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127 KPM Desa Cimandala Terima BLT DD

Sukaraja, Pemerintah Desa Cimandala memberikan bantuan langsung tunai (BLT) dana desa tahun anggaran 2022, yang diberikan kepada 127 Keluarga Penerima Manfaat (KPM) yang ada di Desa Cimandala Kecamatan Sukaraja, Rabu (13/4/2022).

Kepala Desa (Kades) Cimandala, Aditya Agung mengatakan, bahwa pembagian BLT – DD Tahun 2022 ini, sudah sesuai dengan surat edaran Bupati Bogor nomor 147/448/DPMD/2022 tentang mekanisme penetapan KPM melalui Musyawarah desa (Musdes) yang dilaksanakan beberapa waktu lalu.

“Penyaluran dana itu sesuai mekanisme yang sudah ditentukan oleh Pemerintah Daerah dan melalui Musdesus,” ujarnya.

Menurut Agung, bahwa penyaluran BLT – DD itu sangat membantu untuk warga dalam pandemi Covid-19 tersebut.

“Dana ini adalah sangat membantu warga dalam pemulihan ekonomi pasca pandemi Covid-19. Kita dari pemerintah setempat langsung menyalurkan BLT-DD kepada warga yang berhak membutuhkannya,” pungkasnya.

Sementara itu, Rohani salah seorang warga KPM Desa Cimandala mengungkapkan rasa syukur, setelah dirinya terpilih sebagai salah satu KPM BLT DD dari pihak Pemdes Cimandala.

“Alhamdulillah, saya dan warga desa Cimandala, mendapat BLT – DD tahun 2022. Uang ini sangat bermanfaat untuk keperluan sehari-hari di dapur dan sekolah,” ungkap Rohani.

Sebagai informasi, BLT DD yang dikeluarkan Pemerintah Desa Cimandala sendiri dibagi setiap 3 bulan, dengan jumlah keseluruhan anggaran kurang lebih Rp 900 ribu/KPM, dan dibagikan langsung kepada KPM oleh Kepala Desa Cimandala.

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10 Tempat Wisata Alam Bogor Favorit Mudah Dijangkau

BOGOR, HRB – Saat ini banyak sekali tempat wisata alam Bogor favorit yang menjadi tujuan berlibur bersama keluarga.

Beberapa tempat wisata alam Bogor favorit di wilayah penyangga Ibu Kota Negara ini banyak menyuguhkan tempat wisata baru yang wajib masuk dalam daftar tujuan wisata Anda.

Dirangkum dari berbagai sumber, berikut tempat dan lokasi wisata alam Bogor favorit yang tidak kalah menarik dari kota-kota lainnya yang mudah dikunjungi.

1. Taman Wisata Alam Sevillage
Berada di kaki gunung Gede Pangrango, wisata alam yang mengusung konsep outdoor, Sevillage adalah salah satu objek wisata alam terbuka untuk orang-orang dari segala usia.

Tempat wisata ini merupakan salah satu destinasi favorit di kawasan Puncak. Di tempat ini terdapat kafe ddengan suasana outdoor, wahana selfie, dan glamping yang ramah untuk segala usia, layak dijadikan destinasi wisata ramah keluarga.

2. Damar Langit Resort
Tempat wisata Bogor ini menyuguhkan keindahan alam pegunungan dan perbukitan hijau yang sangat indah.

Berada di Damar Langit Resort Anda bisa menyaksikan lukisan alam yang sangat mengagumkan dengan udara yang sejuk.

3. Talaga Saat
Tempat ini sering disebut titik 0 Sungai Ciliwung. Danau seluas 1,5 hektar ini merupakan salah satu destinasi wisata favorit di kawasan Puncak, Bogor karena pemandangannya yang eksotik indah berselimut kabut.

4. Cimory Dairyland Puncak
Tempat wisata yang mulai dibuka pada 1 Mei 2021 ini adalah pilihan terkini untuk berwisata dengan keluarga.

Cimory Dairyland Puncak mengusung konsep suasana peternakan seperti di luar negeri. Pengunjung bisa menikmati berbagai atraksi hewan ternak dengan bernuansa edukatif dan juga ramah.

5. Curug Seribu
Tempat wisata alam Bogor satu ini adalah salah satu air terjun terbesar di Taman Nasional Gunung Halimun Salak.

Curug Seribu memiliki ketinggian air terjun sekitar 100 meter menjadikannya sebagai curug tertinggi di Bogor. Air terjun ini memiliki pemandangan menakjubkan dengan pohon-pohon besar memenuhi sekelilingnya.

Air terjun ini berada di ketinggian antara 7501.050 mdpl. Dinamakan Curug Seribu dikarenakan dinding batu air terjun dikellingi sangat banyak air terjun kecil. Sumber airnya berasal dari Gunung Salak dan mengalir ke arah Sungai Cikuluwung.

Baca juga:  Usai Dikukuhkan, Kontingen Peparda Kabupaten Bogor Geber Persiapan

6. Taman Fathan Hambalang
Tempat ini merupakan kafe dan tempat nongkrong hits kalangan muda Kabupaten Bogor. Terletak di Desa Hambalang Citeureup, tak jauh dari destinasi wisata Villa Hambalang, Sentul.

Tempat ini menyuguhkan panorama Gunung Pangrango yang mempesona. Tak heran jika tempat ini selalu ramai dikunjungi terutama anak muda yang gemar selfie.

7. Highland Park Resort
Tempat wisata ini adalah penginapan yang berdiri di atas tanah seluas 12 hektar, menarik dengan gaya yang unik untuk kelas atas, khas Mongolia.

Menggunakan tenda putih dengan latar belakang Gunung Salak, memberikan suasana yang nyaman dan menyegarkan.

8. Taman Fathan Alesano
Taman Fathan Alesano merupakan salah satu tempat wisata baru di Bogor yang baru saja viral di media sosial. Tempat ini merupakan salah satu cabang yang telah sukses dengan Taman Fathan Hambalang sebelumnya. Dan kini dibuka kembali sebagai Taman Fathan Alesano dengan pemandangan yang lebih sejuk.

Taman Fathan Alesano terletak di Cijeruk, Bogor, tepatnya di atas bukit Alesano. Mengingat lokasinya, tempat ini memiliki banyak pesona alam.

Di sana, wisatawan dapat menikmati pemandangan Kota Bogor dari atas bukit. Selain itu, jika cuaca cerah, wisatawan dapat melihat panorama gunung Pangrango dan gunung Salak yang sangat menawan.

9. Curug Cipamingkis
Tempat wisata alam Bogor Timur ini adalah curug yang terletak di desa Warga Jaya, Kecamatan Sukamakmur, Kabupaten Bogor.

Lokasinya yang tidak terlalu jauh dari kota yang ada di sekitar Bogor, membuat Curug Cipamingkis menjadi tempat wisata alam Bogor favorit para pengunjung.

10. Gunung Pancar
Wisata alam Bogor Favorit yang letaknya tak jauh dari Ibu Kota Kabupaten Bogor ini terletak di Karang Tengah, Kecamatan Babakan, Sentul.

