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Author Topic: If one wanted to start listening to Bowie  (Read 381 times)
Skrappybiskit
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« on: September 08, 2003, 07:47:47 PM »

Is there some pertinent body of work that summarizes what the man is about?

SKraps
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Josh
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« Reply #1 on: September 08, 2003, 07:50:53 PM »

Oh, gosh, I have no idea.

I consider myself a fan, but only own one of his albums, Heathen. Which is GREAT. I'd give it an A-, probably. It was one of my Top 5 albums from last year.

As for the classic stuff, you should probably check out Space Oddity and the Berlin Trilogy, just because they're famous, but I'm not sure how good they are.

Anyway, everyone here should listen to Heathen at some point. It's fantastic.
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bloop
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« Reply #2 on: September 08, 2003, 08:16:58 PM »

My favorite of his is "Low".  "Hunky Dory" and "Ziggy Stardust" are also very, very good albums.  He's very diverse in some ways, so there is no album that fully captures him.  Oh, and I second "Heathen"...that's his best I heard from his more recent albums.
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Josh
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« Reply #3 on: September 08, 2003, 09:33:56 PM »

Bowie's website has a place where you can listen to songs from the new album, Reality. Sounds good to me.

Most intriguing line of the year so far: "Some people try to pick up girls and they get called an asshole/ I'll bet that never happened to Pablo Picasso." Or something like that.  huh  
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Skrappybiskit
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« Reply #4 on: September 08, 2003, 09:37:24 PM »

Wow, he sounds like a true modern poet. As long as you have Picasso in you're song, you're pretty darn cool... Wink

Skraps

ps: I will listen to some of this music. Tell you what I think later.
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Josh
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« Reply #5 on: September 09, 2003, 02:38:52 PM »

Some Bowie links:

Jeffrey Overstreet's review of Heathen
Jeffrey Overstreet's review of Hours
Also, DavidBowie.com lets you listen to songs from the new album, Reality. Click on "Jukebox."
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Josh
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« Reply #6 on: September 13, 2003, 06:40:00 PM »

Rolling Stone's review of the new album is up.

As a young subversive, David Bowie played with Sixties verities about gender, identity and rock & roll itself, insisting that truth was nothing but another mask. Now fifty-six and a revered figure himself, he's searching for some version of truth -- or, as this album title puts it, Reality -- and it turns out he was right the first time. To his mixed dismay and amusement, meaning comes and goes. "I still don't get the wherefores and the whys," he sings over the roaring guitars of the title track. "I look for sense, but I get next to nothing/Hoo, boy, welcome to reality."

And Reality turns out to be an intriguing place. As on last year's Heathen, Bowie ponders life after 9/11 -- he lives about a mile from Ground Zero -- and his role in a world that has trumped all his apocalyptic fantasies. Part of that role, at least, is rocking hard. With co-producer Tony Visconti, Bowie toughens up his sound, sawing at the edges of Jonathan Richman's "Pablo Picasso" and, on "New Killer Star," reclaiming the insinuating guitar propulsion he'd loaned to Lou Reed when he produced Transformer. On a quieter note, his version of George Harrison's "Try Some, Buy Some" becomes a waltzing memorial to a fellow spiritual searcher. Reality closes with "Bring Me the Disco King," a surreal ballad that runs close to eight minutes. It's another of Bowie's ambivalent farewells to the era in which he wreaked such havoc "in the stiff, bad clubs/Killing time in the Seventies." The difference is he now knows that time is killing him, and all of us, and that the Disco King, that master of revels who promised eternal life on the dance floor, is nowhere to be found.

ANTHONY DECURTIS
(RS 932, October 2, 2003)


 
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bloop
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« Reply #7 on: September 13, 2003, 06:44:14 PM »

David Bowie recently declined knighthood.
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« Reply #8 on: September 15, 2003, 08:13:20 PM »

My Heathen review is finally up...
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Josh
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« Reply #9 on: September 21, 2003, 08:26:56 PM »

I picked up Reality today.

It's quite likely that this one'll be in my Top 5 albums for this year. And that's no small feat- this is turning out to be a very good year for music.

Reality has a more straightforward rock sound than Heathen, but Bowie still throws on the pyrotechnics and weird sound effects to keep things interesting. It's not as eclectic or poetic as Heathen was, but it's much more energetic and fun.

Reality is also much more modern. Heathen has a few songs that sounded like throwbacks to the 80s, but this album is firmly rooted in 2003.

The lyrics here are interesting. Themes seem to be identity and the search for contentment.

Good album. Right now it gets a B+, but I might bump it up or down after further listening. Too early to say for sure.
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