hit the top of the album chart here prior to 1980! Bush this pioneer. Also, Bush wrote the album and co-produced it. It was absolutely historic when Bush got that number one. Many people overlook these accomplishments when they talk about Kate Bush. How important she is.

Kate Bush released her only greatest hits album, The Whole Story, in 1986. That combined her best work to that date. Well, the singles at the very least. Early in 1986 – June to be semi-precise -, Alan Jones wrote in the Record Mirror that Bush had single-handedly written all fifteen of her singles. She was twenty-seven at this point. That was unrivalled by any other female songwriter in the world. I am not sure how many women have matched that since. It is quite rare. In terms of solo-penned hit singles. I can’t think of any other artists who have that record. Can you think of any female artists since 1986 that have self-written such a run of singles like Kate Bush did? Madonna co-wrote and had other writers. Taylor Swift co-writes for the most part. It is amazing to consider! I have a few more record/firsts to cover off. Each one makes me admire and respect Kate Bush more! On 13th November, 1993, Bush (aged thirty-five) conceivably released the first ‘visual album’. The short film, The Line, the Cross and the Curve, was a selection of songs from her The Red Shoes album tied to a story. To that point, there had been musical films. The Beatles had been in a few, though they were theatrical releases and one cannot say something like Help!, Magical Mystery Tour or A Hard Day’s Night were ‘visual albums’, because of their sheer length. Bush’s short film was very much the first time a woman in music had done anything like this. In years since, artists such as Beyoncé and Frank Ocean have put out visual albums. Bush was the first woman to do this. Maybe she does not realise that fact now. She also wrote and directed that film. You might quibble as to whether it is a visual album. However, as it was a short film stringing together album tracks, that is what it was!

Cast your mind back to 6th September, 2014. That was when Bush was performing her Before the Dawn residency in Hammersmith. Because of the press coverage and massive popularity, she saw eleven albums of hers in the chart/the top 100. Eight of them were in the top 40. It was a record at that time. The most simultaneous top 40 albums by a solo female artists. Bush was fifty-six at the time. I am not sure whether an artist like Taylor Swift has beaten that since. In 2014, this record was set. Bush once more inspiring and pioneering. Showing just how loved she and her music is. As an artists in her fifties, it also showed how one cannot define women and write them off. Her still very much active today, Kate Bush has helped shift perceptions around women in music, especially when it comes to age. I mentioned it early. Bush hitting number one with Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) in 2022. On 23rd June, 2022, Bush set a record for the longest gap between number one songs. She was sixty-three when she got only her second number one song in the U.K. – which seems insane considering all that golden music! Her first number one was Wuthering Heights in 1978. Bush was nineteen. A gap of forty-four-years and eighty-three days. She set the record but was soon bested by The Beatles. I think Bush would not have minded being beaten by The Beatles! Now and Then, their final single, went to number one in 2023. Forty-four years and 144 days since The Ballad of John and Yoko came out (in 1969). However, Bush still holds the record for women.

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1985/PHOTO CREDIT: Guido Harari

Kate Bush snatched a record from Wham! The record for the longest time for a song to reach number one. Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) was released in 1985. It took thirty-six years and 310 days to finally hit the top spot. Last Christmas took thirty-six years and twenty-three days to get to number one in 2021. Incredible to think that Bush has broken so much ground through the years! That is not all! I did say how Bush was sixty-three (actually, twenty-three days shy of sixty-four) when Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) reached number one in 2022. That record was previously held by Cher, who was only fifty-two when Believe came out! Amazing! As mentioned, as music is still ageist and judges women, Bush hitting number one in her sixties is helping the conversation. That women can succeed and be relevant in older age. In fact, women over thirty or forty are labelled and often seen as ‘too old’ still. Every time Kate Bush does something amazing like reaching number one and reaching a new audience in the process, in her sixties, this gives strength and faith to so many other women! In terms of the ‘firsts’, Bush set her first in 1978. Her most recent happened in 2023. A period of forty-five years between records just shows what a legacy and genius she has. How her music has spanned the decades and continues to influence and connect with people. In 2023, Bush’s Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) became the first solo recording released in the 1980s by a woman to reach a billion streams on Spotify. Bush was sixty-four. That might seem quite niche, though consider some of the women who were making waves and ruling the charts in the 1980s. Madonna for one! No solo Madonna single has surpassed a billion streams on Spotify. The Like a Virgin (1984) album has passed a billion but no song has come close to a billion streams. I wanted to write this feature so that we can see just how pioneering Kate Bush is. Thanks to Leah Karos and her Hounds of Love 33 1/3 book for opening my eyes and inspiring this feature! From Wuthering Heights scaling to number one in 1978 through to Bush passing a billion streams on Spotify for Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) in 2023, what other ‘firsts’ will she achieve in years to come? I don’t think she has done smashing records and breaking down barriers. It is another reason why the mighty Kate Bush is taken to heart by…

