Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10.1 6/24/83; site mit-eddie.UUCP Path: utzoo!watmath!clyde!burl!ulysses!allegra!mit-eddie!gds From: gds@mit-eddie.UUCP (Greg Skinner) Newsgroups: mod.music Subject: Love-Hounds Digest Message-ID: <1000@mit-eddie.UUCP> Date: Sat, 18-Jan-86 13:57:43 EST Article-I.D.: mit-eddi.1000 Posted: Sat Jan 18 13:57:43 1986 Date-Received: Sun, 19-Jan-86 05:39:04 EST Organization: MIT Lusers and Hosers Inc., Cambridge, Ma. Lines: 186 Approved: gds@eddie.mit.edu Love-Hounds Digest Saturday, January 18, 1986, 14:10 Today's Topics: Robert Fripp in Guitar Player KB in Tower Records' "Pulse" Trivia Question Wall Street Journal and Kate [][][][][][][][][][] >From wicinski@nrl-css.arpa Tue Dec 31 09:45:37 1985 Date: Tue, 31 Dec 85 09:59:38 est From: Tim Wicinski Subject: Robert Fripp in Guitar Player The new guitar player magazine has an interview with Rober Fripp. I borrowed a friend's copy and read it in a hurry (we were on our way to a hockey game) so I didn't get the whole picture out of it. It is a long interview, taking up a good many pages. The interview covers topics like why Discipline is a much better album than than two albums that followed it; a new method of guitar tuning being developed by Fripp which he says is infinitely better than the old standard (don't ask me man, I know little about music); and various topics guitar related, music related, and life related. As usual, Fripp is his intense self. It doesn't sound like he takes things lightly at all. Also included is a flex-i-disc of some frippertronics music. not bad. tim [][][][][][][][][][] >From tsung@aero Tue Dec 31 12:32:12 1985 Posted-Date: 31 Dec 85 09:31:30 PST (Tue) Subject: KB in Tower Records' "Pulse" Date: 31 Dec 85 09:31:30 PST (Tue) From: tsung@aero "Pulse" is a (monthly?) magazine published by Tower Records. In the current issue there is an one-page article on Kate. It seemed that Kate had interviewed with an Tower person (why not? If she could interview with Doug :-) as this article is consisted largely of her quotes. Following is some of the more interesting stuff (KB's words are double quoted): -------------------------------- The latest of five Bush collections just hit the bins and now _Hounds of Love_ is being stacked alongside such long-standing successes as Heart and Motley Crue (!!?). Before, _The Kick Inside_, _Lionheart_, _Never For Ever_, and _The Dreaming_ were but small cult items. about RuTH: "That song is going to puzzle a lot of people," says Bush. "I think perhaps the word God conjures up a sense of religion but it's quite often used symbolically." (a quote from Ruth about the Deal With God) ". .. . (God is the) only person who can make the true bond of love possible." She laughs: "Hopefully there are enough people who listen to the music and see that it's actually not that religious." about The Ninth Wave: The flipside's (of _HOL_) dubbed "The Ninth Wave" or, "a journey for a woman asleep on the water: There are people trying to keep her awake and not let her fall asleep ['And Dream of Sheep']. Then she falls asleep and has a dream -- but wakes up from the dream only to find herself underwater ['Under Ice']. And then she has hallucinations where people are saying 'Wake up, wake up, don't sleep anymore,' and trying to get her out of the water. Except a witch finder pushes her right under because he assumes she's a witch ['Waking the Witch']. Soon she travels home and sees her loved ones but they can't see her ['Watching You Without Me'] and hopefully it all leads to the hope and salvation of the morning ['The Morning Fog'] where everything comes to life again. The sense of loneliness is taken over by the sense of someone saving them." (what happened to "Hello Earth"?) random: "Perhaps there's more of a sense of continuity on this album," she comments, "but that's just my humble subjective opinion." One thing's for sure: "It's the lightest album and the easiest for me emotionally." But being able to "turn ideas into pieces of plastic" has remained her emotional high. "What is wonderful is I may read a book or see a movie and get a lot of visual imagery. Except the influence won't surface in my music for maybe ten years," (she cites _The Book of Dreams_ as an example). "When the ideas feel right they just come to the front and sort of go, 'Hi there.'" Plans of late are "getting on with the next record as soon as possible" and creating a full-length video version of "The Ninth Wave." . . . Bush calls herself lucky as her wildest fantasy is coming true: the ability to remain true to her inventive mind without worrying about its results being accepted by the commercial world. Bush sings about that fantasy on _Hounds of Love_. "You want my reply?/What was the question?/I was looking at the big sky." (written by Richard Laermer, quoted w/out permission, etc, etc). ------------------------------ Well the last paragraph (about "The Big Sky") certainly made a lot of sense to me. Say, do you think that The Ninth Wave could be about her own artistic/internal struggle? It's that witch part above (and the discussion a while back of KB-the-witch) that gave me the idea. For instance, the bit with the witch- finder is about KB not understood by outsiders (critics, etc), and "Watching You Without Me" (she sees loved ones but they can't see her) is about her not understood by her close friends. Just a wild speculation. By the way, where does all that angry energy of "The Dreaming" comes from? I don't think anybody can produce a work of such STRONG emotion without some stimuli of an equivalent magnitude. Fu-Sheng p.s. KROQ (Pasadena/LA) played "Hounds of Love" (the song) twice in last three days! I'm amazed! Within twenty minutes (of HOL), the same DJ played "Close To Me" from the latest Cure album, which I consider to be one of the best cuts from the album. Doubly amazed! [][][][][][][][][][] >From think!harvard!topaz!petsd!peora!jer Wed Jan 1 16:49:02 1986 Subject: Trivia Question Date: 31 Dec 85 16:59:19 EST (Tue) From: J Eric Roskos X-From: J Eric Roskos While sitting here thinking about how I sort of miss the Love-Hounds discussions, and stuff like that, I realized that I had left a "loose end" when I disappeared recently. Specifically: Nobody ever answered my A-ha "Take on Me" trivia question. So, I will tell you the answer now: it's the movie _Altered_States_. And, also, I never answered the question someone asked about "What is the etymology of the term `Golden Ghetto'". This term was first used to refer to Sandy Springs, GA, an area in which very high-income people live, which has a very high level of crime perpetrated by juvenile offenders. [][][][][][][][][][] >From hofmann@AMSAA.ARPA Thu Jan 2 13:13:02 1986 Date: Thu, 2 Jan 86 10:58:47 EST From: Jim Hofmann Subject: Wall Street Journal and Kate WSJ reviews Hounds (2 paragraphs) without making any comments on the marketibility of Kate! Actually their arts and leisure page is very well written - you'd be suprised you are reading what Sport Death Larry refers to as a business rag. It was in the Monday issue. If anyone wants me to reprint it here, just say the word. (Is anyone collecting all the reviews?). Oh, it was generally a good review ... the person loved the 2nd side and desribed it as the last minutes of drowning victim who goes through various stages of terror, fear and ectasy ... for two paragraphs it was written very succintly and was the lead off for a bunch of other reviews (included Joni Mitchell and Pete Townsend). hofmann [][][][][][][][][][] -- It's like a jungle sometimes, it makes me wonder how I keep from goin' under. Greg Skinner (gregbo) {decvax!genrad, allegra, ihnp4}!mit-eddie!gds gds@mit-eddie.mit.edu