Tag Archives: David Bowie

David Bowie – Post Glam Soul & The Berlin Trilogy

Today being David Bowie’s 65th Birthday, might as well continue with my own personal list of “best of” songs from each of his albums.  I’ve pointed out my favorite songs from his early years and the justifiably famous Glam Rock era.  Now, the Soul & Berlin Trilogy…

Following the release of Diamond Dogs, David Bowie was clearly a man in transition.  He announced the end of Ziggy Stardust in a concert (his announcement being so complete people could be forgiven for wondering if he was retiring from music altogether!), he jettisoned his band, and, in 1975, moved toward…soul.  The result was Young Americans, another very successful release.  My two favorite works on the album are probably the two “safest” picks I could make:  The spectacular Young Americans and the John Lennon co-written Fame.

Things were going well for David Bowie.  His music was successful and he took the lead role in critically well received The Man Who Fell To Earth, perhaps his single best movie.  However, during this time Mr. Bowie was also becoming more and more dependent on drugs.  His 1976 album Station To Station, considered one of his stronger overall efforts, nonetheless is an album that allegedly Mr. Bowie hardly remembers recording, so heavily was his drug use at the time.

Nonetheless, the album is spectacular.  The title track is one of my favorites…

Once again, I find it hard to consider what my second favorite track on the album is.  The album featured only 6 songs.  Being forced to choose, I’ll go with Golden Years, the song that Mr. Bowie supposedly wrote intending to offer to…Elvis Presley!

Following Station to Station, David Bowie moved back to Europe and began the painful process of kicking his cocaine addiction.  While there, he worked on and released a set of three albums, beginning with 1977’s Low, which were done in collaboration with Brian Eno.  These three albums became known as Mr. Bowie’s Berlin Trilogy, and there are those that consider them the three best albums Mr. Bowie ever created.  My favorite track on Low is Sound and Vision.

Next favorite is Be My Wife.

The second album in the Berlin Trilogy is 1977’s Heroes.  And I absolutely love the album’s title track, which Mr. Bowie used so movingly at the Concert For New York following the horrific events of 9/11.

Runner up favorite is V2 Schneider.

The final of the Berlin Trilogy albums is 1979’s Lodger.  Another of those albums it’s very tough to single out two tracks as your favorite.  At this moment and at this time, I’d have to pick Look Back In Anger as my favorite.

The next favorite track would be (again, very difficult choice!)…Red Sails.

Next up: New Wave David Bowie…and the lean years.

David Bowie – The Glam Years

Continuing my list, we move from David Bowie’s early albums to the ones that made him, justifiably, very famous.  First up is the album many consider David Bowie’s masterpiece:

In 1972 David Bowie released The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders of Mars.  It was a concept album whose underlying story was the rise and eventual fall of a fictional music superstar.  As many have noted, it could well have been David Bowie willing himself to superstardom.  Focusing on this album, I’m presented with a genuine problem.  Given I’m looking back at Mr. Bowie’s albums and taking one song I consider the “best” of the particular album and one that is a close runner up, with Ziggy Stardust there are just so many great songs.  How to chose one as your favorite and one as your second favorite?  To me, its far easier to pick the one song I think is my least favorite on the album (the cover of Ron Davies’ It Ain’t Easy, while not a terrible song, is simply not as strong as the other songs on this album, IMHO).

Ok, enough quibbling.  What is my favorite song on Ziggy Stardust?  At this point in time, it may well be Lady Stardust.

There’s something magical about this song, which focuses on a star struck fan’s reaction to the Ziggy Stardust “show”.  Yes, there are definite homosexual overtones, but idol worship has never been presented in such a startling, heartbreaking fashion.

My runner up?  Again a very hard choice.  And, again, at this time I’ll go with Rock and Roll Suicide.

Another very touching song.  Despite its depressing sounding title, the song is uplifting, encouraging.  A great, great conclusion to an equally great album.

