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From: rhill@netrun.cts.com (ronald hill)
Date: Sun, 06 Jun 93 02:03:02 PDT
Subject: ########### KATE BUSH LIVE BOOTLEGS PART I ##############
To: Love-Hounds@uunet.UU.NET
Comments: Cloudbuster
Organization: NetRunner's Paradise BBS, San Diego CA
KATE BUSH LIVE BOOTLEGS
LAST UPDATED: June 6, 1993
by Andrew Marvick (IED), Ronald Hill, Doug Allen, Woj, and
Barth Richards.
This is a compilation of various messages from Love-Hounds,
done by Ron Hill who takes responsibilty for any errors that may have
occured during editing.
There are five main sources for the material on the live
bootlegs.
1) The official _Hammersmith_Odeon_ videotape. The best
sounding boots simply are recorded off of the laser-disk.
The official video tape contains only one hour out of the two
and a half hour show. The un-edited film has only been seen at the
1985 convention. So far, no audio recordings off of the un-edited film
have surfaced.
2) Fan-recorded tapes from the Bristol, Paris, Manchester,
London Palladium, and Amsterdam concerts. There is also the
unidentified (and undentifiable) "Temple Of Truth" tape (see bootleg
entry). Note that there is only one known tape from each of these
concerts, although they have been released in different formats. The
sound _is_ abysmal, there are no bootlegs of the 1979 concerts that
have good sound. The best-sounding one that includes all the songs and
incidental bits and pieces is probably the Manchester concert (a two-LP
set, though only a little less complete than the _Dreamtime_ 3-LP set).
But they're all miserable. They feature not only songs, but a
chant, readings by John Carder Bush, and incidental bits of music, all
of which were heard while Kate changed costumes in between songs during
the concert. Specifically, there are: a heartbeat passage preceding
"Room For the Life"; an ethnic chant performed by the band in unison;
two synthesizer introductions to songs; three brief readings by
John--one known as "Two in One Coffin" (preceding "The Kick Inside"),
the others passages of unidentified prose (perhaps by John); an
arrangement of Satie's 1st "Gymnopedie", which is used to frame
"Symphony in Blue", and a short jam session by the KT Bush Band. Also
of note is the live version of "Egypt", which sounds very different
from the LP version.
3) Kate. This was a forty-five minute TV special which aired in
England on December 28, 1979; sometimes called the "Christmas Special".
In addition to a couple of lip-synchs of LP tracks and one or two new
vocal performances of old songs, several new and unique bits of music
appeared on this show. They include a brief introduction, an
arrangement of part of Satie's "First Gymnopedie" (as an introduction
to "Symphony in Blue"); an early version of "December Will Be Magic
Again"; a choral introduction for Peter Gabriel (Kate's guest on the
show--he sings "Here Comes the Flood"), sometimes referrred to as
"Peter, the Angel Gabriel"; a brief bit of blues piano; and a duet with
Peter of Roy Harper's song, "Another Day".
4) There are a few clips from other live Tour of Life shows on
three different TV programmes: the Tour episode of _Nationwide_ (UK
TV); a German programme called _Kate_Bush_in_Concert_ (which has some
songs from the Hamburg and Mannheim concerts); and a Swedish show
called _Rockdrotting_ (with a few songs from the Stockholm concerts).
All are in mono TV sound, however.
5) Bill Duffield concert. A modified Tour of Life show, staged
at London's Hammersmith Odeon on May 12, 1979 for the benefit of the
surviving relatives of Bill Duffield, Kate's lighting director for the
Tour, who had died in an accident at the very beginning of the tour.
The concert featured Steve Harley, Peter Gabriel. In addition to songs
from The Tour of Life, this concert featured Let It Be, sung by Steve
Harley, Peter Gabriel and Kate Bush ;"Them Heavy People" with verses
sung by Harley and Gabriel; "The Woman With the Child in Her Eyes" sung
by Harley and Gabriel; Gabriel's "I Don't Remember" sung as a duet by
Gabriel and Kate; and Harley's "Come Up and See Me", sung by Harley,
with Kate and Gabriel on backing vocals.
