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50 Words For Snow
 
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50 Words For Snow

Kate BushMP3 Download
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (229 customer reviews)
Price: £7.49
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Album Savings: £2.94 compared to buying all songs

 
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  Song Title Time Price    
Play   1. Snowflake 9:46 £0.89
Play   2. Lake Tahoe 11:08 £2.99
Play   3. Misty 13:32 £2.99
Play   4. Wild Man 7:16 £0.89
Play   5. Snowed In At Wheeler Street 8:05 £0.89
Play   6. 50 Words For Snow 8:30 £0.89
Play   7. Among Angels 6:48 £0.89
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
159 of 172 people found the following review helpful
By Andrew
Format:Audio CD
If you've been reading the reviews of this album you'll notice quite a striking dichotomy. Most professional reviewers and many here at Amazon give it a full 5 stars, but then there are a significant number who actively dislike the album, handing out a 1 star accompanied by a slew of derisory comments.

What to make of it?

Well, if you're after pop songs and easily accessible melodies you may well be disappointed. Instead this record takes a more extended modern classical or jazz approach. It's subtle and it's a definite grower.

Personally after initially being a little nonplussed I really love it a lot now. Lyrically it's particularly strong and really creates an atmosphere of the season. Currently it's probably my favourite listen of 2011.

So, if you are open to a high quality subtle slow burner (and a great winter album for years to come), go ahead and buy (a quick listen/sample will not reveal its charms). If however you're after something more immediate maybe give this one a miss.
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23 of 25 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Being a fan of all Kate's albums, it feels that she has in some ways come full circle, returning to the evocative simplicity of her early work but creating new moods and atmospheres that are fresh and intriguing. After listening to this for a few weeks, it has a special meaning to me. I often play it as a late evening chill out.

Just listening to her in the latest radio interviews, Kate clearly has never seemed happier and her musical Mojo remains undimmed. It seems she already has ideas for her next project and we will be hearing of her more often in the years ahead.

Not so much a collection of songs, but 7 short story 'tone poems'. I welcome Kate's experiment with longer song structures to lose oneself in.

Whilst I would admit this is not an album of catchy seasonal ditties, this album needs patience and repeated listens in order to fully appreciate its beauty. Kate is an artist who produces work on her own terms, free from the shackles of the demands of fan blogs and the music industry establishment.

My general impressions: Shut out the world, put on this album and immerse yourself for an hour uninterrupted in Kate's winter wonderland. Despite only a few listens, new details and elements of the stories are starting to develop in my head. This work is so organic, evocative and dreamy. Forget your troubles and the recession, just escape into Kate's alternative world.

Snowflake: Kate views snow as a substance transforming a landscape or garden with its physical beauty. Kate finds the world so loud and 'lowest common denominator' sometimes, whilst snowflakes are all unique and individual. With repeated listenings, the repeated piano and Bertie motifs become less intrusive and ghostly sounding electronic keyboard details emerge from the mix. Love's Steve Gadds evocation of horses through snowdrifts.

Lake Tahoe: Perhaps the most ambitious song on the album, Kate giving the song an almost classical feel. Stefan Roberts makes a memorable contribution, his opening lines remind me of the end of Hello Earth from the album Hounds of Love. The haunting theme of a dog's almost mythical journey to be reunited with its owner is simple yet atmospheric and moving. This is Kate at her storytelling best.

Misty: I love the almost jazzy feel of Steve Gadd's sunlime drum work. The sequence 'I turn off the light, switch on a starry night' is almost akin to an out of body experience, makes me think of the scene in the film Little Voice, when we first see Jane Horrocks character singing/playing music in her bedroom. 'When I kiss his ice-cream lips' is Kate at her musically bonkers best!!!

Wild Man: The most pop-oriented and perhaps the most immediately accessible track on the album, marking perhaps the beginning of the albums second section. Steve Gadd's hypnotic drums, Andy Fairweather Low's full and throaty chorus and Del Palmer's bells are highlights. Kate's interpretation is an intriguing mix of fear, pity and intrigue for the mythical Yeti.

Snowed In At Wheeler Street: Whilst not particularly well versed in the music of Elton John and despite the controversy evinced by some fans, I think this really does 'work', particularly with Elton's soulful delivery. The idea of the love and loss of friends and lovers by humanity as a universal trait through the centuries is great. Love Kate's increasingly frantic vocal towards the end.

50 Words For Snow: No Kate album is ever complete without a lighter, fun moment. Wacky, this song follows in the tradition of the Big Sky and the song Aerial, whilst keeping to this album's feel. I don't think this track needs to be over-analysed.

Among Angels: A return to the piano-based delivery of the first 3 songs, it is clearly not about snow. Quite simply this song is to me one of the most moving songs she has ever written in her whole career. There is an underlying theme of personal loss, perhaps partly inspired by the recent death of her father, but I feel there is a more general message, about self-belief. We often overlook that the beginnings of a resolution to inner conflicts lies within our own souls.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
It Resonates deeply 30 Jan 2012
By A. Lark
Format:Audio CD
I think to pinpoint why this album is receiving so much glowing attention, especially from the ardent Kate fans, is because once you let the music wash over you a couple of times, it has in places the merest hints and overtones of how Kate used to sound, right back at the beginning of her career..
Hints of her earlier musical thoughts, that not just made their way on to The Kick inside & Lionheart, but also possibly from the scores of early bootleg recordings, that a lot of us have heard & cherish.

I think deep down, this is the Kate we're all yearning for, and in 50 Words, she teases at it for the first time....
Before you dismiss this, go & listen again & listen closely. You'll get goosebumps.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Good to hear.
I really enjoyed listening to this album. Very different from previous ones, but lovely to cosy up and listen to carefully. Good.
Published 10 hours ago by Mum of 2
Just takes time to catch up, but so worth it
I suppose at first it likens to jazz, many like it, many don't. But do persevere, it is a quite stunning work. Just let it wash over you, and slowly the peices fit together. Read more
Published 8 days ago by BookRob
Sorry
I tried, I really tried! I purchased this album 4 months ago and I have really tried to like it but I'm sorry, I find the music, at best boring and the lyrics completely trite. Read more
Published 28 days ago by JHP yorkshire
"BANG! Goes a clanger of a sonnet with a man"
Now, only those of us 'in the know' will understand the title of this review, and how to "sing it" ;-)
Namely, the ones among us who've known, and loved, Kate's work for 30+... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Mr. D. Pendry
50 words for snow - Kate Bush as brilliant as ever
50 Words for Snow As usual Kate manages to produce a very listenable album, helped along the way by classic artists such as Andy Fairweather Low and Elton John. Read more
Published 1 month ago by N. Porter
The best album of 2011!
Quite simply Kate's best record since 'Hounds Of Love'. If you haven't got it yet and like any of the girl's tunes, do yourself a favour and pick this up now - you will not be... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Donna
Kate on thin ice? NO!
Have to say this has been the hardest Kate album to ' get into' for me. Startling, unexpected, weird and compelling. Read more
Published 1 month ago by T. tremmel
Wonderful
Another glorious delivery from my favourite musical midwife. The product is always beguiling and charming and well worth the wait.
Published 1 month ago by Capt Spoons
Give it time
I bought the CD on the one day this year that it snowed properly and playing it while watching the snow fall was a magical experience. Read more
Published 2 months ago by K. Lester
Kate Bush Album - 50 Words for Snow
This album takes a while to get used to because its complex and quite different to much of Kate's work. Assuming you like her work, once you've absorbed it, you'll love it. Read more
Published 2 months ago by T. David Pattison
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