1.117! 1i n717M771E11! Photo courtesy of guardian.co.uk Zach tunes in By Zachary Bailey CD Reviewer zsblos@psu.edu ***** Kate Bush returns to the music scene after a twelve-year absence with Aerial. This album had been long anticipated by Kate Bush fans. The album consists of two discs. The first is titled A Sea of Honey. The second is titled A Sky of Honey. I was impressed with the album art from the start; the cover depicts a golden sunset over the water with an image of a sound wave over the top. The inside of the booklet shows various pictures of birds, sailors, sky, and hanging laundry. After viewing the album art I was interested enough to listen. Upon first listen, I was quite shocked. A lot of the songs are piano -based with other synth pad type sounds in the background. The album also has some very sparse arrangements with instruments that tend to weave in and out in a very elegant fashion. I don't really care for Kate Bush's voice. As soon as she started singing in the first track I thought it had to be some kind of joke. To my ears, her voice was the musical equivalent to fingernails on a chalkboard. I couldn't understand a word the woman sings in half of her songs. Her vocal style is very bouncy sounding with a bit too much vibrato for a pop release. In some songs, I had to check the lyrics to make sure that she was still singing in English. I would have liked the songs a lot better if I could have understood what she was singing about. The subject matter of the album varied quite a bit. From the loss of her mother, to her new son, to Joan of Arc, this album jumps from one subject to another without warning. The lyrics on this album were another disappointment. For example, a large chunk of the song Pi is merely Kate Bush spouting off numbers in the mathematical calculation of pi. While I don't have anything against the irrational ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter, I still wouldn't want to pay money to hear somebody sing '3.14159265358979323846 2643383279'. The second disc is a bit more cohesive than the first. It contains an epic quality with titles like Nocturn, Sunset, and Somewhere in between. After listening to this album in its entirety, I get the feeling Bush would be more comfortable writing songs for musicals than for a pop album. The album closes with the song Aerial. In this song, Bush sings, "What kind of language is this? I can't hear a word you're saying. Tell me what are you singing," I couldn't help but chuckle to myself because I had been asking the very same questions. I give this album three stars because, even though I can't stand her voice and a portion of the subject matter, I do like the overall sound of the instrumentation on the album and most of the production. < \ OC