Before the Dawn (Kate Bush concert series)

Before the Dawn
Residency show by Kate Bush

The exterior of the venue during the residency
Location London, England
Venue Eventim Apollo Hammersmith
Associated album The Red Shoes, 50 Words for Snow, Hounds of Love and Aerial
Start date 26 August 2014
End date 1 October 2014
Legs 1
Number of shows 22
Kate Bush concert chronology

Before the Dawn was a set of concerts performed by British singer Kate Bush in 2014 at the Hammersmith Apollo in London. The residency consisted of 22 dates, and was her first series of live shows since her first tour in 1979, which had finished with three performances at the same venue. The show was filmed on 16–17 September 2014, although no video release has been announced.

On Friday 21 March 2014, Bush announced via her website her plans to perform live. A further seven dates were added to the original fifteen due to the high demand following the pre-sale ticket allocation, which went on sale Wednesday 26 March to fans who had signed up to her website. Tickets went on sale to the general public at 09:30 on Friday 28 March and were sold out within 15 minutes;[1] some reports say 14, some 10, some as little as 7 minutes.

Kate Bush was subsequently nominated for two Q Awards in 2014: Best Act in the World Today[2] and Best Live Act but did not win either award.[3] She did win the Editor's Award at the Evening Standard Theatre Awards for taking musical performance to new heights.[4]

Overview

Before the Dawn was presented as a multi-media performance involving standard rock music performance, dancers, puppets, shadows, maskwork, conceptual staging, 3D animation and an illusionist. Bush spent three days in a flotation tank for filmed scenes that were played during the performance and featured dialogue written by novelist David Mitchell. Also involved with the production were Adrian Noble, former artistic director and chief executive of the Royal Shakespeare Company, lighting designer Mark Henderson and Italian Shadows Theatre company Controluce Teatro d'Ombre. The illusionist was Paul Kieve, the puppeteer Basil Twist, the movement director Sian Williams and the designer Dick Bird. The video and projection design was by Jon Driscoll.

The performance was centred on a band featuring the following musicians:[5]

and the following actors:

Bush's son, Albert McIntosh, who performed in the show as a backing vocalist and actor, was also credited as creative advisor.[6] Keyboard player Kevin McAlea is notable for also having played on Bush's previous tour "The Tour of Life" in 1979.

Parts of the show told stories based on two Bush song-suites – "The Ninth Wave" from Hounds of Love and "A Sky of Honey" from Aerial.

During "The Ninth Wave", Bush's character is lost at sea after her ship, the Celtic Deep, sinks. She fades in and out of consciousness, sometimes underwater and sometimes above, hoping to be rescued with only a flickering red light to make her seen in the darkness. She has an almost out-of-body experience, observing herself as though under ice, seeing her family without her, and imagining entering earth's atmosphere until she is found; survival has given her a new appreciation of love and life. Then, in "A Sky of Honey", Bush portrays a bird-like woman observing the actions of a 19th-century painter and a wooden puppet.[6][7]

Reception

The news of the residency prompted a surge of interest in Bush, with a number of music websites, radio stations and newspapers running the story, as well as causing Bush's own website to crash due to the high web traffic. Bush was said to be 'completely overwhelmed by the response to the shows', adding she was 'looking forward to seeing you all later this year'.[8] In the week before the show's debut, the New York Times ran an article documenting Kate Bush fans who were traveling from around the world to attend the show.[9]

The show received widespread critical acclaim. The Evening Standard gave the opening show five stars out of five, commenting: "[an] extraordinary mix of magical ideas, stunning visuals, attention to detail and remarkable music..she was so obviously, so unambiguously brilliant, made last night something to tell the grandchildren about. "[10] Alexis Petridis of The Guardian gave the show five stars out of five, calling the show "another remarkable achievement."[11] Following the first week of performances, eight of Bush's albums charted within the UK Top 40, making her the first female artist in history to ever achieve this, with The Whole Story at No.6 and Hounds of Love at No.9 being the highest charting.[12]

Credits

Production Credits

Before the Dawn – written by Kate Bush
Directed by – Kate Bush, Adrian Noble
Creative Advisor – Albert McIntosh
Lighting Designer – Mark Henderson
Set Designer – Dick Bird
Projection Designer – Jon Driscoll for Cinelumina
Creative Consultant – Robert Allsopp
Costume Designer – Brigitta Reiggenstuel
Movement Direction – Sian Williams
Oceanic Wave Design – Basil Twist
Illusionist – Paul Kieve
Shadow Theatre Scenes – Cora de Maria, Alberto Jona, Jenaro Meléndez for Controluce