Berada disini Anda bisa memanjakan tubuh dengan mandi air panas sehingga mampu merileksasi otot-otot yang kaku. Selain itu juga disuguhi pemandangan hutan finus yang sejuk di pandang mata dan mampu meluluhkan hati.

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17 Perguruan Tinggi Di Kabupaten Bogor Dapat Beasiswa Pancakarsa

Ciawi, Ade Yasin menandatangani Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) pemberian 1.200 beasiswa Pancakarsa, antara Pemerintah Kabupaten (Pemkab) Bogor, dengan 17 Perguruan Tinggi Negeri (PTN) dan Perguruan Tinggi Swasta (PTS) di Bogor.

Menurut Ade, hal ini untuk membangun generasi muda Kabupaten Bogor yang berkualitas, kompetitif dan berdaya saing di masa depan. Penandatanganan MoU dilakukan pada acara Bogor Innovation Wildly Important Goals (WIG) tahun 2021, di Hotel Pullman Ciawi, Rabu (29/9/2021).

“Kita menyadari bahwa pendidikan dan pembangunan kepemudaan, merupakan bagian yang tidak terpisahkan dari pembangunan bangsa, sebagai upaya pembangunan manusia Indonesia seutuhnya,” jelasnya.

Undang-undang nomor 40 tahun 2009 tentang Kepemudaan dan Peraturan Daerah Kabupaten Bogor nomor 1 tahun 2020 tentang Pembangunan Kepemudaan, mengamanatkan agar pemerintah memberikan penghargaan kepada pemuda yang berprestasi.

“Bermitra dengan perguruan tinggi negeri se-Indonesia dan perguruan tinggi swasta di Bogor, beasiswa pancakarsa tahun 2021 ini diberikan kepada 1.200 pemuda usia 16 sampai 30 tahun sebagai penghargaan atas prestasi di bidang keagamaan seperti hafidz Quran, kesenian, olahraga, kepemudaan, penggerak sosial, dan akademik,” terangnya.

Ade menambahkan, hal ini juga untuk membangun generasi muda Kabupaten Bogor yang berkualitas, kompetitif dan berdaya saing di masa depan. Program Beasiswa Pancakarsa yaitu bantuan dana pendidikan sebagai stimulan dan motivasi bagi putra/putri daerah yang berprestasi untuk menempuh jenjang pendidikan tinggi dan menjamin keberlangsungan pendidikan mahasiswa sampai selesai.

“Terimakasih kepada seluruh Rektor universitas dan sekolah tinggi mitra program Beasiswa Pancakarsa, saya titipkan para pemuda dan pemudi pilihan dari Kabupaten Bogor untuk dididik dan ditempa di institusi pendidikan yang Saudara pimpin, agar menjadi SDM yang tangguh dan berkualitas,” ujar Ade.

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Ade mengungkapkan, berdasarkan data Kemenristek Dikti, jumlah masyarakat yang menempuh jenjang pendidikan tinggi masih rendah. Pada 2019, jumlah masyarakat yang masuk perguruan tinggi hanya mencapai 34,58% dari populasi pendidikan, artinya sekitar 65% lulusan SMA / SMK memutuskan tidak melanjutkan kuliah. Jumlah ini sangat sedikit jika dibandingkan negara asia lainnya, Malaysia 47%, Singapura 78% dan Korea Selatan sudah 98% warganya menempuh pendidikan tinggi.

“Kepada para mahasiswa penerima beasiswa, manfaatkan beasiswa ini sebaik-baiknya. Tidak semua orang mendapatkan kesempatan untuk bisa melanjutkan pendidikannya ke universitas. Belajar sungguh-sungguh untuk masa depan agar mampu berkontribusi terhadap pembangunan bangsa,” tandas Ade Yasin.

Selanjutnya, kata Ade, tahun ini pihanya juga memulai kerjasama sekolah pascasarjana dengan Universitas Padjadjaran dengan memberikan kesempatan kepada ASN Pemkab Bogor.

“Semua itu untuk melanjutkan pendidikan pada program Magister Inovasi Regional, untuk mewujudkan smart ASN sebagai human capital yang handal, profesional, inovatif, yang mampu memberikan pelayanan prima bagi masyarakat,” tukasnya.

Untuk diketahui, dari 17 PTN dan PTS tersebut diantaranya, IPB University, Universitas Terbuka UPBJJ Bogor, Institut Agama Islam Nasional Laa Roiba, Institut Ummul Quro Islami, Institut Agama Islam Tazkia, Universitas Pakuan, Universitas Nahdlatul Ulama Indonesia, Universitas Ibn Khaldun, Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Administrasi Menara Siswa, Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Ekonomi Dewantara, Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Ekonomi IPWI Jakarta, Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Ushuluddin Wadi Mubarak, Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Tarbiyah Sirojul Falah, Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Al-Qur’an Ar-Rahman, Sekolah Tinggi Keguruan Dan Ilmu Pendidikan Muhammadiyah, Sekolah Tinggi Agama Islam Al Hidayah, Ketua Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Kesehatan Wijaya Husada.(HRB)

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15 Hal yang Dilarang Dalam Penggunaan Dana BOS dan BOP 2022

Jakarta, Kemendikbudristek menerbitkan Permendikbudristek 2 tahun 2022 tentang Juknis Pengelolaan Dana BOP PAUD, BOS dan BOP PK. Peraturan Menteri ini mengatur tentang Penerima dana Bantuan Operasional Penyelenggaraan Pendidikan Anak Usia Dini (BOP PAUD), Bantuan Operasional Sekolah (BOS), dan Bantuan Operasional Penyelenggaraan Pendidikan Kesetaraan (BOP Kesetaraan).

Besaran alokasi dana BOP PAUD, BOS, dan BOP Kesetaraan. Penyaluran dana BOP PAUD, BOS, dan BOP Kesetaraan. Penggunaan dana BOP PAUD, BOS, dan BOP Kesetaraan. Pengelolaan BOP PAUD, BOS, dan BOP Kesetaraan, dan Pemantauan dan evaluasi BOP PAUD, BOS, dan BOP Kesetaraan.

Dana BOS yaitu dana yang diperuntukkan guna memenuhi kebutuhan belanja operasional untuk peserta didik di satuan pendidikan dasar dan menengah. Namun, dalam penggunaan dana BOS terdapat beberapa hal yang tidak boleh digunakan untuk membayar 15 hal ini.

Berikut ulasannya mengenai dana BOS yang tidak boleh digunakan untuk membayar 15 hal ini diantaranya:

Mengenai petunjuk teknis pengelolaan dana bantuan operasional penyelenggaraan pendidikan anak usia dini, bantuan operasional sekolah, dan bantuan operasional penyelenggaraan pendidikan kesetaraan.

Lebih lanjut pada Pasal 42 menjelaskan mengenai petunjuk pengelolaan dana BOP PAUD dan Dana BOS.

