For a brief article to do justice to Kate Bush’s 1985 magnum opus Hounds Of Love it would need to be written in colour. It would have washes of luminous chalk, splashes of oil pastel, shafts of vivid acrylics and tendrils of lava lamp pink. Shapes would pulsate with passion, creep along midnight forest trails and spark with ecstasy, or perhaps rage. In this world poetic imagination dances with pointed observation, pop is in bed with progressive music, a woman both whimsical and wild gently breathes out a hurricane while doe-eyed dogs snuggle up to her. Welcome to the captivating world of one of the most important British artists, ever.
After the disappointingly modest success of The Dreaming (1982), many artists would have retreated to the familiar; returned to the wide path of pop orthodoxy and made something the public could easily embrace. But that was not Kate Bush’s way. It was never her way.

Hounds Of Love is daring, experimental and entirely unique. That it boasted not one, but four singles—three of which made the UK Top 20—is astonishing. One of those singles, “Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)”, was Top 10 in the UK and Australia in 1985 and, on the back of inclusion in the TV series Stranger Things, a #1 hit in 2022. The parent album is, thus far, Bush’s most successful and frequently appears on Best Album Of All Time lists. Those last two achievements speak volumes about both the acclaim for Hounds Of Love and how timelessly captivating its eccentric charms really are.
The kinetic energy of the album is on display right from the opening of the first track, “Running Up That Hill”. This uncanny marriage of art-rock and synth-pop has an infectious momentum that continues throughout the first side of the LP. The rhythmic fusillade of “Hounds Of Love” follows. As one listens and gazes at the sensual cover portrait of Kate and her canines, one can’t help but feel the pull of faerie. The heroine is running away once more… from baying predators or from intimate love? Perhaps she is leading us towards her own mystical world? “The Big Sky” and “Cloudbursting” share an atmospheric theme; the lightness of imagination and the heaviness of misunderstanding. Bush’s lyrics are both evocative and symbolic; her music is detailed yet potent.
Side two of the album is a suite entitled The Ninth Wave. Immersing oneself is like watching an arty film. Not everything is obvious or clear, but the journey is intriguing and ultimately moving. Across the seven pieces comprising the suite we hear many of Kate Bush’s favoured styles and strategies. The deft use of percussion for dramatic effect, deployment of synthesised tones (she was an early adopter of the Fairlight computer music instrument), art-rock bursts, and tributes to her Celtic heritage. There is classical ambition and a theatricality that some may find overbearing. But then, Ms Bush has always been joyously over the top. Here her vision is expressed more cohesively than on any other album in her catalogue.
Hounds Of Love was recorded entirely in her home studio and delivered to EMI as a complete work. That it continues to beguile and delight remains a wondrous achievement.

Your review is itself a work of art.
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Very kind. Thank you Dr Richard.
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You put it so succinctly about how beautiful she is on that cover. Kate has always managed to not make her physical appearance get in the way of her art, yet one can’t help but still be attracted to her beauty. I watched her videos endlessly back in the day! “Running Up That Hill” IMHO is one of the best album opening tracks ever. – Marty
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Kate certainly poured a lot of creative energy into her videos. After reading your comment I just watched ‘Cloudbursting’ again. Great little piece of storytelling.
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She was quite good, that Kate woman.
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Indeed, a sizeable talent. Not unattractive either.
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The Dreaming is one of my favourite Bush albums, but in some ways it’s a draft for this one. Like she figured out how to turn her at home sequencer experiments into hit songs.
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The good ol’ Fairlight was a beast to master, or so I’ve read. Considerable home study required, as you say.
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I only know a handful of Kate Bush songs – basically the ones that became hits on the mainstream charts. “Running Up That Hill” received extensive radio play in Germany at the time. I also recall hearing “Cloudbusting” on the radio. That said, I never explored her music. I can safely say it wouldn’t be love at first listen but a taste I’d have to acquire.
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I think many would view Kate Bush’s oeuvre that way, Christian. Part of the mythology is her uncompromising commitment to her own muse.
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It’s remarkable how music like this can boomerang back into time via social media and TV. Think Pink Moon too. Makes you almost wonder, were those reimaginings of the song, or repositioning, reframing, re-presenting, the more ideal settings somehow? If one were to measure the impact of the work by way of its reception, I dunno, but find that remarkable. To think TikTok is a new MTV but one you can kind of game and manipulate yourself, like a jukebox.
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Surges in popularity or rediscovery (or whatever it is!) are interesting and perplexing. Why this and not that? It’s like someone pulls a fish out of the oceans of music and finds a gold ring inside, then WOW! everyone’s fishing there.
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Good stuff Bruce. I just listened to her first album the other day. Now you have me settling into this one. I’m gone.
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Kate has that effect.
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On my second spin. That usually means Im enjoying the music or looking for hidden messages that Kates sending me.
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CB… CB… Come to me…
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Yeah, I think I heard that. Those Hammer Horror girls are my style.
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Thanks for taking the time to showcase the brilliance and impact of Kate Bush’s 1985 masterpiece, “Hounds Of Love”, in such a captivating and well-written article.
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Thank you for that lovely feedback, Sasha. So glad you enjoyed the piece.
There is also an article on Aerial, which you might enjoy.
https://wordpress.com/read/blogs/50816513/posts/13459
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