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66 of 67 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More like the Best Story, not the Whole Story
With five albums under her belt from EMI Records, it was time for Kate to put out a greatest hits. She'd made it big with Hounds Of Love, which spawned four hit singles, and The Whole Story brings her EMI songs to closure. And it was this album that introduced me to Kate Bush, and the rest is history. Key, []=original studio album.

The version of "Wuthering...

Published on December 19, 2003 by Daniel J. Hamlow

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great music but horrible audio fidelity
I first bought this album on vinyl, later again on cassette, and finally on CD - It was my introduction to this artist's very distinctive music, and the selection of tracks, given the original LP format and time frame of covered work, is a worthy assortment - There's not much I will attempt to add to what others have written here about her music and these songs, EXCEPT:...
Published on July 24, 2005 by Ferrara Brain Pan


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66 of 67 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More like the Best Story, not the Whole Story, December 19, 2003
This review is from: The Whole Story (Audio CD)
With five albums under her belt from EMI Records, it was time for Kate to put out a greatest hits. She'd made it big with Hounds Of Love, which spawned four hit singles, and The Whole Story brings her EMI songs to closure. And it was this album that introduced me to Kate Bush, and the rest is history. Key, []=original studio album.

The version of "Wuthering Heights" features a newer vocal, which is more developed than the girlish vocals of the Kick Inside days and helps the piano and drums of this song. Yes, she does sing about the longing about Kathy towards Heathcliff. Much better than the original.

"Cloudbusting" is my favorite single from here, especially with its martial rhythm set by the strings and synthesizers. The song and the video are related, as it's sung from the POV of the daughter of an inventor who creates a rainmaking machine that gets the government after the inventor, considered a threat to the men in power. [Hounds Of Love]

"Breathing" is one of Kate's most serious pieces, about the effects that radioactive fallout has on a baby still in the womb, and it's sung from the perspective of the infant. The addition of a cold official sounding voice reporting the results of fallout from a nuclear test and the crescendo that rises with the "What are we going to do, we are all going to die refrain" shows that Kate is an artist with political conscience. [Never For Ever]

One of Kate's best realized pieces is the piano ballad "The Man With The Child In His Eyes" on a man who is most surely her Prince Charming, [The Kick Inside]

The dreamy "Wow" about the travails of fame and show business [Lionheart] is followed by two songs from Hounds Of Love, the frantic title track, and "Running Up That Hill", where she is ready to make a deal with God and trade places. There's some weird background vocals towards the end.

The sombre guitar ballad "Army Dreamers" tells the story of a serviceman in the B.F.P.O. who's been killed and the opportunities he never had, such as a proper education, the ability to play a guitar, or getting married and having a child. "What a waste, army dreamers" Kate laments.

The upbeat weirdness of "Sat In Your Lap" tells the story of someone who wants to be an intellectual, scholar, full of knowledge, but can't be bothered to learn and just wants it set in her lap, i.e. "just gimme gimme gimme gimme gimme."

"Experiment IV" the new song, is about some people asked by the military to create a "sound that could kill someone from a distance," instead of "music made for pleasure, music made to flow." And the regrets of the inventors for making such a weapon is felt in the lyrics. The sound neatly fits in the Hounds Of Love era.

"The Dreaming" featuring a didgeridoo, and Kate's slight Australian twang, tells how the aborigines and the natural habitat are being exploited by the mining companies, with the aborigines being driven to drink and even kangaroos being hit by vehicles. [The Dreaming]

Finally, "Babooshka" is about a woman who tests her husband's fidelity by writing him anonymous letters, disguising herself as a younger version of herself, and seeing if he'll go through with an adulterous affair with his own wife. The piano is struck forcefully during the verses, before the electric guitar riffs kick in the prechorus and chorus. [Never For Ever]

Kate's greatest hits does not tell the "whole story", as she had two more albums and a record deal with Sony, but it tells the best stories of the recording chapters of her career, as they were the most experimentally creative and lyrically enriching.

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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Kate sure made some interesting videos!, December 21, 2001
Question: What is better than listening to Kate Bush's The Whole Story? Answer: Watching the Whole Story-The Videos. Kate Bush is as imaginative in her videos as she is in her songs.

"Wuthering Heights" and "The Man With The Child In His Eyes" are mere performance clips. The former is the original vocal version from The Kick Inside, not the new vocal version on the Whole Story album. The latter makes great effect of Kate's lovely face, framed between her leonine brown hair. "Wow" has her singing over a mixture of concert footage taken from her Live At Hammersmith video.

