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From: nrc@cbema.att.com
Date: Fri, 4 May 90 8:39:58 EDT
Subject: Submitted For Your Approval: _Saxophone Song_
Original-From: Richard Caldwell <cbema!nrc>
I'm reposting this since my first attempt didn't seem to come through.
Apologies to anyone who gets multiple copies. So just what it the
address to mail submissions to now, anyway?
Well, it's taken me almost two months but I finally have a first draft
of my annotations to _Saxophone Song_ to submit for your approval.
Please let me know what you think about the ideas included below.
This is your chance to point out what's wrong and what's missing. Once
we've discussed it and it has been revised to a point that most people
are satisfied with it I'll post the final version and someone can place
it in the archives.
My goal is to provide a file that most Kate fans can turn to and say,
"This presents a fairly complete and reasonable picture of what this
song might be about." In order to do this I need your feedback.
Please email or post as you see fit.
=============================================================
SAXOPHONE SONG
HISTORY
_Saxophone Song_ appeared for the first time on _The Kick
Inside_, Kate's first release. This is the only official
release of this song. The song was recorded well before
rest of the album and is believed to have also been known
as _Berlin_ in it's early stages.
The Kick Inside.....................EMC 3223......02/17/78
The Kick Inside (picture disc).....EMPC 3223......02/17/78
BACKGROUND
"_Saxophone Song_ is one of Kate's earliest compositions.
She made the final recording, exactly as it was
released, in 1975, when she was 16 or 17, and there were
no later changes. Its subject is pretty self-
explanatory, though perhaps it should be said for the
record that Kate had never been to Berlin, so far as
anyone is aware! She probably wrote the song about the
same time as _The Man With the Child in His Eyes_, which
is to say when she was about 14."
- Andrew Marvick
While the song does seem to be self explanatory, Kate's fans
know that her songs can often be far more then they seem.
In the third issue of the Kate Bush Club newsletter (November
1979) a fan asked Kate if _Saxophone Song_ was written about
David Bowie. Kate replied:
"The song isn't about David Bowie. I wrote it about the
instrument, not the player, at a time when I really
loved the sound of the saxophone -- I still do."
One might find reason to be skeptical that the song is about
the instrument and not the player since the lyrics repeatedly
address the sax player in the second person. Kate's remarks
in an EMI Records press kit make the intent of the song
somewhat more clear.
"I wrote _The Saxophone Song_ [sic] because, for me, the
saxophone is a truly amazing instrument. Its sound is
very exciting -- rich and mellow. It sounds like a
female."
- Kate
_EMI Music Talk_
So there can be little doubt that the saxophone player in
_Saxophone Song_ is just a character in a story that Kate is
telling to express her feelings about the sound of a
saxophone. While some think that the player's role is
simply that of a musician who can stir the soul with the
sound of his saxophone, others believe that the protagonist
does have feelings for the player. It may be that these
feelings have been aroused by the sound of his saxophone.
In portraying the rich, mellow, feminine nature of the
saxophone Kate virtually creates a third character in her
story. Some suggest that Kate might even be creating a
symbolic love triangle between her three characters.
All of this may relate to Kate's view of art . "Don't you
think Art is a tremendous sensual-sexual expression? I feel
that energy often...the driving force is probably not the
right way to put it," said Kate in a November 1989 interview
with _Q_ magazine.
_Saxophone Song_ is also interesting because it shows Kate's
remarkable ability to create atmosphere with her words,
music and vocals even at a very early stage in her career.
In 1980 Kate wrote a some brief remarks to accompany the
sheet-music published in the book _The Best of Kate Bush_.
On _Saxophone Song_ she comments, "All the people in the club
are babbling, but the instrument is talking, and I can but
listen."
ANNOTATIONS
SAXOPHONE SONG
Words and Music By Kate Bush
The sounds heard during the beginning of the song are "whale
song", the sounds made by whales underwater. These sounds
are also heard at the beginning and end of the previous
track, _Moving_, and continue into the introduction of
_Saxophone Song_. It's not clear whether Kate had any
particular reason for including these sounds.
You'll find me in a Berlin bar
In a corner, brooding
We note here that Kate's character is brooding. A variety
of explanations have been suggested for this. It could be
that she knows that she can never really have the object of
her desires because she loves him not for who he is but for
the music that he creates. Perhaps it is because of the
virtual love triangle that some feel is being suggested
between herself, the player and the instrument.
It may be that the reason is completely unrelated to the
song itself but that it serves to show that the sound of
the saxophone can touch her no matter what her mood.
You know that I go very quiet
When I am listening to you
There's something special indeed
In all the places where I've seen you shine, boy
There's something very real in how I feel, honey
Here she seems to tell how the musician and his saxophone
make her feel. She seems to be saying that these feelings
are not just the those of simply enjoying the music but
that there is something "special" and "very real" in these
feelings. Those who love Kate's music can certainly
empathize with this with this.
(Chorus)
It's in me, it's in me - and you know it's for real
Tuning in your saxophone
Daba-daba-doo
The candle burning over your shoulder
Is throwing shadows on your saxophone
A surly lady in tremor
Here Kate develops the metaphor of the lady and the
saxophone. The saxophone is referred to as "A surly lady in
tremor". Some have suggested that this is specifically
comparing the sound of the saxophone to the sensual singing
voice of woman. In this case, "in tremor" may be referring
to the tremolo of such a voice.
A few have noted that "A surly lady in tremor" suggests a
woman in orgasm and the sounds that she might make. These
might be compared both to a sensual singing voice and to the
feminine sound of the saxophone.
The stars that climb from her bowels
Those stars that make towers on vowels.
Evidently these "stars" are the sounds that the saxophone and
the "lady in tremor" make.
You'll never know that you had all of me
You'll never see the poetry you stirred in me
Of all the stars I've seen that shine so brightly
I've never known or felt, inside myself, so rightly
(Chorus)
One might consider these final four verses to be a capsule summary
of the entire song. They seem to express not only the deep
feelings that the player and his saxophone have stirred in the
listener, but also that the musician and the instrument will never
know of these feelings, either because they will never meet or
because the feelings themselves are to deep to describe.
PERFORMERS
Drums: Barry de Souza
Bass: Bruce Lynch
Guitars: Paul Keogh, Alan Parker
Keyboards: Andrew Powell
Saxophone: Alan Skidmore
Electric Guitar: Paul Keogh
CONTRIBUTORS
Doug Alan
Richard Caldwell
Andrew Marvick
John M. Relph
Jenn Turney
COMPILATION
First draft compiled and edited by N. Richard Caldwell,
May 2, 1990. Please send your comments, suggestions
and annotations to nrc@cbnews or att!cbnews!nrc
==============================================================
"Don't drive too slowly." Richard Caldwell
att!cbnews!nrc
nrc@cbnews