On a Brighter note

col8

Vital Football Legend
Blackstar the new album by David Bowie is released.

If Lazarus and Blackstar are anything to go by the album is going to be a cracker.

Released on the 8th January his 69th birthday.


When David Bowie returned from exile with 2013’s ‘The Next Day’, an album that wistfully referenced his late-‘70s art-rock heyday, it felt like this eternal futurist was starting to look back. Wrong, earthlings! Released on his 69th birthday, 25th album ‘Blackstar’ spins the spaceship back around and points it at the moon. Bowie’s formidable record of reinventing himself with each new album remains intact.

His first unexpected move was to jettison the band of long-serving musicians who backed him on ‘The Next Day’ in favour of a group of New York jazzbos led by versatile sax player Donny McCaslin. That doesn’t mean ‘Blackstar’ is a jazz album, it just broadens the canvas. Warped showtunes, skronking industrial rock, soulful balladeering, airy folk-pop, even hip-hop – it all has a place on this busy, bewildering and occasionally beautiful record.

Lead single ‘Blackstar’, with its doomy elegance, multiple narrators and whiff of the occult, gives you a reasonable idea of what to expect – ie, the unexpected. 2014 oddity ‘Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)’ reappears in radically reworked form, its big band melodrama now welded to a frantic, drum’n’bassy rhythm, its cacophonous climax reflecting the lyric’s murderous intent. ‘Lazarus’ is sung from the perspective of Newton, the homesick alien Bowie played in 1976 film ‘The Man Who Fell To Earth’, and who is also the subject of his new musical. Over a thick, skulking groove resembling latter-day Massive Attack, he inhabits the woes of a man out of time, scarred and self-mutilated.

But the most startling thing here is ‘Girl Loves Me’, a menacing, militaristic tattoo that that finds Bowie rapping “Where the fuck did Monday go?” in a lazily aggressive, sing-song style. Producer Tony Visconti has cited Kendrick Lamar’s ‘To Pimp A Butterfly’ as an influence on ‘Blackstar’, but is it possible that Bowie’s been listening to Young Thug and Future too?

As we speak, Bowieologists are furiously trying to crack ‘Blackstar’’s code. What could an album that references Norse history, Jacobean drama and Atlanta trap possibly all mean? Tellingly, its final song is a serene, lilting number called ‘I Can’t Give Everything Away’. In other words, even if there is an overarching concept – and it’s hard to see how there could be, given the number of disparate elements in play – then Bowie’s not going to tell you what it is. Because where’s the fun in that?

Is ‘Blackstar’ vintage Bowie? No, but nor is that the intention. Actually, one of the few certainties we can take from this restless, relentlessly intriguing album is that David Bowie is positively allergic to the idea of heritage rock.
Read more at http://www.nme.com/reviews/david-bowie/16363#e1HJp8GzL8dMFyVY.99
 
as you know Col, looking forward to it greatly! It's a very experimental album from all I've read about it.

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Cheers Col dude didn't know it Bowie was releasing a new album om chuffed cor wait to hear this time to go on Youtube and listen!!! :)
 
Like all of the great Bowie albums, it will take many plays but first impression is :4: A few of those songs are stunning.

It is more avante garde and certainly less accessible than The Next Day.. think we are going to get on just fine!!
 
Anything Bowie i can just whack on with my earphones on and chill out too very easily
 
China Girl, Modern love, absolute beginers, ashes to ashes, lets dance love em all
 
Have to say 'The Next Day' left me a little underwhelmed, a couple of great moments but I just felt it was overrated.

'Blackstar' on the other hand, has struck me as fantastic from the off and you sense it will keep improving upon further listens. It's got a bit of 'Station To Station' (my favourite Bowie Album - I think!) about it - not sound-wise, but the spirit of it.

An exceptional swansong.
 
I just hope and pray from 2003 to 2013 he was writing and recording. From a completely selfish point of view I dont want Blackstar to be the end. I hope he has hundreds and hundreds of songs in the can, enough to fill the rest of my life with incredible music.