(1) Dalam pengelolaan Dana BOP PAUD, Dana BOS, dan Dana BOP Kesetaraan kepala Satuan Pendidikan dan tim BOS sekolah dilarang;

  1. Melakukan transfer Dana BOPPAUD, Dana BOS, dan/atau Dana BOP Kesetaraan ke rekening pribadi atau lainnya untuk kepentingan selain penggunaan dana;
  2. Membungakan untuk kepentingan pribadi;
  3. Meminjamkan kepada pihak lain;
  4. Membeli perangkat lunak untuk pelaporan keuangan Dana BOP PAUD, Dana BOS dan/atau Dana BOP Kesetaraan atau perangkat lunak lainnya yang sejenis;
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Dalam hal ini misalnya bendahara melihat salah satu aplikasi yang menurutnya menarik untuk pelaporan itu tidak boleh, sebab pada dasarnya Kemendikbud sudah ada aplikasi tersendiri yang sudah disiapkan.

  1. Menyewa aplikasi pendataan atau aplikasi penerimaan Peserta Didik Baru dalam jaringan;
  2. Membiayai kegiatan yang tidak menjadi prioritas Satuan Pendidikan;
  3. Membiayai kegiatan dengan mekanisme iuran;
  4. Membeli pakaian, seragam, atau sepatu bagi guru atau Peserta Didik untuk kepentingan pribadi yang bukan inventaris Satuan Pendidikan;
  5. Memelihara prasarana Satuan Pendidikan dengan kategori kerusakan sedang dan berat;
  6. Membangun gedung atau ruangan guru;
  7. Membeli instrumen investasi;
  8. Membiayai kegiatan untuk mengikuti pelatihan sosialisasi, dan pendampingan terkait program Dana BOP DAUD, Dana BOS dan/atau Dana BOP Kesetaraan yang diselenggarakan oleh pihak lain selain Dinas dan/atau Kementerian;

Dalam hal ini jika ada kegiatan sosialisasi yang penyelenggaraannya di luar Dinas Pendidikan tidak boleh menggunakan Dana BOS.

  1. Membiayai kegiatan yang telah dibiayai secara penuh oleh Pemerintah Pusat, Pemerintah Daerah, atau sumber lain yang sah;

Dalam hal ini jika sudah dianggarkan oleh satu pihak, maka penganggaran tidak boleh double, misalnya terdapat kegiatan yang dianggarkan oleh Pemerintah Pusat, maka Dana BOS tidak perlu lagi.

  1. Menggunakan Dana BOP PAUD, Dana BOS dan/atau Dana BOP Kesetaraan untuk kepentingan pribadi;
  2. Menjadi distributor atau pengecer bahan pembelajaran, buku, alat permainan edukatif, dan/atau peralatan lainnya kepada Satuan Pendidikan dan/atau Peserta Didik.

Itulah 15 penggunaan dana BOS yang dilarang oleh pemerintah Kemendikbud Ristek, agar diketahui dan dipatuhi oleh guru dari instansi pendidikan.

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13 Kios di Kampus IPB Ludes Terbakar

Sebanyak 13 kios pedagang yang berada di kawasan IPB Dramaga ludes terbakar pada, Senin (22/11) pagi sekitar pukul 05.30 WIB, beruntung tidak ada korban jiwa dalam kejadian tersebut namun kerugian ditaksir mencapai 130 juta rupiah.

Api dapat dipadamkan oleh petugas Pemadam Kebakaran dari Dinas Kota Bogor dengan menerjunkan tiga unit mobil Pemadam dibantu Pemadam Kebakaran dari Kampus IPB yang datang ke lokasi kejadian.

Menurut keterangan warga sekitar Maulana mengatakan, api diduga berasal dari salah satu kios buku, diduga akibat korsleting listrik. Api begitu cepat merambat karena banyak material yang mudah terbakar.

“Diduga karena korsleting listrik, ada sekitar 13 kios lah, tidak ada korban jiwa karena saat kejadian seluruh kios belum buka,” ucapnya.

Sementara itu, Kapolsek Dramaga Iptu Agus Suryana mengatakan, pihaknya masih melakukan penyelidikan penyebab kebakaran tersebut.

“Kebakaran yang terjadi di kampung babakan raya RT 04 RW 07, sekitar 13 kios terbakar, kronologi kejadiannya masih dalam penyelidikan,” katanya

Ia mengungkapkan, tidak ada korban jiwa dalam kejadian tersebut, hanya saja kerugian ditaksir mencapai ratusan juta rupiah.

“Kerugian sekitar 125 jutaan, masih dalam penyelidikan, itu kios sebetulnya milik IPB, pengelolaannya pun oleh pihak IPB, bangunan permanen,” ungkapnya.

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Zeus311 Slot Resmi Dengan Metode Pembayaran Fleksibel

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Meski begitu harus diakui jika Zeus311 menjadi slot resmi pertama yang membawa deposit qris ke dunia slot online. Kini hampir semua situs judi slot memiliki metode pembayaran pakai qris yang langsung masuk ke akun tanpa melalui antrian.

Perusahaan Zeus311 online secara resmi ingin mengucapkan Terimakasih, kepada seluruh masyarakat indonesia yang selama ini telah mempercayai situs zeus311 sebagai tempat taruhan kalian, sistem dan pelayanan akan tetap di kembangkan agar member bermain dengan lebih nyaman dan kami memiliki komitmen dalam menjaga data kerahasian member agar tidak bocor ke luar.

Prioritas utama situs Zeus311 terus menciptakan hal yang nyaman dan bagaimana caranya mempermudah member yang ingin daftar, bermain dan login di Zeus311. Kita akan terus kembangkan dan bahkan akan mulai tampil di global sebagai situs judi kelas dunia.

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“It’s not actually a disco album per se.” On Daft Punk (2013)

1. Just because it’s not the record you were expecting, it doesn’t make it a bad record.

2. Streaming Random Access Memories on iTunes probably wasn’t the best way to unveil it to the world. It meant that the most hugely anticipated album of the year received its first listen on millions of shitty little computer speakers.

3a. Streaming the most hugely anticipated album of the year anywhere probably isn’t a good idea. The amount you pay for something shapes your perception of it. Sitting at your desk with your arms (figuratively) folded, waiting to be impressed is no way to listen to a record.

3b. Sorry. I know I keep banging on about this, but in a world of infinite opportunities to listen to free music, you really try harder to understand a record when you pay for it.

4. At no point did Daft Punk tell you to expect an entire album of Get Luckys. You might realise this, but quite a lot of people seem not to.

5. If the old VHS tape found by Wall-E contained not Hello Dolly but Thank God It’s Friday or Saturday Night Fever and subsequently inspired him to make his own disco album, it might sound like Random Access Memories – especially Giorgio By Moroder, Within, Instant Crush and Touch.

6. Which is to say that it’s a love letter to the disco era, a sometimes poignant memorial to the unquenchable optimism of pre-Aids dance music – but not actually a disco album per se. Its closest companion is Madonna’s Confessions On A Dancefloor.

