Cloudbusting -- Kate
Bush In Her Own Words
There Goes A Tenner
- "Everybody synchronize watches. Remember there's only half an hour
to do the job. We've been rehearsing for weeks, so nothing should go wrong.
Let's run through it one more time:
- "I go in and distract the guard,
- Frank's out the back in the getaway car,
- The sign on the door turns from open to shut,
- We keep them all covered, you blow the safe up,
- We grab the cash, make a hasty retreat,
- And tear across London using the backstreets.
- Remember, be careful, give nothing away,
- The arm of the Law is as long as they say.'' (1982, KBC 12)
And what's going to be the next single that you're working on?
- Well, we've done the video for the next one, which is ``There
Goes a Tenner."
Sorry?
- "There Goes a Tenner."
What's that about? Is it about robbery?
- Yeah, yeah.
What, sort of pickpockets in the east end, et cetera?
- Yeah. It's about amateur robbers who have only done small things,
and this is quite a big robbery that they've been planning for months, and when
it actually starts happening, they start freaking out. They're really scared,
and they're so aware of the fact that something could go wrong that they just
freaked out, and paranoid and want to go home.
Really? Is this based on any kind of
film?
- No. It's sort of all the films I've seen with robberies in, the
crooks have always been incredibly in control and calm, and I always thought
that if I ever did a robbery, I'd be really scared, you know, I'd be really
worried. So I thought I'm sure that's a much more human point of view.
Yeah. You see I thought it might be based on a
film. It was on telly over christmas. It
was about a guy who was blackmailed into doing a robbery and of course he
really was scared, the further he got involved in it and he had to carry it
out. But he was having the sleepless nights and stuff. [Kate makes noises
expressing interest throughout this - it's clear that she has not seen the
film.]
- How did he get blackmailed? Because he'd murdered someone?
He'd been in prison a long time, and therefore when the robbery
took place the mafia bosses who were organising it knew they had a stool
pigeon, and so they got him to do it.
- Great! Yeah, a similar sort of thing, isn't it? I'm sure a lot of
these young kids, when they actually get into a situation where it is not just
a little job, they must be really scared.
Yeah. What made you think about it? I mean, have you run into these
east end types before?
- No, no. I think it was much more the thing of watching a lot of
films, things like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, you know.
There are lots of films where robberies take place and yet they glorify them,
they always make the robbery something very heroic and fun, risky and
dangerous, but for me it's something incredibly scary, something that has such
a potential of going wrong that it's not worth the risk, and I don't think it's
something that should be glorified at all. I think it's something that should
be made very real, so that people realize it's not worth the effort - it's not
something that's fun, it's something that's just not worth the effort. You'll
end up in gaol for thirty years!
And is that the video that you were shooting in the train carriage
on the way up to manchester, or practicing for it?
- That was the one we were practicing for, yes, but only because we
didn't have any time, because that show came up at the last minute and we were
planning to rehearse all that night, so instead of doing it in the studio, we
did it in the back of the train. [Laughs] I couldn't see anything!
And how many of there were you in that guard's van?
- There were just the three of us. They cleared it out for us - it was
really great of them, actually. Each station we stopped at there'd be various
guards who would pull the window down and go 'alright, then?', because they
were just checking us out. It was great - they cleared out all the postings,
chickens and pigs, and all the other things.
You get some odd things, don't you?
- So it was a completely empty carriage, it was beautiful. The only
thing was we could hardly hear the tape recorder, because the noise was so bad,
so we were more of less having to, sort of, keep checking, and it was very hard
to stay stationary at a hundred and fifty miles an hour!
And that's how that kind of
dance somehow can get incorporated into a
film about robbery?
- Yeah.
That should be interesting.
- One of the bits in the song is all about waiting, and how the first
time they're just waiting for something to go wrong, and the second time
they're just waiting for the guy to blow the safe up, because when he blows it
up, there is so much that could go wrong. It's a
dance routine that's based on waiting.
