Bush Share Music Video For ‘Nowhere To Go But Everywhere’
The band’s new Greatest Hits album will arrive on November 10.
Bush have shared a music video for “Nowhere To Go But Everywhere,” featured on their first ever Greatest Hits collection, Loaded: The Greatest Hits 1994-2023. The project is set to be released on November 10.
An exploration of mourning youth while questioning the lengths people go to avoid aging, the video is the perfect level of eerie for the October month. Check it out below.
Frontperson Gavin Rossdale commented on the video, saying, “While anyone can identify with clinging to the past which the song addresses, the extremes we’ve seen some people go to for external youth is unnerving. It is a drag watching your own face age—and yet as, David Bowie said, ‘The thing about aging is you become the person you should have been all along.’ Genius. And feels true.”
Bush will perform at Grammy Museum in Downtown LA on Monday November 6, in celebration of the Greatest Hits release coming Friday November 10. The album will arrive via Round Hill Records. To celebrate the release, the band also announced a new series of North American headline dates.
With over 24 million records sold, one billion streams and a procession of No. 1 hits, the Grammy-nominated, multi-Platinum band—comprising Gavin Rossdale (vocals, guitar), Chris Traynor (guitar), Corey Britz (bass) and Nik Hughes (drums)—stand tall as rock outliers whose imprint only widens as the years pass.
Loaded provides an expansive view of the band’s legacy with 21 tracks spanning nearly 30 years. Loaded includes iconic hits from each of the band’s nine studio albums as well as “Mouth” (The Stingray Mix) from the 1997 remix album Deconstructed and a cover of The Beatles’ “Come Together” that saw a very limited release in 2012.
Next year will mark the 30th anniversary of the release of Bush’s 6x Platinum debut album, Sixteen Stone, so it’s only fitting that Loaded explodes with five tracks from the record: their debut single, “Everything Zen,” “Little Things,” “Machinehead” and the group’s first No. 1 singles – “Comedown” and “Glycerine,” which topped Billboard’s Alternative Airplay chart in 1995.