7. Dear People Who Seem Convinced That It’s All Been Done Before. Listen to Get Lucky. Then go back to your record collection and try and find a song that really sounds like it. I tried it the other week. I pulled out all of my Chic records. I pulled out Diana Ross’s Upside Down. I pulled out Sheila B. Devotion. None of them scratched the itch that Get Lucky scratched. The deep, foetal bass of Get Lucky couldn’t have been laid down in a pre-techno era. The gradual mutation of the vocal melody into robot-ecstasy – I haven’t heard that on any other record of the era. Ditto the absolute perfection of Omar Hakim’s prolonged drum climax on Georgio By Moroder (Omar Hakim’s drumming is 70 per cent of the reason I own Sting’s Bring On The Night album); the postcoitally ecstatic lack of BPMs on Lose Yourself To Dance (which will be beyond incredible when 200,000 people join in with the handclaps en masse at next year’s intevitable Glastonbury set); and the digitised intergalactic freakout at the end of Contact. I’ve got LOADS of old records. I spent ALL OF THE 80s buying up cheap disco 12-inches. I don’t have ANYTHING that truly sounds like this.

8. Dear Columbia: A much better way to disseminate Random Access Memories would have been a vinyl release, a week ahead of the official release. By and large, people who buy records on vinyl tend to devote more time getting to them. If you buy a record on vinyl, you can’t listen to it on shitty computer speakers (see point 2). And Random Access Memories needs to be heard either on good speakers or decent headphones to be really enjoyed. If the first fans hearing it this way had then gone onto social networking sites and relayed their reactions, all those first-reaction blogs might have been a bit more positive (by the way, you might want to keep this in mind for any other “event” releases you may be planning).

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Noel Gallagher Vs Beyoncé While he’s got the dictionary open, he might want to look up the difference between artisan and artist.”

If there’s a better way of promoting your new album than giving in to your laziest prejudices, could someone please tell Noel Gallagher about it? Asked by Stereogum about Kanye West’s contention that Beck should “respect artistry” by handing over his Grammy to Beyonce, Noel’s retort was unequivocal: “Someone should buy [Kanye West] a dictionary. And he needs to look up the fucking term ‘artistry’ and then see if it reminds him, in any way, of Beyoncé. If shaking your ass for a living is considered art, then she’s right up there, no?”

We’ve seen, time and time again, that the man who famously described his brother as “a man with a fork in a world of soup” can be very funny indeed. But in this case, Noel isn’t trying to be funny. The quote itself strays from Noel’s customary dryness into something jarringly sour. Even most of Beyoncé’s detractors would concede that what she does could not be reduced to “shaking your ass.” But, hey, let’s take Noel at his word. Forget about the music. Would it be fanciful to dignify Beyoncé’s “ass-shaking” with the term ‘artistry’? To take the most celebrated example of her “ass-shaking”, we’ll look at the Single Ladies video, in which Beyoncé pastiches the dance that Bob Fosse choreographed for a trio led by Fosse’s wife Gwen Vernon on a 1969 episode of The Ed Sullivan Show. Despite several million YouTube plays, its impact remains undiminished. Beyonce saw the original clip and immediately singled it out as an aspirational piece of “urban choreography.” The video shoot saw Beyoncé go through the extraordinary routine several times, with the final version switching between the different performances from different angles. When I interviewed her on the week that Single Ladies went viral, she said it was “the most tiring video I’ve ever done”, but it was necessary to keep it relatively unadorned, “because the great thing about the Bob Fosse film is the way the personalities of the dancers shone through ’cos there wasn’t any tricks.” Beyoncé didn’t stumble into the Single Ladies video shoot, read the synopsis, and say, “Ok. This sounds nice.” She micromanaged the entire thing, from conception to execution.

Even if Beyoncé had done nothing else, I’d say there’s enough there for Beyoncé to earn the title of “artist” – and famously Kanye West thought so, when he staged the first of his two interventions at the VMAs six years ago. Given that Taylor Swift won for the video to a song no-one remembers, Kanye had a point. Shifting our attention to the music, Beyoncé also co-wrote the song – as, indeed, she does with the majority of the songs she has recorded: among them, Independent Women, Survivor, Say My Name, Crazy In Love, Freakum Dress, Pretty Hurts, Drunk In Love and XO. For Noel Gallagher, the fact that other people’s names are on the credits warrants some sort of points deduction when determining the true nature of artistry. “We could boil this down to two separate things,” he continues. “Beck writes all his own music, OK? There you go, the end. You have to employ a fucking team of songwriters and eight producers and nine engineers, or you can sing it, hum it, play it yourself, I don’t know. You decide. I know what side of the fence I’m on.”

So now we’re burrowing into the outmoded, faintly misogynistic assumptions that really lie beneath Noel’s “ass-shaking” dismissal of Beyoncé’s oeuvre: it’s cheating to get help. But these are weird rules, aren’t they? Imagine opening the hatch of Room 101 and waving goodbye to every great song that wasn’t wholly written by the person who sang it. We’d have to keep Badfinger’s version of Without You but lose Nilsson’s version; we’d have to keep Peter André’s Insania but lose Jimmy Ruffin’s What Becomes Of The Broken-Hearted. The rules of great pop don’t adhere to Noel Gallagher’s meat-and-potatoes notion of what warrants artistic commendation and thank God for that. Even when singers don’t have any hand in the songs that are written for them, their mere existence can draw something great from journeyman songwriters. Kylie inspired Stock, Aitken and Waterman to write What Do I Have To Do and Shocked for her – while the best that Big Fun could get out of them was Can’t Shake The Feeling. Britney Spears’ hellish Beverley Hill meltdown inspired an army of shit-hot songwriters and studio magicians to write an incredible album for her – Blackout – one that simply wouldn’t exist had she not been there to inspire it. Would I call the resulting album a great work of art? Absolutely. Does it matter that Britney probably has no recollection of making it? No more than Marilyn Monroe not having posed for Andy Warhol’s depiction of her diminishes its worth.

And if records bearing the imprint of Kylie and Britney can be called great art, it goes without saying that we certainly shouldn’t have any problem applying the same criteria to, say, Beyoncé’s magnificent self-titled double album – a personal but never self-indulgent exploration of modern femininity which produced some of her most inarguably affecting music: Pretty Hurts; Blow and Superpower, to name but three standouts. One of the many co-writing credits that seem to trouble Noel goes to Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. On the song in question ***Flawless, a sampled Adichie begins, “We teach girls to shrink themselves/To make themselves smaller/We say to girls, ‘You can have ambition/But not too much…’ and ends, ‘We teach girls that they cannot be sexual beings/In the way that boys are/Feminist: the person who believes in the social, political, and economic equality of the sexes.’” Even without factoring into the equation the fact that the album came with a simultaneously-released complement of films to accompany every song, this is clearly the work of an artist steering her own narrative into bold uncharted waters. Now, I love the Beck album too, but on this occasion, even Beck had to concede that Kanye once again had a point when he staged the second of his pro-Beyoncé interventions: “I thought she was going to win,” admitted Beck afterwards, “Come on, she’s Beyonce! . . .”