SO many people around the world.

FEATURE: Spotlight: Good Neighbours

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight


Good Neighbours

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I realise I focus…

largely on solo artists when it comes to my Spotlight features. This time around, I am talking about Good Neighbours. There is a lot out there, and I am going to drop quite a few interviews in. The first I want to come to is from 1883 Magazine. They discussed their debut E.P., Good Neighbours:

Before coming together as Good Neighbours, Oli Fox and Scott Verrill were carving their own paths as solo artists. Their individual experiences shaped the foundation of what would become their unique collaboration, a project defined by creative freedom and a fresh approach to making music. Unlike their previous ventures, where external voices often clouded their artistic vision, Good Neighbours is a space where the duo can fully express themselves, free from outside influence. The result is a raw, unfiltered sound that stands in stark contrast to their earlier work.

From the moment they sent out their first SoundCloud link—intended as a joke—major labels were quick to notice. What started as a playful move turned into a surreal moment, with industry insiders reaching out within hours. Their breakout single “Home” soon went viral on TikTok, catapulting the band into the spotlight. Despite the sudden success, they’ve stayed true to their DIY roots, recording with whatever tools are available—whether that’s an iPhone or a high-end studio mic—infusing their tracks with an authentic, handmade quality that resonates with listeners.

Before Good Neighbours, both of you had solo careers. How did your experiences as individual artists shape what you bring to this project, and what makes Good Neighbours different from your previous ventures?

This is definitely the first time we’ve both made something with no external input whatsoever – we both had really similar paths in our solo projects and got to the point where there were way too many cooks in the kitchen and we lost our vision.

To be honest the best thing about this time round was the fact we had no intention to even start the band and it’s all been centered around the music.

You sent out your first email with a SoundCloud link as a bit of a joke, and within hours, major labels were reaching out. What was going through your minds at that moment? Did it feel like a surreal moment?

Yeah it was super gratifying for people to react so passionately purely from hearing the music. We found a couple emails from LinkedIn for our favourite labels and sent an obnoxious email with the songs. People in the music industry LOVE to know about things before anyone else, so it was just a fun bit for us to disguise it as this totally new project when actually we had crossed paths with most of these people before… people couldn’t figure out if we were like 16 or 40.

Your song “Home” blew up on TikTok and became a massive viral hit. How did you handle the pressure that came with that sudden success, and how did it impact the way you approached creating music afterward?

Luckily we weren’t making music with any goal in mind and first, we were just writing for the sake of fun and trying to be a bit naive again, so before we had even begun writing Home there were a string of songs we made that all felt super cohesive. For us home is like an anomaly that’s helped to kick everything off – we don’t want to force stuff to fit with it and are just trying to stick to writing whatever feels new and fresh.

The DIY approach you’ve taken with the EP is refreshing. Can you share some of the unconventional methods you used to record tracks, like recording drum parts through iPhones, and how this adds to your overall sound?