See _Japanese_Fan_Club_EP_, _If_You_Could_See_Me_Fly_ and
_Passing_Through_Air_.
ALBUMS
_Japanese_Fan_Club_EP_ The more common yellow-vinyl edition is
not the original version of this disk. The _actual_ record, as put out
by the Japanese fan-club (now apparently defunct and succeeded by a
different group in Japan), was a simpler affair: a red flex-disk with a
white sleeve. On the disk where a label ordinarily would go was a KT
symbol in silver. The disk had John's spoken message first, followed by
Kate's brief message, followed finally by the excerpt from the live
performance of "Let It Be" from a fan's in-audience (i.e., pirated)
Walkman recording of the benefit concert for Bill Duffield. (The other
singers on that track are Steve Harley and Peter Gabriel.)
_Wow_ : a two-record set containing a poor stereo dub of the
Hammersmith odeon video's audio track and a mono dub of the BBC tv
special _kate_ (one on each record). This is probably the first KaTe
booTleg, appearing in 1982 or early 1983 and was put out by New York
based bootleggers.
_Moving_ : beautiful re-packaging of _Wow_. Equally poor audio
though. Made in the UK.
_Live in Paris_ (1984): single LP containing excerpts of the
Paris concert.
"Kate Bush Live in Europe 79 & 80" is a double album credits as
being from the non-existant Fan Club of Taiwan. This also appeared as
a cassette tape. One record is the soundtrack to the"Kate Bush Live at
the Hammersmith Odeon" video tape, and the other album is the
soundtrack to the hour long Christmas special called "Kate" that she
did in 79.
"Kate Bush Live in Europe 79 - 80" a re-packaged three-record
set that consists of: 1.) a true stereo transfer to vinyl of the whole
of "Live at Hammersmith Odeon"; 2.) a transfer of the television sound
track from Kate's 1979 Christmas special (the same TV-hum-filled audio
track heard on the various video copies), which originally appeared
along with 1.) as the above-mentioned two-record set called "Wow"; and
3.) a copy of part of a 1979 Paris concert, which previously appeared
as the above mentioned Paris LP. All of these records were pressed by
the same bunch of people, under several label pseudonyms, most often
"Rock Solid Records" and"International Records" of New York.
_A Bird in the Hand_ (1986) is _the_ worst ripoff of all the KT
boots. Don't buy it unless you have never heard anything from the
Hammersmith concert video at all before. All it is is an _edited_
transfer of the Hi-fi audio track from the video-cassette of the Live
at Hammersmith Odeon film. Furthermore, the stereo channel separation
is virtually completely lost in the boot version, although the pressing
(surface noise) is o.k. But this particular bootleg doesn't even
include the whole 53-minute soundtrack! Only about nine songs (perhaps
eight are listed, but as IED recalls nine are included on the record)
are transferred, even though other boots have a better stereo transfer
of the entire soundtrack on single disks. So steer clear!
The cover boasted two fine early photos in blue ink with pink
borders. Interestingly, this bootleg is marked: "cover produced in
U.S.A., 1986"; and according to the labels, the record's alias is
"Please Don't Let Me Go".
The track listing is as follows:
A: Violin
Strange Phenomena
Hammer Horror
Wow
Feel It
B: Kite [not listed on the cover]
Oh England My Lion Heart [the blank is not from me]
Wuthering Heights
Moving
_Under the Ivy Bush_. (1988) This one features quite slick
packaging, although the photos used are obviously from positives. The
cover is of the Japanese-_TKI_ pink leotard shot (uncropped, of
course). The album is a hodge-podge, but is quite interesting. It
bears the misleading label "previously unreleased live German tracks."
