Off Topic 20.325 Themen, 225.644 Beiträge

Kate Bush: ´Aerial´

Olaf19 / 35 Antworten / Flachansicht Nickles

Hallo zusammen!

Eigentlich hatte ich das neue Kate-Bush-Album für meine Freundin gekauft - sie ist ein großer Fan - aber da ich es schon mal in den Händen hatte, hab ich natürlich mal reingehört.

Schon das Cover ist ein sinnlicher Genuss: Ein goldgelber Himmel mit Sonne und ein paar Wolken, in Wasser gespiegelt, dazwischen eine bizarre, anscheinend virtuelle Gebirgslandschaft. Wenn man genauer hinsieht erkannt man, dass es sich dabei um das Oszillogramm einer WAV-Datei handelt. Genial!

Die Musik macht dem Titel "Aerial" und dem Coverdesign alle Ehre: Klingt alles ganz luftig-leicht, fast ätherisch, vor allem die 2. CD - die erste ist etwas bodenständiger, poppigern, stellenweise folkig. Auf der 2. CD gibt es mehr experimentelle Sounds, Naturgeräusche, Vogelstimmen und ein paar Synthesizer, die 1. CD ist klanglich konventioneller. Kates Gesang wirkt introvertiert, versponnen, mit der eigenen Innenwelt beschäftigt - und doch hat die Musik etwas Einladendens, Freundliches, Strahlendes...

Meine Favoriten bislang: "King of the Mountain" (CD 1, erste Single - klasse, wie mächtig sich dieser Song quasi aus dem Nichts erhebt), und "Sunrise" (endet mit einem spritzigen Latin-Rhythmus) sowie vor allem das betörend schöne "Something in between" von der 2. CD. Wobei ich mich schwer entscheiden kann, einzelne Titel hervorzuheben - gerade die 2. CD wird von Minute zu Minute größer.

Tja... wie sieht\'s denn aus - kennt von euch noch jemand Kate Bush? Oder hat gar schon das neue Album gehört? Fast 12 Jahre Schaffenspause sind in diesem Business eine doppelte Ewigkeit ;-)

CU
Olaf

"Das sind Leute, die von Tuten und Ahnung keine Blasen haben" (ein Reporter auf die Frage nach der politischen Bildung des typischen Anhangs von Donald Trump)
bei Antwort benachrichtigen
@Fischköppche ;-) triker
triker Nachtrag zu: „@Fischköppche ;-)“
Optionen

hier auch mal ein kleine Abriss zur CD:

Kate Bush releases her first album in 12 years next week but has it been worth the very long wait?

When EMI invites a group of journalists to the Royal Academy of Music, in London, for a one-off listen to Kate Bush's new album, they are sending a clear signal - this album is not to be dismissed lightly.

Aerial is in two distinct halves - the first side, A Sea of Honey, is a collection of distinct, highly personal, sometimes impenetrably personal, songs.

Side two, A Sky of Honey, is an old-fashioned concept album - complex, layered, perhaps pretentious, but also a dazzling aural masterpiece.

A Sea of Honey has seven wildly different songs which touch on aspects of her daily life, both public and personal.

Single King of the Mountain opens the album full of swelling synthesizers and pounding beats and with its almost cryptic lyrics sets the tone for side one.

All of the songs have a swirling, almost uncontrolled creativity as if Bush has had these songs bottled up for more than a decade.

Her voice escapes, rather than emerges, in that familiar part-piercing, part-haunting tone that uniquely can carry across consonants and vowels with seductive ease.

Folk melody

Bertie, about her young son, has a simple, pleasing folk melody but lyrically feels slightly mundane.

Aerial
Fans have waited a long time for the album

She sings: "Here comes the sunshine, here comes the son of mine. Here comes everything, here comes a song for him."

"You bring me such joy. Then you bring me more joy," she recites, almost unconvincingly.

How to be Invisible is side one's stand out track, with a real sense of menace in its driving beat.

"I found a book on how to be invisible. On the edge of the labyrinth," she sings.

Strangest song

The strangest song on the whole album is Mrs Bartolozzi, a plaintive wail seemingly about domestic chores.

"Washing machine, washing machine, washing machine," she cries. Listening to this, I felt like I was trapped inside the washing machine on the spin cycle.

The final song of side one, A Coral Room, is a deeply moving elegy about her mother's death that is so private it feels almost intrusive to listen in.

Seven songs in and it seems a poor return on a 12-year wait. It also gives little clue to the sheer majesty of side two.

Lyric poem

A Sky of Honey is, in a sense, a lyric poem set to music. Full of lush, fecund melodies which swing from jazz to rock, it is threaded through with bird song and chatter and feels distinctly organic and earthy.

There is also a painterly quality to the nine linked songs, a feeling which is enhanced by the appearance of Rolf Harris who both speaks and sings - thankfully briefly - on two tracks.

Side two is the album Pink Floyd might have made if Kate Bush had been their lead singer and lyricist in 1979.

Many people will hate the concept album feel to the songs and it is an acquired taste but is both sonically and lyrically a fine achievement.

It takes the listener on a journey - from a young boy's innocent statement of "Mummy, daddy, the day is full of birds" to a dynamic conclusion more than 40 minutes later where Kate Bush herself seems to have become the birds and takes flight.

Reaction

"I want to be high up on the roof," she sings.

Often playful, Bush seems aware of the reaction some listeners will have.

"What kind of language is this? Tell me are you singing?" she asks.

Musically the nine songs of side two - which are parts of a whole rather than distinct tracks - are splashes of piano, bass and drums, layered with 1980s synthesizers which give the album a retro quality.

It is a very English album, with the rural feel of a John Betjeman or AE Houseman poem.

'Laughing'

"All of the birds are laughing. Come let's all join in," she sings as her voice emerges from the sound of birdsong.

A Sky of Honey is a celebration of song itself, which has a child's joyful lack of inhibition about it - Kate Bush is heard laughing freely towards the end while a young child, possibly her son, is heard several times.

Wild guitars, pounding drums, dashing across the left and right channels of speakers, carry the album to its conclusion where both bird chatter and the sound of a cuckoo rise and then fade away.

It is difficult to know how successful the album will be - certainly it is not for the iPod generation - but Aerial stands alongside The Hounds of Love and The Kick Inside as her finest work.

Aerial is released on 7 November.


---------------------------------------------------------------------

ach ja:
Ein aktuelles Bild gibbet aach noch dezuu:

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/40958000/jpg/_40958048_kate_bush_emi203x250.jpg
Steven

Gesundheit konnte ich mir nicht kaufen... Deshalb habe ich fast keine mehr...
bei Antwort benachrichtigen
@Krumbeersche ;-) Olaf19
Re: Kate Bush: ´Aerial´ luttyy