Album Summary
The Sensual World is the sixth studio album by English art rock singer Kate Bush, released on 16 October 1989 by EMI Records. The album peaked at No. 2 on the UK Albums Chart. It has been certified Platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for shipments in excess of 300,000 in the United Kingdom, and Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in the United States.
Reviews
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Date
Jan 20 2022
Author
Kate Bush suffers from what I like to call "Björkism."
Björkism is a disease that causes vocalists to wander aimlessly; rarely, if ever, approaching anything resembling a melody, let alone a legitimate hook. In fact, vocalists who suffer from Björkism often seem downright phobic when it comes to hooks. Instead, they choose to warble endlessly and leave the listener exhausted from trying to follow along.
I call this syndrome Björkism, not because I believe that Kate Bush bit the style from the eponymous Björk, but because Björk is the ultimate example of this disease. Accordingly, "The Sensual World" by Kate Bush receives a slightly better score than your average Björk album because, as annoying as it is, at least it's not Björk.
Dec 28 2022
Author
DAMN… maybe all those stranger things nerds were on to something…
Aug 09 2021
Author
Right... I'm guessing this is going to be a bit of a theme but here we go: I know this album is great, but spending one day with it isn't enought. I feel bad rating the album anything without giving it its due diligence... So, I'll give it 5 stars in the hopes that I'm not wrong once I've dedicated the time to the album that it deserves. Again, Kate Bush is a fascinating and revolutionary artist, one that is worth studying and appreciating.
Oct 24 2021
Author
This kind of discovery is exactly why I was excited about the prospect of this project. I would never have given it a chance. Wikipedia says "Art Pop?" Gag. But I listened once and felt a spark. Then again and started digging it. Now a third time in four days and it keeps growing on me.
I love the theme (of most tracks) of yearning for human connection in various types. It's human and earnest and totally disarmed my assumptions about being pretentious. It's a little weird, but just a little, so it seems like it's in a sweet spot for me. So like, Tori Amos and Robyn and Portishead in a stew, not Bjork salad.
Jan 21 2021
Author
With all Kate Bush albums there is an element of intrigue and mystery. This is proved sonically with this album. The power and range of her voice is constant throughout with layers of atmospheric instrumentation. All mixed to never interfere with the vocals at centre stage but instead to enhance even more as the tracks build.
Highlights are The Fog, Reaching Out, Deeper Understanding and the incredible finale This Woman’s Work. I personally prefer The Hounds Of Love slightly but this is still a valiant effort as a follow up to the album that has defined her career.
Jun 12 2021
Author
Beautiful, lyrical, ethereal. The opening and closing tracks are exquisite. Kate Bush is in a class of her own.
May 10 2021
Author
it doesn't quite give me the feels hounds of love does, but i'll be goddamned if i wasn't getting verklempt at "this woman's work."
May 09 2021
Author
Hard to find something to enjoy about this record. Weird 80s beats and all the songs sound the same.
Aug 26 2021
Author
Yes. This clicked Kate Bush for me. I always appreciated she had an amazing voice and style, but I never enjoyed her music and always found it a bit too soft and airy. This album packs a punch, it's daring and out there, and her voice cuts through that brilliantly. It's fantastic
Feb 14 2025
Author
Kate Bush's dad was my first doctor, have I mentioned that before? This was in Plumstead, a tough suburb southeast of London, popular with the National Front back then, my mother tells me. Dr Bush was a lovely doctor, she says, and his daughter was always referred to as "Auntie Kate" in our household. I find it hard not to default to five stars when her records come up here.
This is a grower: no earworms on first listen, on second it gets richer and stranger, which is generally how her records work. It has this strange artificiality that I associate with her songs, all the instruments clearly separated into their own place in a manner that seems to heighten this phantasmagoric effect she's goes for. Her voice charges through it all.
May 12 2021
Author
La légende raconte que Kate Bush a écrit cet album quelques heures seulement après s'être acheté deux sweatshirts dans un magasin GAP. Et on a envie d'y croire tant le projet est une réussite.
Apr 30 2024
Author
Not a good album by Kate Bush. Her style is already very controversial (in my opinion), and when the music is as boring as on this record, then there is nothing redeemable about it. Whole album was a perfect example of music for human tortures, probably it's number 1 in Guantanamo. I think I'm a bit too harsh, but definitely it is not a record for me.
Feb 14 2025
Author
I never really "got" this when it came out, sounding to me like a defanged version of "The Ninth Wave", minus most of the tunes. It's better than that, but still not something I'll listen to much. Looking forward to getting her more distinctive albums later!