The whole recording process for us is like bottling up the energy and excitement as fast as we can, instead of thinking about it technically. So we just record with whatever is within an arm’s reach – most of the time it’s our phone and we airdrop parts in, or if we’re in a room with a big fancy mic we’ll use it just cos it’s what’s available. I think you can definitely hear that there are two humans hitting stuff and shouting in a small room in most of our songs, which is cool.

You describe your sound as capturing the ‘coming of age’ feeling. How do you go about creating that emotion in your music, and how do your personal experiences play into the songwriting?

Staying completely honest and raw in the lyrics gives our songs a nice edge to them. We love mirroring this in our recording process by not over thinking anything and being quite brash and fast with how we work.

It’s been a big year for Good Neighbours, with your EP release and performing on major stages. What has been the most rewarding or surreal moment of this journey so far?

It’s all moved so insanely fast that it’s hard to soak it in – we’re working on that… I think because we slogged away in our previous projects for so long, everything this time round feels like a win and we are way more grateful for it. Some of the festival stages like the Radio One Tent at Reading have been the most surreal because those are the ones we dreamed of playing  as teenagers.

Your music has a nostalgic, bittersweet vibe with a touch of darkness in the lyrics despite the uplifting choruses. How do you balance these contrasting emotions in your songwriting?

The blue sky mentality. It’s been a motto of ours when writing. I think it’s stemmed from our hometowns, that aren’t the most beautiful places to look at but when the sun is out it’s a wonderful place to be. So we try and treat the subject matter like that; taking any topics like depression or anxiety and putting them in an uplifting production that kinda opens the conversation up to the audience.

Looking back at your early days in the industry and the challenges you faced, what lessons did you take from those experiences that guide you now with Good Neighbours?

When we first started out in the industry I think it was easier and safer to say yes to others opinions because we thought they knew best. With this project, it’s been us and only us from day one. So we’ve been free of opinions in the creative process which I think has really benefited us and I believe that’s why people are truly buying into the message the project is putting out”.

PHOTO CREDIT: Emma Swann

I am going to take a snippet of an interview DIY published with Good Neighbours from last August. This breakthrough duo who are creating perfect summer Indie bangers, I think that they are going to festival mainstays pretty soon. Designed to get large crowds united and jumping:

Although, from the outside, it might seem like Good Neighbours have come out of nowhere, the pair explain they’d been toiling as solo artists for years before their pathways finally crossed. Verrill muses: “We spent so long in our previous musical lives working away, now we feel like we deserve these big moments and we’re able to take it in our stride a little bit more.”

With that in mind, it doesn’t necessarily feel like they’re short-circuiting the system in heading straight for the bigger stages. “I don’t think either of us were really loving playing alone,” Fox says, looking back. “We both grew up playing in bands. I personally fell out of love with it massively, I didn’t know what music I wanted to make so I just took a step back and became a songwriter just because it meant a bit more creative freedom.”

After the bulk of their workload became Zoom sessions with artists overseas, the duo suddenly realised they had this time to burn themselves. “The whole project was born out of this spare energy that was always sitting between us that we’d never used,” explains Verrill. But those hard yards of working together resulted in a natural chemistry. “Those couple of years were really helpful. We both dabble on all instruments so we just jump in and out of each other’s places and it’s really fluid.”

Given the project was born from a place of fun and freedom, the band plan on keeping it that way, even as the pressures from their fans and the industry begin to grow. “Ultimately we started this project for us as a writing exercise and that’s where all the joy came from,” says Fox. “I don’t think that spark should ever go; as long as we keep the blinkers on in the best way possible then the magic will continue.”

Having largely processed their overnight rise via screen-based metrics and numbers so far, now the pair are relishing the thought of a packed festival season including milestone performances at Reading and Leeds. “Just playing on an outdoor stage feels so right for the music,” says Verrill. Fox nods: “Everyone’s takeaway from the shows we’ve done is that it should be on a bigger stage. It’s heartening to hear that because we want to be that festival band that lifts everyone up.”

