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From: Wieland Willker <willker@chemie.uni-bremen.de>
Date: Tue, 19 Mar 1996 10:11:12 -0100
Subject: IN PRAISE OF KATE BUSH -1-
To: love-hounds@gryphon.com
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Sender: owner-love-hounds@gryphon.com
OCR'd from: "ON RECORD - Rock, Pop and the written word" Simon Frith and Andrew Goodwin (ed.) Routledge, 1990, p. 450 - 465 IN PRAISE OF KATE BUSH (1988) BY HOLLY KRUSE (C) copyright In the American musical mainstream, the most innovative performers are usually the least commercially successful. This may be less true in Great Britain, where avant-garde artists such as Laurie Anderson have reached the number one position on the pop singles chart, but even that was considered a novelty, and it remains surprising that the most commercially successful female recording artist in Britain is Kate Bush. Kate Bush's music integrates intellectually challenging subject matter into complex and often experimental instrumental arrangements. Her 1985 album Hounds of Love, for example, which was a Top 10 record in the United Kingdom, contained songs dealing with out-of-body experiences, the later life of Wilhelm Reich, and witch trials; and Bush frames her visions in arrangements that combine ancient folk instruments with the latest in synthesizer technology. How has such an apparently "uncommercial" artist been able to succeed within the constraints of the music industry? This question is the focus of the frst half of my essay. In the second half I examine the ways in which Bush's music - specifically that found on Hounds of Love-employs intricate musical and narrative structures to convey her vision of a human essence that transcends temporal boundaries. THE MAKING OF AN UNLIKELY POPSTAR Kate Bush's entry into the music business was in itself unconventional. She began writing songs while still in her early teens, and by the time she was in her mid-teens, she and her family had produced a demo tape that contained fifty of her compositions. Though every record label to which the tape was circulated turned it down, it was not long after that friends of the Bush family brought Kate's music to the attention of Pink Floyd's guitarist David Gilmour. Gilmour was impressed by Bush's songwriting skill and vocal range and in 1974 financed a three-song demo for Bush, made with Pink Floyd's producer Andrew Powell. The tape was sent to EMI, Pink Floyd's record company, where it was heard by Terry Slater, the executive who signed the Sex Pistols to a major label contract. Slater was quite impressed with the demo and signed Kate Bush, even though she was only sixteen years old. In recognition of her relative youth, EMI made an unusual move and gave Bush some money "to grow up with", and Bush spent three years continuing her dance studies, honing her vocal skills, and developing a more mature songwriting style. In 1977 she recorded her first album, The Kick Inside, and the frst single, "Wuthering Heights", reached the number one spot on the British pop chart just one month after its release in early 1978. Whatever the curiosity value of "Wuthering Heights" the young singer proved to be no one-shot wonder. Though Kate Bush's next album, 1979's Li.onheart, was a critical disappointment, it did produce a Top 20 single in the U.K., and there have been a couple of British hits on all her subsequent LPs: 1980's Never For Ever on which she debuted as co-producer, 1982's self-produced The Dreami.ng, and Hounds of Love, recorded in the studio she had now built in her home. EMI is obviously well satisfied with Bush's success, but it seems unlikely that the company could have predicted Bush's profitability at the time of her signing. Even her earliest recorded material dealt with unusual subjects, such as life after death, poisoning, metaphysical understanding, and supernatural phenomena; and Bush's vocal phrasing has always been unconventional. Undoubtedly, then, Bush's contract with EMI was the result of several conspiring factors. Though the relative importance of each element can only be guessed, EMI's market position and the nature of the recording industry in the 1970s provide clues into the conglomerate's motives for signing Kate Bush. That it was David Gilmour who brought Kate Bush to the attention of EMI certainly helped Bush's career get off the ground. At the time of Bush's signing in 1974 Pink Floyd was a very important act to the company. The progressive band released its eternally selling Dark Side of the Moon on EMI's Harvest label in 1973, and Pink Floyd was a respected and successful veteran of the art rock scene. Other members of Pink Floyd were seeking out fresh talent at the time, and EMI management would have surely thought it in the company's best interests to cater to the band members' whims. The importance of Pink Floyd to EMI was symptomatic of a larger development in the British music industry in the early seventies. A number of progressive artists were selling substantial quantities of records in both Great Britain and the United States. The acid rock of the late sixties had evolved into the art rock of the seventies, with bands like Pink Floyd, Emerson, Lake and Palmer, Jethro Tull, Traffic, and Genesis becoming industry mainstays. These artists experimented with synthesizers and other emerging technologies in order to create new sound experiences. Once the commercial viability of these musicians had been proved, record companies were eager to jump on the progressive bandwagon. One study of the musical tastes of British teenagers done in 1972 found that almost half of the middle class teens surveyed favored "progressive" music over mainstream pop. Undoubtedly the middle-class teen market was one that record companies desired to tap. EMI had already shown its commitment to progressive rock by launching the Harvest label in 1968, and by the early seventies it was clear to industry executives that adventurous musicians could actually make money for a company. Thus, in 1974 EMI would have been more likely to believe that an experimental performance artist like Kate Bush could sell records than it might have been later in the decade. Another factor that cannot be overlooked is EMI's dominant position in the British record industry during the early seventies. Since 1950 the record industry in the United Kingdom had been dominated by two giants, EMI and British Decca, and EMI's position was strengthened substantially in the early sixties when the label signed the Beatles. Although increasing competition from American labels hurt the industry leader as the decade drew to a close, EMI remained in control of an array ofinterests that gave it both horizontal and vertical