"Cloudbusting" is a story video which has her the daughter of a scientist who has made a rainmaking machine. I could be mistaken but it looks like Donald Sutherland playing her father. Someone let me know. I don't know if Kate is supposed to be playing a little girl, her mannerisms are akin to a seven to nine year old. Memo to Kate: you look better with long hair.

"Breathing" is probably the best and most bizarre video in the collection. Kate, wrapped up in a mounds of transparent plastic, portrays an unborn baby, complete with umbilical cord, and sings the horrors of nuclear war. The song takes on a more disturbing meaning, when she sings of breathing in her mother's nicotine, especially when the part of the song with the authoritative voice on the effects of an atomic explosion comes in. Kate is shown violently thrown around her mother's womb.

"Running Up That Hill" features a ballet duo, Kate is the female, whose routines take on a wrestling and even sexual nature. The bizarre imagery in that one is the shot of many people walking towards us, wearing xeroxed faces first of the male, then of Kate.

"Army Dreamers", shot on video camera and in a studio setting, effectively captures the anti-war sentiment of the song. Her closing eyes are in rhythm click-clack sound. The two scenes of import are of Kate, who upon seeing a young boy in camouflage, drops her gun and rushes toward him, mother instinct in full throttle. The second is of Kate, charging with a "kowabunga" expression of her face, only to be thrown backwards into the bushes by an exploding shell.

"Experiment IV" is a story of the song, with the deadly sound personified by a ghoul resembling the vengeful spirit in Raiders Of The Lost Ark, who ends up killing everyone in the top secret bunker. There is a twist at the end. Who is seen getting into a van, giving us a conspiratory wink?

"The Big Sky" shows her fun side, as a gathering of characters, including British pilots, Superman, and Soviet soldiers come together on the rooftop where she is stargazing and transform it into a stage.

Bush's videos and the ideas that spring from her head may not always be comprehensible but like characters in Fellini's movies, leave an undelible impression, and is leagues better than today's MTV fodder.

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great music but horrible audio fidelity, July 24, 2005
By 
This review is from: The Whole Story (Audio CD)
I first bought this album on vinyl, later again on cassette, and finally on CD - It was my introduction to this artist's very distinctive music, and the selection of tracks, given the original LP format and time frame of covered work, is a worthy assortment - There's not much I will attempt to add to what others have written here about her music and these songs, EXCEPT:

The sound on this CD is among the worst analog-to-digital mastering jobs I've ever heard, definitely the worst I've heard on a major label release - The cassette sounded better on my Walkman than this CD does on my home stereo - It's straight LP master tape to digital transfers like this that gave CDs such a bad rap when they were first introduced onto the market - Any amateur home recordist knows that audio needs to be very expressly mastered, in terms of EQ & dynamics/compression especially, for the medium on which it is to be listened to (excuse my clumsy syntax) - The art and science of remastering has dramatically improved in the past 15+ years since CDs became the predominant medium and the subsequent reissue of thousands of classic recordings - It is long overdue for this album to be rereleased in an expanded and remastered edition, along with Kate's other albums for that matter - With an artist of Kate Bush's reputation and broad appeal, I can't think of what they're waiting for - If Capitol Records did such a phenomenal job with remastering all those classic 50s/60s lounge records for the Ultra-Lounge series (which I highly recommend), then they ought to be able to do as good or better with this music - It certainly deserves better than what we're getting here...
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Arty rock and pop, April 9, 2005
This review is from: The Whole Story (Audio CD)

The Whole Story covers all of Kate bush's most memorable songs from the 1970s and early 1980s although it is by no means the whole story of her career. It opens with the re-recorded version of her spooky and atmospheric 1978 hit Wuthering Heights. This version has greater depth than the original single and still remains a most remarkable song based as it is on the novel of the same name.

Bush is a unique singer-songwriter with a gift for striking romantic imagery, although her work is not always immediately accessible. The Man With The Child In His Eyes is a complex and moving ballad, whilst Wow is a powerful atmospheric pop song.