Taking stock of their whirlwind six months, the band are trying to take it one day at a time. “We had no plans for the band, we just had a bunch of songs that we loved,” says Fox. “We didn’t have any expectations so we do feel blindsided in the best way possible.” Verrill says they’re thankful to have each other through such a dizzying time: “You celebrate all of the wins together, it feels like the perfect chemistry. Nothing has been overthought, we’re just making it up as we go which is better for our heads not to jump too far ahead; we’re just letting it happen and setting our own benchmarks. Right now, everything is this beautiful happy accident that just keeps working. Let’s just hope that continues and then we’ll be two very happy boys”.

Four more interviews I want to highlight. I will start with one from Rolling Stone from November. They chatted about the concept of guilty pleasures and why they want to feel like teenagers when writing and creating their music. I am new to their music but am really interested to see where they go next.

When you first came together to make music, what drew you in the direction of this bright, melodic indie sound?

Oli: It was just personal taste really.

Scott: We never really liked the pop stuff we were making that much, and no-one references the indie 2000s scene. We’d never delved into it together and realised we have all these mutual bands [that we like].

Oli: It was like a guilty pleasure making it.

Scott: We were desperate to make something fun, and that you felt like a teenager when you were making it.

Guilty pleasures are an interesting concept – it’s only guilty if you allow yourself to feel that it is. Pop-punk is massively in vogue again now thanks to Olivia Rodrigo…

Oli: It’s a bit of a risk, but when we started making it, the whole thing felt like fate. When we started to feel like this could be a band, all the deep cuts of Foster the People were started circulating again online. Kids were finding them for the first time. That was the universe screaming at us and saying, ‘You are the ones that need to bring it to the forefront and really do it’. That really motivated us.

Does your recent debut EP serve as a chronological run through the start of the band?

Oli: It’s kind of chronological. We went on a purple patch of ‘Keep It Up’, ‘Daisies’, ‘Ripple’. ‘Home’ was the last song we wrote for the EP. We had the chorus for ages and never really thought much of it to be honest. Then we put [the teaser] out and it popped off, so we realised we needed to finish it straight away. ‘Home’ was the keys going in the engine and wanting to shout our name as loudly as possible. When ‘Keep It Up’ came out, that’s when we could actually show what we’re about. 

Does the music you’ve been writing since the EP follow a similar sonic path, or are you looking to experiment beyond that?

Scott: We’re trying to experiment a little bit more. We definitely had a formula with the earlier music, which I guess was easy to write. We’re trying to push ourselves a little bit more. It’s a little bit more electronic.

Oli: When you’re playing gigs, you start to see gaps in your discography. As performers, we know where we want the gig to go, but realise that we haven’t even written that song yet. It’s such a good practice of knowing BPMs that we’re missing out, or the feel of a song that we haven’t got yet.

People have been sending us loads of 2000s bands that we remind them of, and we’ve been listening to them and taking a lot of inspiration from that. It’s evolving in front of our eyes. We’re excited to show people.

Scott: We’re trying to keep the naivety that we had before, just making stuff on our laptops between the two of us and trying to keep it janky.

The lyrics of Good Neighbours are very personal – was it nice to be able to write from that place after years of writing for others?

Oli: The weirdest thing as a songwriter is having a message that you know you want to say, but you feel bad inflicting it onto another artist. Or there’s a real nugget that they could have, but they just can’t relate to it. That was a bit of a struggle for me as a writer, and I always wondered why that was. I guess this band pointed out that maybe I’d needed to just say it as the artist.

That’s been a real help for me, personally and  mentally, to have a space to talk about struggle and then see it react on a big scale with people around the world. It’s been a real acceptance of stuff that I’ve been dealing with personally, which has been a really lovely part of the project. When people come up to you after the gig and tell you that you’ve helped them through a really hard time, you hear about that happening with other artists, but when it happens to you for the first time, you’re like, ‘Oh shit, I can actually make a difference, or lighten someone else’s load”.

Even though Chappell Roan won the BBC Sound of 2025 poll, you think it should have gone to an act like Good Neighbours. Less well-known than her, it would have been more appropriate, though they were named among the longlist. NME spoke with the rising duo. They highlighted how they want to be ‘that’ festival band:

Are the lyrics to ‘Home’ autobiographical?

