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From: IED0DXM%UCLAMVS.BITNET@wiscvm.wisc.edu
Date: Sun, 08 Mar 87 14:52 PST
Subject: KT Bad News; other KT news; and the Convention Interview, Part 3
KT Bad News: This is a sad day for American and Canadian Kate Bush fans, and, indeed, for Kate fans throughout the world. "Break-Through", the long-running Kate fanzine begun by Dale Somerville of Hartney, Manitoba in 1982, has folded after the publication of twelve historic issues. After a hiatus of a little less than a year in 1984, the fanzine re-surfaced in a newsprint format under the guidance of Dale's wife, Robyn Carstairs. Unfortunately, Robyn has now left the marriage and disappeared into thin air, leaving Dale completely disillusioned by his three erstwhile loves, Robyn, Kate, and Jesus... (In the last two issues of the fanzine Robyn and Dale infused the subject of Kate Bush with born-again Christianity, a development much criticized by the publication's readers. Dale's devotion to God seems to have gone the way of his dedication to Robyn and to Kate: viz., to Hell.) The unprofitability of "Break-Through" was not a major factor in the publication's demise, since it had always cost far more to produce than its subscription revenue brought in (Dale is very wealthy). So, not only are Kate fans in the Western hemisphere without a fanzine, but they have lost one of Kate's most generous and hard-working fans. Whatever their peculiarities of character (and these were considerable), the team of Robyn and Dale was an asset to the KommuniTy which will be sorely missed by serious followers of Kate's progress -- and that of her fans -- in America. However, all is not lost! Allan Balliott, whom many Kate fans in this country will associate with the name Intergalactic Garage, a mail-order company which specializes in Kate Bush merchandise, has definite plans to launch a new American Kate 'zine, to be called "After the Party" (a title presumably paraphrased from the line "Away from the party" in Kate's song "Under the Ivy"). For any L-H's who would like to contribute, there is still time: the first issue will probably appear in the late spring. Allan can be reached at: Intergalactic Garage P.O. Box 7323 Washington, D.C. 20044 (703) 241-0473 Other as-yet healthy Kate fora are listed below. The Kate Bush Club P.O. Box 120 Welling, Kent DA16 3DS "Homeground" (note new address) c/o Peter Fitzgerald-Morris, Krystina Fitzgerald-Morris and Dave Cross P.O. Box 176 Orpington, Kent BR5 3NA "Under the Ivy" 55 Burnside Road Dagenham, Essex RM8 1XH "Dreamtime" c/o Gaye Godfrey 46 Gladstone Avenue South Perth 6151 Western Australia Other KT News: According to the latest issue of the Kate Bush Club Newsletter, at least one fan has successfully deciphered the first six words of the twelve-word message in the "backwards" track from "Watching You Without Me". As he is certain that the perceptive party in question is not himself, IED looks to the world Love-Hounds community for further clues. Please make some effort to figure out the solution, folks. The passage in question starts at 2:19 into the track (using a CD), and lasts about thirty seconds. It begins right after the Morse code passage, and is identifiable as a message sung in octaves, with tambourine and an occasional "Yip!" in the background. The first word of the twelve-word message is "Don't". This is still not nearly enough to make the solution easy, so please help out -- let's have an argument about something truly important in Love-Hounds, for a change! Now, the Convention Interview, Part Three M: Do you get a lot of ideas from reading books, and from films? KT: I think whenever I have the time to read I'm always inspired by it. The problem is that I just shun it, I just think that there are more important things to do with my time. It's rubbish really, but I do always feel guilty when I sit down and read a book, because I think I should be doing other things. It takes me such a long time to read, but in a way there is no other experience like it, an intimate relationship between yourself and a book. It's incredible, and it's very sad that things like television and films, although encouraging books by using their scripts for films, are taking something away from that whole world of books. But particular films do inspire me. I've always had a television, I always used to watch lots and lots of television when I was a kid, and I really enjoy watching films. M: Can I just take you back to your beginnings, when you started off in the business? You were very young. <Mild laughter from convention audience.