The Red Shoes (album) explained

The Red Shoes
Type:studio
Artist:Kate Bush
Cover:Katebushtheredshoes.png
Released:[1]
Recorded:June 1990–June 1993
Studio:Abbey Road (London)
Length:55:30
Label:EMI
Producer:Kate Bush
Prev Year:1990
Next Title:Live at Hammersmith Odeon
Next Year:1994

The Red Shoes is the seventh studio album by English musician Kate Bush. Released on 1 November 1993,[2] it was accompanied by Bush's short film, The Line, the Cross and the Curve, and was her last album before a 12-year hiatus. The album peaked at number two on the UK Albums Chart and has been certified platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), denoting shipments in excess of 300,000 copies. In the United States, the album reached number 28 on the Billboard 200, her highest-peaking album on the chart at the time.

Overview

The Red Shoes was inspired by the 1948 film of the same name by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, which itself was inspired by the fairy tale of the same name by Hans Christian Andersen. It concerns a dancer, possessed by her art, who cannot take off the eponymous shoes and find peace.

Bush had suggested she might tour in support of The Red Shoes and deliberately aimed for a "live band" feel, with less of the studio trickery that had typified her last three albums (which would be difficult to recreate on stage). The tour did not materialise.

This was a troubled time for Bush, who had suffered a series of bereavements including the loss of her mother, Hannah, who died in 1992 and the death of her favoured guitarist, Alan Murphy. Bush's long-term relationship with bassist Del Palmer had ended, although the pair continued to work together. "I've been very affected by these last two years", she remarked in late 1991. "They've been incredibly intense years for me. Maybe not on a work level, but a lot has happened to me. I feel I've learnt a lot – and, yes, I think [my next album] is going to be quite different... I hope the people that are waiting for it feel it's worth the wait."[3]

Many of the people she lost are honoured on the ballad "Moments of Pleasure", as well as director Michael Powell, with whom she had discussed working shortly before his death in 1990. Composer and conductor Michael Kamen contributed a score for the song.

The Red Shoes featured more high-profile cameo appearances than her previous efforts. The track "Why Should I Love You?" featured instrumental and vocal contributions from Prince as well as guest vocals from comedian Lenny Henry. "And So Is Love" features guitar work by Eric Clapton, and Gary Brooker (from the band Procol Harum), and Jeff Beck also collaborated. Trio Bulgarka (who had contributed to The Sensual World) appeared on three songs: "You're the One", "The Song of Solomon", and "Why Should I Love You?".

A short film, The Line, the Cross and the Curve, written and directed by Bush, and starring herself and English actress Miranda Richardson, was released the same year. It featured six songs from the album: "Rubberband Girl", "And So Is Love", "The Red Shoes", "Moments of Pleasure", "Eat the Music" and "Lily". The first five were used as promo videos for the singles, though Bush recorded a separate video for the American release of "Rubberband Girl" (though this video is intercut with clips from The Line, the Cross and the Curve). The film was nominated for the Long Form Music Video at the 1996 Grammy Awards.

In 1995, Bush received a Brit Award nomination for Best British Female Artist.[4]

The album was recorded digitally, and Bush has since expressed regrets about the results of this, which is why she revisited seven of the songs using analogue tape for her 2011 album Director's Cut, as well as releasing a remastered version of The Red Shoes in 2011, based on the master from an analogue backup tape.[5]

In November 2018, Bush released box sets of remasters of her studio albums, including a new remaster The Red Shoes.

Bush performed "Lily" and "Top of the City" live for the first time in 2014 as part of the Before the Dawn concert residency.

Critical reception

Chris Roberts, writing for Melody Maker, praised The Red Shoes as "an utter masterpiece" and felt that, apart from the "misguided" "Eat the Music", Bush is "on form like the Bible is well-known" with an album of "heartbreakingly beautiful ballads" and the rest "sunrise and Santa Claus, miles of muses".[6] Terry Staunton of NME considered the "truly exceptional" album to be Bush's "most personal to date, yet also her most accessible". He noted that it is "a more mixed bag" than the "semi-thematic collections" of her previous two albums, but added that the majority of the songs are "link[ed] by a sense of loss, in particular the loss of love and loved ones", despite being "often light-hearted musically".

Personnel

Production

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (1993)! scope="col"
Peak
position
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[7] 8
European Albums (Music & Media)[8] 6
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)4
French Albums (IFOP)[9] 14
Irish Albums (IFPI)10
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[10] 24

Year-end charts

Chart (1993)! scope="col"
Position
Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[11] 77
UK Albums (OCC)[12] 32

Notes and References

  1. Web site: BPI.
  2. Web site: BPI.
  3. [BBC Radio 1]
  4. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Web site: Eddi Reader wins British Female presented by Jarvis Cocker BRIT Awards 1995 . YouTube.
  5. Web site: The Red Shoes . Amazon . SBME SPECIAL MKTS. . 13 August 2022 . 2008.
  6. Roberts . Chris . Albums: Good Buy, Ruby Shoes Day . 30 October 1993 . . 32.
  7. Top 10 Sales in Europe . . 10 . 48 . 27 November 1993 . 14 . 29800226 . World Radio History.
  8. Hits of the World . . 105 . 48 . 27 November 1993 . 91 . 0006-2510 . World Radio History.
  9. Web site: Le Détail des Albums de chaque Artiste . InfoDisc . fr . 26 July 2018. Select "Kate BUSH" from the drop-down menu and click "OK".
  10. Web site: レッド・シューズ/ケイト・ブッシュ . The Red Shoes / Kate Bush . ja . . 1 May 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121011062532/http://www.oricon.co.jp/music/release/d/265342/1/ . 11 October 2012.
  11. The RPM Top 100 Albums of 1993 . RPM . 58 . 23 . 18 December 1993 . 0033-7064 . Library and Archives Canada.
  12. Top 100 Albums 1993 . . 15 January 1994 . 25 . 0265-1548 . World Radio History.