Sometimes her material has been downright odd: the song “Pi” on 2005 Aerial CD (it's essentially her singing the numbers for the symbol Pi to its 137th decimal place) is a prime example. So it should come as no surprise that the first song here, “Snowflake,” is sung from the point of view of snow itself; a second song details lovemaking with a slowly melting snowman, “Misty,” and a third, “Wild Man,” examines the discovery and protection of a yeti. But unlike the somewhat blotted Aerial – she’d been away from the music scene for some years when she recorded that and it showed – 50 Words for Snow is just this side of a masterpiece.
Kate Bush |
“Lake Tahoe” is an old-fashioned ghost story about the ghost of a woman who is constantly searching for her lost dog, Snowflake (she drowned in the lake looking for him and so she still wanders the shore trying to find him). The off-rhythm, jazz-tinged playing and Bush’s minor chord singing gives the piece an eerie, unreal quality. “Roll his body./Give him eyes./Make him smile for me./Give him life,” is how “Misty” begins. And yes, it is about a woman building and then making love to a snowman. The metaphor she’s playing with here is summarized in the line “I can feel him melting in my hand.” It’s a fine conceit about melting the heart of a ‘cold’ man, but the song did not really need 13:32 to tell its tale. The playing by Bush and Gadd, particularly, is compelling, but it is ultimately the only weak track on an otherwise masterful collection.
“Wild Man” is being touted as the first “single” (it was released prior to the CD launch on Youtube in a pared-down sub-five minutes version – the CD track is over seven minutes in length). On the track, Bush talk-sings the lyrics in a husky voice that suggests someone in the cold relating the story of the discovery of a yeti on a mountain climb. The climbers who find him protect and hide him from those that would exploit him/it. Or perhaps, she’s doing the lyrics ‘sotto voce’ so no outsider can hear. It’s got a compelling musical line, and Bush’s vocal approach is nothing like I’ve heard her do before, but it does have that oddball perspective that she has always been attracted to.
Drummer Steve Gadd |
The title track, “50 Words for Snow,” has fun playing with language, and I think she’s trying to do here, with great success, what she attempted in the flawed “Pi.” The song is a ‘recitation’ by the fictional Professor Joseph Yupik (really Stephen Fry) as, urged on by a throaty and erotically charged Bush, he states the 50 words for snow, including: “whiteout,” “blackbird Braille,” “Wenceslasaire,” “Santanyeroofdikov,” “peDtaH ‘ej chIS qo,” “bad for trains,” and, of course, number 50, “snow.” Where several of the songs play with jazz, this one is polyrhythmic World Music-inspired.
The final track, “Among Angels,” is a pretty, simple love song that brings this fine collection to a enveloping and, yes, loving almost achingly romantic finale. This is the CD for those who love Kate Bush’s music, and have been waiting for after the disappointment of Aerial, or the ‘okay, nicely done, but why’ reinterpretations of her older songs she released earlier this year under the name Director’s Cut. Whether 50 Words for Snow will grab and hold the ears of those just discovering her is another story. Songs from the snow’s point of view, or a woman copulating with a snowman, are not what you hear every day in contemporary music.
– David Churchill is a critic and author of the novel The Empire of Death. You can read an excerpt here. Or go to http://www.wordplaysalon.com/ for more information. And yes, he’s begun the long and arduous task of writing his second novel.
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