Tuesday, February 27, 2007

4. The Kick Inside


Flash forward to January 1979*. I'm student teaching and attending university in England and it seems like everyone in the college dorm is playing a record by a new female singer. At first I'm not so sure I like the music, but when I listen to the lyrics I find that I do. The musician tells a story with each of her songs, and her voice can do things I'd never heard. Plus, they tell me, she dances while she sings her incredible songs. I'm also told, by fellow American students, that she performed on Saturday Night Live the night after I left for England.

Of course I'm talking about Kate Bush. As soon as I return to the States I buy her album, The Kick Inside, and play it over and over again, listening to the words; hypnotized by the sounds. I force my friends and family to listen to her and we try to dissect the songs. What do they mean?

Of course we know what Wuthering Heights is about, but I was memorized by the title song, The Kick Inside. I suspected it was about sibling incest or suicide, but couldn't imagine either, so looked for some other meaning in the lyrics.

The first verse was obviously about death. I remember looking up the word chintz and because it sounded so old fashioned, thought perhaps this was an old woman's deathbed. She'd lived a long and happy life and was writing a note to a loved one (husband? child?) and saying she'd soon be with (a) God.
I've pulled down my lace and the chintz.
Oh, do you know you have the face of a genius?
I'll send your love to Zeus.
Oh, by the time you read this,
I'll be well in touch.
The second verse made it harder to fool myself. My first thought was that the kicking was an unborn baby, but that didn't mesh with my old woman theory. Maybe the kicking was pains from death. Maybe she's writing that note to her brother and not her husband or child. And the part about being under the quilt. Well, it was the olden days - they had to keep warm somehow.
I'm giving it all in a moment or two.
I'm giving it all in a moment, for you.
I'm giving it all, giving it, giving it.
This kicking here inside
Makes me leave you behind.
No more under the quilt
To keep you warm.
Your sister I was born.
You must lose me like an arrow,
Shot into the killer storm.
I'd deluded myself for years, loving this song, but not letting myself think what it could really be about. It wasn't until I began researching for this post that I discovered that it was about sibling incest and suicide and an unborn baby. God bless the Internet.

I'll write more about Kate Bush's music and her influence on me in later posts. I go in and out of my obsession with her work. Currently I'm out, but once I listen to her stuff again, I'm sure to be back in.



*It's possible I'd heard about Kate Bush earlier than January 1979 - in fact I'm almost sure of it, but my memories do not mesh with the dates. I thought I'd heard her in a 6th form break room at Benton Park Grammar School while visiting friends at that school, but the year she released The Kick Inside, I didn't visit England until early December. Maybe I visited the school before their winter holiday break. Still a month earlier doesn't make that much difference, I just like to get my memories straight. back

3 comments:

Indigo Bunting said...

How do you do it? You keep me enthralled.

Deloney said...

I have her remake of Wuthering Heights. She sings it in a lower register so fewer chamapagne glasses shatter!

Sabine said...

This was such a great post. So glad you've joined this.