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[Love & Anger]
[Gaffaweb]
KT news: ^^^^^^^ Item One: The Whole Story slipped to #108 on Billboard's LP chart, and to #97 on the Cashbox chart. Item Two: Kate Bush is God. (Woops! Wrong section of this posting.) Now, for the mail-bag: ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ In answer to "Babooshka"'s questions re album cover art for Kate Bush's first LP, The Kick Inside: There are actually at least FOUR different album cover designs for this album. The only one officially sanctioned by Kate was the UK release's design, which shows Kate hanging from an Oriental kite in front of (or "in") an enormous eye (a clear reference to "The Man With the Child in his Eyes"). The "windy-waily" landscape photograph on the back cover, taken by Kate's brother John Carder Bush, was embellished by her bass player/demo-engineer/boy-friend Del Palmer with a little free-drawn figure of an Oriental man with a Kite (a figure more or less echoed on the back cover of Never for Ever, in another of John Carder Bush's photos). Del's sketch includes the first depiction of the KT logo, which has been included in more and more obscure hiding-places on each of her subsequent albums. The most common U.S. release of the LP features a photo of Kate in blue-jeans, and is sometimes called the "country-western" cover. The photo was chosen because EMI-America felt it might attract American customers, and because they believed the official cover was too weird for us poor dumb hicks to cotton to. There was also a Canadian (Harvest label) cover design, which had a darker, more "glamourous", soft-focus close-up of Kate on the cover, framed in a brighter red than on the other covers. This design was, in fact, also used by EMI-America for the first pressing of the U.S. release of the album, but they quickly phased it out in the States, in favour of the "country-western" cover. Finally, there is an entirely different design on the Japanese edition of The Kick Inside. On its front cover, Kate is shown "pouting" (anyway, that's what the anti-Kate press called it) in a tight, low-cut pink body-stocking. The photo became well known in England in 1978 because it was used as a promotional poster to sell the album, and because the original photo included a "risque" view of the outline of Kate's breasts (later edited down for the Japanese LP version.) The back cover design, as well as the actual music, are both exactly the same in all editions. There are no alternate LP mixes or extra LP tracks, or anything like that (although the original UK single of "The Man With the Child in his Eyes" featured a spoken introduction, and there is now, of course, a "new vocal" version of "Wuthering Heights"). So, unless you are desperate to acquire every design, or to get hold of the first of Kate's several vinyl- inscribed secret messages (available on the UK edition only), it doesn't really matter which version you have. For the record, IED did not overlook an L-H's recent request for a list of all the KT video-clips known to exist. It's a very tall order, and one likely to stir up worms, since most of the stuff that's not "official" is more or less rare and "in demand". Further enquiries should be made to IED personally. In the meantime, he's trying to type up a video KaTalogue... Welcome to the obsession, Phil Stephens, good to have you with us! IED has spent about an hour listening to the "X4" secret message with your suggestion ("I don't like much when they give me an infinity of instruments") in mind. By the way, we are listening to the same passage, according to your description of its location. And it's not, as far as IED has ever been aware, a backwards message; there's probably no need to look in that direction. Now, not wishing to antagonize another KT fan only moments after making his acquaintance, IED hopes you won't be offended if he admits that he can't hear your phrase, or anything like it, in the mix. First, there simply aren't that many syllables, period. At the very most, there are thirteen, but IED hears only twelve, and they are more distinct than ever: "I bet my mum's gonna give me a little toy!" Your message contains sixteen syllables. Whether IED has the message word-for-word correct or not, he is absolutely certain that it's not just something "accidentally recorded between sessions." It's definitely Kate's own spoken voice; and Kate is almost certainly saying something very deliberate; something having a specific personal, emotionally associative meaning (very much like her line from "And Dream of Sheep": "Come here with me now," which Kate has now explained the significance of in the Zwort Finkle interview). About your suggestion that Love-Hounds be split into Kate Bush and non-Kate Bush fora, IED hopes nothing so drastic is necessary. There were no floods of mail demanding that IED be banished from L-Hs, and he certainly has no wish to be ostracized from the midst of those fortunate few members of the group who seem to be less obsessed than he. So until such time as an organized anti-Kate (or anti-IED) campaign is mounted in this arena, let's all continue just to scroll past the postings we don't want to read, whether those be the Kate-related bits, or the other pointless, pathetic, heathen garbage...! -- Andrew (Ev'rybody's pal!)