Nov 27 2024
Author
This Woman's Work.
May 08 2022
Author
Kate Bush is incredible. In looking at previous work in this project, Hounds of Love is one of my favorite albums ever. This album didn't quite show the variety of voices and styles that I appreciated so much in that one, but I still very much love so much of it.
The title track has always been a sensual favorite, and "This Woman's Work" will always be emotionally connected to the scene from "She's Having a Baby," which it was written for.
I did notice the influence from the very popular in the late 80s "Le Mystère des Voix Bulgares" keep creeping in, and then saw that it had an actual Bulgarian women's choir join in.
"Deeper Understanding" is strangely prescient of our times for 1989! "Love and Anger" continues to be the sort of engaging song that made it on the US charts.
Jan 04 2025
Author
I used to have a crush on Kate Bush. I still do. She does it all - writes the songs, sings the songs, dances in weird videos, plays piano and masters the Fairlight as well. And clearly she does whatever she wants, nothing manufactured about her.
This isn't her best album, but it's still great. Vocals on This Woman's Work are particularly splendid.
May 01 2024
Author
Bonerific
Oct 17 2023
Author
I'm pretty sure Kate Bush is from the Feywild.
May 12 2021
Author
Excellent album, en revanche j'ai pas trop apprécié sa décla comme quoi "tout le monde préfère sa propre race à celle des autres"
Jan 22 2025
Author
Wiki says Kate Bush's next album is called "Aspects of the Sensual World". How Chomskyan!
This feels extremely of its time and extremely Kate Bush, which are not bad things, but make me smile in that way that things that are extremely how they are do. I like that she says sen[s]ual, which is apparently British.
Highlights: 'Love and Anger' (my top 2 emotions), the first part of 'The Fog' that sounds like a 90s RPG 's town music.
I'm starting to have a crisis of faith about the consistency of my ratings. But I think this was solidly "fine".
Apr 29 2025
Author
Not her best work in my opinion but it's Kate Bush so never bad
Mar 24 2025
Author
Fun fact - The song 'The Sensual World' was inspired by Molly Bloom's soliloquy from James Joyce's Ulysses (1922). Unfortunately Bush couldn't then get the rights approved by Joyce's estate, so had to rewrite the lyrics for this album. Happily she finally did get permission to use the original lyrics in 2011, when she released the song on the Director's Cut album as 'Flower of the Mountain', so listen to that one if you want to hear it as originally intended!
Feb 09 2025
Author
This will be my final Kate Bush album to review. I didn’t care for The Dreaming very much, but Hounds of Love is one of the best albums of the eighties in my opinion, and I listen to it pretty often. I’ve never listened to The Sensual World before, but I’m hoping I’ll love this as much as I love Hounds of Love!
This album was fantastic, and I absolutely loved it. Granted, the reasons I loved The Sensual World were completely different from the reasons I love Hounds of Love. Jesus, this was absolutely beautiful from start to finish. Kate Bush knows how to craft some fantastic arrangements, and that talent was on full display here. I love keyboards and synthesizers, so this album was right up my alley musically. There’s also some fantastic guitar playing from David Gilmour, and some beautiful strings too. I could listen to music like this all day long. I find the late eighties and early nineties are such an interesting time in popular music, due to the wide variety of influences that were leaving their thumbprint on music, and this album feels both of that time but also timeless. Kate Bush’s singing is fantastic too, and her voice fills out these beautiful melodies perfectly. I loved the songwriting on this album too, and I thought the moods and themes tied all of these songs together perfectly. There was a ton of emotion in every song, but the closing “This Woman’s Work” was the song I identified with the most. In my opinion, it was about a man watching his partner give birth to their child, and as a father of two little girls, I thought it captured the experience of birth from a father’s perspective incredibly well. I really loved everything about this album, and I will be buying a copy of it immediately. Well done, Kate Bush!
Dec 26 2024
Author
KB FOREVER
Dec 15 2024
Author
Hell yeah
Nov 29 2024
Author
another entry by the fantastic kate bush, this one smooth, dreamy, and... yes, absolutely sensual. this album is majorly centered around the euphoric and ethereal emotions revolving human intimacy.
folksy and cathedralesque, this album, like others in kate's discography is unique and all her own. it's softer compared to her more famous tracks and albums.
Nov 28 2024
Author
Some people in music got to the point in the year where they had to write an album and knuckled down and wrote enough songs. Bush from Hounds of Love onwards seems to have just absorbed herself and written symphonies. Whole album of texture and sound, of musical experimentation. One of the finest prog rock artists of all time.
