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The Red Shoes is the seventh studio album by English musician Kate Bush.Released on 1 November 1993, [1] it was accompanied by Bush's short film, The Line, the Cross and the Curve, and was her last album before a 12-year hiatus.
"The Red Shoes" is a song written and performed by English musician Kate Bush. It was the fourth single released from her seventh studio album, The Red Shoes (1993). The single was released in April 1994 by EMI. The song peaked at No. 21 and spent 3 weeks on the UK Singles Chart.
The film was released direct-to-video in most areas, and was only a modest success. Kate Bush later expressed her displeasure with the final product, calling it "a load of bollocks". [1] Soon after its release, Bush effectively dropped out of the public eye until her eighth studio album, Aerial, released in November 2005.
"Eat the Music" is a song written and recorded by British singer-songwriter Kate Bush. Columbia Records released it as the lead single from Bush's seventh album, The Red Shoes (1993), in the United States, while EMI chose "Rubberband Girl" everywhere else in the world.
"And So Is Love" is a song written and recorded by musician Kate Bush. It was the fifth and final single release from the album The Red Shoes.. Released on 7 November 1994, the single climbed to number 26 in the UK Singles Chart.
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 ...
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"Moments of Pleasure" is a song written and recorded by British musician Kate Bush, released in November 1993 by EMI Records as the third single from Bush's seventh studio album, The Red Shoes (1993). The song peaked at No. 26 and spent 3 weeks on the UK Singles Chart.