Her music can be quite idiosyncratic and full of oneiric imagery, like Breathing and The Dreaming. On the other hand, Babooshka is a buoyant pop song with a catchy tune. This compilation is charming and very enjoyable. Overall, Kate's music can be described as a form of art rock, not always appealing on first listen, but very rewarding if you persist.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A newcomer's opinion, November 9, 2005
This review is from: The Whole Story (Audio CD)
One day I heard at the radio "Army dreamers" and instantly this song reminded me of "Beatrix" from Cocteau Twins, I dare to say it's even better than "Beatrix". I wanted to know more about this Kate Bush, so I bought this album, called "The Whole story". Boy, I was stunned and this hadn't happen to me since many years! These songs are just haunting, I hear them again and again in my mind long after I have heard them. Her voice is sublime, like coming from another world... What a strange beauty in her words !... She's like nobody else, not even Tori Amos , to whom I see that some people compare her. I adore Tori but this one (Kate Bush) is just so different. I can't compare her to anyone else nor classify her style which is unique.

I give a five star rating to this album and long to hear to her other albums, to her new album as well, which is called "Aerial" (Sylvia Plath comes to my mind here with "Ariel", I wonder if there is a connexion between them).

My favorite songs from this album, the ones which, in my opinion, stand out are the following : "Breathing" (one of the best songs by far that I' ve ever heard), "Army dreamers", "Cloudbusting", "Wuthering heights", "Running up that hill", "The Dreaming", "Hounds of love", "The Man with the child in his eyes", "Babooshka".

Finally I would like to indicate to new listenners (like me) the following link which is a great source of information about Kate Bush (including a short biographical note, discography and some very interesting external links):

http://www.answers.com/Kate%20Bush
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Collection from a Unique Talent, November 27, 2001
This review is from: The Whole Story (Audio CD)
I am not an unqualified Kate Bush fan (having sampled various of her albums over the years, I have never been compelled enough to actually purchase them), but I do recognize that she is a unique singing and song writing talent who has created an unclassifiable body of work - something like a pop/no-wave hybrid often swollen beautifully with lush production values and instrumentation, and always shining with that sweet but powerful voice.

Having admitted that I am by no means a devoted fan, I must now state that this CD is a great collection for somebody like me. All twelve tracks (most from various albums dating prior to and/or up to 1986; one - "Experiment IV" - released here for the first time) are stunning examples of the talent Ms. Bush possesses for musical narrative. I use the word narrative advisedly, for many of the songs included here are what I believe might be called "story songs". Perhaps the greatest example of this is "Wuthering Heights", Kate's swirling and passionate take on Emily Bronte's gothic love story. "Experiment IV", another good example, is a sinister tale about corrupt government devising weapons of sound. The track selection here is cohesive despite the differences between songs - "The Man With the Child in his Eyes", for instance, is a ballad of sorts, while "The Dreaming" is a wild and percussive trip into a world of Australian Aboriginal myth.

True, as noted here by real fans, this collection will probably not be worthwhile if you are seriously into Kate Bush. But if you are simply looking for an introduction to her work or a simple "best of", this is a wonderful selection of music that will move your heart, feet, and mind.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I just know that something good is gonna happen..., April 6, 2005
This review is from: The Whole Story (Audio CD)
There really isn't too much more to say that hasn't yet been said about this woman. Kate Bush has one of the most, if not THE most, incredible female voices in history. 1986's The Whole Story encompasses a range of her talents spanning 12 popular hits and singles, all released in the late seventies and early eighties. These songs can range from catchy pop-rock ("Wuthering Heights") to calm, chilled-off ballads ("Wow", "Breathing") with some strange, exotic tastes in-between. Not all the songs are lovable on first listen, as I listened to "Army Dreamers" numerous times before it caught onto me, and I was never a fan of "The Dreaming", but Bush manages to tie it all together into one nice package. One of her biggest hits, "Wuthering Heights", has been dubbed with new vocals, offering the song a nice polished feel to the original. "Wow" was my first taste of Bush, and it's still my favorite song of hers by far - a very beautfiul ballad with great lyrics, I believe about someone who has been warped by fame and fortune. And who could forget that song "Running Up That Hill"? Probably her biggest, if only, States-side hit, this is one of her catchiest, most charming offerings. "Cloudbusting" is an instant favorite, a bit more layered than others, and is followed by another tearjerking ballad, "The Man With the Child in His Eyes." "Breathing" is a nice comfortable track, the longest of the album which features some male vocals to complement those of Kate. The non-album single, "Experiment IV", can be found here as well - a great song not to be missed out on. And finally, this story closes with another mega-hit, "Babooshka", a song whose lyrics describe the story of a woman who plays a secret game with her husband to see if he is worthy of her trust. This song is very catchy, bound to have you humming its chorus after a listen or two.