By contrast, I woke up at 5am on Wednesday and saw that iTunes had started streaming of Noel’s new album. One and a half times I listened. I had to listen one and a half times, because halfway through the first time I realised my attention had wandered and went back to the start. In his misguided attempt to play Kanye to Beck’s Beyonce, Noel turns his nose up at the sort of songwriting assistance from which his music could almost certainly benefit, thinking this makes him superior, and that his way constitutes “artistry.” While he’s got the dictionary open, he might want to look up the difference between artisan and artist. And if he still isn’t clear about which of the two categories his brand of honest-to-goodness indie rock comes under, I’m more than happy to help.

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It rose up and dispersed like a vapor that enveloped the world outside: the Chrysler factory in the rain; the sulphur light of the subways beneath the Bull Ring.”

It rose up and dispersed like a vapor that enveloped the world outside: the Chrysler factory in the rain; the sulphur light of the subways beneath the Bull Ring.”

Growing up in Birmingham at the age of ten, I knew what reggae was. Reggae was the music I heard booming out of upstairs windows on when my dad drove through Balsall Heath. Reggae was the sound of the occasional chart hit on the radio speaker, straining to be heard over the pinball machines in my parents’ chip shop. Reggae was Uptown Top Ranking. Reggae was Jamming. It was Now That We’ve Found Love. What did this music sound like? I probably wouldn’t have been able to put it into words at that point. But it sounded like it had come from a hot and far away place. In my childhood imaginings, reggae was Jamaica.

The reason I have a clear memory of hearing UB40 for the very first time though, is that UB40 did not sound like Jamaica. On a March evening in 1980, I found myself returning from a school trip in a transit van that had crudely been converted into a school minibus – just two benches running along the length of either side of the vehicle. When Food For Thought came on the radio, it rose up and dispersed like a vapor that enveloped the world outside: the Chrysler factory glistening in the rain on Coventry Road; the sulphur light of the subways beneath the Bull Ring; black kids and white kids hanging around on every street corners because there quite simply wasn’t that much else to do.

Listening to UB40’s debut single and the album that followed it, some thirty years after they first appeared is a deeply evocative experience. This is music that effortlessly catapults you back to a Britain we recognize from grainy footage of picket lines and overcrowded benefit offices. Signing Off may not have been intended to document much beyond the sound that eight young men from Moseley made when they played music together. But that’s neither here nor there. Without knowing it, they were merely following the advice laid down by Ernest Hemingway when he suggested that your first and foremost duty as an artist is to write down the truest thing you know.

For UB40, growing up in Moseley and the surrounding neighbourhoods, the truest thing they knew was reggae. There was no discussion about what sort of music they would play. That Ali and Robin Campbell’s father Ian was a well-known folk singer may have informed the seam of social awareness that prompted Robin to write about famine in Africa on Food For Thought. The lyric famously misheard as “I’m a prima donna/Standing in the dark” is actually “Ivory Madonna/Dying in the dust/Waiting for the manna/Coming from the West.” As the oldest of the Campbell brothers, Robin had been already been playing guitar for a few years when the ripples of the splash made by punk pushed out as far as Birmingham. “I only knew half a dozen chords,” he remembers, “But it turned out that they were the only half a dozen I needed to know.”

Forming a band was less about wanting to become famous or take over the world, more just a function of friendships that already existed. As a teenager in nearby Acocks Green, Brian Travers remembers donning his crombie jacket on a Friday night and dancing to reggae, bluebeat and soul at Crosby Hall youth club. “Because music is so readily available these days, it’s perhaps hard to convey just how important it was to people back then. All my friends were black or Asian. You had television, but television was white. There was no black TV; no Asian TV. So black kids turned to music to find a representation of themselves. For that reason, music was more important than telly. And, in turn, what your mates are into is more important than anything else. If you’re part of something, you’re part of something.”

Brian may have felt part of something, but the roots of what was to become UB40 were germinating two miles away. From where he grew up, it was a three mile ride on the number 1 to Moseley. A short walk from the bus stop in Moseley village was the flat at 106 Trafalgar Road, where Earl Falconer lived. Earl knew Brian (along with Jimmy Brown and Ali Campbell) from their time at Moseley School of Art. When a room became available next door to Earl, Brian moved in.

With unemployment surging upwards, Brian and Earl would have to travel beyond Birmingham, getting casual work on building sites as far afield as Leeds and Coventry. With their savings and the criminal compensation money awarded to Ali Campbell after he was attacked in a pub, they bought their first instruments. For Travers the soul fan, saxophone was a logical choice – although, as he explains, his reasons were more practical. “I had been an apprentice electrician, which fuelled my hatred of electricity. Choosing to learn the saxophone meant that I didn’t have to rely on electricity.”

In the summer of 1978, the first rehearsals of what became UB40 took place in the basement of Earl’s flat – initially just Earl on bass, Jimmy Brown on drums and Ali singing. Robin remembers them trying to learn by copying their favourite records – “there was one by Bim Sherman and another by Gregory Isaacs. It was just three songs that they copied parrot-fashion. Earl had his bass tuned wrong. We had already come together once before, but I had left saying that it would never amount to anything. They stuck to it though, and when they asked me to have another listen, it suddenly started to sound something like music.”

“The basement was only accessible from the outside,” remembers Brian, “You went down these steps and it was completely derelict – just leaves and dirt. But we cleaned it out and worked hard at getting better. Robin knew the chords to House of the Rising Sun, so when he joined in earnest, that’s what we would base a rehearsal on. It was all basic stuff, but we worked really hard at it.”

Had UB40 been well-versed with their respective instruments, the incentive to write original songs might not have been as great. It would be four more years – with the release of 1983’s Labour of Love – that the group felt sufficiently emboldened to record an album of covers. Be that as it may, that intense early period of rehearsals yielded dramatic results. By any stretch of the imagination, the soulful small-hours instrumental reverie of Signing Off and King ­– which illustrated the degree to which James and Earl had gelled as a rhythm section – were a phenomenal way for any band to open their songwriting account. Written collectively at around the same time, Burden of Shame addressed the misdeeds committed in the name of colonialism, portending sentiments that many would have cause to feel anew at the height of the Falklands conflict.

Among many young musicians at that time, Margaret Thatcher had quickly become an unlikely muse – a folk devil for the politically disenfranchised – and UB40 were no exception. A vocal double-hander featuring Ali and Astro, Madame Medusa was another stellar leap for the eight piece group, using their repulsion at how – Robin’s words – “the country had been taken in by this horrific woman” as a jumping-off point for a magnificently heavy thirteen minute dub-reggae excursion. “We didn’t consider it real music if it didn’t have a degree of political content,” remembers Brian, “The mere fact that a band like us even existed was political. That’s how we saw it.”

