Cloudbuster said: onenitealone said: If you see the magazine - whether you're a fan or not - you must read it. Every music fan should.
Page 88. The colour picture in the middle. How much I'd like to wake up next to that every morning. Damn, I don't have it to hand. Which one is that, mate? | |
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onenitealone said: Damn, I don't have it to hand. Which one is that, mate? She's at a record signing for The Dreaming. Wearing a white t-shirt. | |
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Cloudbuster said: onenitealone said: Damn, I don't have it to hand. Which one is that, mate? She's at a record signing for The Dreaming. Wearing a white t-shirt. Pervert! How much of the album have you heard now, Cloudy? | |
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onenitealone said: Pervert!
How much of the album have you heard now, Cloudy? Pervert? I've heard most of it. | |
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Cloudbuster said: onenitealone said: Pervert!
How much of the album have you heard now, Cloudy? Pervert? I've heard most of it. Just kidding. Give us a review, then... | |
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onenitealone said: Just kidding.
Give us a review, then... Probably next week, I wanna hear the whole thing first. | |
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Got my copy today and I just played CD1. How to be invisible and A coral room are the highlights. Bertie is just horrible. The first thing I noticed is that Mick Karn doesn´t get mentioned in the liner notes and that the bass on How to be invisible doesn´t sound like him. I think she replaced him.
Will play CD2 this evening when i have more time. | |
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theplejades said: Bertie is just horrible.
That's the only one that's left me cold so far. I like the music, tho'. | |
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Cloudbuster said: I've heard most of it.
You fucked up the whole first experience thing now. Well the next time I guess, if you aint dead by then By the way I guess I am buying the album on the first day after all, since everyone's hyping it up... | |
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Kate's new album is simply a masterpiece. Absolutely stunning! | |
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LightOfArt said: Cloudbuster said: I've heard most of it.
You fucked up the whole first experience thing now. Well the next time I guess, if you aint dead by then I know, I'm disgusted with myself. I so wanted to wait until the day, but once the links appeared on the KB News & Info site I thought, fuck it, I've waited 12 years, I ain't waiting any longer. Still, there's a few tracks I haven't heard and I've yet to experience the second disc from start to finish, so I've that to look forward to. | |
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Kate Bush, Aerial
5/5 (EMI) Alexis Petridis Friday November 4, 2005 The Guardian These days, record companies try to make every new album seem like a matter of unparalleled cultural import. The most inconsequential artists require confidentiality agreements to be faxed to journalists, the lowliest release must be delivered by hand. So it's hard not to be impressed by an album that carries a genuine sense of occasion. That's not to say EMI - which earlier this year transformed the ostensibly simple process of handing critics the Coldplay album into something resembling a particularly Byzantine episode of Spooks - haven't really pushed the boat out for Kate Bush's return after a 12-year absence. They employed a security man specifically for the purpose of staring at you while you listened to her new album. But even without his disconcerting presence, Aerial would seem like an event. In the gap since 1993's so-so The Red Shoes, the Kate Bush myth that began fomenting when she first appeared on Top of the Pops, waving her arms and shrilly announcing that Cath-ee had come home-uh, grew to quite staggering proportions. She was variously reported to have gone bonkers, become a recluse and offered her record company some home-made biscuits instead of a new album. In reality, she seems to have been doing nothing more peculiar than bringing up a son, moving house and watching while people made up nutty stories about her. Aerial contains a song called How to Be Invisible. It features a spell for a chorus, precisely what you would expect from the batty Kate Bush of popular myth. The spell, however, gently mocks her more obsessive fans while espousing a life of domestic contentment: "Hem of anorak, stem of wallflower, hair of doormat." Domestic contentment runs through Aerial's 90-minute duration. Recent Bush albums have been filled with songs in which the extraordinary happened: people snogged Hitler, or were arrested for building machines that controlled the weather. Aerial, however, is packed with songs that make commonplace events sound extraordinary. It calls upon Renaissance musicians to serenade her son. Viols are bowed, arcane stringed instruments plucked, Bush sings beatifically of smiles and kisses and "luvv-er-ly Bertie". You can't help feeling that this song is going to cause a lot of door slamming and shouts of "oh-God-mum-you're-so-embarrassing" when Bertie reaches the less luvv-er-ly age of 15, but it's still delightful. The second CD is devoted to a concept piece called A Sky of Honey in which virtually nothing happens, albeit very beautifully, with