Kate Bush / 50 Words For Snow
Artist Kate Bush
Album Title: 50 Words For Snow
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Alternative & Punk: Art Rock
Format CD
Released 11/21/2011
Label Anti/Epitaph
Catalog No 87186-2
Bar Code No 045778718627
Packaging Book Bound Thang
Tracks
1. Snowflake (9:47)
2. Lake Tahoe (11:08)
3. Misty (13:32)
4. Wild Man (7:16)
5. Snowed In At Wheeler Street (8:05)
6. 50 Words For Snow (8:30)
7. Among Angels (6:48)
Date Acquired 02/15/2012
Personal Rating
Acquired from Amazon
Purchase Price 12.00

Web Links

All Music Guide Entry:
Discogs Entry:

Notes

foobar2000 1.2.9 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2013-12-26 01:07:17

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Analyzed: Kate Bush / 50 Words for Snow
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DR         Peak         RMS     Duration Track
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DR13      -0.14 dB   -16.95 dB      9:48 01/07-Snowflake
DR11       0.00 dB   -14.76 dB     11:08 02/07-Lake Tahoe
DR10       0.00 dB   -14.24 dB     13:32 03/07-Misty
DR12       0.00 dB   -14.10 dB      7:17 04/07-Wild Man
DR9        0.00 dB   -14.08 dB      8:05 05/07-Snowed in at Wheeler Street
DR12       0.00 dB   -14.44 dB      8:31 06/07-50 Words for Snow
DR12      -0.13 dB   -16.83 dB      6:49 07/07-Among Angels
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Number of tracks:  7
Official DR value: DR11

Samplerate:        44100 Hz
Channels:          2
Bits per sample:   16
Bitrate:           522 kbps
Codec:             FLAC
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Reviews
All Music Guide Review:

Review by Thom Jurek
Kate Bush's 50 Words for Snow follows Director's Cut, a dramatically reworked collection of catalog material, by six months. This set is all new, her first such venture since 2005's Aerial. The are only seven songs here, but the album clocks in at an hour. Despite the length of the songs, and perhaps because of them, it is easily the most spacious, sparsely recorded offering in her catalog. Its most prominent sounds are Bush's voice, her acoustic piano, and Steve Gadd's gorgeous drumming -- though other instruments appear (as do some minimal classical orchestrations). With songs centered on winter, 50 Words for Snow engages the natural world and myth -- both Eastern and Western -- and fantasy. It is abstract, without being the least bit difficult to embrace. It commences with "Snowflake," with lead vocals handled by her son Bertie. Bush's piano, crystalline and shimmering in the lower middle register, establishes a harmonic pattern to carry the narrative: the journey of a snowflake from the heavens to a single human being's hand, and in its refrain (sung by Bush), the equal anticipation of the receiver. "Lake Tahoe" features choir singers Luke Roberts and Michael Wood in a Michael Nyman-esque arrangement, introducing Bush's slippery vocal as it relates the tale of a female who drowned in the icy lake and whose spirit now haunts it. Bush's piano and Gadd's kit are the only instruments. "Misty," the set's longest -- and strangest -- cut, is about a woman's very physical amorous tryst with, bizarrely, a snowman. Despite its unlikely premise, the grain of longing expressed in Bush's voice -- with bassist Danny Thompson underscoring it -- is convincing. Her jazz piano touches on Vince Guaraldi in its vamp. The subject is so possessed by the object of her desire, the morning's soaked but empty sheets propel her to a window ledge to seek her melted lover in the winter landscape.

"Wild Man," introduced by the sounds of whipping winds, is one of two uptempo tracks here, an electronically pulse-driven, synth-swept paean to the Tibetan Kangchenjunga Demon, or "Yeti." Assisted by the voice of Andy Fairweather Low, its protagonist relates fragments of expedition legends and alleged encounters with the elusive creature. Her subject possesses the gift of wildness itself; she seeks to protect it from the death wish of a world which, through its ignorance, fears it. On "Snowed in at Wheeler Street," Bush is joined in duet by Elton John. Together they deliver a compelling tale of would-be lovers encountering one other in various (re)incarnations through time, only to miss connection at the moment of, or just previous to, contact. Tasteful, elastic electronics and Gadd's tom-toms add texture and drama to the frustration in the singers' voices, creating twinned senses: of urgency and frustration. The title track -- the other uptempo number -- is orchestrated by loops, guitars, basses, and organic rhythms that push the irrepressible Stephen Fry to narrate 50 words associated with snow in various languages, urgently prodded by Bush. Whether it works as a "song" is an open question. The album closes with "Among Angels," a skeletal ballad populated only by Bush's syncopated piano and voice. 50 Words for Snow is such a strange pop record, it's all but impossible to find peers. While it shares sheer ambition with Scott Walker's The Drift and PJ Harvey's Let England Shake, it sounds like neither; Bush's album is equally startling because its will toward the mysterious and elliptical is balanced by its beguiling accessibility.
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