Progress and time dictate that there will not be many more occasions when I have the opportunity to walk into a shop and buy the new David Bowie album but whatever the surroundings it still feels like an event. Nothing can quite compete with 2013’s grand return of course but you wonder how that would have worked had the album on offer three years back been this one. `The Next Day` remains one of the prime latter period Bowie offerings yet it is at heart a conventional set not dissimilar to `Reality` the album with which we thought he’d closed his account in 2003. `Blackstar` is something else altogether.
There
have been hints for some time of Bowie’s Scott Walker influenced tendencies and
as far back as `Bring Me The Disco King`, (a song that appeared as a `Reality`
extra but dates back further) the idea of a jazzier backing track was
simmering. Far from being a curio, `Sue (Or In A Season of Crime` )turns out to
have been significant too. It was after working on this new track for the `Nothing
Has Changed` compilation that Bowie opted to take the concept and most of the
musicians as the backbone of what has now emerged as `Blackstar`. It’s on here
too, though somewhat differently arranged. On the cd the first thing you notice
is that nothing will be easily given away on this album; the lyrics are printed
on a black surface and are only readable if you hold the sleeve up to the light
in a particular way!
No time
to write an in depth thing if I’m to get this posted but here’s some notes I
made while listening for the first time to the full album….
Blackstar- already well known thanks to the
video, the song itself sounds more angular at first when heard in isolation.
The drums pound softly if that doesn’t sound like a contradiction and you
notice the backing vocal far more. Love the way that the electronic beats occasionally
surface and there are weird spacey noises underneath the sax solo. The way the
song morphs into the “Something happened on the day he died” section is a
beautiful moment- the orchestrations arranged by Bowie himself it seems- with
that single trail leading out of the background wailing. There’s something
great too about the way you think the song’s going all soft then it bites back.
“I can’t answer why, just go with me,” Bowie declares cheekily as the backing
vocals find lots of things that can end with the word star! “You’re a flash in the pan, I’m the great I
am,” he declaims. I wonder how many characters there are in this song? Who was “born
the wrong way round”? The way the song sinks back into its original tune is
seamlessly done unlike the jarring manner it had left. And what’s this solitary
candle at the centre of it all for? The ending sees the song collapse into a
single note with electric buzzes around it.
Tis A Pity She Was A Whore – Starts urgently and
at first feels like it might be more conventional while Bowie’s vocal matches
the running notes behind it. There’s not much of a tune but it has such forward
motion. The lyrics? Oh they’re not printed properly at all but you get the idea
from the title and lines like “she punched me like a dude”. Bizarrely it
reminds me of – wait for it – something off `Never Let Me Down` except done
well. Imagine if that album had been like this, how history would be altered.
Well, musical history at least.
Lazarus – From the stage play he’s also been working
on though it may well become better known as hospital bed video song. This is
slower “Look up here, I’m in heaven” it begins arrestingly. Is he addressing
fame on this song? Out of the initial opening is one of those reflective songs
Bowie has taken to in latter years, his vocal becomes more desperate, pleading
to “be free, just like that bluebird.” There’s a lot of sax on this album btw.
The lengthy instrumental outro has a Pink Floydyness about it albeit of a more
urgent nature than that group would produce.
Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime) – Hang on, this is
different. You may know the song in its original form but it has been radically
re-tooled with Bowie’s vocal pitched sideways over a harder jazz background. It’s
like he’s singing against the music rather than over it as before. The song is
transformed into the nasty thing it needs to be fitting the lyric better too as
the character describes how he’s actually murdered Sue because she went off
with “that clown”. Presumably not a clown per se. The mixture of self- pity and
anger swirls up as the song progresses to a spiralling ending that is stunning.
Who knew this song was actually so good?!
Girl Loves Me- This sees Bowie’s compressed vocal
singing mashed up mixtures of Clockwork
Orange type words that combine to seem child- like albeit with a devilish glare.
The marching rhythm seems like it can barely constrain the musicians who pop
out with snatches of percussion. It’s mechanical yet also alluring. I bet though
if the girl heard it, she wouldn’t love this character, he sounds a nasty piece
of work!
Dollar Days – The first gentle piano opening
heralds a curious song that suggests someone stranded away from home “If I
never see England’s evergreens, it’s nothing to me,” It’s the album’s most straightforward
song even if the lyrics don’t make their intent clear. More sax takes the song
away from the jazzy edge that the rest of the album’s had so far. Great echoey
ending segues into…
I Can’t Give Everything Away- Again ghosts of `Never
Let Me Down` (if it had been good) float over words that seem to suggest Bowie
is explaining why he won’t explain. A harmonica refrain keeps popping back and
as if to further underline the title, there don’t seem to be lyrics on the
packaging for this one! Or it could be this is just another character “with
skull designs on my shoes”. Ooh, there’s even a Reeves Gabrels-alike guitar
solo here. Strange song, strange album!
It’s obviously one of those records that will take more listens than there are hours in this day but on just one play for most tracks it is a challenging, interesting work that stretches and pulls different musical forms together and makes them fit together.
Of course
it’s compulsory for every Bowie album since 1993 to be hailed as the `best
since `Scary Monsters` but I’d say `Blackstar` is certainly one of the most
unexpected detours in a career full of such left turns. For musical bravado it
matches the `Low` / `Heroes` / `Lodger` trio, `Scary Monsters` or the `Outside`
/ `Earthling` duo and that’s a good place for Bowie to be.
Videostar
Bowie was
late to promo videos compared to some contemporaries yet being something of a zeitgeist
surfer he made up for lost time with a series of promo films during the 1980s
that were sometimes better than the music they were promoting. `Day In, Day Out`
being an example of a startling video tagged onto a so so song. In the Nineties
the videos delved into dark places- `The Heart’s Filthy Lesson` is one of the
least likely videos to make for a single and `Little Wonder` is dazzling but
too weird for the mainstream. Some equality between music and vision has
happened of late but Bowie now seems to treat the promo films as something
separate adding occasional lines of dialogue and narratives not necessarily
related directly to the lyrics. The first three films for `The Next Day` album
are each stunning in different ways.
`Blackstar`
appears to be a single storyline centred around some kind of prophet whose
execution creates the `blackstar` of the title. Quite what it represents is
unclear- perhaps it’s the dark side of the character who survives the execution?
Now comes `Lazarus` in which the same button eyed character from the previous
video is in a hospital bed freaking out while the girl from the previous video
seems to be manipulating him from under the bed. As the camera pans every
inventive angle ti can, another Bowie emerges from a big old wardrobe wearing a
stripy all in one outfit and looking equally worried. What does it mean? We may
never know!
There is
a tendency to read too much into these films of course. Sometimes an idea is
used just because it looks good. After all the shaking motif of the background
characters on `Blackstar` was only employed because Bowie liked the look of old
cartoons. It’s worth remembering too that when we first heard and saw `Where Are
We Now` Bowie seemed frail and old feeding the myths that had grown during his
absence. Then the wily old fox turned out to be fine and the rest of the album
was sung with energy and it turned out he deliberately wanted to appear frail
in the first film. So sometimes he just does things because he wants to provoke
speculation like this. Aaargh, we’ve fallen for it again!
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