Friday, March 28, 2014

Rebel rebel, you've torn your dress.

I've become untethered in time. What is time anyway, but something constructed by humans to measure our collective existence? Whether or not I call this moment the past, which it will be (is now), the present, which it is (just was), or the future which it was (still is), I'm just here (was, is, will be).

That's sort of how I feel about dystopian future stories that were written before I was born (1984, A Clockwork Orange, Brave New World, The Chrysalids...). Reading them has always been a surreal, otherworldly experience in which I feel like I'm observing something in a future that has already happened.

Largely inspired by George Orwell's 1984, with hints of other dystopian future stories woven throughout, Diamond Dogs gives me this same feeling, catapulting me into a timeless timeline in which I float freely between past, present, and future, all where history is made-up and the truth exists only in the little acts of defiance about which only you know.



This timeless place is described in the album's opening track, Future Legend. The year is 1984. I'm only 9 years old, so I have to be careful out there in the Hunger City. My youthful innocence is enmeshed with a sort of memory of the future already lived. I learned about it in my History lessons at school. I make sense of it as best I can. 


 In today's History lesson, teacher told us that the government is listening to our calls, reading our emails, and tracking our Internet searches. It was foretold to us, but we kept calm and carried on, and look where that's gotten us. If you listen closely to the music on the radio, you can hear the blip-blip-blip of those watching over us as they record our conversations. The music becomes dotty and obscured in places where they listen in.

As families of the party we have to be careful. But teacher told us that the proles/peoploids are free, because they don't care. People like that real cool cat, Hallowe'en Jack. He stole a gold-plated granny-brooch off my jacket. It made me want to be like him.


Oh, the dirty, sordid future-past, where prostitution reigns as the best living you can score as a free person, and the price is only your hope, your soul, your heart. But you wouldn't have it any other way, would you? If you want it, boys, get it here, thing. 'Cuz hope, boys, is a cheap thing.


It's weird that as a 9 year old girl, I know about such things. I don't know them from personal experience, God no! I know them because they're in my memory, planted there from my travels through the thing we made up called Time. My family thinks I'm blissfully unaware of the crumbling society around me. They support the status quo, do what they have to do to survive and protect me.

I sit atop the staircase to the basement at my grandmother's house and watch as my uncle's cover band, The Suspects, rehearses songs for their next show. My uncle is the drummer and the singer, which is apparently really hard to do. To my 9 year old self, he's a rock 'n' roll idol and my favourite babysitter. The band doesn't always let me watch them rehearse - children cramp their style. But today they relent to my pleas. I'm a good audience - I sing along and clap after every song. Especially this one. You've got your transmission and a livewire!


Watching the Suspects rehearse fills my head with dreams. I go to school, but instead of paying attention to my lessons, I doodle pictures of rock stars. I start my own airband with kids from the neighbourhood. We rehearse in the basement, too. I'm the singer. My band members all play air instruments, but I don't lip sync. I break all the airband rules. When you rock and roll with me, there's no one else I'd rather be.


There is a conversation happening upstairs. My grandmother and grandfather are talking about things that children shouldn't hear. I don't understand, but 30 years later, my nightmares make sense of it for me. We are the dead. What did they mean? Who are the thought police, Grandpa? What are fuck-me pumps, Grandma? I never got to ask. I never saw them again. I went upstairs, and the window was open, and they were gone. 


When it turned 1984, I watched the ball drop in Times Square on TV, like you, like everyone, like every year. It was the first time I was ever allowed to ring in the new year. I was in a strange place though. Not my grandparents' house, where I lived. Somewhere else, where the kids were allowed to eat cereal that I wasn't allowed to have. Sugar cereal. Such an important night, and that's what I remember. Dick Clark and Cap'n Crunch. It scraped the roof of my mouth raw and I liked it. Beware the savage jaw of 1984.


I never did care much for Big Brother. The way people talk about him, you'd think he was God or something. I never did care much for Him either. The only difference between them is that God's a fictional character, but Big Brother is real. 


As I type this, Big Brother is watching my 9 year old self, noting her rebellious tendencies -- her penchant for not doing her homework, the improper way she wears her school uniform (shirt untucked, socks rolled down), the earrings she stole from the shop. She's just a child, but one day, she'll become vanishable. She'll write her thoughts and memories for others to read and... whose footsteps are those in the corridor?

