|
Post by oasisserbia on Nov 30, 2015 7:30:09 GMT -5
#BowieAndOasisGlastonbury2016
I BELIEVE!!!11
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Nov 30, 2015 7:55:14 GMT -5
#BowieAndOasisGlastonbury2016 I BELIEVE!!!11 I think Noel actually would reform Oasis if he got the chance to support Bowie.
|
|
|
Post by carryusall on Nov 30, 2015 8:12:28 GMT -5
#BowieAndOasisGlastonbury2016 I BELIEVE!!!11 I think Noel actually would reform Oasis if he got the chance to support Bowie. I want Bowie with the Pixies backing him, believe Black Francis/Frank Black offered their services when The Next Day came out, and Bowie called them the 'Band of the 80s'. They would have been perfect for the Next Day Material...
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Nov 30, 2015 13:52:12 GMT -5
Classic Rock magazine:
He shoots, he scores, he falls wanking to the floor on this boldly experimental jazz odyssey. Can lightning strike twice? Bowie’s 2013 comeback album The Next Day was as much a testament to brilliant marketing as musical skill, arriving from nowhere after a decade of silence, secrecy and sinister rumours. It topped the charts globally, earning the legendary rock recluse his first UK No.1 in 20 years, and helped make the David Bowie Is... exhibition a worldwide blockbuster. A sell-out tour without the Thin White Duke even having to leave his New York bunker? Genius.
Due for release on Bowie’s 69th birthday on January 8, Blackstar arrives with a little more notice and background information than The Next Day, but not much. This time, the beloved art-rock godfather cannot depend on the delighted surprise and (frankly) relief that he’s alive and kicking.
With its seven lengthy tracks, this album is leaner and more focused than its predecessor, but also more defiantly arty and less poppy. That said, Bowie’s vocal range and mastery is particularly striking.
Blackstar appears to be the score for Bowie’s hotly anticipated stage musical collaboration Lazarus, which opens off Broadway in December. The drama is based on his most celebrated big-screen outing, in Nicolas Roeg’s The Man Who Fell To Earth, but any narrative parallels are buried behind opaque lyrics.
The album was recorded with various New York-based jazz musicians, rather than Bowie’s regular roster of rock players, though long-time producer Tony Visconti returns, and James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem contributes percussion on two tracks.
Blackstar begins with its title track, a 10-minute mini-symphony of shifting movements and Middle Eastern melodies cloaked in jazzy electronica and muscular beats. Bowie delivers the ominous, quasi-Biblical lyric like an incantation. Then the music changes mood and a beautiful pop ballad emerges from the maelstrom, a lovely elegy about death and renewal, and fallen angels. A daunting musical monolith at first, this dense sonic tapestry reveals more and more treasures with each listen.
Hard-core fans will be disappointed that two Blackstar tracks have already been made public, albeit in alternate versions. The opaquely sketched murder ballad Sue (Or In A Season of Crime) was first released in 2014 in a skittery, brass-heavy, bebop-jazzy drum’n’bass arrangement. This update feels sharper, denser and heavier, with added funk-rock guitar squeals and percussive shudders. Crucially, Bowie’s achingly emotive vocal is terrific on both versions.
Dating from the same single package, ’Tis A Pity She Was A Whore was originally a propulsive, roaring, heavily electronic wall of sound. This new version features more organic instrumentation, with squawking saxophone and lush backing vocals that nudge it closer towards the lightly disguised R&B stompers that shaped much of Bowie’s early career.
One of the less convincing tracks here is the six-minute title song to Lazarus, the musical, a fairly unremarkable two-chord churn that drags in its latter stages. Girl Loves Me is another slight affair but at least offers more punch, blending tensile art-funk with electronica and drum’n’bass flourishes.
For all its arty aura, Lazarus climaxes with two rousingly emotional power ballads that remind us Bowie can still turn on that windswept romantic crooner voice. All plaintive piano and wafting saxophone, Dollar Days is soft and soulful and steeped in regret. Lightly jazzy with a long sax fade-out, this could be an outtake from Young Americans.
But the climactic I Can’t Give Everything Away is better, six minutes of heart-swelling widescreen melodrama that builds into an Absolute Beginners-sized epic. Swept along by orchestral strings, a lonely harmonica and liquid guitar solos that recall Robert Fripp’s classic Bowie collaborations, this feels like the sweet reward for sitting through the more ear-bashing experimental tracks.
Much of Bowie’s output for the last 25 years paid lip service to his avant-garde leanings while mostly sticking within fairly straight indie-rock parameters. With Blackstar, he has gone deeper, making his most adventurous and uncompromising album since his classic run of Brian Eno collaborations. Even more than The Next Day, these seven tracks suggest the sounds inside his head are in sync with his long-time soul brother Scott Walker, though thankfully he remains on warmer terms with old-fashioned melody and emotion.
It seems lightning can strike more than twice, because Bowie’s autumnal comeback keeps getting richer and stranger. Old boys keep swinging.
