Artist: Kate Bush
Album: Never for Ever
Genre: Pop, Rock
Release Date: 1980/2018
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 44,1 kHz
Duration: 37:25
Total Tracks: 11
Total Size: 415 MB
Tracklist:
1. Kate Bush – Babooshka (03:19)
2. Kate Bush – Delius (02:51)
3. Kate Bush – Blow Away (03:34)
4. Kate Bush – All We Ever Look For (03:47)
5. Kate Bush – Egypt (04:11)
6. Kate Bush – The Wedding List (04:15)
7. Kate Bush – Violin (03:15)
8. Kate Bush – The Infant Kiss (02:49)
9. Kate Bush – Night Scented Stock (00:52)
10. Kate Bush – Army Dreamers (02:59)
11. Kate Bush – Breathing (05:30)
Download:
Never For Ever (2018 Remaster) by Kate Bush was the singer’s third studio album. It reached #1 on the UK charts, becoming the first record by a female soloist to make it to the top of the chart. Never For Ever (2018 Remaster) was newly remastered by Kate Bush and James Guthrie, and features hits “Breathing,” “Babooshka,” and “Army Dreamers.””Never for Ever has Kate Bush sounding vocally stable and more confident, taking what she had put into her debut single “Wuthering Heights” from 1978 and administering those facets into most of the album’s content. Never for Ever went to number one in the U.K., on the strength of three singles that made her country’s Top 20. Both “Breathing” and “Army Dreamers” went to number 16, while “Babooshka” was her first Top Five single since “Wuthering Heights.” Bush’s dramatics and theatrical approach to singing begin to solidify on Never for Ever, and her style brandishes avid seriousness without sounding flighty or absurd. “Breathing,” about the repercussions of nuclear war, conveys enough passion and vocal curvatures to make her concern sound convincing, while “Army Dreamers” bounces her voice up and down without getting out of hand. “Babooshka”‘s motherly charm and flexible chorus make it one of her best tracks, proving that she can make the simplest of lyrics work for her through her tailored vocal acrobatics. The rest of the album isn’t quite as firm as her singles, but they all sport a more appeasing and accustomed sound than some of her past works, and she does manage to keep her identity and characteristics intact. She bettered this formula for 1985’s Hounds of Love, making that album’s “Running Up That Hill” her only Top 40 single in the U.S., peaking at number 30.”