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Beverley Craven acknowledged that when she was beginning to write songs, she was "trying to sound like Kate Bush". [225] Tim Bowness of No-Man named Bush as one of his early influences. [226] Elton John cited Bush's duet with Peter Gabriel, "Don't Give Up", for helping him to become sober, particularly Bush's lyric, "Rest your head. You worry ...
Over the years, Gabriel has collaborated with singer Kate Bush several times; Bush provided backing vocals for Gabriel's "Games Without Frontiers" and "No Self Control" in 1980, and female lead vocal for "Don't Give Up" (a top 10 hit in the UK) in 1986, and Gabriel appeared on her television special.
"Don't Give Up" is a song written by English rock musician Peter Gabriel and recorded as a duet with English singer Kate Bush for Gabriel's fifth solo studio album So (1986). An edited version was released as the third single from the album in the UK on 20 October 1986 and as the fourth single in the US in March 1987. [2]
The couple married on 1 September 2012 in the Nash Conservatory at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, southwest London. [32] A 2020 interview with the national Swedish news agency TT revealed that the couple had separated. [33] Interviewed on ITV's Lorraine live from West London on 16 October 2020, Melua confirmed that the couple had divorced. [34]
Peter Richardson & Kate Bush "This Woman's Work" Kate Bush 1990 "Love and Anger" 1991 "Rocket Man" 1993 "Rubberband Girl" "Eat the Music" "Moments of Pleasure" "Rubberband Girl" (US version) n/a 1994 "The Red Shoes" Kate Bush "The Man I Love" Kevin Godley "And So Is Love" Kate Bush 2005 "King of the Mountain" Jimmy Murakami: 2011 "Deeper ...
Billie Eilish, Peter Gabriel, Sheryl Crow, Nile Rodgers, Bootsy Collins, Sofi Tukker, Rufus Wainwright, Bush and many more have joined a coalition of musicians called Artist for Action to Prevent ...
The success of "Running Up That Hill” could help propel 'Stranger Things: Music from the Netflix Original Series, Season 4' to a Grammy nomination for best compilation soundtrack for visual media.
Early iterations of the song were performed by Gabriel on the tour to promote his second eponymous studio album (a.k.a. "Scratch"). [5] In the spring of 1979, the song was also performed with Kate Bush at a memorial concert in Dorset for Bill Duffield, Bush's former lighting engineer who died from injuries sustained from a fall during her first tour. [6]