The Sensual World | |
Type: | Studio album |
Artist: | Kate Bush |
Cover: | The Sensual World.png |
Alt: | A grayscale photo of a woman holding a rose. |
Recorded: | September 1987 – July 1989 |
Studio: |
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Genre: | |
Label: | EMI |
Producer: | Kate Bush |
Prev Title: | The Whole Story |
Prev Year: | 1986 |
Next Title: | Aspects of the Sensual World |
Next Year: | 1990 |
The Sensual World is the sixth studio album by the English singer-songwriter Kate Bush, released on 16 October 1989 by EMI Records. It entered and peaked at No. 2 on the UK Albums Chart and has been certified Platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for shipments in excess of 300,000 in the United Kingdom, and Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in the United States.
Bush drew inspiration for the title track from the modernist novel Ulysses by James Joyce. Bush realised that Molly Bloom's soliloquy, the closing passage of the novel, fitted the music she had created. When the Joyce estate refused to release the text, Bush wrote original lyrics that echo the original passage, as Molly steps from the pages of the book and revels in the real world.[2] She also alluded to "Jerusalem" by William Blake in a reference to the song's gestation ("And my arrows of desire rewrite the speech"). The song includes Irish instrumentation (uilleann pipes, fiddle, whistle) under a breathy rendering of the orgasmic 'Yes' of the original text.
The songs "Deeper Understanding", "Never Be Mine", and "Rocket's Tail" all feature backing vocals by the Bulgarian vocal ensemble Trio Bulgarka. "Heads We're Dancing" includes a characteristic Mick Karn fretless bassline. The song "This Woman's Work" from the romantic comedy film She's Having a Baby (1988) was re-edited for this album. On 27 November 2005 it was featured in the British TV drama Walk Away and I Stumble starring Tamzin Outhwaite. Due to that broadcast, the song reached No. 3 on the UK Singles Downloads Chart in late 2005.[3] This song has also been used in a long-running UK television advert for the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, broadcast between 2005 and 2008, and in the Extras Christmas Special in 2007. A version of the song was recorded by R&B artist Maxwell in 1997 for his MTV Unplugged EP.
Released as CD players were becoming increasingly popular, the original LP ended with "This Woman's Work", while "Walk Straight Down the Middle" was included as a bonus track on the CD and cassette versions of the album. The gap between these two tracks is slightly longer to indicate the album was intended to finish with "This Woman's Work". "Walk Straight Down the Middle" later appeared on the compilation The Other Sides.
A video collection called The Sensual World: The Videos was also released. It contained videos for the title song, "Love and Anger", and "This Woman's Work" (all directed by Bush herself), as well as excerpts from an interview Bush gave to the music TV channel VH1.
In May 2011, Bush released the album Director's Cut, which featured new versions of four songs from The Sensual World, including the title song, now called "Flower of the Mountain". Finally having received permission from the Joyce estate, Bush recorded a new vocal using Molly Bloom's soliloquy as the lyric. Additionally, she re-recorded a sparse, piano-only version of "This Woman's Work". The new version of "Deeper Understanding" was released as a single, with an accompanying video.
The live version of "Never Be Mine" was included on her live album Before the Dawn, released in 2016. Although the song had not been performed before an audience, Bush included the live version in the recording.
In November 2018, Bush released box sets of remasters of her studio albums, including The Sensual World.
"While Bush's famously fey voice would probably be enough to hold the disparate strands of The Sensual World together, the album takes its cue and colouring too from the hypnotically sinuous sway of the pipes on the title track," wrote Robert Sandall in Q. "There are some strapping power chords to be despatched here and there, most notably on 'Love and Anger', but the dominant mood is of Oriental reverie, similar in feel to that achieved latterly by Japan. And in fact the last track on side one, 'Heads We're Dancing', reproduces that mysteriously sproingy bass sound favoured by Mick Karn."
In 1990, Bush received two nominations at the 10th Brit Awards in the categories Best British Producer and Best British Female.[4] At the 33rd Annual Grammy Awards held the following year, The Sensual World was nominated for Best Alternative Music Album.[5]
Slant Magazine ranked The Sensual World at number 55 on its 2012 list of the best albums of the 1980s, writing, "Blessed with one of music's most wildly expressive voices, Bush takes each song further than she has to, resulting in an album that forms its own unique world."[6]
In December 1989, Robert Smith of the Cure chose "The Sensual World" as his favourite single of the year, The Sensual World as his favourite album of the year, and included "all of Kate Bush" in his list of "the best things about the Eighties".[7] Charli XCX named The Sensual World as one of the records that define her.[8]
Credits are adapted from The Sensual World liner notes.[10]
Production
Peak position | |
European Albums (Music & Media)[11] | 6 |
---|---|
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[12] | 3 |
French Albums (IFOP)[13] | 38 |
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[14] | 18 |
Italian Albums (Musica e dischi)[15] | 14 |
Position | ||
Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[16] | 93 | |
---|---|---|
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[17] | 97 | |
Norwegian Autumn Period Albums (VG-lista)[18] | 18 | |
UK Albums (Gallup)[19] | 45 |
The Sensual World: The Videos | |
Type: | video |
Artist: | Kate Bush |
Released: | 1990 |
Recorded: | 1989–1990 |
Length: | 16 minutes |
Label: | CMV Enterprises |
Prev Title: | The Whole Story |
Prev Year: | 1987 |
Next Title: | The Line, the Cross and the Curve |
Next Year: | 1994 |