In a short space of time, UB40 had improved beyond all expectations. All young bands tend to be convinced of their own greatness – aren’t youthful chutzpah and self-belief the qualities that make you form a band in the first place? In this case, however, there were plenty of witnesses to the band’s progress. “In the basement, all our mates from Moseley would hang out and watch,” recalls Brian. After months spent raising their profile via an assiduous local fly-posting campaign, the next step was to play a show. Ahead of their maiden concert in February 1979 – a private party for a friend’s birthday – Robin remembers being a “total bag of nerves, expecting it all to go wrong.” In fact, the 40 minute set went down “amazingly.”

Over the next few weeks, the co-ordinates of UB40’s trajectory would be charted by the increasingly feverish reaction that met their three-night residency of shows at Moseley’s New Inn. As Jimmy recalls, “the first was a good crowd, the second was sold out and on the third, you had more people locked out trying to get in than were actually in the pub.” One person quick to cotton on to their potential was local producer Bob Lamb. “By the time I happened upon them, they were writing quite prolifically, he remembers. “They came to my studio and the first song they recorded was King. They laid down the backing track, which was beautiful. When Robin, Ali and Jimmy sang the vocal together around one mic. I nearly fell off my chair. I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. It was just amazing.”

The serendipity of having Bob Lamb nearby meant that UB40 could engineer their ascent whilst barely having to leave their own postcode. Even if London-based major labels had registered their existence, the group felt that they had good reason to keep them at bay. “It was brave of them to keep it independent,” says Lamb. Their determination to do just that was, according to Robin, a result of the Campbells’ upbringing. “I remember my dad telling me that all record companies and publishers were evil,” he smiles, “So, when some labels finally did approach us, we made all sorts of demands. Nothing too extreme – just things like total artistic control.”

When the time finally did come to make a record, the group elected to do so with Graduate – a small independent label run by Dudley-based record shop owner David Virr. The immediate success of Food For Thought/King vindicated their self-belief, vaulting them into British top five – an unparalleled feat from a completely independently run label. As Ali Campbell points out, “That was when calling the band UB40 instantly came into its own. We instantly had three million card-carrying fans.”

Even getting the chance to make a record represented untold excitement. “As far as I was concerned,” remembers Brian, “only really famous people made records, not the likes of us! Bob got the first pressing in and we all went over to his place in Kings Heath. We were elated.” As the man responsible for the song’s yearning saxophone hook, Brian had particular cause to take pride in the song’s nationwide ubiquity. “I remember standing at the bus stop and hearing it coming out of cars sitting in traffic jams. I couldn’t believe that was my record.”

Between the winter and spring of 1980, the airwaves belonged to Food For Thought. The ascent of 2-Tone had propelled The Specials and Madness into the charts, but their sound at this time was revivalist at its core, centering around ska and bluebeat. Food For Thought and King presented an altogether more uncompromising noise – one that reflected the sound system culture of UB40’s immediate locale. Listen to those songs with fresh ears, and what strikes you is just how ­– by any conventional criteria – uncommercial they sound. Once in a while though, a song captures the public imagination by virtue of what it [italic] doesn’t [italic] do. Whither the notion of “commercial” when applied to Otis Redding’s Sittin’ On The Dock (Of The Bay)? – a song about homelessness which boasts no chorus and a whistling solo. It’s no exaggeration to say that Food For Thought struck a chord of similar proportions. The exact numbers differ, but common consensus puts the song’s sales at around half a million.

A second top ten single, My Way Of Thinking kept UB40’s profile high while they completed work on their debut album. By all accounts, the sessions for Signing Off went by in an idyllic haze, with many individual tracks recorded in Bob Lamb’s garden! Percussionist and trombonist Norman Hassan has even claimed that if you listen hard to some of the tracks, you can even hear the birds tweeting in the background. “The vision everyone had for Signing Off was so pure,” says Bob. “A major label would have totally screwed it up.” Or, at the very least, diluted their uncompromising vision. Take for instance, the cover. One of the truly iconic record sleeves of its time, the blown-up facsimile of brown card that every jobless person had to bring with them when visiting the dole office anchors Signing Off to the very circumstances that informed its creation.

But, of course, it was the music which ultimately ensured that the album – voted by Q Magazine in 2000 as one of the hundred greatest British albums of all time – would go on to spend 72 weeks in the album chart. That would have counted as a hell of an achievement for any album. If you listen to Signing Off with fresh ears, thirty years after its original release, that feat seems more astounding than ever. Little By Little and a well-chosen cover of Randy Newman’s I Think It’s Going To Rain were sonic barometers of Britain between the winter of discontent and the decade of desolation ushered in by Thatcherism – whilst Tyler showed a group that was no less adept at addressing subject matter that lay further afield. Once again, the influence of the Campbells’ father manifested itself on Tyler. “Police gun was planted/No matching bullets/No prints on the handle…” sang Ali on Tyler, outlining the suspicious grounds upon which teenage African-American Gary Tyler was sentenced for murder by a Louisiana jury.

Younger music fans who associate UB40 with huge number one hits such as Red Red Wine, Can’t Help Falling In Love and their duet with longtime fan Chrissie Hynde on I Got You might struggle to reconcile that band with earth-shaking dub explorations like Madame Medusa and Reefer Madness. Both tracks originally appeared on the 12-inch that accompanied the original issue of the album. As Jimmy says, “Dub was the formative thing for me: Lee Perry, Prince Jammy – that was the music that you had on when you were smoking your spliffs. You listen to these amazing sounds achieved with really basic equipment on old King Tubby records, and through sheer force of will, you would set about doing the same thing.”

Bearing testament to Jimmy’s words are the two extraordinary recordings that comprised the UB40’s third single. Most bands, having hit the top ten with their first two singles, would surely set about trying to consolidate that early success with something more outwardly commercial. The third single released by UB40 confirmed that when it came to such matters, they simply didn’t appear to give a f***. Featured on the second CD here, the 12-inch versions of Dream A Lie and Earth Dies Screaming rank as arguably the heaviest recordings committed to vinyl by the group. With Earl Falconer’s near-subsonic bass rumble masterfully underscoring the whole thing, Dream A Lie locks into the sort of blissful dub groove that presaged the later critically-acclaimed work of sonic explorers like Mad Professor and even Massive Attack. Tapping into the collective cold war anxiety of the age, The Earth Dies Screaming paid host to one of Campbell’s most soulful vocals, attesting to Lamb’s claim that listening to him sing for the first time was an experience comparable to hearing the young Steve Winwood. Once again, this sort of fearlessness paid off, scoring UB40 their third top ten single in a row.

Thirty years on, it’s a purple patch from which UB40 take immense pride, and rightly so. Signing Off would be a staggering achievement from any band, let alone finding their way in a studio for the first time. “In one sense, the music might evoke dark times,” says Ali Campbell, “But there’s also an immense positivity about what UB40 did that has since been lost. Back then, Birmingham was a genuinely multiracial place. We’ve gone backwards in that respect. If you go back to our old stomping ground – Balsall Heath and Sparkhill, those places – black kids hang around with black kids and white kids stick with other whites… Hip-hop came along and we inherited the segregation that it promotes.”