I bought this in the autumn it came out and I'm listening to it here in November and it still screams cold, dark days and nights to me. A virtually perfect piece of work.
Hell this is good. It even has Mick Karn.
Oct 18 2024
Author
1989 - what a year for albums.
This Woman's Work is easily the best song from any album we've listened to so far.
Aug 29 2024
Author
As with any of Kate Bush's greatest work there's just so much to listen to here - chopped up drum machine bits, ethereal fiddles, unexpected guitar solos, and, uh, per Wikipedia, a cracked fishing rod? Of course, where else could it lead but one of the most powerfully sparse songs in Bush's catalogue with "This Woman's Work" - (mostly) just voice and piano, building and building to its haunting coda of "Make it go away". I wanted to not give it a 5 as a human being who's listened to Hounds of Love before, but come on, you always gotta give props to maybe the most classic auteur pop music ever gave us.
Apr 10 2025
Author
It was mysterious with lots of bwahhh bass, I liked it
Nov 05 2021
Author
Who knew that something that begins with a Ulysses-inspired tune would turn out to be so lush? Layered, dense, and beautiful.
Sep 23 2021
Author
I’m a huge fan of Kate Bush but I think this is one of her weakest albums. There aren’t any bad songs, but no absolute knockouts either. This is probably her most commercially appealing work which is also probably why I’m not as enthusiastic about it. I would give this a 3.5 but round up because I’m not sure if her iconic albums like Never Forever, The Dreaming, Hounds of Love or Aerial will show up on this list
Jun 11 2021
Author
Titellåten gjorde ingenting för mig. Försökte för hårt att vara porrig och sensuell.
Bra fart och nice David Gilmour-gitarr i Love And Anger.
I The Fog är Kate Bush' röst så fin och skör. Precis tillräckligt stämningsfull och mystisk och experimentell, mycket bra!
Reaching Out är kraftfull, kanske lite för powerballadig. Mer poetiskt än melodiskt vacker.
Heads We're Dancing visar upp ett kul och innovativt låtskrivande, när berättarjaget blir uppbjuden till dans av Hitler.
Deeper Understanding fortsätter understryka vad som verkar vara genomgående i albumet: briljant låtskrivande och sång av Kate Bush, men musikaliska arrangemang som är ganska släta och för mycket 80-tal för mig. Handlar om hur berättarjaget får kärlek och förståelse endast av en dator (före sin tid frågetecken).
Between a Man and a Woman och Never Be Mine ljöd i lurarna utan att jag reagerade nämnvärt, varken bra eller dåligt.
Rocket's Tail däremot! De första tre verserna är endast Bush' sång ackompanjerad av en bakgrundskör (den bulgariska kören Trio Bulgarka enligt wiki) innan bandet slår som en slägga - gitarrer och bas, trummor och hat - som förvandlar låten till ett fantastiskt rocknummer. David Gilmour med även här.
This Woman's Work fantastiskt vacker. Tydligen ska bakgrundssången låta som en kvinna med sammandragningar inför en födsel.
Ett bra album, med ett sound som kanske inte åldrats så väl, men som ändå lyckas dra in en i sin meditativa aura. Med en enigmatisk och mystisk Kate Bush blir det en upplevelse! Avslutet, med Rocket's Tail och This Woman's Work (räknar inte med bonusspåret Walk Straight Down the Middle), höjer albumet väldigt mycket!
Under lyssningen gick mitt betyg från en 2:a, med hjälp av Kate Bush' mysticism till en 3:a, och tack vare de avslutande låtarna, som hjälpte mig se resten av albumet i ett nytt ljus, till en stabil 4:a!
Bästa låt: Den första som stack ut efter en grundligare lyssning var The Fog. Men de två sista låtarna måste också nämnas. Speciellt andra halvan av Rocket's Tail.
May 13 2021
Author
Bush finally clicks. A sumptuous record (or should I say sensual) where the artist is able to convey an emotional range above and beyond the mere mortal. Best track: This Woman's Work.
Feb 18 2021
Author
Highlights: The Sensual World, Deeper Understanding, This Woman's Work
It's easy (and frankly lazy) to compare Kate Bush to Tori Amos, but there is so much more. Both feature a strong, crystal clear vocal talent, companied with classically-trained piano...Bush's haunting, sweeping melodies intertwined with other-worldly lyrics are easily her own, comparisons be damned. She'll hook you with a pop-like progression and turn on you, shattering your expectations with the unsettling reality that this is her show, she's going to run it her way. It's great. This is a strong album from start to finish.
