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another Kate Bush interview

From: IED0DXM%OAC.UCLA.EDU@MITVMA.MIT.EDU
Date: Mon, 21 Nov 88 16:55 PST
Subject: another Kate Bush interview


 To: Love-Hounds
 From: Andrew Marvick (IED)
 Subject: another Kate Bush interview

     The following interview was conducted by Danny Baker for
_New_Musical_Express_ in the fall of 1979. IED will try to
refrain from commenting during the text, but he must say at
the outset that this interview must rank as one of the most
hostile and unprofessional to date. Mr. Baker is clearly
out of his league when discussing with an artist of Kate's
intelligence and sensibilty any matters relating to art.
     Furthermore, he admits that he is not familiar with most
of her work; and although he also makes it clear that he did
not see the live performances, he is quite content to repeat
his colleague's foolish conclusions about them. He makes an
offensive and narrow-minded assumption that is all too common among
the English music press: namely, that his readership are in agreement
with his essentially Philistine and socialist attitude toward art. He
therefore stupidly assumes that those comments by Kate which tend to
dispute such an attitude are worthy only of ridicule. Finally, in stating,
with typically misplaced pride, that he has "cut about a hundred"
of Kate's "wows" and "amazings", he inadvertantly undermines the
journalistic legitimacy of his entire text. For if these words
(so casually counted) were deemed unworthy of the readers' attention,
what else of Kate's speech may have been "cut", as well?
It is interviews such as these that explain Kate's great
reluctance, these days, to speak to the press--especially the
English music press.
     Despite these lamentable transgressions on Mr. Baker's
part, Kate manages to offer several stunningly brilliant, thoughtful
and challenging ideas for the careful and openminded reader to
entertain. We can only guess at how many others were overlooked
or rejected by Mr. Baker before his article went to press.
     In the interest of fairness, IED would like to let |>oug
know that he has noted Kate's comments below about fans on the street
etc. As far as IED knows, this is the only instance in which
Kate has expressed such sentiments, and the reliability of the
transcription is certainly not beyond question. Still, it's worth
noting her apparent ambivalence about this subject.

"_Wow,_Wow,_Wow,_Amazing,_Amazing,_Ama--"_(_and_that's_only_at_the_supermarket)

               Kate Bush puts the problems of western society
             in perspective. Danny Baker hears the Pop Goddess
                    tolkein about her favourite hobbits