Sound Credits

Sound Designer/FOH Engineer – Greg Walsh
Monitor Engineer – Ian Newton
Kate Vocal Navigator – Stephen W Tayler
FOH Systems Engineer – David Lombardi
Stage Tech – Baz Tymms
Surround Systems Engineer – Davey Williamson
Sounds FX Consultant – James Drew
Record Archive – Ian Sylvester
Record Supervisor – Jim Jones

Backline Credits

Guitar and Bass Technician – Chris Lawson
Keyboard Technician – Norton "Turbo" Thobro
Drums and Percussion Technician – Steve Grey

Set list

The set list[13] comprised most of Hounds of Love featuring the entire Ninth Wave suite, most of Aerial including the entire second disc, two songs from The Red Shoes, and one song from 50 Words for Snow. Bush's first four albums and The Sensual World were noticeably excluded from the set list.[14]

Act One

  1. "Lily"
  2. "Hounds of Love"
  3. "Joanni"
  4. "Top of the City"
  5. "Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) (Extended)
  6. "King of the Mountain" (Extended)


The Ninth Wave

  1. Video Interlude – "And Dream of Sheep"
  2. "Under Ice"
  3. "Waking the Witch"
  4. "Watching You Without Me"
  5. "Jig of Life"
  6. "Hello Earth"
  7. "The Morning Fog" (contains elements of "Cloudbusting")

Act Two
A Sky of Honey

  1. "Prelude" (contains elements of "50 Words for Snow")
  2. "Prologue" (extended)
  3. "An Architect's Dream"
  4. "The Painter's Link"
  5. "Sunset"
  6. "Aerial Tal"
  7. "Somewhere in Between" (extended)
  8. "Tawny Moon" (performed by Albert McIntosh)
  9. "Nocturn" (contains elements of "Waking the Witch") (extended)
  10. "Aerial"


Encore

  1. "Among Angels"
  2. "Cloudbusting"

Show dates

Date City Country Venue
Europe
26 August 2014 London England Eventim Apollo Hammersmith
27 August 2014
29 August 2014
30 August 2014
2 September 2014
3 September 2014
5 September 2014
6 September 2014
9 September 2014
10 September 2014
12 September 2014
13 September 2014
16 September 2014
17 September 2014
19 September 2014
20 September 2014
23 September 2014
24 September 2014
26 September 2014
27 September 2014
30 September 2014
1 October 2014

References

  1. Keith Perry. "Stampede as Kate Bush tickets sell out in 15 minutes". The Telegraph. Retrieved 2014-04-02.
  2. "Vote now for Q Best Act In The World Today presented by Buster + Punch – Q Awards 2014 – Q MagazineQ Magazine". qthemusic.com.
  3. "Vote for Q Best Live Act presented by The Cavern Club – Q Awards 2014 – Q MagazineQ Magazine". qthemusic.com.
  4. "60th London Evening Standard Theatre awards – in pictures". The Guardian. 1 December 2014. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
  5. Bush, Kate (2014). The K Fellowship Presents Before the Dawn (official concert programme).
  6. 1 2 Ben Ratliff. "Kate Bush Returns to the Stage, and Her Fans Are There to Welcome Her". New York Times. Retrieved 2014-08-26.
  7. Dan Stubbs. "Kate Bush hails return to stage 'a great adventure' as ultra-theatrical show launches in London". NME. Retrieved 2014-08-26.
  8. Guardian Music. "Kate Bush tickets sell out in under fifteen minutes". The Guardian. Retrieved 2014-04-02.
  9. Melena Ryzik. "An Encore 35 Years in the Making". New York Times. Retrieved 2014-08-22.
  10. JOHN AIZLEWOOD. "Kate Bush: Before the Dawn, Hammersmith Apollo – review: Kate Bush was so obviously, so unambiguously brilliant". The Evening Standard. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
  11. Alex Petridis. "Kate Bush: Before the Dawn review – a lithe grace and note-perfect vocals". The Guardian. Retrieved 2014-08-26.
  12. Grow, Kory (September 2, 2014). "Kate Bush Lands Eight Albums on British Chart Following Comeback Shows". Rolling Stone. Jann Wenner. Retrieved August 27, 2015.
  13. Alex Young. "Kate Bush’s first concert in 35 years: setlist + photos". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved 2014-08-26.
  14. Tim Masters. "Kate Bush comeback greeted with huge cheers". BBC. Retrieved 2014-08-26.
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