> KT: I was eighteen when I made the first album. M: You'd been writing before that? KT: Yes, I had. M: When you first started writing songs, did you ever see yourself being as famous as you are now? KT: Absolutely not. M: Was it something that you wanted? KT: No...I don't think so. As a child the idea of being a star was attractive, as I think it is to every child; they love things that are larger than life, and dreams and fantasies, and most children never grow out of it to the day they die. But I think I didn't even consider the idea of being a famous so-called songwriter-singer. I think that as a very young child, perhaps I aspired to becoming something like a great actress. I think I was very enamoured by people like Judy Garland, I thought she was incredible, so beautiful. But no, I never ever thought this. But I did hope I would have involvement with music and that one day I might be able to sing and write songs. M: When you were writing the songs at that time, did you feel that they were different in any way, or just your songs? KT: It's very hard to remember how I felt at that time, but it was something I enjoyed doing immensely. It was my release from school, and if I couldn't go out and it was a wet day, or there wasn't anything good on television, that would be my favourite place to go: to the piano. M: And start writing songs? KT: It was a very important relationship and still is to me. I found something that I think I've never really found since, when I first started writing songs, that I could actually create something out of nothing, and it was a very special discovery, especially if you are lucky enough to make it at a young age, as I was. M: Let's talk about "Cloudbusting". How did you get Donald Sutherland to be part of your video? KT: Well, I think I'm very lucky, really. He was the first choice. He was perfect, he couldn't have been better, really, to play the part; and it was a matter really of finding out how to contact him. And through a very nice man called Barry Richardson I managed to make contact with Donald, and asked him and then he said yes, he was interested. And it all went from there, and it all happened very quickly. I must have contacted him only ten days to two weeks before we actually started shooting, and it just happened to co-incide perfectly with a few days that he had off in a very busy schedule. M: You'd never met him before? KT: No, it was a complete privilege to work with him. M: Why did you want him in particular? Was it because of the way he looked, or because of the fact that he's a great actor? KT: Yes, he is a great actor, and having watched actually how he worked in our situation I just have to re-iterate that. He's just incredible, so professional, so patient, and he helped me immensely. But I'd never really acted as such, and I just had to RE-act to him. He was wonderful. M: You say Donald Sutherland helped you in making the video. You mean acting advice? KT: No, not even advice, his pure presence. He puts out such an energy of sensitivity to the situation that I just had to re-act to him. As far as I was concerned, whenever we were shooting, he WAS my dad. He's wonderful. M: It's almost like a short film, that video. <Laughter from audience.> KT: That's exactly what we wanted. I felt that it was based on the song, which was inspired by a book, and it is a genuine sense of magic emotion and sadness that came initially from that book. And it was so important for us to do justice to it. We all worked very hard to try and create that. M: What was the book? KT: It's called "A Book of Dreams", and it's written by Peter Reich. Unfortunately it's out of print, and I suggest lots of people write to the publishers and <imitating indignant MP> demand that it be put back into print immediately! M: What about the rain machine? Was it your idea, the way the video actually turned out? KT: It was very much my idea, but a lot of ideas came from Terry Gilliam, and together we wrote the story board, and the director Julian Doyle put an awful lot of work into it, and it was fantastic to work with them. Everyone was just so inspired by the story really, and everyone was moved by it, which in a way was the most important thing for everyone involved with it. A great experience. M: How long did it take to do it? KT: To shoot it took four to five days, to prepare it took about four weeks, and all in all including a lot of editing time that Julian spent, I suppose about eight weeks, which is a very long time for a video. M: I'm not going to ask for a figure, but I know that videos cost an awful lot of money to make nowadays. This must have been very expensive? KT: It was no more expensive than the first one we made. M: Which leaves me totally in the dark! KT: I think honestly if people knew how much it cost and what we got out of that...it's phenomenal, what we got for the budget. End of part three; conclusion to follow shortly. -- Andrew Marvick