Fox: “A little. The chorus came to me at a time when I’d returned home for a funeral in Essex for a few days and I was feeling awful about home as a location. When I returned to London, I hugged my then-girlfriend and my whole body just relaxed. I had this visceral sensation and there was this feeling that maybe home is not simply a place; it can be a person too. That became the sentiment of the song.”

Social media has played a huge role in your breakthrough. How do you feel about it?

Verrill: “When we started, we weren’t even sure if Good Neighbours was going to be a proper project, so we certainly weren’t sure we were going to do [social media], but everyone was telling us to use it. In the end, we stuck ‘Home’ up at the last minute to see what would happen.”

Fox: “I think we’ve realised that some things are meant to do really well on social media. That also means that other things don’t quite work and it’s not always obvious why. That’s why I believe live music is undefeated. There’s a fizz in the air when you’re in a venue that you can’t necessarily translate through two speakers at the bottom of a phone.”

Where does the name Good Neighbours come from?

Verrill: “It was originally just a joke.”

Fox: “Yeah. The name came from the fact we were nextdoor neighbours in the studio. Because Scott and I have had projects before, we wanted to test the industry a little bit, so we sent our demos out under the name ‘Good Neighbours’.”

Verrill: :And it was a really obnoxious email as well!”

Fox: “Yeah. The subject heading was ‘You should listen to this’ accompanied by a SoundCloud link. That was all it said. But it sparked a bit of interest that day and we quickly realised that something was happening – more than we ever imagined it would.”

Verrill: “It was a cold email as well. It wasn’t through any of our industry links.”

Did that make you more nonchalant with your approach than you’d usually be?

Fox: “Definitely. Both of us have experienced this industry in the past. You become attuned to thinking, ‘I’ve had my shot now’. Labels talk about it a lot within meetings. They say, ‘You did well, but it didn’t quite click’. I think we both had a ‘fuck it’ mentality going into Good Neighbours, thinking that if they don’t know it’s us we’ll just see if they say anything. When they all replied, it was as though our band pseudonym worked!”

Where are you guys at with your debut album?

Verrill: “We’re just finishing our album at the moment. We’re set to release that in April next year.”

Fox: “We’re trying to figure the album out. I don’t think we’re currently tied to any sort of running order. We’ve got a lot of songs, so it’s a case of whittling it down. We want our album to establish this world we’re building: one of big, blue-sky energy; something that people want to see live. We want to be that festival band”.

Prior to getting to an interview from January, I am going to come to one from Wonderland. from later last year. This amazing and hungry duo are primed for big things. Good Neighbours are already making such an impact. Do make sure that you follow their progress:

You’ve both had journeys in the industry prior to Good Neighbours. Talk us through them? What did you learn? 

I think it’s taught both of us a lot. We maybe listened to one too many opinions last time round, and both ended up with projects we didn’t love. Where as this time we kep the whole project a secret until we truly truly loved it. It’s really help us standout from the rest I think.

What do you think it is about your debut single “Home” that connected so widely with listeners?

I think the song came at a time when people needed to hear that? Home is a title that’s been done to death, but after a festive period with loved ones and in the uncertainty of the new year, I think maybe everyone was a little tender and missing their roots. I guess we opened up the conversation to that online with our tik toks, and people wanted to talk?

Congratulations on your debut EP! How are you feeling about the release?

Really excited for it to be out there. We’d love to say “glad it’s finally out” but it’s hardly been anytime at all since we finished it. I really think it’s a great representation of us and what we want people to get from the Good Neighbours world.

Talk us through the process of creating the body of work? Was it smooth sailing? What were the challenges?

It was frustratingly easy, we had a real flukey run of writing whilst we were in December and January, Writing “Keep It Up”, “Daisies” and “Weekend Boy” in back-to-back sessions. “Bloom” and “Home” were added late to the EP when we wrote them in January and they truly elevate the whole thing.

