Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uwm.edu!bionet!hayes.ims.alaska.edu!gateway!dont-send-mail-to-path-lines From: jburka@SILVER.UCS.INDIANA.EDU (Jeff Burka) Newsgroups: rec.music.gaffa Subject: Re: Finding Kate Message-ID: <9103200032.AA01708@EDDIE.MIT.EDU> Date: 20 Mar 91 00:32:58 GMT References: <9103192253.AA13468@sqa.dsg.ti.com> Sender: Love-Hounds-request@ims.alaska.edu Organization: Indiana University, Bloomington Lines: 34 Approved: Love-Hounds@hayes.ims.alaska.edu I got into KaTe in a sort of roundabout way. I'd heard the name, but had no idea what her music was like...but I knew she sang back up on one of the Gabriel albums my brother had. Then I bought Big Country's _The Seer_, on which she sings BVs on the title track. The manager of the record store where I worked in 86/87 told me to listen to some of her stuff, but I never did... Other than little bits like "Don't Give Up," I had no real contact with KaTe until late '87, when I borrowed a copy of TWS from a friend. It was great, so I went out and bought my first CD: _Never For Ever_. That sufficed until the following fall ('88). A friend of mine who'd heard me playing NFE all the time had bought HoL and TKI over the summer. I fell in love with both albums, but purchashed neither. I bought Lionheart, then HoL, then TD, and finally, in June '89, I bought TKI. "Army Dreamers" is still my favorite KaTe song, with "The Ninth Wave" a close second (what? I can't do that? Okay, "Jig of Life" is my second favorite). SiG, Houdini, Night of the Swallow, and SiYL follow after those. Getting into KaTe was a fairly slow process for me--it took me ~1.5 years to get all of the (then) 5 studio albums. (considering that it took me a little over two years to get all 16 Genesis albums, this is slow...) I don't even know if I would have bought _Never For Ever_ if "Army Dreamers" hadn't grabbed me so strongly when I first heard TWS. Jeff -- |Jeffrey C. Burka |"I've lost my way through this world of | |jburka@silver.ucs.indiana.edu | profanities/I thrive on the wind and | |jburka@amber.ucs.indiana.edu | the rain and the cold." --Happy Rhodes|