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Category: 50 Words for Snow Page 10 of 12

“A semi-classical concept album with a pop song thrown in”: Lucy Jones (Telegraph Blogs)

Lucy Jones on her Telegraph blog sees 50 Words as evidence that those over 30 can’t write a pop song. Did she really expect pop songs?

She’s difficult to critique because she is so the sum of her parts. I feel uncomfortable not loving this album because I think she’s a genius (she’s my second most listened to artist on iTunes). I really want to love it and it feels strange that I don’t … Part of the problem is that 50 Words For Snow is a concept album. Cue groans and rolling of eyes … The obvious pitfall for artists making a concept album is the risk that their songs will sound “samey”. And even though there are independent standout moments on some of the tracks … 50 Words cannot hide from this criticism … Hardcore fans will think this album is sublime and it is very Kate: unpredictable, expansive, devoid of cliché … 50 Words for Snow will be a disappointment to some; Kate’s set the bar high. But it’s still the best secular Christmas album ever released.”

HMV competition to win a ’50 Words’ print signed by Kate

HMV in the UK are running a competition for people pre-ordereing the CD and Vinyl. The prize is an exclusive signed album artwork lithograph.The competition ends on November 21st.

The album is out in less than a week, so the time for preordering is slipping away fast!

Win signed Kate artwork at HMV

Album SuperSite poster on London’s Westway

The HUGE Massive monster street poster for 50 Words has gone up on the West Cromwell Road in London, near the big Tesco Store AND there is a digital version, near Shepherds Bush. Pictures soon!

“A remarkable albeit potentially difficult listen”: Tone Audio

Tod Martens at Tone Audio waxes poetic:

An artisan of the piano, Bush was always more chamber than concert hall. But 50 Words for Snow begs the listener closer, its hushed quality a cleverly crafted comfort to disguise the turmoil underneath … On 50 Words for Snow, Bush splits the difference between … stark realism and the odder, more otherworldly thoughts that mark much of her 80s-era work … The Elton John duet “Snowed in At Wheeler Street,” however, is heartbreak at its most haunting. London smog, the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and burning Rome are among the images that reverberate around a buzzing, horror-soundtrack keyboard..”

Kate’s official site streams ‘Snowflake’ this evening

The stunning opening track from Kate’s new album, Snowflake, which features Kate’s son Bertie (Albert McIntosh) on lead vocals is streaming for just one hour only on Kate’s site tonight. Watch it here – now!

snowflake

“Spirits the listener away into Bush’s distinctive hyperreality”: NPR

Update: This link below also now has the full album as an NPR exclusive stream. Those waiting for the physical CD/vinyl album first-listen should avoid! 🙂

Ann Powers at NPR loves 50 Words for Snow:

It’s a fun game to mimic the task that England’s elusive empress of art rock devised for her 10th studio long-player out Nov. 21. Approaching this release from different angles, speaking of it in different metaphors, piques the imagination while creating a kind of unity of thought, just as limiting herself to stories inspired by winter weather clearly did for Bush … But the phrase that might spring first from the lips of Bush fans digging into Snow is, “Welcome home!” In seven long tracks, the album does just what the best of Bush’s work has done since she burst on the scene … It melds extravagant tales to unconventional song structures, and spirits the listener away into Bush’s distinctive hyperreality. Each song on Snow grows as if from magic beans from the lush ground of the singer-songwriter’s keyboard parts. The music is immersive but spacious, jazz-tinged and lushly electronic … But the tighter focus of Snow makes it one of Bush’s most cohesive works … Spinning variations on a theme instead of offering one long narrative, Bush reimagines the concept album as a poet would, connecting its elements with delicate thread … We who treasure her can rejoice that she cut a path so quickly … The once moderately reclusive artiste may be entering a fruitful late season. Let’s hope she continues on her elemental mission. One hundred words for starlight, maybe, Kate?

Kate Bush

“Gorgeous song stories”: Musicfeeds.com.au

Very enthusiastic review of 50 Words from Stephanie Myers at Music Feeds in Australia:

Bush’s music and living legacy as an artist has the respect of her peers and her contemporaries in spades here, and it shows. Moreover, with this album, it’s clear that she’s adept at creating slow, gorgeous song-stories that take their time to unfold. They are, in essence, pieces that revel in themselves without bothering to revel in the past … 50 Words for Snow offers Bush at her prime … it’s an album that’s more than likely to nab her a new generation of devotees.”

“The Snow Queen of Albion’s electric eden is back to reclaim her throne” – Classic Rock

Stephen Dalton at Classic Rock hands in a 7/10 review of 50 Words:

a more supple and experimental affair, with a comtemporary chamber pop sound grounded in crisp piano, minimal percussion and light-touch electronics … These compositions, none below seven minutes long, unravel into billowing jazz-rock soundscapes, interwoven with fragmentary narratives delivered in a range of voices from shrill to laurie Anderson-style cooing … Bush seems to tap a 21st century vein of pastoral Englishness that chimes with recent avant-folk excursions by Polly Harvey and Radiohead. The Snow Queen of Albion’s electric eden is back to reclaim her throne.”