What topics do you cover across the EP?

The whole EP was written in as honest fashion as possible, we cover our lives in London. From the ups and downs of jobs we hate working in order to make rent, to the people we’ve loved and the people we’ve lost. It’s a mixed bag of truth, and we’re really happy that people have resonated with everything so far.

What do you hope the work achieves? 

I think we honestly just hope people hear it and want to see it come to life on stage. We wanna play even more gigs in 2025 and really bring the neighbourhood into fruition.

What’s to come next? This year, and beyond?

Who knows, we’re trying to stay a little starry-eyed and take everything as it comes. Maybe a track will come out of the blue, maybe it wont haha. Our main focus is gonna be nailing a couple more tracks for our album and playing some very fun tours!

To you, what does success look like?

Success was never in our minds when we started good neighbours, the goal was to write some songs in our little studio and maybe play a couple of gigs to our mates. So in terms of a shiny golden success trophy I don’t think we know what that looks like, so we will just get our heads down and work work work, so that in a few years time we can look back and be pleasantly surprised”.

I am ending on an interview from DORK. Included in their Hype List 2025, they celebrated a duo who are crafting Indie smashes that aim to unite a generation looking for connection. It is interesting knowing more about Good Neighbours:

Home’ was properly released in January 2024 and was followed by ‘Keep It Up’ in April. The five-track riot of ‘Good Neighbours’ dropped in October after a whole lot of live shows. “We were worried about being tied down as a TikTok band, so we’ve been trying to do as many gigs as humanly possible,” says Scott. “We want to showcase the whole character of the band.”

Their nostalgic indie-pop sounds like a sunny day, but there’s a darker edge to it. “Scott’s production is always blue sky vibes so it’s been nice to weigh that down with lyrics that talk about things like grief. It’s so cathartic to sing these big, expressive songs that mean so much to us,” says Oli, taking inspiration from tracks like Bleachers’ hopeful anthem ‘Better’.

“We didn’t talk about it when we first started but the message of Good Neighbours has become really clear over the past few months. We both grew up in small towns where it felt taboo to talk about your emotions, so hopefully being really heart on the sleeve with the lyrics can start conversations.” The fact the music is so energetic, joyful and huge makes it easier as well. “There’s something powerful about songs people can wail to, if they need it,” says Oli. “Our shows really have become this release for people.”

Good Neighbours are trying not to get carried away, though. “We don’t really talk about the future because we don’t want to overthink it,” says Scott. “We’re just taking things week by week.”

“We’ve seen plenty of bands come and go within the year, so longevity is the main goal,” says Oli, though playing Glastonbury, a headline show at Brixton Academy, and a summer spent playing festivals are all up there. “I think we’re way bigger than we currently are, in terms of aspirations and the way things could go for us. We’re not tied to a single genre either, so there’s a lot of different directions we can move in, which is fun.”

“The message of Good Neighbours has become really clear over the past few months”

And their next move is a debut album. They’ve already been testing a lot of new music at live shows, and Good Neighbours are planning on getting the record out by summer.

“The blueprint is the same, but there are definitely some new vibes,” says Oli, teasing a more experimental album that takes influence from overlooked 00s bands like Animal Collective and The Go Team. “I forgot how abstract some of that music was. We’ve been noticing the pockets of our shows where people could be moving a bit more as well. There’s  just no better feeling than seeing a whole room moving as one, so I think it’ll be quite a beat-led record.”

Releasing music as Good Neighbours never felt scary before. “There’s fear now we’ve had some success, though,” admits Oli. “Before, when things didn’t work out, it was easy to take because it felt like I was wasting that opportunity anyway. I’ve never had things go this well before and you just really want to hold on to that feeling,” he adds. “I guess we just have to trust that people connected to the music because it was us having fun. If we keep doing that, everything should be golden”.

A duo with incredible chemistry and sensational music, if you are not aware of Good Neighbours yet then make sure that you connect with them. I love what they are putting out into the world. These good friends are putting out into the world…

GOOD vibes.

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