*****
Sorry if the above is a bit fleeting and disjointed, but memories, and free movement through Time are like that. You sort of never know what's going to pop up. I like things that way. I like life "on shuffle" in some ways. But my habit of putting several Bowie albums on shuffle didn't exactly work for Diamond Dogs. In a way, this album dates itself in terms of its composition; there was a time, before music went digital, when shuffle didn't exist, and albums were meant to be listened to as a whole. I mean, I guess you could sit next to the turntable and move the needle around if you wanted, but why would you?

Diamond Dog's songs are woven together, bleed into one another, are part of each other. As a result, this album needs to be listened to as a whole to be fully appreciated. I hope I haven't done it a disservice by breaking it up into pieces above to tell the story of where it took me.  So without further adieu, here it is in it's full glory.


*****

Post Script: The above story is obviously fiction, but it's based on some true things. Like living at my grandparent's house as a child in the early to mid 80's and watching my uncle's band rehearse covers of awesome rock songs in the basement. During my first listen to Diamond Dogs, I just about jumped out of my seat on the bus when Rebel Rebel came on because I suddenly remembered that it was one of the songs my uncle's band used to play, and I remember watching them rehearse it. Needless to say was a rather joyous recollection. I just need you to know that really happened, and that it's one of my all-time favourite childhood music-related memories. 

Friday, March 14, 2014

There is no other day, let's try it another way.

Well hello there! How is everyone doing tonight? Are you ready to rock? I said, are you ready to ROCK?! Then you came to the right place. Welcome to an evening filled with glammed up, far out cover tunes!


Pin Ups is David Bowie's collection of '60s covers. I have rather enjoyed Bowie's cover of the Stones' Let's Spend the Night Together -- of course I'd heard the original many times before, so that provided me with prior knowledge of the song.  This bestowed a bit of a quandary upon me. The line-up on this album caused me to feel a pang of reservation, mostly because only two of the covers were songs I already knew.

I began to wonder what the best way to tackle this album would be. Should I go in blindly, and just enjoy the songs for what they are, without trying to compare them to the originals, since I mostly don't know them anyway? Or should I listen to the original versions first, to give me some kind of basic foundation?

I decided the best thing to do would be to just jump in and see where the album took me. And if I felt the need to find out what the originals sound like, then I could do that whenever I felt like it. So that's what I did. So where did it take me? Well, I'm getting to that... just bear with me.

Recently I discovered that people listen to music differently. Over brunch and drinks, a friend and fellow Bowie fan who has been reading this blog told me that apparently what he gets from music is totally different from what I get from it. He listens and enjoys music for the composition, the instrumentation, the complexity, originality, what a musician can do with their instrument, what a singer can do with their voice. Don't get me wrong, I like those things too! But I don't listen with a critical ear. For me, listening to music is an immersive, sensory, meaningful experience. I see pictures and watch stories unfold, I feel pangs of pain, I get bursts of euphoria. And with that comes the desire... nay, the need to sing.

So it makes me wonder why Bowie chose these particular songs to cover on this album. Was it strictly something about their composition? Or do they mean something to him? Or is it as simple as they're just super fun to sing? I can relate to that. They are. Like most of the albums I've listened to so far in course of this project, I can't stop singing the songs on Pin Ups.

Here's a little glimpse into my world: As I mentioned, I love to sing. Singing's my favourite.  I give living room concerts to my boyfriend and a feline audience of two almost daily. Oh, and the neighbours, whether they like it or not. This is my living room concert microphone.


Yeah, it's a random plastic wand thing. Yes, I'm 38 years old. I'm not even sure how it ended up in my possession. One day I reached out my hand for something to use as a microphone, and there it was. When I press the button, it lights up. It has three speeds: slow flash, flash, and superfast flash. It also fills the role of guitar and saxophone, when appropriate. It makes me feel like a rock star.

Pin Ups on the whole is fun to sing from start to finish. Having said that, my living room concert usually goes something like this...

Here Comes the Night. It contains the best way to start a song ever: the yowl-cry. I can't reproduce it to my satisfaction (yet... I'm working on it...) but goddamn, that's some good catharsis right there. The whole bawling chorus feels like my soul is taking a shower in a thunderstorm. Brilliant. Microphone: set to flash. Ahhhhhhhhhhhh! Here it comes...