delicious string arrangements, hymnal piano chords, joyous choruses and bursts of flamenco guitar: the sun comes up, birds sing, Bush watches a pavement artist at work, it rains, Bush has a moonlight swim and watches the sun come up again. The pavement artist is played by Rolf Harris. This casting demonstrates Bush's admirable disregard for accepted notions of cool, but it's tough on anyone who grew up watching him daubing away on Rolf's Cartoon Club. "A little bit lighter there, maybe with some accents," he mutters. You keep expecting him to ask if you can guess what it is yet. Domestic contentment even gets into the staple Bush topic of sex. Ever since her debut, The Kick Inside, with its lyrics about incest and "sticky love", Bush has given good filth: striking, often disturbing songs that, excitingly, suggest a wildly inventive approach to having it off. Here, on the lovely and moving piano ballad Mrs Bartolozzi, she turns watching a washing machine into a thing of quivering erotic wonder. "My blouse wrapping around your trousers," she sings. "Oh, and the waves are going out/ my skirt floating up around my waist." Laundry day in the Bush household must be an absolute hoot. Aerial sounds like an album made in isolation. On the down side, that means some of it seems dated. You can't help feeling she might have thought twice about the lumpy funk of Joanni and the preponderance of fretless bass if she got out a bit more. But, on the plus side, it also means Aerial is literally incomparable. You catch a faint whiff of Pink Floyd and her old mentor Dave Gilmour on the title track, but otherwise it sounds like nothing other than Bush's own back catalogue. It is filled with things only Kate Bush would do. Some of them you rather wish she wouldn't, including imitating bird calls and doing funny voices: King of the Mountain features a passable impersonation of its subject, Elvis, which is at least less disastrous than the strewth-cobber Aussie accent she adopted on 1982's The Dreaming. But then, daring to walk the line between the sublime and the demented is the point of Kate Bush's entire oeuvre. On Aerial she achieves far, far more of the former than the latter. When she does, there is nothing you can do but willingly succumb. | |
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thanks....im getting shivers reading these reviews.....cannot wait to hear it in its entirety | |
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Cloudbuster said: Guardian review...
Thanks for that! | |
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The interview will be on BBC Radio 4's "Front Row" show in exactly an hour.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radi...4.shtml?fm [Edited 11/4/05 10:13am] | |
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Well would you believe it.
I was a full time Prince fan 84-88, now only part time. Always liked Kate, I know she worked with him sometime, cant remember what track/when. I used to know. Anyway, I only came on here to start an Aerial thread and what do you know..... Great album, its realy growing on me, more so than Musicology. Get it! | |
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Nebula2020 said: Well would you believe it.
I was a full time Prince fan 84-88, now only part time. Always liked Kate, I know she worked with him sometime, cant remember what track/when. I used to know. Anyway, I only came on here to start an Aerial thread and what do you know..... Great album, its realy growing on me, more so than Musicology. Get it! I can't wait to hear Aerial, judging by the reviews I've seen here it sounds great!! As for Prince and Kate working together, that would be the song "Why Should I Love You" on Kate's last album, "The Red Shoes" (1993). You might be interested to read Alex Hahn's account (in his Prince bio, "Possessed") of this collaboration. "I would say that Prince's top thirty percent is great. Of that thirty percent, I'll bet the public has heard twenty percent of it." - Susan Rogers, "Hunting for Prince's Vault", BBC, 2015 | |
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Kate Bush, the original
nevermind the pretenders to the throne. | |
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If anybody missed the BBC Radio 4 interview on Friday, I've made an mp3 of it here...
http://s50.yousendit.com/...Q1S1FM1TY1 It's a huge file, because it's 30 minutes long, so click the link and go and do the housework. p.s. The interview contains short clips of tracks from the new album, so if you don't want any spoilers, you've been forewarned. | |
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Don't know if this has been posted yet, but here's the AMG review:
Fierce Kate Bush fans who are expecting revelation in Aerial, her first new work since The Red Shoes in 1993, will no doubt scour lyrics and instrumental trills and interludes until they find them. For everyone else, those who purchased much of Bush's earlier catalog because of its depth, quality, and vision, Aerial will sound exactly like what it is, a new Kate Bush record: full of her obsessions, lushly romantic paeans to things mundane and cosmic, and her ability to add dimension and transfer emotion though song. The set is spread over two discs. The first, A Sea of Honey, is a collection of songs, arranged for everything from full-on rock band to solo piano. The second, A Sky of Honey, is a conceptual suite. It was produced by Bush with engineering and mixing by longtime collaborator Del Palmer.
