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Kate Bush - On Stage CD (album) cover

ON STAGE

Kate Bush

 

Crossover Prog

2.77 | 15 ratings

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DangHeck
Prog Reviewer
3 stars First of all, a shoutout is most certainly due to user Finnforest, for the (to me here and now) twelve year old review of this EP. Really well written context for this can be found therein. I, for one, was utterly unaware of this. Despite what they say, it does appear this is a true-blue live recording, from May 1979 at the Hammersmith Odeon. But some have suggested that there was some kind of later (likely very purposeful) studio f*ckery on the finished tracks. Who's to say? Aside from Lionheart's "Don't Push Your Foot on the Heartbrake", the material on this album was originally released via her debut LP, The Kick Inside. [My personal experience with her live material is pretty much solely represented by her famed Christmas special, which premiered later that same year. If anyone is unfamiliar, there are some interesting commentaries written in recent about that performance, in all of its peculiarity. I'm sure they would make for a more than decent viewing guide, too.]

The EP begins with "Them Heavy People", one of her best Pop songs of her early works. For those somehow unfamiliar, this is one of a few tracks that is, as I've put it, faux-Reggae (successfully, I might add). Pretty great sound here, with much-necessary backing vocals. As if we didn't know it already, Kate is of course an insanely talented vocalist. The guitars at the end are soft and lovely. Next is the aforementioned Lionheart track, "Don't Push Your Foot on the Heartbrake". According to the credits for the EP, it is a full live band, as it sounds. This is the first time in her discography that I'm seeing the feature of one of her career go-tos, drummer Preston Heyman. For a live performance, pretty decent sound and offering a slightly different approach than what we get on the studio version. Specifically, it's slightly faster, slightly heavier and the backing vocals provide something pretty interesting that isn't on that original version. Even so, I'd take the original.

Onto our second side, we have the harder Rock of "James and the Cold Gun" and, really, the guitars here sound pretty awesome, either Brian Bath or Alan Murphy. Also a tad heavier than the original. But in that, I'll take the cleaner sound of the original. The even slower, super feeling approach of the final instrumental section is actually a lot more impactful than on The Kick Inside, so that's a mark in its favor, for sure! Honestly, super cool guitar solo here, too. The softest of the bunch by a landslide [did I use this analogy properly? haha] is our final track, "L'Amour Looks Something Like You". And this version, unlike the two tracks that precede it, is actually slower than the original studio recording. Kate sounds great, but there's really nothing that it offers that the original didn't already have.

True Rate: 3.5/5.0

DangHeck | 3/5 |

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