Hammersmith Apollo, London Five stars A flash of white lights up the blue, and Kate Bush leads her five backing vocalists, who include her sixteen year old son, Bertie, onstage in a jaunty conga as her seven-piece band kick into Lily, from Bush's 1993 The Red Shoes album. Twelve nights into her twenty-two night marathon, it's a playful opening to Bush's first live shows for thirty-five years, which have rightly generated screeds of praise for their inherent theatricality. Over the course of three acts, a delighted Bush get back to her pub-band roots in the first six numbers of sophisticated funk and a couple of hits punctuated by showbizzy “I really hope you enjoy this,” type cooings. This is followed by two suites, The Hounds of Love's The Ninth Wave, and, following an interval, Aerial's A Sky of Honey, performed in their entirety. With dialogue by novelist David Mitchell and co-direction by former RSC boss Adrian Noble, these are revealed as a...
An archive of arts writing by Neil Cooper. Effete No Obstacle.