Here Comes the Night (Them Cover)

For comparison's sake, here is the original by Them. Before this, I had never heard of Them. Turns out Van Morrison was the lead singer. That's awesome. I like Van Morrison lots and lots. Now I feel like adding a bunch of Van Morrison/Them to my iTunes.

Next, with the first few bars of See Emily Play, I set my microphone to superfast flash, and launch into my best and most exaggerated British accent (which is hilarious, I'm sure - but it's the only way I can get this one out, apparently). Frrreeeeeee gahhhhymes fo' Maaaaaahhhhhhy, seeeeeeeeee Emily plaaaaaahhhhhhhy!

See Emily Play (Pink Floyd Cover)

Admittedly, I'm rather ignorant when it comes to Pink Floyd. I am familiar with a couple of songs off The Wall. Shameful? Maybe. This was my introduction to this particular song, so I gave the original a listen, and lo and behold, I rather enjoy it! I'm not even sure which version I like better, they both have their own special charms. I'm glad to have expanded my Pink Floyd knowledge, if even just a little bit.

And then... Ohhhh, little baby! You know I feel so good! Like seriously, this is the part of the living room concert where the imaginary fans have their arms outstretched in my direction, and I'm sprinting back and forth across the front of the stage, grabbing hands along the way. I stop and throw a few moves down in between hand-grabs, of course. Because how can you not indulge in a little pelvic swing action when this song is playing?

  Everything's Alright (The Mojos Cover)

The original didn't make me want to run out and listen to a bunch of The Mojos, I have to say. I mean, it's fine. But it's nowhere near as fun as Bowie's. Just saying. I couldn't blow the roof off my imaginary concert hall with that one.

And this is where I just about lose my mind. I got a feeling inside... it's a certain kind. If there is a song that kind of makes me... become someone else? It's this cover of I Can't Explain. If it's possible for meek little me to suddenly transform into someone not unlike Dr. Frank'N'furter, then that's pretty much what happens. If it's not, then I guess this song just... makes me horny in, like, a really weird way. Microphone set to slow flash... and handled rather suggestively during the performance.


I Can't Explain (The Who Cover)

Theoriginal was already one of my all-time favourite songs, so I was very curious to see what this was going to sound like. And I was not disappointed. Way to glam it up, Bowie. Emphatic slow clap while I lick my teeth and cross my legs in the other direction.

Um, yeah, is it warm in here? After that performance I need to chill out. The slow flash continues and the cooldown begins with Sorrow.

 
Sorrow (The Mersey's Cover)

Epic living room concert moment: I tried to find her 'cuz I can't resist her, I never knew just how much I missed her. There's just something about that bit that makes me go oooof! inside. You know that feeling. Oooof. Right there, in the stomach. The Merseys' version holds up rather well against Bowie's. They're both great.

Flash speed increases on the microphone for Shapes of Things. Off this album, this song gives I Can't Explain a run for its money where favourites are concerned. It's just so awesome. And I'm so thankful to Bowie for making me aware that this song exists, because The Yardbirds' version is also awesome.

 
Shapes of Things (The Yardbirds Cover)

Come tomorrow, will I be bolder than today? That's a line I take to heart. It's like, by asking the question, I'm opening up the possibility that one day I'll be able to overcome my ridiculous self-doubt and actually put something new out into the world.

Until then, I'll have to be content with expressing my boldness within the confines of my living room concert venue. I can go anyway, way I choose!
 
Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere (The Who Cover)

Once again, the original proves itself to be just as brilliant as the cover. Apparently, I love The Who. I think I always thought I liked them, but now I definitely know I love them. I may very well undertake a The Who Project when The Bowie Project is over. In fact, I think that's a very, very good idea!

Superfast flash, and the rockin' good times continue with Where Have All The Good Times Gone.


Where Have All The Good Times Gone (The Kinks Cover)

I like how Bowie changed the lyric in the first verse from never tried to sing to never tried to see. Because you know what? I know that feel. Sometimes, no matter how great a song is, a lyric just feels wrong. Sometimes you have to change it up a little to make it yours -- to make it true. Check out the Kinks'version here.

Finally, speaking of truth, my concert set list ends with a bit of The Boss. Apparently Growin' Up is a bonus track that wasn't included on the original release of Pin Ups. I think that's too bad, because it's a really nice way to end the album. Listening to this song, I definitely get the sense that this was chosen for a reason beyond Bowie simply liking it lots and lots. The lyrics support my theory:

I took month-long vacations in the stratosphere
and you know it's really hard to hold your breath
I swear I lost everything I ever loved or feared
I was the cosmic kid in full costume dress


Growin' Up (Bruce Springsteen Cover)

Um, yeah man, you were, like literally, that.