FINAL VERDICT: 7/10
|
|
|
Post by uǝɥʇɐǝɥ on Nov 30, 2015 15:05:07 GMT -5
I think a guest performance by Bowie would be much appreciated, no matter with whom. I guess a whole new tour would probably distract him from creating even more new records.
|
|
|
Post by benoitbe1 on Nov 30, 2015 15:20:10 GMT -5
Blackstar is a fucking good track imo. The album should be great. I though Bowie said I won't tour again. ? Nah, I doubt it. There was rumours he'd do Glastonbury after The Next Day came out, but it never happened. Read an article on the making of the album, the other day, and Visconti reaffirmed Bowie's position - there will be no more live appearances. I didn't know. Thank you!
|
|
|
Post by NYR on Dec 1, 2015 22:45:15 GMT -5
He's pulling a Beatles; continuing to release records but no touring.
It's a shame as I'd love to see him live.
|
|
|
Post by batfink30 on Dec 1, 2015 22:49:05 GMT -5
Get up off your arse Bowie and get put on the road again!!!!!
|
|
|
Post by matt on Dec 14, 2015 11:14:24 GMT -5
I may be wrong on this, but Steve Lamacq just said on BBC 6 Music they will be playing a brand new track of Bowie's new album.
|
|
|
Post by matt on Dec 14, 2015 11:22:15 GMT -5
He's pulling a Beatles; continuing to release records but no touring. It's a shame as I'd love to see him live. Seeing him live would be something special I agree, but I love artists who simply just exist to record in the studio. There were discussions amongst associates and Visconti in the studio during The Next Day about complex arrangements and how they would be able to play this live, and Bowie merely brushed it aside stating 'we're not going to play this live'. The Beatles would never have been the band they were if they hadn't quit touring, most likely having to dilute their songs on record for the sake of practicalities of playing live. Sure, live performances are awe inspiring but the moments are fleeting and making music as great as possible in the studio is even better in my opinion as that stays with you forever, and the music is eternal. It is the true mark of a great artist - I would quite happily see acts like Noel quit touring to push the limits in the studio instead to provide us with sonic mind blowing quality (not likely to happen I know!).
|
|
|
Post by batfink30 on Dec 14, 2015 11:29:13 GMT -5
He's pulling a Beatles; continuing to release records but no touring. It's a shame as I'd love to see him live. Seeing him live would be something special I agree, but I love artists who simply just exist to record in the studio. There were discussions amongst associates and Visconti in the studio during The Next Day about complex arrangements and how they would be able to play this live, and Bowie merely brushed it aside stating 'we're not going to play this live'. The Beatles would never have been the band they were if they hadn't quit touring, most likely having to dilute their songs on record for the sake of practicalities of playing live. Sure, live performances are awe inspiring but the moments are fleeting and making music as great as possible in the studio is even better in my opinion as that stays with you forever, and the music is eternal. It is the true mark of a great artist - I would quite happily see acts like Noel quit touring to push the limits in the studio instead to provide us with sonic mind blowing quality (not likely to happen I know!). One of my last musical hero's I'd like to see. Really gutted I haven't had the opportunity to see him live.
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Dec 14, 2015 12:41:15 GMT -5
I may be wrong on this, but Steve Lamacq just said on BBC 6 Music they will be playing a brand new track of Bowie's new album. 'Lazarus', the next single, will be released on Friday. And yeah, Lamacq will air it the day before.
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Dec 14, 2015 12:45:35 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by 4everlife on Dec 14, 2015 14:43:32 GMT -5
Sounds pretty fookin sweet
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Dec 16, 2015 6:32:24 GMT -5
Blackstar is the best song I've heard all year. Without a doubt.
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Dec 16, 2015 7:17:18 GMT -5
Wikipedia have Lazarus down as being over 6 minutes long, and Sue... at around 4 minutes
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Dec 16, 2015 14:02:11 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Dec 17, 2015 11:36:35 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Dec 17, 2015 11:52:35 GMT -5
This 'Where's Your Car Debbie' sounds a bit like Full On...
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Dec 17, 2015 12:10:03 GMT -5
coming on in a few minutes...
|
|
|
Post by batfink30 on Dec 17, 2015 14:55:27 GMT -5
Crackin.
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Dec 17, 2015 15:50:35 GMT -5
You little tinker, you beat me to it! So what's everyone thinking? Will need a few more listens I think, and its obviously not as good as Blackstar (which I genuinely now believe is a complete masterpiece), but I do definitely like it. I'm gonna have a stab in the dark and say 8/10
|
|
|
Post by carryusall on Dec 17, 2015 16:13:05 GMT -5
Bit late to the party, but that's because I was watching the new Star Wars. New Bowie and New Star Wars in the same day, wow. And for years no-one believed me that we'd get either. But I always knew we would. And I really enjoyed them both. And my response is normally to work out exactly how good I think things are, and tbh I'm not sure about either. But I'm not gonna do that today. I enjoyed them both very, very much, so I'm just gonna keep on enjoying them for a while. And even if I'm only enjoying them as new material from sources that it means a lot from me to hear from and return to, well that's ok with me.
|
|
|
Post by 4everlife on Dec 17, 2015 23:24:20 GMT -5
First listen- I like it more than blackstar, honestly. Very good song
|
|
|
Post by theyknowwhatimean on Dec 18, 2015 6:20:57 GMT -5
|
|