A Sea of Honey is a deeply interior look at domesticity, with the exception of its opening track, "King of the Mountain," the first single and video. Bush does an acceptable impersonation of Elvis Presley in which she examines the singer's past life on earth and his present incarnation as spectral enigma. Juxtaposing the Elvis myth, Wagnerian mystery, and the image of Rosebud, the sled from Orson Welles' Citizen Kane, Bush's synthesizer, sequencer, and voice weigh in ethereally from the margins before a full-on rock band playing edgy and funky reggae enters on the second verse. Wind whispers and then howls across the cut's backdrop as she searches for the rainbow body of the disappeared one through his clothes and the tabloid tales of his apocryphal sightings, looking for a certain resurrection of his physical body. The rest of the disc focuses on more interior and domestic matters, but it's no less startling. A tune called "Pi" looks at a mathematician's poetic and romantic love of numbers. "Bertie" is a hymn to her son orchestrated by piano, Renaissance guitar, percussion, and viols. But disc one's strangest and most lovely moment is in "Mrs. Bartolozzi," scored for piano and voice. It revives Bush's obsessive eroticism through an ordinary woman's ecstatic experience of cleaning after a rainstorm, and placing the clothing of her beloved and her own into the washing machine and observing in rapt sexual attention. She sings "My blouse wrapping itself around your trousers/Oh the waves are going out/My skirt floating up around your waist...Washing machine/Washing machine." Then there's "How to Be Invisible," and the mysticism of domestic life as the interior reaches out into the universe and touches its magic: "Hem of anorak/Stem of a wall flower/Hair of doormat?/Is that autumn leaf falling?/Or is that you walking home?/Is that a storm in the swimming pool?" A Sky of Honey is 42 minutes in length. It's lushly romantic as it meditates on the passing of 24 hours. Its prelude is a short deeply atmospheric piece with the sounds of birds singing, and her son (who is "the Sun" according to the credits) intones, "Mummy...Daddy/The day is full of birds/Sounds like they're saying words." And "Prologue" begins with her piano, a chanted viol, and Bush crooning to romantic love, the joy of marriage and nature communing, and the deep romance of everyday life. There's drama, stillness, joy, and quiet as its goes on, but it's all held within, as in "An Architect's Dream," where the protagonist encounters a working street painter going about his work in changing light: "The flick of a wrist/Twisting down to the hips/So the lovers begin with a kiss...." Loops, Eberhard Weber's fretless bass, drifting keyboards, and a relaxed delivery create an erotic tension, in beauty and in casual voyeurism. "Sunset" has Bush approaching jazz, but it doesn't swing so much as it engages the form. Her voice digging into her piano alternates between lower-register enunciation and a near falsetto in the choruses. There is a sense of utter fascination with the world as it moves toward darkness, and the singer is enthralled as the sun climbs into bed, before it streams into "Sunset," a gorgeous flamenco guitar and percussion-driven call-and-response choral piece — it's literally enthralling. It is followed by a piece of evening called "Somewhere Between," in which lovers take in the beginning of night. As "Nocturne" commences, shadows, stars, the beach, and the ocean accompany two lovers who dive down deep into one another and the surf. Rhythms assert themselves as the divers go deeper and the band kicks up: funky electric guitars pulse along with the layers of keyboards, journeying until just before sunup. But it is on the title track that Bush gives listeners her greatest surprise. Dawn is breaking and she greets the day with a vengeance. Manic, crunchy guitars play power chords as sequencers and synths make the dynamics shift and swirl. In her higher register, Bush shouts, croons, and trills against and above the band's force. Nothing much happens on Aerial except the passing of a day, as noted by the one who engages it in the process of being witnessed, yet it reveals much about the interior and natural worlds and expresses spiritual gratitude for everyday life. Musically, this is what listeners have come to expect from Bush at her best — a finely constructed set of songs that engage without regard for anything else happening in the world of pop music. There's no pushing of the envelope because there doesn't need to be. Aerial is rooted in Kate Bush's oeuvre, with grace, flair, elegance, and an obsessive, stubborn attention to detail. What gets created for the listener is an ordinary world, full of magic; it lies inside one's dwelling in overlooked and inhabited spaces, and outside, from the backyard and out through the gate into wonder. | |
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I LOVE IT, I LOVE IT ! So pure, so beautiful! Les enfants qui mentent ne vont pas au paradis. | |
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Well it's out here in Japan...but I already have it on preorder from amazon.com so I couldn't quite swallow paying over 3200 yen (almost US$30) for a copy of it today.