Nov 17 2024
Author
Yesh. This is bad
May 10 2021
Author
This just wasn't for me. I liked the David Gilmour solo towards the end of the album that other than that this was a chore.
Nov 27 2025
Author
The denim vest is really what stood out. I don't ever remember seeing anyone wear a denim vest in my high school of 3000 people. A new kid in school recently relocated from Kentucky. His dad had just been relocated the help the ailing JC Penny's in Atlanta. Seems they were the supplier of said vest. Matt and I shared an english class. And eventually a lot more than that. But without a doubt the most lasting influence was the shared love of Kate Bush. Or as we knew her - Kate. Is still find some of her more esoteric moments confounding (I'm looking at you Lionheart). But when she hits - wow does she hit. I am a pop smith romantic at heart and this album is all her talents on full display. I cant really review this album. It just is for me. I feel like a rag doll it here capable hands. Tossed and twisted at her whim. And I gladly give myself over. Adult emotions writ large. Takes me back and makes me glad I lived those days. Kate/Matt - thank you.
Nov 24 2025
Author
Fantastische Stimme, fantastisches Album, das an keiner Stelle langweilig wird.
Nov 21 2025
Author
It is 100% a byproduct of me being 450 albums in, and I know I sound like an asshole for saying it, I wish there was a lot more avant-garde pop like this.
This may be the most ambitious pop album I've ever heard. This album is firing on all cylinders from start to finish. Kate Bush is singing her god damn lungs out the entire time. We deserve for all our pop music to be as innovative and as beautiful as this.
Nov 11 2025
Author
Like all great original artists, it takes a little while to get into their world. But when it clicks, you realise what a superb raw talent some individuals have. Kate Bush's best music always seems to have a touch of magic, mystistim and exotica with rich classical overtones. Truly spellbinding.
Nov 07 2025
Author
This is luxury music. Kate Bush is the only popular musician I can think of who I legitimately wish I was best friends with.
Nov 06 2025
Author
Love Kate!
Oct 16 2025
Author
Actually a perfect title for the album's vibe, Kate's voice is immaculate
Oct 06 2025
Author
Never heard this album but knew in general what to expect from Kate Bush
it's a gem, loved it
Sep 24 2025
Author
i really liked this !!! first kate bush album i've heard and i will 100% listen to more because holy shit that was real good! genuinely like insane songwriting on here wdym there's a song about dancing with hitler and also she predicted people dating chatgpt ?!?! i love all the sounds she uses in the songs like she wasn't afraid to get a little weird with it
Sep 01 2025
Author
I mean I already knew she was a genius, how much more confirmation did I need
Aug 31 2025
Author
I guess this is my third five-star review for Kate Bush. Some great songs on here; as well as the title track and This Woman's Work, I liked Love and Anger and Deeper Understanding a lot. I love the bass sound on this album.
Aug 15 2025
Author
interesting
Jul 31 2025
Author
Phenomenal
Jul 21 2025
Author
Arguably Kate Bush's second best album after 'Hounds of Love', this album captures a profound longing for human connection and intimacy. Lyrically, the songs are imaginative and prescient, conjuring unexpected scenarios like encountering Hitler at a club or exploring online love before digital dating was comprehensible. Revisiting the album, I'm struck by how well the songs have aged—tracks I once skipped now reveal new depths of meaning, demonstrating the album's enduring artistic power.
Standout track: Never Be Mine
Jul 09 2025
Author
More majesty and wonder from Kate Bush. A bit more restrained on the first half and then she lets loose.
Jun 18 2025
Author
Nice soul singer. Also appeared to have song the original mockingbird.
Jun 15 2025
Author
i've heard almost all of Kate Bush's albums front to back (except for her very last one she released in the 2010's i think), so i'm very familiar with her work. i've only listened to this occasionally since it's not my absolute favorite of her work, but i doubt this will get a poor rating
The Sensual World - 5/5
Love and Anger - 5/5
The Fog - 4/5
Reaching Out - 5/5
Heads We're Dancing - 5/5
Deeper Understanding - 4/5
Between a Man and a Woman - 4/5
Never Be Mine - 3/5
Rocket's Tail - 4/5
This Woman's Work - 5/5
Average score: 4.4/5 (rounding up)
it's not my favorite album of Kate Bush's discography. i've always been more of a fan of the grand and almost theatrical hits from The Kick Inside to Hounds of Love
(side note: can you believe The Kick Inside didn't make the cut for this album list?? blasphemy!!!)
that being said, much like the majority of her other albums, it's lovely. what you see in the title is what you get: sensual, lush and ethereal. this is also what i consider her last good release
Jun 12 2025
Author
Each Kate Bush album is an artistic experience. I wasn’t familiar with this one, but it’s no exception. A bit more adult in theme and sometimes wearied and even cynical in message, this is fantastic art pop that stands just a hair below the quality of her very best work, which makes it an absolutely terrific album.
