Hounds Of Love

Album: Hounds Of Love (1985)
Charted: 18
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Songfacts®:

  • This is about the fear that rules all of us in one way or another, in particular the fear of love. The hounds of love that are hunting you is imagery for love itself as something to be feared, to run away from lest it catch you and rip you up. At the same time, it says that perhaps the hounds are friendly and one should not fear love ("I've always been a coward, and never know what's good for me").
  • The song was inspired in part by an old black-and-white movie which was sort of a cult classic in Kate's family titled Night Of The Demon. The movie was about demons who hid waiting in trees - the song's opening line (in a male voice) "It's coming! It's in the trees!" is taken directly from the movie.
  • The title track from Bush's most commercially successful album, "Hounds Of Love" is one of five songs from Side One of the album, four of which charted in the UK. These five songs are very much separate pieces ("Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)," "Hounds of Love," "The Big Sky," "Mother Stands for Comfort" and "Cloudbusting" - "Mother Stands for Comfort" is the one that didn't chart in the UK). The last seven songs are a conceptual suite called The Ninth Wave written to be one piece of music. A remaster of the album was released in 1996 with four additional songs from the same period. >>
    Suggestion credit:
    Lee - Ottawa, Canada
  • The album was recorded in a windowless studio that Bush had constructed in a converted barn near her parents' house in semi-rural East Wickham, south east of London. Kate Bush (from Q magazine): "People commented on how the album seems very elemental. And I can't help but put quite a lot of that down to the fact that I moved out into the country. The visual stimulus coming in was that of fields and trees, and seeing the elements doing their stuff."
  • Kate Bush: "The hounds of love are an image really, someone who's afraid of being captured by love; and the imagery is love taking the form of hounds that are hunting them, so they run away because they're afraid of being caught by the hounds and ripped to shreds." (Source NME)
  • The shot of Kate Bush reclining on the Hounds of Love album cover was taken by her brother, John Carder Bush. He also supplied backing vocals on "Cloudbusting" and the narration on "Jig of Life."
  • An indie-rock cover of this song by The Futureheads was released in 2005, and became that band's first major commercial hit, reaching #8 on the UK Singles chart and getting named Single of the Year by NME magazine.
  • The hounds of love on the album cover are Kate Bush's two dogs, Bonnie and Clyde. According to an interview with the singer, it took all day to get the hounds to settle down. When the final picture was taken, one of the pooches actually fell asleep on her. On the album sleeve notes Kate gives, "A big woof to Bonnie & Clyde."
  • Hounds of Love was the second album solely produced by Bush (the first being her previous release, The Dreaming).
  • Bush made her first foray into directing with the music video, which was inspired by Alfred Hitchcock's 1935 thriller, The 39 Steps. The clip features a lookalike of the famous director, who was known for making cameo appearances in his films.

Comments: 3

  • Jeff from Atlanta, GaI remember reading an old piece about a concert Kate had in England. I was always jealous that she never toured.. Me and my best friend would laugh and say we would drive the bus for her due to her fear of flying.. buying the collection was one of the best purchases ever.
  • Sara from Madison, Withis song is like my favorite song ever! i love kate bush...her music is sooo relaxing
  • Richard from Newport, Isle Of Wight, EnglandHounds of Love was covered by British four-piece band The Futureheads on their 2004 album, imaginatively titled "The Futureheads", and released as a single in February 2005. The Sunderland band cite Kate Bush as one of their biggest influences.
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