     EMI: Three letters that have come to represent
"the enemy" in rock'n'roll's war games.
EMI House rambles like a country home with a thousand
warrens of ministry--type boring pools and divisions.
The guard on the reception listens to my appointment
with Kate Bush with all the emotion of a weighing machine
being told a hard luck story. Like everyone else, I get
told to take a seat while he talks, unheard, into one
of the extension phones. About ten minutes later I'm
led down and through EMI House and up to a corridor down
which the _Daily Mirror's_ Pauline McLeod is striding.
She's out--I'm in.
     Kate Bush is sipping Perrier water from an elegant
glass. I tell her she'll get a royal old bulge if
she carries on guzzling the gin like that, and she laughs
naturally. She's far more attractive than I'd ever thought--
not being the globe's most rabid fan of the woman, y'understand--although
quite short.
     _NME_ had been after a KB interview for a while but, so
I'd learned on leaving the office, her management were less than
obliging. Me? Well, the truth is that I had no opinions
about Kate at all. I knew the singles, but I really couldn't
find it in me to go any deeper, to check out her roots (he
said, nicking in this piece's most contrived gag). I still
don't...such was our meeting.
     Hey Kate. Do you feel obliged to sing like that these
days?
     "What? You mean..."
     Y'know, like you could age the nation's glassblowers.
     "Oh, yeah, sure. I mean, I don't feel obliged--that is me.
See, like in a recording studio, when it's all dark and there's
just you and a couple of guys at the desk, well, you get really
so involved that to actually plan it becomes out of the
question. It just flows that way. As a writer I just try
to express an idea. I can't possibly think of old songs of mine
because they're past now, and quite honestly I don't like them
anymore."
     Doing _Wuthering_Heights_ must've been murder then.
     "Well, I was still promoting that up until 18 months
after I'd had it released. Abroad I was still promoting it
on TV, where I was able to do it backwards and (she mimes it
whilst picking her nose nonchalantly)...just weird."
     Have you still got people around you who'll tell you
something's rubbish?
     "My brother Jay, who's been with me since I was writing
stuff that really embarasses me--he'd let me know for sure...
Yeah, there's a few I can really trust."
     She smiles again and I was warm to her. Mind you,
she speaks my language, so I could be sympathetic because
she's one of the South London rock mafia. I ask her what it's
like to be paraded in the _Sun_ and suchlike
as the Sex Goddess of POP!
     "Hmmm. You see, you do a very straight interview with
these people, without ever mentioning sex, but of course that's
the only angle they write it from when you read it. That kind of
freaks me out, because the public tend to believe it..."
     Asking a few more questions, I begin to realise that
this isn't the kind of stuff that weekloads of _Gasbags_
<The _NME_ letters page> are made of. I'm searching for a
key probe, but with Kate Bush--well, there's not likely to
be anything that will cause the twelve-inch banner-headline
stuff, is there now? I recall Charlie Murray's less than
enthusiastic review of her Palladium shows, which were
apparently crammed with lame attempts to "widen" the audience's
artistic horizons--y'know, lots of people dressed as violins
and carrots an' that. CSM reckons it was one of the most
condescending gigs in the history of music. Kate had read
the review, but she didn't break down.
     "Just tell me one thing," she said in normal tones. "I mean,
was he actually at the show that night?"
     Yeah, sure. I remember he told me he'd spent a week there
one Tuesday.
     "Oh, well, in that case that's just his opinion and he's
entitled to it."
     We all smiled again, and Kate asked me if I'd seen _Alien_.
I wondered if she got out much herself.
     "Well, I don't get out to parties often. I have this thing
about wasting time..."
     Oh really? Which thing is that?
     "You know, I nag at myself all the time for being a waster.
I think, 'Gosh, you could be creating the world or something.'"
     Well, that certainly seems a worthwhile thing to
do, all right, although it has in fact been done before. Y'see,
occasionally Kate allows the poet and all-round Tyrannosaurus
Rex dreamer to slip out, a sucker for _Lord_of_the_Rings_.
For a start I have cut about a hundred "wows" and "amazings"
from her speech. She talks at length about how important she
feels it is to be "creating" all the time, and when I asked
her if she looked to the news for any song inspiration I got
this curious answer:
     "Well, whenever I see the news, it's always the same
depressing things. War's hostages and people's arms hanging
off with all the tendons hanging out, you know. So I tend
not to watch it much. I prefer to go and see a movie or
something, where it's all put much more poetically. People
getting their heads blown off in slow motion, very beautifully."
     She grins broadly again. Kate is an artist through and
through, seeing the world as a crazy canvas on which to skip.
Her outrageous charm covers the fact that we are in the midst
of a hippy uprising of the most devious sorts. I approach her
on the question of being a woman in pop music once more. How
do her workmates treat her?
     "Well, when I started, I felt really conscious of being
female amongst all these fellows. But these days I feel like
one of the lads."
     That doesn't sound very healthy.
     "Oh, yeah, it is. When I'm working, it's really important
for me to get on with it in that way. But at the same time,
I sense that they're very respectful, because they make me
aware of being a woman, and will lay off the dirty jokes and that..."
     Incredible. Do you find men in awe of you?
     "Socially? Well, I find that--with people that I haven't
seen for a couple of years, because they won't treat me as a human
being. And people in the street will ask for autographs and
also won't treat you as human, but...ah...sometimes I get really
scared. Sometimes when I'm going to the supermarket to get
the coffee and cat litter, I get freaked out and see all
these people staring, and you turn around and there's
like forty people all looking at you...and when you go around
the corner, they're all following you! You start freaking out
like a trapped animal.
     "However, I don't notice guys doing it on a personal level.
Maybe some will keep their distance, but that may be because
they don't get off on me.
     "You see, when I first got started, I thought that I'd
better watch out for these rip-off artists and stick with old
friends. But it's amazing that since I've been in the business,
I've made many more real friends, especially on a working basis.
I find that I can get so involved with a guy working with me--and
usually on a platonic level, which is great! That's so special,
like these two minds linked on this one project. And that is
a very beautiful thing that I'd never have experienced if I
had not been in this business.
     "And what's more, I'll keep these friends for life, because
not only do they care for you, but they give me information
and their teachings. What more could I ask for?"
     Do you think there's a danger of becoming detached inside
music?
     "Probably. I don't read newspapers, and I've said I don't
watch the news. I love books, but I don't read much.
     "What I do is I get people to read to me, and I put the
stories in my head."
     A bit like a hat, I suppose.
     "And films. I watch an awful lot of TV films."
     Do you think you might be avoiding real life?
     "Well, no, because I think that all these heavy issues--equality
among blacks and whites, etc.--have all been done before,
and if you do it now, it has to be very cleverly handled.
It all gets too negative and cliched. So I find that, working
with fantasy, I can handle the same issues, perhaps, but in
a more positive way."
     Don't you think that albums can make you feel and think
sometimes without er...pussyfooting? I remember the first time
I heard The Clash, and...
     "Oh, yeah, some of these new bands are amazing. They're
just springing up. The Police are just amazing..."
     Here, listen, I think you've got the picture. Kate Bush,
to meet, is a happy, charming woman that can totally win your
heart. But afterwards on tape, when she's not there and
you actually listen to all this, well...golly gosh. Don't
lose sleep, old mates, it's just pop music-folk and the
games they spin. Wow.
     This was Chicken Licken, Cosmic News, Atlantis, goodnight, man...