Jun 12 2025
Author
An epic. So good. Rocket's Tail is one I hadn't heard before and absolutely loved.
Jun 08 2025
Author
## In-Depth Review: *The Sensual World* by Kate Bush
Kate Bush’s sixth studio album, *The Sensual World* (1989), stands as a pivotal work in her discography. It bridges her experimental, literary past with a new maturity and emotional depth, all while expanding her musical palette. Below is a comprehensive exploration of the album’s lyrics, music, production, themes, and influence, along with a balanced assessment of its strengths and weaknesses.
---
## **Lyrics**
Bush’s lyricism on *The Sensual World* is both intimate and expansive. The album opens with the title track, inspired by Molly Bloom’s soliloquy from James Joyce’s *Ulysses*. Although Bush was denied the rights to use Joyce’s text, she crafted lyrics that evoke the same breathless sensuality and celebration of the senses, with imagery of “peaches, mountain flowers, seed-cake,” and a recurring, erotically charged “Yes”[1][3]. This track sets the tone for the album, where sensuality is explored not just as sexuality but as a broader engagement with the world.
The album’s songs are structured as vignettes, each offering a glimpse into different lives and emotional states. Unlike her previous work, which often focused on grand, fantastical narratives, *The Sensual World* grounds its stories in more ordinary, relatable experiences, though still colored by Bush’s vivid imagination[1][3]. For example:
- **“Heads We’re Dancing”**: Tells of a woman who discovers she’s been dancing with Adolf Hitler, inspired by a real-life anecdote about Robert Oppenheimer. The song becomes a meditation on judgment, trust, and the darkness that can lurk beneath charm[1][3][4].
- **“Deeper Understanding”**: Explores the relationship between humans and technology, presciently depicting a character who finds solace in their computer—a theme that has only grown more relevant[1][4].
- **“This Woman’s Work”**: Perhaps the album’s emotional centerpiece, it captures the vulnerability and power of human relationships, originally written for the film *She’s Having a Baby* and later becoming one of Bush’s most iconic songs[1].
Bush’s lyrics throughout the album are emotionally raw, inventive, and layered with meaning. She uses nature as a recurring motif, drawing parallels between human longing and the natural world, as in “Reaching Out,” where a sunflower’s stretch towards light becomes a metaphor for unfulfilled desire[3].
---
## **Music**
Musically, *The Sensual World* is lush, eclectic, and deeply textured. The album retains Bush’s art rock sensibilities but is distinguished by several unique elements:
- **Celtic and Eastern European Influences**: The use of Irish folk instruments (notably Davey Spillane’s uilleann pipes) and the Bulgarian vocal ensemble Trio Bulgarka adds a distinctive color to the album. These elements are woven seamlessly into tracks like the title song and “Deeper Understanding,” providing an organic counterpoint to Bush’s technological experimentation[1][3][4].
- **Fairlight CMI Synthesizer**: Bush continues her pioneering use of the Fairlight digital sampler, though in a more restrained manner than on previous albums. The result is a sound that is at once modern and earthy, with electronic textures supporting rather than dominating the arrangements[1][2].
- **Guitar Work**: David Gilmour’s contributions, especially on “Love and Anger,” bring a soaring, emotional quality that complements Bush’s vocals[1][4].
- **Vocal Arrangements**: Bush’s voice is as expressive as ever, ranging from whispery intimacy to powerful, almost operatic wails. The inclusion of Trio Bulgarka on several tracks adds a rich harmonic layer, enhancing the album’s sense of feminine presence and cross-cultural dialogue[1][4].
The album’s production is dense and layered, with each track offering a unique sonic landscape. From the cinematic strings of “The Fog” to the bombastic, Eastern-inflected “Rocket’s Tail,” Bush demonstrates her ability to blend disparate influences into a cohesive whole[4].
---
## **Production**
Bush produced *The Sensual World* herself, a testament to her growing confidence and control in the studio. The album’s sound is characterized by:
- **Lushness and Complexity**: Multiple layers of instrumentation and vocals create a sweeping, immersive experience. The arrangements are sophisticated, with careful attention to detail in every track[4].