This refers to tracks one and two which are simply mono tapes of the LP
tracks of "Running Up That Hill" and "The Big Sky" as used by Kate for
lip-synch performances. The only differences between these and the LP
tracks are that these are in terrible low-fi TV sound, and they include
a studio audience cheering at the beginning and end of the lip-synch
tracks. By the way, these two tracks are taken from Kate's appearance
on the German TV show "Peter's Pop Show", which was also re-broadcast
on a French program, both of which aired in the fall of 1985.
Track 3 is another matter altogether. It is a live version of
"James and the Cold Gun" that has never appeared in any boot or video
that IED has seen before. It's not from the Hammersmith film, nor is it
like the "On Stage" version of the Hammersmith version, nor is it from
the Bristol or the Paris shows. The sound is better than average for
bootleg live material, and it's a really confident, loose performance.
This version is incredible, only recommended for Truefans, because it
is quite disturbed/ing! Nobody seems able to hold a note. That stands
not only for Kate's vocals, but for all instruments too. If this is not
some pitch problem with the recording, it has to be purpose!
Alltogether, this piece is a heavy experience...
Tracks 4 and 5 are just the Satie "Gymnopedie" and "Symphony in
Blue" from "Kate", the 1979 Christmas special. However, the audio on
these tracks is _far_ superior to that on the earlier bootleg transfers
of the "Kate" program.
Side Two starts off with "The Man With the Child in His Eyes" from
the "Kate" program.
Track 2, Side Two is just an excerpt from the German documentary
on Kate called "Kate Bush in Concert". You can hear the last words of
one of Kate's answers to an interviewer's question, which segues into
the live version of "Violin" from the TV program's filmed excerpts of
the Mannheim and Hamburg concerts.
Track 3 is just the "Hammer Horror" from the Tour of Life. (The
specific concert is untraceable, really, because this recording of the
song was made by Kate in the studio with the KT Bush Band specifically
for the Tour, so that she wouldn't have to worry about singing for at
least one song in the show, which left her a bit freer to dance during
that song. Consequently this track is identical in all the concerts).
Track 4, Side Two begins with some bootlegger's idea of a joke:
it's a phrase from an interview Kate gave for the German TV film "Kate
Bush In Concert" (IED believes), which the bootleggers have
_backwards-masked_! The words that Kate utters, when played backwards,
are: "...will be totally believed by an awful lot of people." Ha ha.
Track 5 is a pre-tour live version of "Wuthering Heights", taken
(probably) from one of the two German TV shows on which Kate appeared
to perform the song in 1978. The sound, again, is quite good for a
transfer from TV.
Track 6, the last track on the album, is again a reasonably clear
transfer from a thin, mono TV original. This one, however, is something
special: the live version of "Under the Ivy" which Kate performed solo,
accompanying herself on piano, in Abbey Road Studios for the satellite
broadcast of a special edition of the U.K. TV program _The Tube_.
That's it. Altogether a pretty queer collection of tracks, but not
without value or interest.
As in other boots, the bootlegger's disguise the contents of a
disc by selecting strange track titles that only resemble the actual
one:
Side 1:
Climb every mountain - Running up that Hill
Blue Sky - The Big Sky
Jimmy get your gun - James and the cold gun
Gymnopedies - Satie's first Gymnopedie & Moving
Side 2:
Only have eyes for you - The Man with the Child in his Eyes
Fiddler on the roof - Violin
Horror at home - Hammer horror
High as a bird - Kite
High Society - Wuthering Heights
Under the Ivy - Under the Ivy
The last one is an exception to the rule, but since it is more
unknown than
the other ones (it is not an album track) and since the whole album has
that title, it's not adding too much to the risk of producing the
bootleg. Note also that the album is by the KTB Band, something we all
know, but something that not everybody connects with Kate Bush.
---
rhill@netrun.cts.com (ronald hill)
NetRunner's Paradise BBS, San Diego CA