- It's just all these ideas of people waiting. And the rest of the
dancers are all acting out what the
story says, really. It's not so much a dance at all. (1982, Bootleg CD)
How did ``there goes a tenner'' come together?
- That was written on the piano. I had an idea for the tune and just
knocked out the chords for the first verse. The words and everything just came
together. It was quite a struggle from there on to try to keep things together.
The lyrics are quite difficult on that one, because there are a lot of words in
quite a short space of time. They had to be phrased right and everything. That
was very difficult. Actually the writing went hand-in-hand with the CS-80.
It's easy to hear how the piano was used for the verses, but what
about the choruses? Those sections are very uncharacteristic of what you'd
expect to be written on a piano?
- That was really the difficult structure of the song. I could hear
what I wanted, but until we put the Synclavier in there - which was played by
Dave Lawson - I couldn't get the full picture. I really liked what we did in
that. (1985, Keyboard)
Apart from
the use of sound to conjure up very simple images you've also used list of
names, like minnie, moony, vicious, buddy holly, sandy denny on ``
blow away'' and bogart, raft and cagney on ``there goes a
tenner'' Are they people you particularly admire or do you just like the
strong images they create?
- They are people I like. For me, Cagney is one of the greatest actors
that has ever been. I just couldn't believe his
acting in White Heat.
- He's always played the boy who grew up in a hard time and in a way
he was only ever bad because of the things that had influenced him. He comes
across as a very human person who had the potential to do something great but
was always misled."
- In that song the idea is that everyone's amateur robbers...
Like the old ealing comedies?
- Yeah, that's right. So it's like maybe they get a bit cocky... I
dunno, I've never done a robbery, but I think that in a situation like that
you'd almost try to be like the person you admire so perhaps they'd be like
Cagney and George Raft. They idea was nothing like deep - it was just handy!
The real challenge of that song was to make it a story but also keep it like a
Thirties tune. (1982, Melody
Maker)
- Well it's
all about some people that are doing a bank robbery and they're quite amateur
and they've been looking forward to it for weeks. But when it actually starts
happening they realise that they're really nervous and very scared in doing it.
And it's all about the reality of the situation like that, really.
Yeah you've got a warped mind 'aven't you. [Kate laughs]
thinking up bank raids in our spare time.
[Makes funny voice] I'm not warped! [Laughs]
But if you got together for a bank raid perhaps you could afford
the next tour. Kate seriously thank you very much cause I know you're a local
girl. You used to dance around here,
didn't you?
- Yeah, just around the corner. Yeah, I know this place very well.
(1982, BBC Dreaming interview)
"There goes a tenner'' from the album the dreaming. And I think
that will be a hit actually.
- Do you?
It's got a lot of that umpa.
- Do you really?
Yes, I think thats a...
- I don't.. I don't know anymore. (1982, Pebble Mill At One)
A song of yours for which the symbolism in the lyrics really
fascinates me is ``there goes a tenner.'' you've said that it is
just a simple song about bank robbery, but the more I look at it, the more it
seems that nearly every line is really sort of an allusion to your
recording career at the time you were
recording the dreaming. You wouldn't deny that this was intended, would you?
- Yes, I would deny it.
You would?
- Yes. It's very much a song about bank robbery. I wouldn't say it was
a simple song about bank robbery, but it's about the fear that people feel
rather than the glorification of bank robbers.
I dunno. It seems like...well, to me it seems every line sort of
could parallel your recording career.
I won't go and explain it, but like one example is ``there goes a tenner.''
``tenner'' could be a ten-dollar [Sic] bill - it could also be a level
of singing: You know, like soprano, alto, tenor. And sort of every line is like
that. But you don't agree?
- Well, no I don't because that's not...That was...nothing that was in
my head when I was writing it. But then I think the interpretations that people
have of your songs afterwards are nothing to do with me anyway. I think it's up
to them to get what they can out of the song.
Okay. That seems reasonable. Maybe it was all subconscious. It
seems so perfect to me. I dunno. (1985, love-hounds)
Gaffaweb /
Cloudbusting / Music /
There Goes A Tennor