control over numerous aspects of the recording and distribution process in Britain - even in the middle of the 1970s, EMI was still manufacturing one-fourth and distributing one-third of all records sold in the U.K. Financial success gave EMI the economic means to invest in the development of new talent. Moreover, it is in the long-term interest of a large company to recruit new talent continually, because "nobody wants to depend on a small number of acts." Labels lose artists to other companies, life-style alterations, and death, as EMI was painfully aware with the breakup of the Beatles. Record companies depend on a constant influx of new talent to ensure that the organization will survive, and, in the words of one observer, "the larger the company, the greater its need for new 'product.' " The mid-seventies were definitely a key time for labels to be on the lookout for new talent. The British record industry was reaching a stagnation point and EMI was particularly conscious that it failed to sign the major British successes in the United States like the Who and Led Zeppelin. Artist and repertoire (A&R) people were searching for anything that might prove to be "a 'Next Big Thing,' the new Beatles phenomenon", that would invigorate the industry. After all, one reason behind the continuous search for talent is the recognition by industry executives that they are working in a "taste," business. The commercial success of a particular artist or musical genre is often dificult to predict; therefore, the record industry must produce a variety of musical sounds. If, for example, Kate Bush or a Kate Bush clone became the Next Big Thing, a label would not want to miss out financially on the trend. Record companies, particularly record companies resourceful enough to carry numerous failed gambles, see that it is wise to invest in a wide range of talent just in case something outside of the musical status quo captures the public's attention. EMI may have been gambling when it signed Kate Bush, but it was a gamble that paid. When "Wuthering Heights," reached the top of the British chart, only EMI had a Kate Bush, and the idiosyncratic nature of Bush's music made the construction of a Kate Bush clone an accomplishment almost beyond the powers of imagination. In addition, one should not forget that EMI signed Kate Bush at a time when visually oriented rock performers were growing in popularity. Kate Bush's early career was aided by her training in dance and mime and her striking good looks. The visual presentation has always been an important component of Bush's music: her single "Wuthering Heights" was released with a video at a time when such promotional clips were rather rare. By the time the video explosion reached Britain in the early eighties, old hands like David Bowie, Bryan Ferry, Peter Gabriel, and Kate Bush found themselves in advantageous positions from which to exploit the medium. Bush's lengthy experience in the realm of music video has allowed her to direct clips for "Hounds of Love," "The Big Sky," and "Experiment IV." There is a last point to be made here: although by the mid-1970s U.S. tastes and sales strategies dominated the rock scene, and EMI suffered competitively as a result, it was still the dominant record company in non-English-speaking markets in Europe, Japan, and South America - and the company seems to have been aware of Kate Bush's potential in these markets from the start. Although she is, formally, a "singer-songwriter," she did not really compete with early-seventies U.S. stars like Joni Mitchell or Carole King. She was a solo performer who gained popularity with quiet, though offbeat, songs like "Wuthering Heights" and "The Man with the Child in His Eyes." Unlike Mitchell at this time she did not foreground the acoustic guitar in her music but instead composed on the piano, and on some early songs, especially "James and the Cold Gun," and "Hammer Horror," she relied heavily on the electric guitar. And unlike King, Bush was not content to restrict her vocals or her subject matter to a conventional pop range. It was, rather, the "exoticness" of her sound and image that made her, from EMI's point of view, a possible star in, say, Japan. The musical climate of the 1970s, EMI's position in the British and international music industry, the involvement of David Gilmour as a "gate-keeper,", Kate Bush's undeniable talent, and a number of other factors thus interacted at a specific point in time to make the addition of Kate Bush to EMI's stable of musical talent seem a wise maneuver. And once Bush proved a profitable artist, the company probably thought it best not to tamper with a successful formula and allowed Bush a great deal of artistic freedom. However, though Kate Bush has been a bestselling artist in the U.K. for almost a decade, she is virtually unknown in the United States. It was only with Hounds of Love in 1985 that Bush received any significant recognition in the United States. Though none of her previous albums had been able to crack the Top 100, Hounds ofLove reached the thirtieth position on the Billboard album chart, largely on the strength of the single "Running Up That Hill," which peaked at thirty-one in November of 1985. But Bush has yet to attain the kind of success in the United States that she enjoys in her native England and in Europe; and though "Running Up That Hill" brought Kate Bush new fans in American dance clubs, she seems destined to remain a strangely British and European phenomenon. If her popularity in non-English-speaking European, Asian, and South American countries suggests that factors other than the unusual subject matter of her songs have allowed her to succeed, these factors have not been suficient to ensure her success in the U.S. market. Putting that to one side, for a moment, perhaps one reason that Kate Bush's popularity in England has not been duplicated in the United States is because she is a very English singer. Throughout most of the history of rock music in Britain, performers have used accents imported from America. This began to change in the early seventies when singers like David Bowie and Bryan Ferry employed English accents, and Bush herself acknowledges the importance of these male artists in the formation of her own vocal style. "I think most of the stuff I have liked has been English. With the majority of other people well' they were listening to Elvis and people like that and most of their heroes were American. The artists I liked, such as Roxy Music and David Bowie' were all singing in English accents and, in fact' were among the few in England who were actually doing so at that time. I mean, Elton John, Robert Palmer, and Robert Plant sound American when they sing."