Sometimes you listen to a song and it's like it was written for you. And so it becomes yours. Pretty sure we've all experienced that. Even if you're the kind of person who is mainly impressed by how a song is performed in the key of whatever and was recorded with 1000 guitar solos layered on top of one another, and in order to play it live all the band members have to play 84-string guitars and wear tinfoil suits to get the right kind of sound bouncing off, I defy you to not  have "a song". That one song, conceived by someone else, that tells your story and makes you go ooooof in your stomach.

My story is told by hundreds of songs by hundreds of different artists. And while I don't pretend to know what goes on in David Bowie's mind, I am enamoured with the idea that Pin Ups is something not unlike that - a selection of songs that are fun to sing... but also tell some kind of truth.

And with that, my concert is over. I blow kisses to an imaginary crowd. My voice is raw. The battery in my microphone is dying and the flashes are growing faint. I've got to conserve some of its power for tomorrow night's show. It's been a blast. Thank you, and good night.

*****

So of course I was wondering, if I were to record an album of covers, what would be on it? It would be a collection of songs that are fun to sing, but that mean something to me, and tell my story. Pin Ups has 14 tunes on it (12 on the original release, plus 2 bonus tracks). Restricting myself to 14 songs, here is my very own Pin Ups! This was challenging, I have to say... somehow, the Smiths, the Jeff Healey Band, and Oasis didn't make the cut, which is astonishing. So I bet if I did this on a different day it would change. But this is how it came out today, and I'm sticking to it.
  1. Here Comes the Sun - The Beatles
  2. Mr. Jones - Counting Crows
  3. Everything You've Done Wrong - Sloan
  4. Get Off My Cloud - The Rolling Stones
  5. Cruel to be Kind - Nick Lowe
  6. Life on Mars? - David Bowie
  7. Your Ex-Lover is Dead - The Stars
  8. All Green - Clem Snide
  9. Stuttering - Ben's Brother
  10. My Favourite Chords - The Weakerthans
  11. Vincent (Starry Starry Night) - Don McLean
  12. Walk Right Back - The Everly Brothers
  13. You and Me - The Wannadies
  14. Driftwood - Travis
So now dear reader, I'm dying to know... how do you listen to music? What's on your cover album?

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Who'll love Aladdin Sane?


I'm a bit late arriving for the show, but the usher happily takes my ticket and opens the door to the theatre for me. I find my seat, careful not to scuff the fancy shoes of the other guests I tiptoe past. Finding my seat, I look at my watch -- it says 9:25... the show should be on by now. Suddenly, as if on cue to my thoughts, the theatre darkens. Conversation turns to whispering chatter. Then silence. A cough. Cue the floodlight. I glance quickly at the programme.

Ziggy Goes to America: A Surrealist Play in Two Acts

Cast of Characters:
·         Ziggy Stardust/Aladdin Sane
·         The Spiders from Mars - Ziggy's band
·         Shakey - party host, in the style of Jay Gatsby
·         The Jean Genie
·         The Only Survivor of the National People's Gang
·         Buddy - a cracked actor
·         Twig the Wonderkid
·         Film Director
·         Lady Grinning Soul

Act One


The curtain rises on "another" fab party at Shakey's New York City mansion. The spectacular guests are all sipping from glasses filled with something nice. Ziggy Stardust stands in a corner, surrounded by an old fashioned band of married men, looking up to him for encouragement. He tries to slide away, only to find himself handed a phone. He answers, glancing around the party for his friend the Jean Genie, who sits across the crowded room, smiling like a reptile.


Shakey waves his security man over. Someone who has taken something that isn't agreeing with anyone is escorted out of the party.  The room is manic and filled with mayhem, but Shakey handles it gracefully, like a man whose sole purpose in life is to throw parties. He walks like a jerk, but he's only taking care of the room.


(The concert and other footage in this video is all taken out of context, and as such appears rather comical in some places... so you might want to not watch it and just listen to the song. But once you've done that, watch the video, because it is kind of awesome.)