All in all, with 12 great tracks, there's not too much more to want. Definitely recommended to people like me, who enjoy her beautiful voice, but don't have the time to invest in her entire catalog.

10/10
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gimmie, Gimmie, Gimmie, Gimmie Kate Bush!, March 2, 2007
This review is from: The Whole Story (Audio CD)
I'm probably the least likely person to review a Kate Bush album, as an R&B/Pop lover of the Black sista persuasion but I have a English chat buddy who I trade music with and she recommended Kate Bush to me. I had heard of Kate before and had caught the "Wuthering Heights" video while flicking channels and landing on VH1 Classic and was awe-struck at this song about the classic novel. But never did I think I was going to be reintroduced to Miss Bush. So my chat buddy gave me this album of Kate Bush's highlights. And at first listen I was like, "Whoa...this is weird"...then slowly a smile started to creep on my face as the album went on and I noticed how Kate really draws you into a song by lyrics and weird rhythms and phrases...it's pure GENIUS! I love how each song tells a story...not the usual "I Love You" songs I'm used to listening to, there's more to the songs than meets the eye, which is like reading a mystery novel and trying to figure out the conclusion.
This album has grown on me as I keep listening to it, and admist my Justin Timberlake, Mariah Carey, The Killers and Mary J Blige albums, this album is nestled inbetween them like a gooey intellectual morsel.
First off, "Running Up That Hill" has to be my favorite track off of this and me being a fan of 80's music, I guess it digested with me better. Still what a great intro and the lyrics of wanting to swap places with God is truly out of the ordinary. "Babooshka" is my next favorite, it's slinky, yet fun and the story of a woman testing her husband's faithfulness is like reading a children's fable book and laughing at the end of the happy ending. The music is beautiful and funky in one package! Other highlights I enjoyed were, "The Man With The Child In His Eyes" which is just a gorgeously arranged track with such a heart-tugging point of affection for someone. Also "Breathing" took my by suprise at first because I was like, "That song was soo not about that!" but it was...and I even got a bit emotional thinking about the baby in the womb breathing in the poison...deep stuff and heart wrenching. One of the most unique songs I've ever heard. Now I'm not going to escape talking about the two tracks from "The Dreaming", "Sat In Your Lap" and the title track are featured here and in their oddity they are the most complex of the collection. "Sat In Your Lap" is stark and in your face and has a thundering keyboard backing Kate up, while "The Dreaming" is almost a trance chant that it's just a world of imagery and hodge-podge of rhythm...truly the weirdest of the set! Other good songs, "Experiment IV" is soothing and has a cold computer soul about it while "Hounds Of Love"'s music gives the image of actual hounds running in the fields howling. And least not forget "Wuthering Heights" which is her tour-de-force and a very unique song, and her writing that at 19 is quite impressive.
So to conclude, I find Kate Bush quite the artist and a visionary that she is. I know for a fact that she influenced alot of performers of today, and one that comes to mind is another favorite of mines, Tori Amos...who uses that imagery and quirkiness in most of her music. This is a great overview of Kate Bush's work, though this came out like when I was born, it still stands strong and has some themes that still apply to todays world. What an innovated mind that Miss Bush has!
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I'm not a Kate Bush fanatic, but..., June 3, 2000
By 
R. Shouse (State College, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Whole Story (Audio CD)
I'll say this shortly and sweetly--The Whole Story is simply one of the finest and most creative batches of music I've ever heard. This is a CD that I can literally listen to every day and not get tired of hearing it. There's not a bad song on it. It's not that Kate Bush has such an enormous range or anything, it's just that she's great at what she does--whether it's soft crooning or "Patty Smith" style screech-singing. My favorite songs here are Cloudbursting, Breathing, Wow, Hounds of Love, and Experiment IV. If this CD is representative of Bush's work, then I just don't think there is anyone else like her.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wanna see an Elf???, May 6, 2003
Kate Bush is one of those that you only hear about in fairy tales, or imagine. She "can't be real", with her low profile in the commercial world of music, once you open Kate's door to another side, it's like Alice's double mirror. You will be mesmorized by intense almost painful beauty of KB's art, her real,yet well cushioned with wonder land imagination sound and lyrics, you can only fall in love and "never get out again."
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