Australia: Radio National ‘Album of the Week’

Down in Oz the national broadcaster ABC on the Radio National channel has 50 Words for Snow ahead of its release, and from Wednesday, November 16, all the tracks will be available to listen to online.

Here’s a treat on several levels: she has a reputation for innovation and independence, she has a track record that any artist would cherish, she does not release albums on anything near a regular basis so when they come, you should listen carefully… Kate Bush. This is an album that is quiet, lush and otherworldly.”

“Sublimely strange”: Rolling Stone

Will Hermes in Rolling Stone (this one is not yet on line):

an LP that finds a universe of emotions in its wintery theme – a sort of virtual snowglobe … the music … is full of plush, drifty ambience. The vocals sound nothing like the fierce cyberbabe on her 1982 LP The Dreaming, or the strange angels on Hounds Of Love, but they are no less sublime … she sounds utterly at home defining her own world. It’s an amazing place.”

“inspired, unique and beautiful”: Holy Moly

At Holy Moly, Tim Chipping begins to run out of superlatives:

50 Words For Snow is a slowly unfolding, dense and serious work. Not so much a set of songs as a collection of sung short stories, backed by her most perfect and economical piano playing to date. And while Kate’s once limitless voice is now fried round the edges, her ability to communicate precise emotion and character remains the very best, and most affecting pop music has ever had to offer. If the underrated Aerial was child-focused and playful, 50 Words is adult and profound … We came to this record expecting to find fault, to notice a diminishing in her once impeccable judgment and to hear an artist from the past, far from the top of her game. What we found was the opposite, and so much more. 50 Words For Snow is simply extarordinary.” The album is rated 10/10.

“Sublime and Ridiculous”: BBC Music

Jude Rogers reviews Kate’s new album on the BBC Music site:

reflects a season which brings out the profound and absurd in equal measure – the feelings of longing and loneliness that emerge as the dark nights bed in, the party-hat silliness that pops up when the same nights stretch out … The album only really reaches the heights Bush has set for herself when she appears centre stage. Her voice is noticeably older now, full of earth, heft and husk, and works stunningly well with little more than her piano’s sustain pedal … 50 Words for Snow may threaten to lose its way in the blizzard sometimes, but it is moments like these – jolting us from her world for a moment, reminding us of how all-embracing her talent can be – that show just how much she can move us with her fire and ice…

50 Words For Snow newsbit round-up!!

50 Words For Snow

Lucky fans in Sweden could attend a preview of the album on November 15th in Stockholm, read more at this Facebook page here….DJ Mark Radcliffe is also interviewing Kate f0r BBC Radio 2 and BBC Radio 6, we’ll have broadcast times when we get them….Eamon Sweeney has interviewed Kate for the Irish Independent‘s Day & Night magazine due out on Friday November 18th, the day the album is released in Ireland. Eamon says “An immense privelege & honour to talk to her…(the album) gets lovelier every time I hear it too”….Canadian radio interview coming up also with Jian Ghomeshi on CBC Radio (no date yet)….the December issue of Clash Magazine gives the new album a 9/10 rating….a 4-star review of 50 Words For Snow has been published in in The List. Malcolm Jack writes “The sensual, seductive Bush dominates a sparse, wintery, piano-led slow-burner”….The Wire magazine gives a more mixed review, but says the album is “like a wintry riposte to the midsummer day of Aerial’….UK journalist Pete Paphides tweets this evening that the new album is “her best since Hounds of Love”….speaking of Twitter, journalists who have been given preview listens have been tweeting their enthusiasm for the album (“truly dreamy lush & gorgeous”, “very special”, “I’m hooked”, “tremendously lovely”, “the song with Elton John on is amazing”) you’ll find many of them in a fantastic and regularly updated listing of the media activity about 50 Words For Snow here on the site forum (thanks Louise!)….

50 Words For Snow album package

BBC Front Row interview with Kate on the way – Kate says hello to fans via her very first tweet!

John WilsonJohn Wilson has interviewed Kate on his BBC Radio 4 Front Row programme for the releases of both Aerial and Director’s Cut. He’s not about to break that habit for 50 Words For Snow and today met with Kate to interview her for a future broadcast (we’ll have the broadcast date and time of this interview as soon as we can). He relayed the following message from Kate via his Twitter account“Thank you so much for all your kind words, I’m really touched. Hope you like the album, love Kate” Aww.

New interview in Dutch OOR magazine

Read more about this new Dutch interview with Kate to promote 50 Words For Snow in The Netherlands at the magazine’s site here. (scan from OOR website)

OOR magazine interview with Kate

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