Kate Bush | Biography, Songs, Running Up That Hill, & Facts | Britannica (original) (raw)
Quick Facts
Byname of:
Catherine Bush
Also Known As:
Catherine Bush
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Kate Bush (born July 30, 1958, Bexleyheath, Kent, England) is a British singer and songwriter whose imaginative and inventive art rock—marked by theatrical sensuality, textural experimentation, and allusive subject matter—made her one of the most successful and influential female musicians in Britain in the late 20th century.
Early life and career
Bush was the youngest child of an artistic family. Her father, who was a doctor, played the piano, and her mother, a nurse, had competed as a folk dancer in her native Ireland. As a child, Bush studied violin and piano and frequently joined her parents and older brothers in performing traditional English and Irish tunes at home. By age 14 she had begun writing her own musical compositions, and two years later a family friend introduced her to Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour, who helped her win a contract with EMI Records. For the next several years Bush took vocal lessons and studied dance and mime in London while preparing material for her first recording.
The Kick Inside and Lionheart
In 1978 Bush released her first single, “Wuthering Heights,” inspired by characters from Emily Brontë’s novel of the same name. Although its high keening vocals, florid instrumentation, and literary affectations were out of step with the punk rock that was then fashionable in Britain, the song became an unexpected number-one hit there and elsewhere and boosted sales of Bush’s debut album, The Kick Inside (1978), which features similarly ornate and romantic fare. She quickly capitalized on her early success with another album, Lionheart (1978), after which she embarked on a European tour. The performance schedule exhausted Bush, however, and she subsequently focused primarily on recording.
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Never for Ever, The Dreaming, and Hounds of Love
Bush returned in 1980 with Never for Ever, which produced such hits as “Babooshka” and was praised for its musical sophistication. On The Dreaming (1982), the first album she produced entirely on her own, she employed new synthesizer technology to create densely layered arrangements for songs that explore such subjects as the life of Harry Houdini and the plight of the Aboriginal people of Australia. The album sold only modestly, however. Bush then reached a critical and commercial apex with the lush Hounds of Love (1985). Its moody otherworldly single “Running Up That Hill” even provided a breakthrough for Bush in the United States, although her following there ultimately remained limited. The greatest-hits collection The Whole Story (1986) and the single “Don’t Give Up” (1986), a duet with Peter Gabriel, further increased her popularity.
The Sensual World and The Red Shoes
With The Sensual World (1989) and The Red Shoes (1993), Bush continued to draw out bold emotions and alluring pop melodies from songs that were elaborately constructed and sometimes inspired by erudite sources. (The title track of the former record, for instance, is a reimagining of Molly Bloom’s soliloquy in James Joyce’s Ulysses, and the latter record is named after the Powell-Pressburger ballet film.) She also collaborated with a number of guest musicians, including Gilmour, Prince, Eric Clapton, and a Bulgarian vocal trio. The Sensual World earned her a Grammy nomination for best alternative performance.
Career hiatus and return with Aerial
After directing and starring in The Line, the Cross & the Curve (1993), a short film featuring songs from The Red Shoes, Bush took a 12-year hiatus from music. She resurfaced with the atmospheric Aerial (2005), a double record imbued with themes of domesticity and the natural world that earned her some of the most favorable reviews of her career. Bush later released Director’s Cut (2011)—for which she rerecorded songs from The Sensual World and _The Red Shoes_—and 50 Words for Snow (2011), a contemplative piano-focused set of new material.
Return to live performances, other projects, and honors
In 2014 Bush returned to the stage for the first time in 35 years. Her 22 concerts were stage spectaculars, featuring puppets, illusionists, and dancers, and they were followed by the three-disc live recording Before the Dawn (2016). How to Be Invisible, a book collecting her song lyrics, was published in 2018. In 2022 Bush’s 1985 song “Running Up That Hill” featured prominently in the fourth season of the popular Netflix series Stranger Things. Because of this exposure to new audiences unacquainted with her work, the song reentered the charts in many countries. In the United States it went to number three on the Billboard Hot 100, and Hounds of Love reached the 12th position on the album chart.
In 2002 Bush was granted the Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Contribution to British Music. She was made Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2013.