- **Balance of Organic and Synthetic**: The interplay between traditional instruments and digital technology is a hallmark of the album. While some critics have noted a certain “coldness” in the original CD mastering, remastered editions have addressed this, allowing the album’s warmth and nuance to shine through[2].
- **Dynamic Range**: The album moves fluidly between moments of intimacy and grandeur, with Bush’s production choices serving the emotional arc of each song[4].
Despite the album’s complexity, Bush avoids self-indulgence, maintaining a sense of focus and momentum throughout[4].
---
## **Themes**
*The Sensual World* is unified by its exploration of passion, sensuality, and the complexities of human connection. Key themes include:
- **Feminine Sensuality**: Bush embraces a more overtly feminine perspective, expressing sensuality on her own terms rather than as a marketing tool[1][3]. The album is often described as her “feminine” work, with a focus on emotional maturity and self-discovery[2].
- **Nature and Humanity**: The natural world is both a source of inspiration and a metaphor for human experience. Bush draws connections between the rhythms of nature and the patterns of human emotion[3].
- **Technology and Isolation**: “Deeper Understanding” anticipates the digital age’s impact on relationships, exploring the paradox of increased connectivity and emotional isolation[1][4].
- **Moral Ambiguity**: Songs like “Heads We’re Dancing” challenge the listener to confront uncomfortable truths about judgment and complicity, subverting expectations about the nature of passion and evil[1][3].
Bush’s willingness to tackle complex, sometimes unsettling subjects sets the album apart from more conventional pop records of its era.
---
## **Influence**
While *The Sensual World* did not achieve the commercial heights of *Hounds of Love*, it was a critical and artistic success. The album set a precedent for Bush’s later work, particularly in its integration of global musical influences and its mature, introspective tone[1][2]. Its impact can be seen in:
- **Expansion of Art Pop**: Bush’s fusion of folk, classical, and world music elements influenced a generation of artists seeking to push the boundaries of pop music.
- **Female Artistic Agency**: By producing the album herself and foregrounding a distinctly feminine perspective, Bush paved the way for other female artists to assert creative control over their work[1][2].
- **Enduring Songs**: Tracks like “This Woman’s Work” have become cultural touchstones, covered by numerous artists and featured in film and television[1].
The album’s prescient themes and innovative sound continue to resonate, ensuring its place as a landmark in Bush’s catalog and in the broader landscape of popular music.
---
## **Pros and Cons**
| Pros | Cons |
|------|------|
| Lyrically rich and inventive, exploring complex themes with nuance and depth[1][3][4]. | Some tracks may feel overly dense or self-indulgent to listeners unaccustomed to Bush’s style[4]. |
| Musically adventurous, blending Celtic, Eastern European, and electronic influences into a cohesive whole[1][3][4]. | The original CD mastering was criticized for a certain “coldness” in the sound, though later remasters have improved this[2]. |
| Strong, expressive vocal performances, with memorable contributions from Trio Bulgarka and David Gilmour[1][4]. | The album’s eclecticism and lack of a single narrative arc may make it feel less unified than earlier works like *Hounds of Love*[1][3]. |
| Sophisticated production, balancing lush arrangements with emotional intimacy[4]. | The 80s production style (synths, drum sounds) may date some tracks for modern listeners[4]. |
| Forward-thinking themes, especially regarding technology and gender, that remain relevant today[1][3]. | Commercially, it did not reach the heights of its predecessor, possibly due to its more subdued and experimental approach[2]. |
---
## **Conclusion**
*The Sensual World* is a masterful album that showcases Kate Bush at the height of her creative powers. It is a record of transition—between youth and maturity, fantasy and reality, tradition and innovation. Bush’s willingness to embrace vulnerability and complexity, both lyrically and musically, results in an album that is as challenging as it is rewarding.
The album’s strengths lie in its lyrical sophistication, musical diversity, and emotional honesty. While its density and experimentalism may not appeal to everyone, these very qualities have cemented its status as a cult favorite and a touchstone for adventurous pop music. *The Sensual World* remains a testament to Bush’s artistry and her ability to capture the full spectrum of human experience in sound.
Jun 05 2025
Author
This was my first listen to a Kate Bush album...and WOW! Beautiful lush and atmospheric sounds and the voice of an angel. It sounded to me like she was channeling Peter Gabriel...a lot of similarities to his "So" album. Really enjoyed this one!
May 01 2025
Author
5/5 Velvet Arousal Swells
This album isn’t just sensual—
It’s sentient.
It listens to you as much as you listen to it.
