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The Observer: the privilege of working in geological time

Interesting review in Sunday’s Observer, by Kitty Empire:

Kate Bush has earned the privilege of working in geological time. She was once a pop star who turned out landmark releases relatively quickly, but now, aeons pass between releases … Only a nerd of the deepest hue would bother to painstakingly transpose her 1993 album, The Red Shoes, from its digitally produced final cut into analogue tracks, held by many audiophiles to be “warmer”-sounding. This is precisely what Bush has done on Director’s Cut. The album takes great swathes of The Red Shoes and choice cuts from its predecessor, 1989’s The Sensual World, and reworks them, sometimes with subtlety, and sometimes with daring …

UK tabloids giving Director’s Cut some love! “…a dreamy, bewitching treat”

The News of the World give a four star review to the new album. “The first new album in six years by Florence And The Machine’s spiritual mum. Sort of – it’s new versions of her old songs. Which is a swizz, but there’s a playful adventurousness here that’s more imaginative than most brand-new music.” The Sun gives Director’s Cut 4 out of 5 and describes the album as “beautiful” in the review below. (with thanks to rblazon on the forum)

Kate’s official Fish People site goes live!

While we were all busy watching the Eurovision this evening, Kate re-launched her official site! See it here.

Kate 2011

Toll & Rook

The Irish Times gives four stars to Director’s Cut

“…some truly remarkable performances here from one of the most intriguing and bountifully talented musical artists of our time.” Read Brian Boyd’s review here.

Daily Telegraph: Four Stars

Very good review by Helen Brown in yesterday’s Daily Telegraph:

Wisdom replaces grief in Director’s Cut

Director’s Cut should really be enjoyed as a rare, live performance from an artist who hasn’t toured since 1979. The lead vocals and drums have all been re-recorded, allowing us to hear how Bush sounds in 2011. She’s stripped back the digital crunch of the production, giving the instrumentation more breathing space and creating a more intimate, organic feel: Rubberband Girl sounds like it could have been recorded in the backroom of an Irish pub ….

Financial Times and Standard: Three Stars

In the Financial Times Ludovic Hunter-Tilney gives Director’s Cut three stars: “Kate Bush’s perfectionism is a reason for the long gaps between her albums. It also appears to motivate Director’s Cut …”

In the London Evening Standard John Aizlewood also awards three stars: “That Director’s Cut is an album whose existence has neither rhyme nor reason and that its track listing borders on wilfully perverse actually adds to 52-year-old Bush’s maverick charm …

Dublin embraces Director’s Cut!

Ireland’s largest music store has had something of a Kate Bush party, Friday. The release of this album has been heralded with an almost unprecedented anticipation in Kate’s maternal homeland, press and radio reviews abound. Tomorrow, Saturday, from 11am-12am, Nadine O’Regan will be talking to Kate on her Phantom FM show The Kiosk here. The Irish Times has given the album a glowing review. We think the front window display in Tower Records says it all. The Dublin celebrations continue next month

Tower Records, Dublin, May 13th, 2011

Dutch fans enjoy EMI album launch party!

Pictures and reports on the Director’s Cut album launch party in Amsterdam here.

 

Music Week: A Pretty Strange Album Concept

Ben Cardew in Music Week doesn’t quite know how to react to Directors Cut:

On its own merits, then, Director’s Cut is a strong album. But it’s hard to know exactly who it will appeal to: if you don’t know the original songs, it is impossible to appreciate the subtle re-work that Bush has done; if you do know them, you might not necessarily want an update …

Director’s Cut reviews: Times, RTE…

A tonne of reviews are in, and more to come today, no doubt. As fans in Ireland, Australia, Japan and many other European countries already have the album we’re starting to see the reviews coming in thick and fast. Alan Corr gives an online review for RTE: “Bush’s gone ahead and reworked other songs, bringing a singing voice of a lower key, something that comes with age, and the benefits of updated and improved production techniques to the party.” Will Hodgkinsin in The Times gives the album 3/5, raving about Flower of The Mountain, The Red Shoes and Lily, but concluding that the album is “interesting, but not easy to lose yourself in

Four Star review in the Daily Mail

Four star review in Friday’s Daily Mail by Adrian Thrills:

I won’t beat about the Bush, Kate’s still great!

Now deeper and more sultry than when she was dominating the charts with singles such as Babooshka and Man With The Child In His Eyes, it relies less on spectacular, soaring whoops and more on a natural richness and sensuality.

As a singer, Kate is growing old gracefully, but she retains plenty of her unusual mannerisms and a compelling lack of inhibition …

5/5 in the Daily Express

Paul Callan gives Director’s Cut full marks in Friday’s Daily Express:

She dances to her own tune, that Kate Bush. Having taken a more or less two-decade break from recording before coming back with Ariel a few years back she’s now revisiting two of her albums from the Nineties in what she’s calling a “director’s cut”, even though she had full control of both albums first time round. But who cares?

Five Star Review in The Independent

Excellent review of Director’s Cut by Andy Gill in Friday’s Independent:

Despite its being comprised of reworked versions of songs that originally appeared around two decades ago, Kate Bush regards her Director’s Cut as a new album in and of itself. And she’s right to: There’s a consistency and homogeneity about the 11 tracks (seven from The Red Shoes, four from The Sensual World) which echoes her work on Aerial, and which lends the project a character entirely its own …

The Guardian reviews Director’s Cut

Alex PetridisIf you can tear yourself away from that NPR album stream, Alex Petridis gives a four star review to Director’s Cut in today’s Guardian. You can read it here. (Alex previously reviewed the Aerial album for the Guardian in 2005).

NPR website offers Director’s Cut first listen!

The US website for the NPR radio station is offering it’s listeners a first listen to the tracks from Director’s Cut. You can find the songs here. Quite a coup! Thanks to Donna for pointing this out.

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