The party lasts all night. As morning inches ever closer, a sea of bodies lay passed out in various uncomfortable asanas. Rumours of sunrise spread through the mansion by those still awake, waking the others. The partygoers look around the room but Ziggy is nowhere to be seen. Some say he left and went far away. But Shakey tells them he's gone out to the hill behind the mansion to watch the sunrise.

Brandishing bottles of champagne, a mob of disheveled party guests marches out to find him. Ziggy sits on the grass, holding his knees, gazing at the horizon. As the first shard of light appears over the city, the champagne corks start popping, and sighs of ecstasy wave through the crowd. Ziggy stares wistfully off into the distance, ignoring the scene around him. He gets up and exits stage right. The curtain falls for the set change.


The curtain rises on Detroit City, Michigan. Go to Detroit, they said. It'll be epic, they said. Ziggy enters stage left, seemingly having arrived squarely in the middle of a local citywide gang war.  The black pavement shines wetly in the night, reflecting the street lights. The streets are empty, but not quiet. A crash here, a scream there, a siren in the distance. The only person he meets looks a lot like Che Guevara. He asks for an autograph. Before Ziggy can find a pen, the man jumps into his diesel van and makes his getaway from the nearing sirens. Seconds later, Ziggy's tour bus pulls up and the Spiders topple out of the door, grab him, and pull him inside. The bus squeals off down the road, speeding through a red traffic light. The curtain falls on Act One.


Intermission. I get up to stretch my legs and sip on a glass of wine. Wandering around the lobby of the theatre, I'm impressed by the architecture - high decorative ceilings, carved, gilded arches, everything shining in the appropriate places. Everyone is garbed in their finest attire. It's a perfect picture of what theatrical glamour is supposed to look like.

Then I trip on a small tear in the carpet, spilling some of my wine. Fittingly, the colour of the carpet  is cabernet. I stumble to the wall to stop myself from falling. The tiniest of hairline cracks is visible in the wall. I follow the crack to an elegantly framed playbill poster. I find myself wondering what lies behind it. But Act Two is about to begin, so I toss the rest of the wine down my throat and hurry back to my seat.

Act Two

The curtain opens on a drive-in theatre. A film is playing to a lot filled with cars, the actors' broad visages reflecting on the shiny car rooftops. One more car takes its place among the others. Ziggy has arrived to take in a flick before meeting the band at the venue in LA. Munching away on popcorn, he watches as the movie scene unfolds predictably.  A doe-eyed ingénue nicknamed Twig opens the door to Buddy, a hairy, burly hunk of a man. He shrugs and asks to stay. She sighs and turns her head away, but then steps aside and lets him into her room. As Buddy and Twig get it on, the cars around Ziggy begin to rock and sway, almost in unison to one another and the action on the screen.


Downstage right, the director yells CUT! and the actors on the screen gaze blankly in his direction, in an amusing twist on fourth-wall breakage. He's speaking to them in some other language, something they can't understand. The man who plays Buddy storms off the screen. The rest of the cast and crew stand around stunned, and the director exits stage right. Off stage, a phone rings. Buddy's agent answers, and Buddy tears him a new one. He's had enough. He's too old for this. He started out as a bonafide actor, and now look at him. He was supposed to be better than this - fuck it, he IS better than this. Oblivious to the call, and to the kids shagging in cars, Twig picks her nose. The curtain falls for the set change.


The curtain opens on Ziggy and the Spiders, pre-gig, in their dressing room. The clock on the wall says it's 9:25. We should be on by now. The band looks exhausted, drunk, a little out of it. The spoils of Mardi Gras -- all kinds of beads and boas, as well as bottles of Quaaludes and red wine -- are strewn about the room. Ziggy leans back in his chair and smokes his cigarette, staring at the clock. The sound of his fans screaming for him is audible in the background. No one moves or makes a sound, with the exception of  Ziggy's nervous breathing. Suddenly one of the Spiders screams with boredom


There is a knock on the dressing room door. One of the Spiders leans over from his place on the lounge and turns the knob, pulling the door open a crack. In walks a lady - the prettiest star you've ever seen. Everyone sits up and takes notice. Her presence stops time. She's hot, she's cool, and she doesn't need anyone, but she sashays into the room wearing her desires like gold lamé. Lady Grinning Soul splits herself into multiples - there is plenty of her to go around - and each man in the band promptly disappears into the recesses of his own mind to engage in a fantasy romp. 


