"Moving" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Kate Bush | ||||
from the album The Kick Inside | ||||
B-side | "Wuthering Heights" | |||
Released | 20 April 1978 (Japan) [1] | |||
Recorded | August 1977 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 3:20 (single) | |||
Label | Toshiba EMI | |||
Songwriter(s) | Kate Bush | |||
Producer(s) | Andrew Powell | |||
Kate Bush singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Moving" on YouTube |
"Moving" is a song written and recorded by English singer-songwriter Kate Bush for her debut album, The Kick Inside (1978). It was released as a single only in Japan in April 1978 by EMI Music Japan. Written by Bush and produced by Andrew Powell, the song is a tribute to Lindsay Kemp, her mime teacher. "Moving" opens with whale song sampled from Songs of the Humpback Whale, an LP including recordings of whale vocalisations made by Dr. Roger S. Payne.
Bush performed "Moving" at Tokyo Music Festival, on BBC's Saturday Nights at the Mill , on a Dutch TV show set in Efteling park and on her first tour, The Tour of Life (1979).
Kate Bush signed a contract with EMI Records in her late teens. [2] Between recording demos with Gilmour as producer and releasing her first album she pursued her studies and gained maturity in her writing. [3] After seeing an advertisement for Lindsay Kemp's Flowers spectacle, she decided to take mime classes with him. Six months later, she took modern dance classes with Anthony Van Laast. [4] Bush began recording her debut album, The Kick Inside , in 1977. [3] She wrote "Moving" the same year as a tribute to Kemp. [5] "He needed a song written to him," she said in an interview. "He opened up my eyes to the meanings of movement. He makes you feel so good. If you've got two left feet it's 'you dance like an angel, darling.' He fills people up, you're an empty glass and glug, glug, glug, he's filled you with champagne." [6] "Moving" was only released as a single in Japan, with "Wuthering Heights" as the B-side in order to promote The Kick Inside. [7] The single was released on 6 February 1978.
"Moving" follows a chord progression of Dm–C–B♭–F in the verses and Dm–Am–Dm–Am in the choruses. [8] Written in the key of D minor, the song is set in common time with a "slowly" tempo. [8] Its instrumentation includes drums, bass, guitars and electric piano. [9] "Moving" opens with fifteen seconds of whale song sampled from Songs of the Humpback Whale, an LP of recordings made by Dr. Roger S. Payne of whale vocalisations. In an interview with the magazine Sounds , Bush commented, "Whales say everything about 'moving'. It's huge and beautiful, intelligent, soft inside a tough body. It weighs a ton and yet it's so light it floats. It's the whole thing about human communication —'moving liquid, yet you are just as water'— what the Chinese say about being the cup the water moves in to. The whales are pure movement and pure sound, calling for something, so lonely and sad ..." [6]
AllMusic and Billboard have considered "Moving" one of the best songs on The Kick Inside. [10] [11] As "Moving" was only released in Japan, sales and commercial performance were limited. The song failed to chart on the Oricon Singles Chart.
Soon after the release of The Kick Inside, Bush performed "Moving" alongside "Them Heavy People" on 25 February 1978 on the BBC's show Saturday Nights at the Mill. [12] On 12 May, she took part in a Dutch special TV show dedicated to the opening of the Haunted Castle, the new attraction of the amusement park Efteling. She performed six songs in six videos filmed near the castle and across the park. At the beginning of the "Moving" video, the camera shows a tombstone covered with leaves. Then, the wind blows the leaves away to reveal Bush's name. She performs the song in front of the castle's door. [13] In June 1978, Bush sang "Moving" at Nippon Budokan during the Tokyo Music Festival. The performance was retransmitted on the Japanese television on 21 June and was followed by a 35 million audience. [12] [14] She won the silver prize alongside the American R&B band The Emotions. [14] In 1979, Bush included "Moving" on her first tour, The Tour of Life. Her performance is viewable on the video Live at Hammersmith Odeon . [15] However, Bush did not perform the song on her residency show Before the Dawn (2014). [16]
7-inch vinyl single [17]
Credits adapted from The Kick Inside liner notes. [9]
Mandopop singer Valen Hsu covered the song on her 1996 album Tear Sea , titled "Fang Sheng Da Ku" (放聲大哭; "Wailing").
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)Catherine Bush, publicly known as Kate Bush, is an English singer, songwriter, record producer and dancer. Bush began writing songs at age 11. She was signed to EMI Records after David Gilmour of Pink Floyd helped produce a demo tape. In 1978, at the age of 19, she topped the UK singles chart for four weeks with her debut single "Wuthering Heights", becoming the first female artist to achieve a UK number one with a fully self-written song. Her debut album The Kick Inside was released that year, reaching number three on the UK Albums Chart.
Hounds of Love is the fifth studio album by English musician Kate Bush, released on 16 September 1985 by EMI Records. It was a commercial and artistic success and marked a return to the public eye for Bush after the relatively low sales of her previous album, 1982's The Dreaming. The album's lead single, "Running Up That Hill", became one of Bush's biggest hits, giving Bush her second UK number-one single in June 2022. The album's first side produced three further singles, "Cloudbusting", "Hounds of Love", and "The Big Sky". The second side, subtitled The Ninth Wave, forms a conceptual suite about a woman drifting alone in the sea at night.
The Kick Inside is the debut studio album by English singer-songwriter Kate Bush. Released on 17 February 1978 by EMI Records, it includes her UK No. 1 hit, "Wuthering Heights". The album peaked at No. 3 on the UK Albums Chart and has been certified Platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). Several progressive rock musicians were involved in the album including Duncan Mackay, Ian Bairnson, David Paton, Andrew Powell, and Stuart Elliott of the Alan Parsons Project and David Gilmour of Pink Floyd.
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