Review: THE NEXT DAY by David
Bowie
I’ve learned to not review music because since I can’t carry
a tune I will end up giving tribute like “this album (hell I’m not even sure
what to put there) is really, really good” or “it sucks” or something equally
inane. But Mr. Bowie’s latest helped me quite a bit over a long Memorial Day
weekend and if I begin by saying this isn’t a musical review but a post for
like-minded fans who may not have picked up his latest assortment of songs—then
that would be ok, right? So with that aside, and since I can’t see you nodding,
here we go:
My first two CDs I bought was Rewind by the Rolling Stones
and ChangesBowie. I was working at Ames Department stores and this had to be
1989/1990 or thereabouts. I had been a fan of David Bowie, like everyone else
of my generation with the Let’s Dance (1983) LP. And yes, that was bought as an
album. (But CDs were the new rage and, let’s digress even farther, I remember
they came in these long cardboard cases that were eventually declared a waste
of tree and eventually shrink wrapped in nothing but plastic. So I purchased
them with my pathetic pay check and once I got off the swing shift and headed
home around 9:30 and played “Changes,” “Suffragette City,” and “Heroes” to… well
not death because this was a CD after all the new music form was billed as
indestructible. )
Out of all the phases of Mr. Bowie’s career it was that late
70’s period referred to as the Berlin era that cut the deepest with this fan.
Though I appreciated the earlier glam and later 80’s pop it was the 1976-’79
era that I related to the most. I just checked Wikipedia to find this sentence,
“Like Low, "Heroes"
evinced the zeitgeist of the Cold War, symbolized by the divided city of
Berlin.” Yeah, that and I thought the songs were really, really damn good. Since
ChangesBowie I have bought every release hoping to find an album that returned
to that style but Bowie, like Dylan, doesn’t retread and instead created new
landscapes with Heathen, Hours, Reality, and now The Next Day.
I played his latest (bought on the Kindle Fire) in an endless loop for three days. Days of
long, long deliberations on my part and where Mr. Bowie’s vision of the now
came through on a wave of pulsating positive rhythmic beats.* My favorite is “The
Stars (Are Out Tonight” with the heavens
bustling with activity: "We will never be rid of these stars,” Bowie sings
“But I hope they live forever."
What keeps David
Bowie relevant to me is he continues to write adult lyrics that doesn't resort to
entertaining the teen set or fall in the overly wrought sugar sentiment of the
adult radio scene. Bowie writes for the
over forty set who still appreciate the guitars and drums of our youth. With
the release of his latest his website stated “David is the kind of artist who
writes and performs what he wants when he wants ... when he has something
to say as opposed to something to sell.” Working on this not a review I see that Tony Visconti who produced those Berlin era LPs worked on The Next Day. Well there you go. No wonder it hits the mark so well.
The New York
Times called the album
"Bowie's twilight masterpiece". Well he’s only 66 and I’m hoping he’s
productive for another forty years. So were halfway there.
*no clue where I was going there.
I'm so glad you mentioned the up-to-now 'last trilogy' of Hours/Heathen/Reality. I LOVE those albums. Heck, I love the 90s material just as much. And the Berlin era is without a peer. About 15 years ago, Bowie himself created a CD for friends and family with all the instrumentals he had written to that date. The Berlin material provides just about all that content.
ReplyDeleteNow, on to Next Day. When Bowie released "Where Are We Now?" out of the blue on his birthday, I was ecstatic (like most fans). I was resigned to think Reality was going to be the last album. Next Day now might be the last album (but I hope not). WAWN is so, so good. Coming as it did in the gray of early January 2013, it showed a man, just like you wrote, who writes songs for adults. Such a nice breath of fresh air. Stars Out Tonight is probably the standout of the entire LP. The bari sax in Dirty Boys is just plain fun. And Bowie's voice! Not only does it still have the timbre of his latter career, it's showing signs of age (not a bad thing) that further underscore the adultness of this LP. Valentine's Day and I'd Rather Be High are also favs of mine.
Now, are you aware of The Next Day Extra EP? New songs that didn't make the original album and remixes of some songs. You can get it via iTunes so I suspect you can get it on Amazon.
I think you can guess what I'll be spinning tomorrow.
I was introduced to Bowie in 1977 (Hunky Dory) and have remained attached to that period of his music as well. He has fascinated me as an artist ever since. Just saw him recently in the doc about backup singers, "20 Feet From Stardom,"with old footage of "Young American." Still magic.
ReplyDeleteI think of his creativity as both daring and intelligent. I rank him with David Byrne in that respect. Like you say, It's music for adults. I can understand a 3-day marathon immersion. Thx for the perceptive review.
Scott, HEATHEN is my favorite of that trio with "Everyone Says 'Hi' “being my go to song. “Cactus” is another track I still play to death—if that’s possible in this tech age.
ReplyDeleteAnd I had no clue about the extra material and checking Wiki http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Next_Day there does seem to be quite a substantial amount left over. Odd, perhaps, but in my middle stretch, now, I don’t seek out curios like I did twenty years ago. Obviously my loss.
It seems that his live performances will be few and far between but I certainly hope (and the sometimes reliable Wikipedia alludes to this…) his creative spirit endures in the studio.
Ron, I watch a boatful of documentaries and "20 Feet from Stardom" is loaded and ready to view. Thanks for the reminder.
HUNKY DORY (1971) had for the longest time my favorite Bowie Track and that’s the iconic “Changes.” Also “Life on Mars” has aged remarkably well.
I like a lot of Bowie. Current favorite is, "I"m afraid of Americans."
ReplyDeleteI was a big Bowie fan in high school (saw him twice in concert). The older I get, the more stunning that Berlin trilogy seems. I agree with Scott that (at least Low and Heroes) it "is without a peer." I've always looked to Bowie's career as a guide for artists in general. You can never win if you worry about pleasing everybody all the time. And the need for an artist to evolve is imperative. I haven't heard everything from this latest record, but what I have heard tells me Mr. Bowie is just as observant as ever. He is one of those musicians mortality has no business interrupting.
ReplyDeleteDavid, thanks for this fine piece on Bowie and his music. Barring the odd number here and there I've never really been a David Bowie regular.
ReplyDelete