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Launched in the ‘90s and early 2000s, Shinedown and Bush can still bring out diehard fans on a sweltering July day. Go inside ...
Upon its initial release on Bush's Hounds of Love album, "Running Up That Hill" hit No. 30 on the Billboard Hot 100 when it was first released and peaked at No. 3 in the U.K.
Following a comprehensive reissue series of her discography last year, Kate Bush is releasing The Other Sides, a new 4-disc release of rarities. The set will include rare songs, B-sides, covers ...
Written by Kate Bush one summer night in 1983, “Running Up That Hill,” off her fifth album Hounds of Love, hit the U.S. airwaves and peaked at No. 13 on the Billboard Dance Clubs Songs chart ...
Related: Here Is Snoop Dogg’s Cover Art for His Pharrell-Produced Bush Album Watch Pharrell and Snoop Dogg Dance to Beats While Recording Bush Watch the Trailer for Snoop Dogg and Pharrell’s ...
The Orion Experience, announced today the release of their fifth single "Moving", a Kate Bush cover from her debut album, for their upcoming covers album Cosmicovers in 2023. The single is out ...
The album is an artistic statement, a swag of songs greater than the sum of its parts. In a new series, our authors nominate their favourites. Kate Bush’s Hounds of Love (1985) was the first ...
On Bandcamp, Riggs has revealed One Hundred Cigarettes vol. 1, a covers collection “meant to transition to a new name and a new project.” The new project is called Alex, Fair Warning.
Bush’s 2016 double live album, Before the Dawn – which documents her long-awaited stage return after a 35-year hiatus – is available on the second CD box in its original master.
Gavin Rossdale on band Bush, new album, wife Gwen Stefani Gavin Rossdale, who had a successful solo career, said of Bush, “I felt there was unfinished business.
Taken from their 2010 palindromic-titled covers album If I Had A Hi-Fi, “Love and Anger” follows the same peppy power pop formula that made the trio such college rock favorites back in the mid ...
The meaning behind most album covers leans more towards niche than tragedy. Unfortunately, the meaning behind the cover of Yoko Ono’s 1981 album Seasons Of Glass is particularly heartbreaking.