Now the dressing room is empty, except for the beads, boas and bottles laying everywhere. It looks like the band made it to the stage after all. The clock falls from the wall and smashes, stuck at 9:25. The curtain falls on Act Two. Applause.

*****

As you can see, Aladdin Sane unfolded to me like a theatrical production. I read that apparently Bowie described the album as "Ziggy goes to America", and indeed I felt like I was looking at a version of America through his eyes -- watching as a nation destroys itself through its hedonistic obsession with  movie stars and glamourous parties fuelled by excessive drinking, drugs, and sex -- a mass consumption of all things lacking in nutritional value.

With each listen, I am carried away on a mental journey, zipping from city to city, watching Ziggy take notice of the cracks in the paint on the walls, and then peeling that paint away, revealing that they're wallpapered with pages from dirty magazines. And I feel like I'm watching it all from the seats of an ornately decorated theatre, decked out in red velvet and gold tassels.

I love Aladdin Sane. I find myself listening to it over and over, never skipping a song (though I omitted Let's Spend the Night Together and The Prettiest Star from this story, it's nothing personal against those particular songs). This album has everything. A motley cast of colourful characters set against a backdrop of pornography, booze, drugs, crooked chandeliers, and doo-wop backing vocals. 

Of all the songs, Time is my favourite.  The whole thing is sonic perfection, but these lyrics make me feel faint and lightheaded:

I had so many dreams
I had so many breakthroughs
But you, my love, were kind
but love has left you dreamless
The door to dreams was closed
Your park was real and greenless
Perhaps you're smiling now
Smiling through this darkness
But all I have to give is guilt for dreaming

I'd say "get out of my head", David Bowie... but, it's fine. You can stay. Please stay.

Monday, February 17, 2014

I can't help thinking about me.

Yes, I'm back again already. Normally I wouldn't do two posts so close together, but this has been simmering on the back burner for several weeks. 


I've had quite a bit of time with I Dig Everything: The 1966 Pye Singles, as I've been listening to it concurrently with the other albums since Christmas. So I thought that it was high time I wrote about it before I catch up with Ziggy in America in a couple weeks' time. Before I get into it, let me just say that it's quite hard to believe this is the same person who would eventually give us.. well... just about everything he did after this. Prepare yourself for David Bowie: The Teenage Mod.

*****
These songs take me back to a time and place I've been before, in a place called Sudbury, Ontario, from 1994-1999. But not because I was listening to them then... because I was living them. I left home twice. The first time, I left to go to university. I was 18. When that was finished I went home, only to leave again, this time for real and pretty much for good. I was 23. It was quite a trip. I was lovelorn, hopeful, and penniless. It was terrifying, yet exciting. 

Listening to these songs, I'm struck by the vulnerability expressed therein, the self-doubt of youth combined with a buoyant optimism for what's to come. And yet, there's a maturity about them that I sure as hell didn't possess at the age of 19.

Initially, this collection of songs made me want to write a letter to 19-year-old David Bowie -- a letter from the future, telling him that it's going to be alright. He'll make it on his own. Those he is leaving back home in the never-neverland will eat their words.

Then I realized that 19-year-old David Bowie doesn't need a letter from some Johnny-come-lately fan nearly half a century in the future. Because despite his fleeting insecurity and wonderment with the world around him, he knows. He knows it's going to be alright, that he's going to succeed.

There is something in his voice that defies the words he's singing. This coming of age story, while genuine in some respects, almost seems obligatory, as if to say, "Yes... I'm broke, struggling and living in the bad part of town. I have a long, long way to go, but I can see the future, so say what you want. You'll see."

Even though we've all lived it -- everyone of us who left home and went off to chase our dreams and make a life for ourselves -- no one can tell this story the way he can. So I'll let him tell it himself. All I've done is arrange the order of the songs here so that they follow more of a narrative.

