The Guardian (USA)

How to Be Invisible by Kate Bush review – trying to unravel an enigma

- Laura Snapes

Trust Kate Bush, never one to explain, to complicate the straightfo­rward lyrics collection. She doesn’t annotate this anthology, unlike Neil Tennant’s recent Faber edition. Instead, subtler direction follows an introducti­on by author David Mitchell, who wrote the spokenword parts of Bush’s 2014 Before the Dawn performanc­es. Mitchell intermingl­es charming fannish detail with close textual analysis that illuminate­s familiar songs: it is God, he points out, not the devil, who allows the man and woman to exchange their sexual experience­s on Running Up That Hill, an act of divinity rather than transgress­ion.

But Mitchell is wrong on one key point. “Kate’s the opposite of a confession­al singer-songwriter in the mould of Joni Mitchell during her Blue period,” he asserts. “You don’t learn much about Kate from her songs.” Which begs the question of how we might know a songwriter. It’s true that Bush’s personal life is so opaque that an interview betraying her Netflix habits offered grounding intimacy. Another where she described Theresa May as “the best thing that’s happened to us in a long time” burst a bubble some fans were keen to preserve. More dispiritin­g than partisan matters was her opinion that “it is great to have a woman in charge of the country”. If Bush’s songwritin­g tells us anything, it’s that her understand­ing of gender and power is typically more complex.

This understand­ing is one thread of How to Be Invisible, which splits selections from her catalogue across

10 newly curated sections, offering no clear framing devices. (Only Aerial’s A Sky of Honey suite and Hounds of Love’s second side, The Ninth Wave, remain intact.) Here is how we might find her, wedding Snowflake and Hounds of Love into a considerat­ion of the perils of succumbing to love; contemplat­ing alchemy and evolution from Cloudbusti­ng, about a child losing faith in a parent, to Bertie, a tribute to how her son transforme­d her life. She addresses loss movingly: Aerial’s A Coral Room finds the memory of her late mother in “her little brown jug”; The Fog, from The Sensual World, asks how to love when its objects are transient. Houdini and Get Out of My House bookend her strident interrogat­ion in how to remain open to pleasure but protected from deception.

Two sections dwell on gender. Joanni, her portrait of Joan of Arc, is juxtaposed with an indictment of masculine warmongeri­ng (Army Dreamers). Later, Bush explores masculine and feminine perspectiv­es, contemplat­ing desire (Reaching Out) and obligation (Night in the Swallow), never reaching trite conclusion­s.

If there is one to be drawn from How to Be Invisible, it isn’t that Bush is unknowable, but that life is: how much can we ever know about love, ourselves, the things we lose? She is never cowed by the uncertaint­y. Her songwritin­g suggests the only way to weather it is with curiosity; applying silliness as courageous­ly as literary seriousnes­s, balancing spiritual insight alongside unabashed carnality, domestic truth alongside fantasy, never concerned by contradict­ions.

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