For Brian Travers, listening to these songs again has been a humbling experience. “We tried to keep everything as simple as possible, because we wanted to be able to play these songs when we went on tour. In some ways, I think we were smarter then than we are now! Because that simplicity helps give these songs their power.”

“I can’t explain the feeling we had that summer when Signing Off was coming together,” smiles Bob Lamb. “Everything about it felt perfect. We knew that we were making the right record at the right time. It felt like Britain was waiting for a record like this. And, in our little corner of the world, we knew we were about to deliver it.”

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she may have propelled us to the essence of our connection with her music the miraculous ungraspable nature of human consciousness

So this is where epiphanies happen, and few people are better placed to tell you about that than Kate Bush. On July 3rd 1973, she came here, to the Hammersmith Odeon, with her brothers to see David Bowie declare on stage that Ziggy was about to die and he was taking The Spiders From Mars with him. In that moment, she cried (as she later recalled, “it looked like he was crying too”) and the dramatic expiry of one pop star acted as the catalyst for another. Six years later, Bush concluded her Tour Of Life in Hammersmith. Between Ziggy’s swan song and what for the longest time people imagined to be her own live swan song, punk had happened, leaving seemingly little impression on Kate Bush. In truth, it had nothing to offer her.

Kate Bush’s love of Bowie had led her backwards to the beginnings of his fascination with mime, dance and conceptual theatre, locating Bowie’s dance teacher and mentor Lindsey Kemp in 1975 and hoofing up from her flat in Brockley to attend Kemp’s 50p open classes in Covent Garden. After two hours which had variously seen her pretending to be a magician, wearing a winged leotard and dressing as a World War II bomber, the final song of her final Hammersmith turn saw her rising through the fog in the guise of Catherine Earnshaw, singing Wuthering Heights into the one of the modified wire coathanger headsets – soon to become standard issue at gigs – that she had specially invented so that she could sing and dance at the same time.

Because, then as now, Kate Bush was the entire fruit bowl all at once. Mere singing could never communicate the tidal surge of creativity that overwhelmed her in the preceding years. As John Lydon (also quoted in this brilliant piece by Simon Price in The Quietus) pointed out, Kate Bush was “too much” for a lot of his friends. Kate Bush was clearly also “too much”, at times, for her record label, whose ambivalence about her relentlessly surprising musical left-turns remained a constant right up until she bitterly agreed to change the title of her 1985 song Deal With God to Running Up That Hill.

In the foyer of the Hammersmith Odeon before the third of Kate Bush’s first shows in 35 years, it’s hard to make generalisations. But I’ll allow myself this one about the guy next to me who, despite never having met me, keeps passing his binoculars to me so I can see what he’s seeing. And the male twentysomething fan who will brave the tube home dressed in a white cotton tunic, black tights, face painted in white and silver, his hair wreathed by leaves and twigs. And the woman who has gone to the trouble of having a dress made just like the one festooned with clouds on the sleeve of Never For Ever. And the woman who rushes from her seat during the encore of Cloudbusting to hand a bouquet of lilies to Bush (who, in turn, receives it between bows). “Too much” is why we came. There’s nothing more antithetical to Kate Bush’s music than sensory temperance. For three hours, it’s like finding out there was a Dolby switch pressed on your consciousness. The moment that Bush, draped in black and barefoot, marches in a soft, shuffling procession, flanked by her five backing singers, you turn it off. You might need it for the journey to work on Monday, but it’s of no use to you now.

She smiles beatifically throughout Lily – the invocation to guardian angels which originally appeared on The Red Shoes and, in 2011, The Director’s Cut – apart from when attacking the top notes, which she does with the phlegm-rattling zeal of a seasoned soul singer. The love in the room is unlike anything I’ve seen at a live show. Given free rein, it would surely result in an instant surge to the stage, but it’s tempered by a deference which extends to uniform acceptance of Bush’s stated no-cameras request. As a consequence, the first three songs are bookended by a total of six standing ovations. Hounds Of Love is exactly what it should be given the passage of three decades: drummer Omar Hakim and perma-grining percussion talisman Mino Cinelu hold back the rhythmic landslide, creating space for a vocal pitched closer to resignation than combativeness. Eighteen months ago, when Bush’s son Bertie McIntosh (then 15) finally persuaded her to return to live performance, the first two people she pencilled in for the project were the lighting designer Mark Henderson and Hakim. Within the opening section, it isn’t hard to see why Bush wanted to assemble her band around Hakim. Running Up That Hill is every bit as unyielding and startling as it was the very first time you heard it: doubly so for the incoming storm whipped up from the back of the stage. On King Of The Mountain, he reprises the freestyling pyrotechnics of his turn on Daft Punk’s Giorgio By Moroder. Everything about King Of The Mountain, in fact, is astonishing. Bush navigates her way around the song’s rising sense of portent with a mixture of fear and fascination that puts you in mind of professional storm chasers. When they’re not singing, her backing vocalists dance as if goading some unholy denouement into action, before finally Cinelu steps into a misty spotlight. On the end of a rope which he demonically twirls ever faster is some sort of primitive wooden cyclone simulator.

Perhaps the most remarkable thing of all is that this – King Of The Mountain and the preceding songs – is a preamble to the first act. In 1985, as Hounds Of Love was being readied for release, Kate Bush sketched out a putative film script for The Ninth Wave – the 30 minute suite of songs, which shared its title with Ivan Aivanovsky’s 1850 painting of a group castaways clinging to floating debris as dawn approaches. But, as she writes in the programme, “In many ways, it lends itself better to the medium of stage.” She’s referring to the conceit at the heart of The Ninth Wave and, yes, she’s right. What would have been impossibly confusing on film is only occasionally confusing when played out on stage. On a screen, we see the stranded protagonist in her lifejacket in palpable distress, relying on scenes from her past and future to keep her from slipping under. On stage we see those feverish visions played out before us. If Bush’s distress looks unsettlingly convincing on the screen, that might be because the 20ft deep tank at Pinewood Studios in which she had to be immersed for several hours pushed her to method actor extremes: singing live whilst gradually succumbing to a fever which was later diagnosed by her GP as “mild hypothermia.”

With the stage bathed in low blue light, Bush cuts a disembodied presence on screen, singing And Dream Of Sheep, all but unreachable to the singers who impassively assume the role of Greek chorus to her plight. What ensues is heartbreaking, frightening and funny, often at the same time. There’s the seismic din of a helicopter provided some huge piece of cuboid god-knows-what machinery which glides over the audience with searchlights blazing (the voice of its pilot supplied by Bush’s brother Paddy). There’s a blizzard of tissue-thin pieces of ochre paper bearing the excerpt from Tennyson’s The Holy Grail which is also featured on the sleeve of Hounds Of Love. There’s a deliberately mundane sitting-room exchange between her husband (Bob Harms) and son (McIntosh) about a burnt toad-in-the-hole to which she can only bear witness in ghost form (Watching You Watching Me). Then, of course, there are the fish people: skeletal fish-headed creatures that lurk elegantly around the action. That, in 2011, Bush called her record label Fish People – predating the first meetings about these shows by two years – suggests that these guys were probably present on Bush’s very first sketches for The Ninth Wave 30 years ago.