Apr 18 2025
Author
4.5
Apr 11 2025
Author
At times challenging. I really like the world elements and use of strings and successfully pulled me into a different place.
Apr 09 2025
Author
It’s Kate Bush.
It’s ethereal, quirky and amazing.
Tempted to knock a star off for not being Hounds of Love, but holy heck it’s a stunning album.
Apr 06 2025
Author
Another album I already knew and loved before I started the generator. Kate's music is just amazing - well, maybe not everything she made, but this album surely is phenomenal. It has some of my favorite Kate Bush songs, it's such a beautfiul experience to listen to it from start to finish. It's really worth listening.
Apr 03 2025
Author
Superb.
Mar 29 2025
Author
The ultimate album to play while you make dinner for a goth chick so she puts out later in the evening.
Mar 24 2025
Author
Meravigliosa, onirica, ipnotica, energetica, mi è piaciuta un sacco
Mar 19 2025
Author
Sumptuous album.
Mar 16 2025
Author
Stunning vocals, incredible instrumentation, dreamy vibes.
Mar 12 2025
Author
9/10.
Feb 19 2025
Author
When I first heard this album, I thought it was ok, a bit strange. But as always with Kate, her music grows on you. After several re-listenings, I loved it. And still do, as I listen to her albums regularly. So this is a no-brainer for me.
Feb 17 2025
Author
Solid
Feb 05 2025
Author
Loved this album when it came out. It still hold up for me. The Trio Bulgarka are jarring at first but work on subsequent listens.
Jan 26 2025
Author
Genius - nuff said
Jan 24 2025
Author
A palatable version of Hounds of Love. If you liked the last one, you’ll like this one! It lacks the peaks of Hounds, and it also lacks its more experimental moments, but that evens out to something a bit more consistent and generally listenable. I’m not saying I could put this on at a house party, but it is a million times more accessible overall, and that’s just as valuable as a record that changes the game. And the beauty is that Bush achieves that without ever sacrificing her own voice.
To me, there’s not a bad moment on The Sensual World. But then again, the worst moments are the ones that feel stuck in the ‘80s, like “Between a Man and a Woman,” so as a sucker for that sound, I was still on board.
Basically, I just love Kate Bush. Simple as that.
Jan 22 2025
Author
A relaxing, charming and creative 80's album. Solid record all around.
Jan 10 2025
Author
This was absolutely brilliant. Never dug into Kate Bush's back catalogue beyond the obvious Running Up That Hill and Hounds of Love, but I've liked Tori Amos for a long time, and I see a lot of similarities. If you take Bush's more experimental stuff and extrapolate, you end up with Björk, but if you take the core of this album and extrapolate, you end up with Little Earthquakes. Probably the most enjoyable discovery so far on this voyage.
Dec 30 2024
Author
What an absolutely breathtaking album. My second Kate Bush of the project. She's one of my favorites of all time, and I'll echo what I said before that her artistry is unmatched.
The sources of her inspiration are so unique and it's hard to imagine anyone else executing them in such pleasantly surprising ways. On this album alone, there are songs inspired by James Joyce's Ulysses, Stephen Hawking, The Godfather, and her cat, Rocket. Not to mention a song about dancing with a man who turns out to be Hitler. And, of course, This Woman's Work written for She's Having a Baby.
The first time I heard Rocket's Tail transition into This Woman's Work, my breath caught for a tiny moment. She is a truly brilliant artist and I'm so glad to have her music as a constant companion.
Nov 26 2024
Author
fantastic
Nov 17 2024
Author
It's unusual for an album to sound so '80s, but not be dated. Kate Bush has always been a legend and her music holds up well.
Nov 14 2024
Author
True to its name, this is a sensual (late 80’s) ride. Luscious instrumentation throughout, it feels like a bare assed romp through silk sheets. My only beef with Kate is that her songs veer into the obtuse abstract realm just for the sake of it. This album is very well executed though, so it’s totally forgivable, and even welcomed because it suits these songs, unlike others I’ve heard from her.
Nov 14 2024
Author
Wow. This album was really powerful and beautiful. So many layers of sound and emotion. I was so-so on her last album, but this one kind of knocked my socks off. I got very immersed in the soul of it. I like how a lot of the tracks built as they went on. The first and last tracks were my faves, but so many great ones in between too.
Nov 11 2024
Author
Amazing! Anytime I thought I wasn’t loving it, the songs managed to come back around and grip me again. With that said, this one definitely needs way more than just one listen.
Nov 08 2024
Author
I'm not familiar with Kate Bush except for that one "Running up that hill" This was a beautiful album.