Following the smash success of Ziggy Stardust, David Bowie’s followed it up with Aladdin Sane, an album more than one critic noted was “Ziggy Stardust goes to America”.  While this album wasn’t quite as good from start to end as Ziggy Stardust, it is nonetheless one of my all time favorite Bowie albums.  Two songs stick out.  First, the incredible Panic In Detroit.

My runner up favorite is the album’s final song, the mesmerizing Lady Grinning Soul.

Pin Ups, an album composed entirely of covers of songs, proved to be the last full album David Bowie would do with guitarist Mick Ronson and the rest of the “Spiders From Mars”.  There are many who consider this an inferior work, given that it is composed of covers and features absolutely no new David Bowie material.  I’m on the fence with the album.  I think there are some great tunes there, particularly Sorrow.

Runner up?  How about a cover of Pink Floyd’s See Emily Play?

Having moved on from the “Spiders From Mars”, David Bowie decided his next album would be another rock “opera”, this one telling the story of George Orwell’s famous novel 1984.  However, Mr. Orwell’s widow refused to allow his work be used, thus David Bowie had to switch gears and released, in 1973, what would be his “glam rock” swan song, Diamond Dogs.  While there remained two songs that were obviously inspired by 1984, the album had enough other material, I suppose, to avoid a lawsuit.  My favorite song on this album is one of David Bowie’s absolutely best rockers, a song that features Mr. Bowie himself on guitar!  The song?  Rebel Rebel.

I’m going to cheat with my second favorite track from this album.  For this song was never a part of the original album’s release.  In fact, this song languished in the vaults unheard until a special edition of Diamond Dogs was released on CD in 1990.  But it is so damn good.  Behold…the alternate version of Candidate.

Next up: Soul and the Berlin trilogy

David Bowie – Early Years

Listening to BBC’s Inspirational David Bowie made me think back to my own feelings regarding David Bowie’s albums and career.  In all the blog posts I’ve written, I’ve mentioned my favorite Bowie songs, but never really looked at his works album by album.  As a mental exercise, I considered several albums and which song I considered the “best” song of said album and which would be the runner up for the best…again, in my opinion.

Given Mr. Bowie’s long career and many albums, this is a task that will require more than one post.  A couple of rules, first:  I’m focusing on the actual albums released under his name and ignoring the voluminous singles (including those released before his first “official” album release), live albums, duets, movie scores, and side projects.  I may get to them eventually as there is plenty of good stuff there, but for now, the albums and two best songs (IMHO!) themselves.

First up, the three albums from his early years that lead up to the glam era…

Mr. Bowie’s first album is Space Oddity.  Originally released in 1969, this album, in my opinion, isn’t one of Mr. Bowie’s stronger efforts.  Nonetheless, far and away the best song on this album and a terrific piece is the song the album was named after, Space Oddity.

Runner up: The Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud.

David Bowie’s follow up album, The Man Who Sold The World, remains one of my favorite works of his.  The best song on that album, far and away, is The Man Who Sold The World.

Choosing a second great song from that album is a little harder, but I’d go with the very psychedelic/early metal Width of a Circle.

Which brings us to the last of the “early” albums, 1971’s Hunky Dory.  Many consider this the first “real” David Bowie album (I tend to think The Man Who Sold The World is).  There is little doubt, however, that between this album and the last David Bowie was building up his skills.  While The Man Who Sold The World sounded like early metal, Hunky Dory was far lighter in tone and featured the hit single Changes.  My favorite song on that album, however, has to be Life On Mars?.

The runner up is a tough one.  There are several really great songs on this album.  If I were pressed to note one above the others, I might just go for the Lou Reed-esq Queen Bitch.

Next: The Glam Era

Inspirational David Bowie

Those who have frequented my blog know of my love for the works of one David Bowie.

Not so very surprisingly, a few other people have very positive impressions of the muscian/actor as well.  BBC Radio 2 offers a great one hour or so long program on Mr. Bowie’s career in light of his 65th birthday (note the actual program will only be available for 5 more days, until Monday the 9th of January):

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b018l9kh

And a little video of one of my favorite David Bowie songs…

David Bowie Panic In Detroit