Hounds of Love
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Average customer review:Product Description
Though not the most prolific of album artists, Bush's worksmake up in impact what they lack in frequency. Her style and material has always been unique, eccentric even, but Hounds Of Love is probably the strongest mix of controlled musical experimentation and lyrical expression. It deals with big issues - childhood fantasy and trauma, conflict, sexuality -but rarely lapses into pretension. The intense arrangementsare perfectly matched to the subjects: `Running Up That Hill' climactically erotic, `Cloudbusting' broodingly triumphant. And it's all her own work.
Track Listing
- Running up that hill
- Hounds of love
- Big sky
- Mother stands for comfort
- Cloudbusting
- And dream of sheep
- Under ice
- Waking the witch
- Watching you without me
- Jig of life
- Hello Earth
- Morning fog
- The big sky (Meteorogical mix)
- Running up that hill (12" mix)
- Be kind to my mistakes
- Under the ivy
- Burning bridge
- My lagan love
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1188 in Music
- Released on: 2000-01-24
- Number of discs: 1
Customer Reviews
Class
I was 18 years old when this album was first released. I bought it, listened to the singles, had a bash at the rest and then sort of forgot about it. It was only when I updated my collection of vinyl to CD's that I re-discovered this brilliant album, about 15 years ago. It is now never far from my stereo.
Speaking in an old fashioned way, the "a-side" (as it was on vinyl) is the one most people will listen to, it has the singles, from the galloping pounding "Running Up That Hill", through the sheer folky string quartet driven brilliance of "Cloudbusting" to the nicely upbeat "The Big Sky". But please try the old "b-side" - The Ninth Wave. A concept album within an album telling the story of a drowning woman, looking back through her life as she struggles in the darkening waters. Each track segues neatly into the next from the hard rock of "Waking the Witch" to the mad Irish reel of the "Jig of Life". The finest moment for me, by far, is the final two tracks. From the grand almost funereal surges of "Hello Earth" everything begins to fade, down and down, into darkness and near silence, and just then, in that moment of stillness, a bright light explodes in with the opening bars of the delightful "The Morning Fog". The chiming classical guitar of John Williams weaves in and out of the mix with Del Palmer's bass, and still sends chills down my spine! But is it death or life the woman encountered? The jury is still out.
Of the added extra tracks on this CD, the 12" re-mix of Cloudbusting is a goody, but please take some time over "Under The Ivy" one of the most beautiful songs Kate has ever written, and was originally the b-side to the single release of "Running up That Hill".
Kate Bush is beautiful and talented, a rarity in the music world these days. Cherish her, and cherish this, her finest album.
Truly madly deeply
I don't often award five stars to an album,unlike some Amazon reviewers who appear to think it is their duty to dish out five stars for all their personal favorites regardless of objectivity.
I will however make an exception here.Hounds of Love is truly one hell of an album !
Despite it now being 23 years old,the album is timeless and the extended version only reinforces its quality. I find it very much in what it now termed the 'Nu-Folk' field in that apart from obvious things like Jig of Life, even the uplifting cloudbusting is very much lifted from the English folk tradition.
Hounds of Love itself has been covered so many times,especially by Indie bands and running up that hill with its shimmering drum beats borrows from the Peter Gabrial school of music composure....get the rhythm and beat established and the music and lyrics will follow.
Brilliant !
Maverick Marvel ( nevertoolate #003 )
2005's 'Ariel' divided the critics.
With such a long gap between 1993's 'The Red Shoes' and her most recent excursion
it was perhaps inevitable that responses would blow both hot and cold.
I still havn't made up my mind nearly three years on.
Ms Bush's inconsistancies have a long history but The Wolf has always kept
a warm space in his heart for life's true mavericks.
With the release in 1985 of 'Hounds Of Love' however we discover what is probably her most coherant and consistant work.
From the pulsing opening bars of 'Running Up That Hill';
though the cinematic landscapes of 'Hounds Of Love' and 'The Big Sky';
via the more reflective 'Mother Stands For Comfort';
to the exstatic, otherworldly march of 'Cloudbusting', we find Ms Bush
utterly confident and in control of all aspects of composition, performance and production.
The song-cycle 'The Ninth Wave' forming the second part of this remarkable
album is a deeply affecting and perceptive series of subjective reflections about sleep and dreaming.
It is the stuff of true nightmares.
The shifting claustrophobic moods of suffocation, fear and uncertainty are brilliantly
and disturbingly evoked in music of dark and elusive subtelty.
As with all truly great music the album retains a timeless, genre-bending, quality.
Her muse was never more sharply honed than this.