Nov 07 2024
Author
Lovlwy
Nov 01 2024
Author
Großartig. Kate Bush eben. Tolle Atmosphäre, spannende Stimme.
5/5
Oct 23 2024
Author
Every single song is beautiful and very affecting - a perfect record!
Oct 15 2024
Author
Great album. All the quirkiness and splendor one expects from Kate Bush.
Oct 10 2024
Author
Favorite Kate Bush CD.
Sep 24 2024
Author
Third Kate Bush album on the list. I remember this was a highly anticipated release at the time. Not as strong as Hounds of Love but this was not to be expected, still an easy 5 stars.
my score in 1989: 10/10
my score in 2024: 10/10
Sep 24 2024
Author
Perhaps not as special as The Dreaming and Hounds of Love, but still a very beautiful album. The Trio Bulgarka sounds amazing, especially on my favourite track Deeper Understanding.
Sep 02 2024
Author
Great album!
Aug 26 2024
Author
-YES another toe-curling five star number from Kate bush. It’s a lot more conventional and mature than The Dreaming but almost as good. I went through a period just about a year ago where I was absolutely obsessed with this album so it’s nice to revisit it
-Favorites are The Sensual World, Love and Anger, The Fog, Heads We’re Dancing, and Rocket’s Tail
Aug 23 2024
Author
yes
Aug 12 2024
Author
So good! Very emotive. I like the lyrics, vocals, and sax parts the most..especially those deep cuts
Aug 12 2024
Author
Favorite Track:
This Woman’s Work
The Sensual World
Aug 11 2024
Author
If there is a problem in loving and appreciating an artists work so much, it is you are sometimes so familiar with a particular album you seldom listen to it in full. This is one of the great things about following this list in that you are sometimes ‘forced’ to listen to an album you thought it was impossible not to find anything new in. I realised that
a few days ago when I was dealt Tarkus by ELP and reinforced today with this massive album. I knew it was bloody good but if you asked me yesterday where I would have put it in the complete Kate Bush catalogue it would have been near the bottom. But how the passage of time sometimes distorts your view or memories. Just one listen through again and I had to reassess to conclude it is impossible to grade any Kate Bush album as they are all masterpieces in their own way and completely different from one album to the next. That’s the magic of Kate Bush and why I and billions of others love her music. Because of the passage of time it was like hearing one or two of the lesser known tracks for the first time and since I have upgraded my listening equipment over the years discovered new sounds within the tracks. “This Woman’s Work” is a track which has never slipped my mind and one of my all time favourite Kate Bush songs. What a beauty it is. When Kate Bush sits behind a piano and sings a song with little accompaniment there is no-one like her to produce such emotion and sadness which always invariably brings me to tears.
5+/5
10/4/24
Aug 11 2024
Author
I’m at a 5.
This is my first Kate Bush album – obviously, Running Up That Hill was huge a few years ago, but I never really took a deeper dive into her music.
What’s here is one hell of a look at the idea of the human condition and the need for relevancy, comfort, and connection, bedazzled and supplemented with fantastic production work that seems to be the absolute pinnacle of the mid-80s style, refined all the way to this point in 1989. Her vocals are incredible throughout this album, and the lyricism is pretty damn good throughout.
I don’t know that I’ve ever heard a more effective beat drop in my life than the launch of “Rocket’s Tail” – just a masterclass of how to do that sort of thing and have it work perfectly. It’s one of the many examples of great production work blending with Kate’s vision that are scattered throughout the album, but it hits brilliantly on that track in particular. This Woman’s Work might be one of the most emotional album closers that I’ve ever heard. Seeing the scene it’s paired with adds an incredible layer of depth.
Really, I could keep glowing with praise, but I just felt really touched by this album. It hits a few snags of repetition or empty spots at points, but those get immediately washed away by some great line or a great vocal hit or something crazy in the soundscape. It’s just a really fucking strong album, and a very easy 5 for me.
Jul 24 2024
Author
I would have never have thought of pairing jaunty folk instuments with, well, the sensual world. But I'm not Kate Bush
Better than I expected even from her tbh! Heads We're Dancing was a revelation. I didn't think we'd get such a BEAT! Rocket's Tail was bloody gorgeous. She's just a real visionary and it shows here, throughout. She seems more purposeful this album than the one I had to study
But I did in fact get called out by the spending my evenings with the computer like a friend line...
Jul 19 2024
Author
the queen of my heart
Jul 11 2024
Author
One of the small number of people for me who need their own scale.