At times you imagine every prog-rock star who reluctantly had their wings clipped by punk feeling a sense of unalloyed vindication at the scenes being played out here. After the release of 2011’s 50 Words For Snow, I interviewed Kate Bush and asked her about recent musical inspirations. I figured that someone must surely have played her Joanna Newsom’s Ys whilst exclaiming, “Look! A kindred spirit!” (they hadn’t) But actually, she probably has no need of new input. It’s increasingly apparent that Bush’s musical hard drive was full by the time she made her first record. As Watching You Without Me modulates into Jig Of Life, I try and pin the musical sense of deja vu to an actual memory. Finally it comes to me. This sort of spectral somnambulant ceilidh was precisely the sort of thing which arty stoners in the early 70s – arty stoners such as Bush’s older brothers – would have sought out in the albums of Harvest Records outliers Third Ear Band. Except, of course, the one thing that Third Ear Band lacked was a cosmically attuned sensualist to act as a smiling Trojan horse to her own avant-garde sensibilities.* And so, here we are. A generation of pop fans suckered by Wuthering Heights, Wow and Babooshka. And we’re watching four people in fish heads wheel in a floating bit of rig illuminated by red flares. In a moment, she will climb aboard before the fish people claim her, carrying her aloft away from the sea, and among us through the aisle before, finally, The Morning Fog. This is perhaps as beautiful as anything we have seen up to this point. Dancers and singers take their partners. and, bathed in golden light, Bush exchanges glances with her fellow players. Everything you have seen in the preceding hour is the result of more than a year of drilled, deliberate meticulous planning. And yet, on the back of such vertiginous terrain, Bush gazes at her fellow performers with the relieved air of a trainee pilot who had to land a Boeing Airbus after the rest of the cabin crew had passed out.

It could end there. It really could. That was a whole show, right there. But on the other side of the intermission, it’s all change once again. Comprising the second half of 2005’s Aerial, A Sky Of Honey emerged from Bush’s fascination with the connection between light and birdsong and then, as she puts it: “Us, observing nature. Us, being there.” Without realising it, with those last three words, Bush may have propelled us to the essence of our connection with much of her most affecting music (The Sensual World, Breathing, Snowflake). The Ninth Wave is really about the miraculous, ungraspable nature of human consciousness. And, if the subtext – intended or otherwise – of that piece is that only we humans can reflect upon what it means to die, then the subtext of A Sky Of Honey is that only we humans can reflect upon what a gazillion-to-one miracle it is to be alive. Us, observing nature. Us, being there.

Up on stage, it’s left to Bush’s son – playing the part of the painter, a role assumed on the album recording by Rolf Harris) – to be that observer. But before all of that, it’s just Bush at the piano for the first time, encircled on the left hand of the stage by her band, with the right side left empty for the ensuing action. Controlled by its puppeteer, a black-clad Ben Thompson, a wooden artist’s model – perhaps the size of a ten year-old child – walks inquisitively around the stage during Prologue until finally it alights upon the singer. As Bush sings “What a lovely afternoon” and the drums come in, it appears startled. All the time, the backdrop shows birds in slow-motion, while the backing singers (increasingly, given what they have to do, “backing singers” doesn’t begin to cover what they have to do, but “chorus” is unhelpfully ambiguous) move gingerly around each other in painters’ garb. A slowly moving sky descends to fill the space on the right. The palette-wielding McIntosh dabs at the canvas with a brush, attracting the curiosity of the wooden model. “Piss off! I’m trying to work here,” he exclaims, while his mum – dressed in an Indian-style black and gold outfit – moves around him in slow motion.

If it’s surprising to see McIntosh rise to the challenges set before him so fearlessly – “A kind of ‘Pan’ figure” – it’s worth keeping in mind that he’s already the same age that his mum was when she started recording her first album. In a voice at least two octaves deeper than the one he used for Snowflake on 50 Words For Snow, Bush’s son bemoans his rain-splattered work on The Painter’s Link (“It’s raining/What has become of my painting?/All the colours are running”). But here, as on the record, there are no mistakes, just serendipity. The colours run and dusk magically materialises; the redemptive downpour brings all the musicians to the front for almost Balearic, flamenco-flecked stampede of Sunset. As a succession of joyous falsetto “Prrrrrraaah!!”s attest, the moments that see Bush at her most unguarded are the ones where she gets to commune with the twenty-odd players around her.

From hereon in, the Aerial segment of the show – co-directed, as is The Ninth Wave, by former RSC honcho Adrian Noble – is an object lesson in sustained rapture. No less a highlight than it is on the record, Somewhere In Between sees its creator transported by the power of her own song and, in doing so, transports you to the fleeting magic-hour reverie it celebrates. There is also a new song, Tawny Moon, for which McIntosh confidently takes centre stage and climaxes by effectively acting as ringmaster to the huge full moon rising from the back of the stage.

Few musicians are more adept at conveying a sense that something good is going to happen than Kate Bush. We know what Nocturn sounds like on record, so a certain sense of expectation is unavoidable. On either side of the stage, we see arrows fired from bows into the firmament, where they turn into birds. For reasons I couldn’t honestly fathom, we see the painter’s model sacrificing a seagull to no discernible end. Over a rising funk that defies physical resistance, Bush makes a break for transcendence and effectively brings us with her: “We stand in the Atlantic/We become panoramic,” she sings, with arms aloft. Like the rest of the band, guitarist David Rhodes has donned bird mask. As Bush is presented with vast black wings, she and Rhodes circle elegantly around each other, before finally, briefly, she takes flight.

Just two songs by way of an encore – which, after what has preceded them, seems generous: Among Angels from 2011’s Fifty Words For Snow is performed solo at the piano, before the entire band return for Cloudbusting. Once again, we’re reminded that, almost uniquely among her peers, Kate Bush goes to extraordinary lengths in search of subjects that hold up that magic of living up to the light for just long enough to think that we can reach it. But, like the beaming 56 year-old mother singing, “The sun’s coming out”, that too dissipates into memory. And, after another 19 performances, what will happen? In another 35 years, Kate Bush will be 91. Even if she’s still here, we might not be. Perhaps that’s why tonight, she gave us everything she had. And somehow, either in spite or because of that, we still didn’t want to let her go.

*At times, it still seems miraculous that she crossed over into fully-fledged pop star ubiquity, Delia Smith guest spots and all. Look at the sleeve of Never For Ever: that dress and emerging from beneath it a nightmarish picture-book assortment of swans, monsters, cats, whales, monkeys and butterflies. It’s precisely the sort of sleeve you see hanging up behind the counter of a second-hand record shop with a £400 sticker attached to it, next to records by Mellow Candle and Jade Warrior. Except that, somehow, these records – no less weird than several dozen cult artefacts that didn’t cross over – spawned hit singles.