Label: Toshiba Records (Japan), TOCP-67817
Style: Art Rock, Pop Rock
Country: Kent, England (30 July 1958)
Time: 37:30
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 223 Mb
Charts: UK #1, AUS #7, CAN #44, GER #5, FRA #1, NL #4, NZ #31, NOR #2, SWE #16, Israel #5. Canada - Platinum; France, Germany, Netherlands, UK - Gold.
It was Bush's first No. 1 album and was also the first album by a British female solo artist to top the UK Albums Chart, as well as being the first album by any female solo artist to enter the chart at No. 1. It has since been certified Gold by the BPI. It features the UK Top 20 singles "Breathing", "Army Dreamers" and "Babooshka", the latter being one of Bush's biggest hits. Bush co-produced the album with Jon Kelly.
Bush was keen to start producing her work and felt that this was the first album she was happy with, since it was more personal.
The first two albums had resulted in a particular sound, which was evident in every track, with lush orchestral arrangements supporting the live band sound. The range of styles on Never for Ever is much more diverse, veering from the straightforward rocker "Violin" to the wistful waltz of hit single "Army Dreamers". Never for Ever was the first Kate Bush album to feature digital synthesizers and drum machines, in particular the Fairlight CMI, which was programmed by Richard James Burgess and John L. Walters of synth-pop band Landscape. Like her previous two albums, it was initially composed on piano.
Bush's literary and cinematic influences were again to the fore. "The Infant Kiss", the story of a governess who is frightened by the adult feelings she has for her young male charge (who is possessed by the spirit of a grown man), was inspired by the 1961 film The Innocents, which in turn had been inspired by The Turn of the Screw by Henry James. "The Wedding List" drew from Francois Truffaut's 1968 film The Bride Wore Black. "Delius (Song of Summer)" was inspired by the 1968 Ken Russell television film Song of Summer, which portrays the last six years of the life of English composer Frederick Delius, when Eric Fenby acted as his amanuensis. Fenby is mentioned in the lyrics ("in B, Fenby"). "Blow Away (for Bill)" commemorates her lighting director Bill Duffield, killed in an accident at Poole Arts Centre during her 1979 tour. The song links his name to those of several music stars who died in the previous decade-Minnie Riperton, Keith Moon, Sandy Denny, Sid Vicious, Marc Bolan-and one earlier icon, Buddy Holly.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Never_for_Ever)
01. Babooshka (03:20)
02. Delius (Song Of Summer) (02:51)
03. Blow Away (For Bill) (03:34)
04. All We Ever Look For (03:48)
05. Egypt (04:12)
06. The Wedding List (04:16)
07. Violin (03:15)
08. The Infant Kiss (02:50)
09. Night Scented Stock (00:51)
10. Army Dreamers (02:58)
11. Breathing (05:30)
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