Guess I'm stuck waiting, hopefully only a few more days...but at least I got to see it, hold it, and listen to a few tracks at a listening station! And what I heard sounded great: KOTM, Pi, and part of A Coral Room, then I had to leave...I want to listen to disc 2 in its entirety so I didn't touch that. Oh yeah, and I picked up several copies of a nifty little Toshiba-EMI promotional brochure for Kate and Aerial! One page features artists who have influenced Kate...Prince is among them, and interestingly the little photo happens to be the Musicology CD cover photo. [Edited 11/6/05 2:01am] "I would say that Prince's top thirty percent is great. Of that thirty percent, I'll bet the public has heard twenty percent of it." - Susan Rogers, "Hunting for Prince's Vault", BBC, 2015 | |
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GangstaFam said: AMG review...
As I seem to keep saying: WOW! Thanks, Gangsta. I'm incredibly excited about tomorrow. Being a music fan is just one of the most beautiful things, sometimes. | |
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BinaryJustin said: If anybody missed the BBC Radio 4 interview on Friday, I've made an mp3 of it here...
http://s50.yousendit.com/...Q1S1FM1TY1 It's a huge file, because it's 30 minutes long, so click the link and go and do the housework. p.s. The interview contains short clips of tracks from the new album, so if you don't want any spoilers, you've been forewarned. Thankyou Justin - much appreciated buddy xxx | |
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Have been listening to Aerial all day, got hold of a copy a whole day before release-YAY!!!
A fantastic album, I'm in sort of a Kate trance at the moment and cannot concentrate...but just wanted to say how great the album is and that disc 1 really has some of Kate's finest writing and singing, and some modern arrangements... I'll go now, sorry for the gushy, mushy responce. x "There is no such thing in life as normal..." | |
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BananaCologne said: Thankyou Justin - much appreciated buddy xxx
That's the first huggy I've had in weeks. It took me two hours to capture that stream, encode it and upload it. | |
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BinaryJustin said: BananaCologne said: Thankyou Justin - much appreciated buddy xxx
That's the first huggy I've had in weeks. It took me two hours to capture that stream, encode it and upload it. Well you best have a couple more then for good measure: | |
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Today is the day!
I'm leaving the office in ten minutes to go and buy it. Then I'm going to stare at it, occasionally stroke it, and then go home at 3.30, dim the lights, sit on my sofa, put it in my cd player and PLAY IT! LOUD! Woohoo.. Ain't no-one getting in my way! Andrew. "I'm much too hot to be cool" | |
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Bought my copy this morning, 9am on the dot!
Went home, listened to both discs, had to come to work, , going home later to listen to it again. It's a bit too early for me to give a review, especially when it's music as unique or complicated as Kate's, but - on first impressions - I really, really like it. The sound and production is INCREDIBLE! For me, it sounds like the natural successor to The Sensual World. Favourites so far: KOTM, How To Be Invisible, Sunset, Somewhere in between and, particularly, Pi and Joanni. An Architect's Dream is simply divine. You have to hear it. As for A Coral Room, there's one line (which I can't recall but it's to do with her mother & the little brown jug); just the way she sang it... I had a lump in my throat. I think it'll take a while for me to completely absorb this but I'm very pleased so far. So good to have her back. | |
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By the way, if you buy Aerial in HMV, you can also get £5 off the purchase price of Rob Jovanovic's biography if you buy them together.
It's usually £14.99 but, with Aerial, they're selling it for £9.99. | |
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