Kate Bush · Hounds of Love
Under Ice
Table of contents
Dynamics
- Vocals faded out at the end — gradual dissolution reinforces the narrative of the singer sinking beneath the ice
Rhythm / Tempo / Metre
- Large accelerando from opening (65 bpm → 100 → 108), followed by a ritardando in the final bars — brings the piece full circle; leaves little sense of finality or resolution; reflects the disorienting subject matter
- Pause on the final note
- "Obsessive" strong crotchet pulse articulated constantly in the bass throughout — the piece is dominated by these insistent bass crotchets
- Piece built on a repeated ten-bar rhythmic unit (first instance bars 5–14): 2 bars of 4/4, 5 bars of 3/4, 3 bars of 4/4 — frequent alternation between 4/4 and 3/4
- Irregular positioning of time signature changes creates an unsettled feel (e.g. bar 21: an extra 4/4 bar delays the expected 3/4, prolonging the listener's anticipation)
- Accompaniment ostinato (first heard bars 3–4): three-quaver (♫♩) rhythm, repeated and rhythmically displaced to create a 3+3+2 cross-rhythm across two bars of 4/4
- Vocal refrain uses the same three-quaver (♫♩) rhythm as the ostinato — unifies the rhythmic language of the piece
- Figuration sometimes extended into a two-bar phrase (e.g. bars 3–4); later adopted in the vocal line (e.g. "Everywhere", "Not a soul, on the ice")
- Verse has more rhythmic variety: mild syncopation (upbeat), scotch snaps (bar 27), triplets (bar 50)
- Tremolo in the voice part (bar 46) on "moving under ice" — sinister effect; cf. Jaws (John Williams), where rhythmic alteration of a simple repeating interval generates tension
Texture
- Sparse melody-dominated homophony — fragmentary lead vocal underpinned by a bass line and two short, two-part string figurations
- Articulated bass pedal texture throughout
- Ostinato open-fifth textures over the bass (bars 3–4)
- Homorhythmic vocal parts in the refrain using the three-quaver (♫♩) rhythm
- Antiphonal dialogue in the coda between lead vocal and three-part tracked backing vocals on the phrase "It's me"
Structure
⚠️ Structural contradiction: two different outlines appear in the notes — one uses Verse/Refrain labels, the other uses Motif 1/Motif 2 labels with different bar groupings. Both are listed below; check against your score/source to confirm which is correct.
Verse/Refrain reading:
| Section | Bars |
|---|---|
| Intro | 1–4 |
| Verse 1 | 5–14 |
| Refrain 1 | 15–18 |
| Verse 2 | 19–26 |
| Refrain 2 | 27–34 |
| Verse 3 | 35–43 |
| Refrain 3 | 44–48 |
| Coda / Outro | 49–58 |
Motif reading:
| Section | Bars |
|---|---|
| Intro | 1–8 |
| Motif 1 | 9–13 |
| Motif 2 | 14–18 |
| Motif 1 | 19–24 |
| Motif 2 | 24–29 |
| Motif 1 | 30–39 |
| Motif 2 | 40–45 |
| Motif 1 + Extended Coda/Outro | 46–58 |
- Through-composed — rejects verse-chorus structure entirely; structure defined by accompaniment figures and time signature changes rather than by the melody
- Quite short (~2'21")
- Wider listening: cf. "It's a Kind of Magic" (Queen) — also through-composed; through-composed songs are less immediately memorable than verse-chorus forms
Melody
- Restricted range — mostly limited to a perfect fifth, predominantly low tessitura in verses (no higher than E4); rises to C5 only in the climactic final "cry" (bar 53)
- Lead vocal characterised by short, staccato, mainly stepwise two-pitch figures — repeated notes and small stepwise movement; may suggest entrapment
- Short lyrical section ("The river has frozen over") — spans a 5th, with prominent leaps of a 4th (A–D) then 5th (A–E)
- Quasi-pentatonic shapes in more lyrical sections (bars 15–18)
- Mainly syllabic with occasional melismas (e.g. "trees", bars 27–28)
- Final phrase (bar 53): higher register; melisma combined with long descending chromatic portamento — word-painting (singer sinking under the ice); finishes on the lower dominant — harmonically unresolved
Instrumentation / Sonority
- All accompaniment synthesised/sampled via Fairlight CMI — synth strings and synth pad form the entirety of the accompaniment; bleaker, colder sound than 'Cloudbusting' or 'And Dream of Sheep'; no acoustic instruments
- Synth drone throughout — creates a sense of space, texture, and sustained suspense
- Radio-sampled sound, hard-panned left
- Lead vocals: low tessitura in verses; higher continuation from bar 53 — two distinct registers exploited
- Lead vocals harmonised by a quieter lower male voice in refrain sections; additional voices join to create three-part texture in the coda
- Last sound: sustained vocal sample with a moving filter frequency — resembles Mongolian throat-singing vocal harmonics; an intricate detail for what is effectively an appendix to the album
- Pitch bend / glissando at end — gradual fade via moving filter (EQ and volume automation) creates the illusion of the singer sinking into the depths
- Sound effects: wind, cracking ice, submarine radar "pip" — reinforce the cold, searching narrative
Tonality
- Modal A minor throughout — no key changes
- Towards the conclusion, "less rational" electronic sounds undermine the tonality, increasing ambiguity
Harmony
- Built over a sustained Asus2 chord; all chords drawn from A natural minor except for the occasional D major
- Limited, repeating chord rotation: Fmaj7#4 – Dm9 – Asus2 – Am/C — gentle but persistent dissonance
- Bass outlines tonic (A), submediant (F), mediant (C), subdominant (D); dominant (E) deliberately avoided — prevents any sense of harmonic resolution (chords I, VI, III, IV — no chord V)
- Functional cadences avoided; passing dissonances in synth strings and vocals
- Many open and parallel fifths in the synth strings
- Tonic pedal at start and end
- Finishes on an ambiguous Asus2 with electronic effects — no resolution; underlines the narrative of sinking