David Bowie never stopped looking ahead
It was hardly a coincidence that David Bowie named his greatest hits collection "Changes."
Memorabilia and bouquets of flowers are left in honor of David Bowie outside his New York apartment, Monday, Jan. 11, 2016. Bowie, the other-worldly musician who broke pop and rock boundaries with his creative musicianship, nonconformity, striking visuals and a genre-spanning persona he christened Ziggy Stardust, died of cancer Sunday. He was 69. |
It was hardly a coincidence that David Bowie named his greatest hits collection "Changes."
Bowie
changed musical styles, fashion, even his name - from David Jones - in a
relentless exploration of the artistic muse. More than any one sound or
song, that shark-like ability to keep moving forward defined him.
Even
his exit was an artistic statement. He released a striking video last
week for his new song, "Lazarus," that depicts him in an institutional
bed, his eyes covered in gauze.
"Look up here,
I'm in heaven," he sings in the song's opening. A thin Bowie also
appears dressed in a bodysuit that seems left over from the "Ziggy
Stardust" years, retreating to a closet at the song's end. The song,
like the elegaic "Where Are We Now?" from 2013, has him confronting
issues of mortality in haunting fashion.
We
just never knew how close the end was. When it came on Sunday, Bowie had
long since retreated from public view after a reported heart attack in
the mid-2000s. He'd released no new music for a decade before 2013 and
the subsequent "Blackstar," released Friday. He gave no interviews in
his last decade, and kept his 18-month cancer fight private.
Bowie
quite literally seemed from another world in his early years. "The Rise
and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars" was a concept
album about an alien bisexual rock star. With his makeup and orange
hair, Bowie participated fully in an era of excess. The splendid songs
poured out in the 1970s: "Changes," ''Starman," ''Suffragette City,"
''Jean Genie," ''Rebel Rebel," ''Young Americans." He wrote Mott the
Hoople's best-known song, "All the Young Dudes."
The
bodysuit ultimately proved confining. Bowie wasn't the first artist to
make stylistic shifts, but few did it with such aplomb. He delved into
blue-eyed soul with his John Lennon collaboration, "Fame." He moved to
Berlin to explore a minimal, industrial sound with collaborator Brian
Eno. And in the mid-1980s era of Big Albums, Bowie appeared in a smart
suit with the invitation, "Let's Dance."
That
album, which also included the hits "Modern Love" and "China Girl,"
really marked the end of his mainstream success. Bowie kept moving, even
if not all his explorations were rewarding; his 1990s band Tin Machine
produced some unlistenable noise. The restlessness left him with a
conflicted relationship with his old hits. He vowed to retire them after
the 1990 "Sound and Vision" tour, but didn't stick to that and
performed them with grace and enthusiasm on tour a decade later.
He
was soft-spoken with a very British politeness in our only meeting, a
2002 interview where he allowed himself a brief flash of pride.
"What
I'm most proud of is that I can't help but notice that I've affected
the vocabulary of pop music," he said then. "For me, frankly, as an
artist, that's the most satisfying thing for the ego."
Everyone
touched by Bowie's music takes their own moment of inspiration. Kurt
Cobain covered "The Man Who Sold the World" with Nirvana. Vanilla Ice
repurposed Bowie's collaboration with Queen, "Under Pressure," into his
biggest hit.
Personally, two recordings from
1977 will always stick out. One was Bowie's duet with Bing Crosby, made
for a television special filmed just five weeks before Crosby's death.
Crosby sang "The Little Drummer Boy," while Bowie sang "Peace on Earth"
in counterpoint.
The culture clash made it an
immediate classic - the World War II era crooner with one of rock's
wildest personalities. It was hard to imagine them in the same room, let
alone standing around a piano. Yet neither man looked down upon the
other. Its beauty made the collaboration last, and it is heard every
December.
That same fall, Bowie released
"Heroes" from his sessions with Eno. The song starts quietly, Bowie
singing over a droning, repetitive guitar figure, building gradually in
intensity as his voice rises and he sings of a memorable but brief love
affair. It's a moment of majesty that never fails provoke chills.
"We can be heroes," he sings, "just for one day."
David Bowie had more than a day.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.