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3 Creepy Songs by Kate Bush That Should Have Been Bigger Hits

Nobody has an eye and ear for artistic aesthetics and musical concepts quite like the incomparable Kate Bush. Letโ€™s look at a few (sort of) creepy Kate Bush songs that were ahead of their time and should have been way more popular on the charts.

โ€œGet Out Of My Houseโ€ from โ€˜The Dreamingโ€™ (1982)

This song always sticks out in my head for being so unsettling in the best way possible. This song didnโ€™t chart because it was never released as a single off The Dreaming, and I definitely understand why. This track isnโ€™t for the normies. Still, itโ€™s such a beautifully uncomfortable song that deserves more attention in the scope of the album. Inspired by Stephen Kingโ€™s novel The Shining, this unsettling work closes out the album on a strange note. And I wouldnโ€™t have it any other way.

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โ€œWaking The Witchโ€ from โ€˜Hounds Of Loveโ€™ (1985)

Everyone knows Hounds Of Love by its lead single, โ€œRunning Up That Hillโ€. That track is certainly one of Bushโ€™s finest, but there are so many other hidden gems on that album. One such gem, in my opinion, is the strange sea shanty art pop delight โ€œWaking The Witchโ€, which features lyrical quotes from the traditional folk song โ€œBlood Red Rosesโ€. This song is buried in the middle of Side Two and follows the somewhat common theme of drowning found in many of Bushโ€™s works. According to Bush herself, this song features a hefty number of people on the vocal tracks.

โ€œMy motherโ€™s in there, my father, my brothers Paddy and John, Brian Tench โ€“ the guy that mixed the album with us โ€“ is in there, Del is in there, Robbie Coltrane does one of the voices,โ€ said Bush.

Itโ€™s a haunting song about losing oneself, and I can confidently say Iโ€™ve never heard anything like it before.

โ€œMother Stands For Comfortโ€ from โ€˜Hounds Of Loveโ€™ (1985)

This entry on our list of creepy Kate Bush songs yet again comes from Hounds Of Love. โ€œMother Stands For Comfortโ€ gets almost no love online from what Iโ€™ve seen, and I think thatโ€™s crazy. Rarely have I ever heard a song about a murderer sung from the perspective of the killer in question, who seems to know their mother is hiding their crimes to protect them. To make things more complex and exhilarating, this song has such a soft arrangement. That arrangement clashes (beautifully) with the songโ€™s subject. Bush herself said that she used the โ€œcold qualitiesโ€ of synths to mimic โ€œunfeelingโ€ from the perspective of a killer.

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