"Suspended in Gaffa" is a song recorded by English art rock singer Kate Bush. It was the fourth single release from her album The Dreaming. "Suspended in Gaffa" was released as a single in continental Europe and Australia, but not in the UK.
The song lyrics are about seeing something one really wants (God in this case), then not being able to see or experience it ever again.[3] The "gaffa" of the title and chorus refers to gaffer tape, the strong matte black tape used by technicians in the film and concert industries.[4]
The B-side is the original mix of "Ne t'enfuis pas", which is misspelled on the sleeve as "Ne T'en Fui Pas". In some countries, the B-side was "Dreamtime" (which originally appeared as the B-side to "The Dreaming").
A music video was produced for the song, which features Bush performing an interpretive dance in a barn.
Rec.music.gaffa[8] has been the name for the Kate Bush Usenet newsgroup since 16 August 1985,[9] and is now resident at Google Groups and other Kate-Bush-related websites.[10]
"Kate Boosh" by Brooklyn-based rapper Himanshu "Heems" Suri samples the two-line post-chorus vocal of this song and co-opts it as a chorus. The song appears on Suri's 2012 mixtape Nehru Jackets.
^Zaleski, Annie (8 June 2022). "The 10 Best Kate Bush Songs". Stereogum. Retrieved 17 May 2023. An ornate waltz with crisp, conspiratorial vocals and prominent synclavier and strings, "Suspended In Gaffa" feels like antique treasure.