Now I leave them all in the never-neverland
The station seems so cold, the ticket's in my hand
My girl calls my name... "Hi, Dave"
Drop in, see you around, come back, if you're this way again



Got a backstreet room in the bad part of town and I dig everything
I'd see people in the street below, who don't know where they're going
They don't dig anything
Everything's fine and I dig everything



I would walk with you
Talk with you, drink with you
If you drop that halo that you're wearing on the ground
Too bad, I'm not losing sleep




Hey, hey, good morning girl, but I can't pass the time of day
So go tell the man that collects the dues
That you saw a guy without any shoes
Who would do the job if he was built that way



Two by two, they go walking by
Hand in hand, they watch me cry
Lonely nights, I dream you're there
Morning sun and you're gone




[And I say to myself] I can't get what I want
[And I say to myself] And it makes me sad
[And I say to myself] I can't get what I want
[And I say to myself] And it makes me mad

And I say to myself that she shouldn't love anybody else in the world but me


The story is all too familiar, and crazy nostalgic. It feels just like yesterday that I myself left home, thrilled with the feeling of independence, so excited and optimistic about the future whilst being broke and looking for work, continuing to struggle while friends and colleagues succeeded, not giving up, listening to my intuition and rejecting opportunities that would lead me astray, feeling the crushing loneliness after leaving behind someone I loved, and then getting friendzoned by a new love I wanted. 

If only I knew what David Bowie seems to have known back then, that it would all work out somehow. Maybe not the way I expected, with some unfortunate mistakes and regrets, but with good things ahead. Of course, there are things I'd change if I could. If I could send a letter to my 19-year-old self, I know what I'd say: don't be careless with other people's hearts, don't spend all your cash, and don't wait until 2013 to start listening to David Bowie.

Friday, February 14, 2014

Here I stand, foot in hand, talking to my wall.

Myself in The Now, here. Blogging this may be a terrible idea, at the moment. You see, I've had a lot of scotch this evening. But I've had two weeks with The Man Who Sold The World, and since that is the allotted amount of time I've been giving myself with each album, I scheduled tonight for blogging about it. I do have an outline that I drafted earlier this week. Alright, let's do this.


*****

Crazy isn't always crazy. I'm pretty sure all sane people, or at least people who would call themselves sane, have experienced moments where they have in fact genuinely wondered if they're crazy. It's happened to me. No need to get into it, now. But chances are it's happened to you, too. And of course, we also wonder via the age-old question "do crazy people know they're crazy?" and my answer to that is "sometimes". Now where was I going with this? Oh, right.

Mental insanity is a matter of degree, and of opinion. As I listened to The Man Who Sold The World, I realized there is really only one way to tell this story, the stories of a group of people  (or is it one person, with multiple personalities?) who live within the confines of this album. 

Hearing the voices presented herein is like wandering through the halls of an asylum for the mentally insane. You pass one room, and hear the manic wailing of a man who has killed too many (against his will?) in the throes of war. You walk past another and hear the threats of a man who claims he will harm himself if you try to release him back into the world.

The voices are all so different, and yet there is something that binds them together. You could be in an asylum, hearing the stories of different people... or you could be in the mind of one, hearing the very same. Some of them know each other... most of them don't.

Walking down the neural hallway, I first hear the story of a man who seems to have some inclination that something is not quite right, but no formal acknowledgement of this. He sees himself as a monster sleeping by a tree and has a brief conversation with himself before finding himself "getting it on" with... God? The Devil? Kind of hard to say. God (He's a young man, too) and the Devil may in fact be the same being, as described in The Width of a Circle.


It's difficult to know if the man in that room is scarred by the experience. His cries of do it again, do it again, coupled with the warnings of turn around, go back! make it impossible to discern the nature of the encounter.

Continuing down the corridor, the self-harmer yells out from his cell, I can fly, I will scream, I will break my arm, I will do me harm! It's obvious that this poor schizophrenic soul has an awareness of his condition that seems to have made him acutely aware of what is happening, and terrified of what will happen to him if he's allowed to live among the free men. He accepts his condition, and his medication, even embraces it. 


Crazy isn't always sad, or angry, or even obvious. Crazy is sometimes a bit happy. When I arrive at the door of this next cell, I'm relieved for a bit of a break from the ominous. This man's a bit bipolar, and a bit OCD, with his repetition of the same phrases over and over, but he cheers me up some... until his medication starts to wear off near the end of our encounter. Happy bonkers David Bowie is happy. And Bonkers. Pack your pack horse up and rest up here, on Black Country Rock.


As the nurses run in to the cell to administer a dose of lithium to our giddy friend, I move along down the hall. Here I listen to the ramblings of a man who is deeply, majorly depressed. I can barely hear the almost audible sighs that emit from his whispering throat. I've borrowed your time and I'm sorry I called, but the thought just occurred that we're nobody's children at all, after all. Sad David Bowie is sad.


Before I'm even past the room, I begin to hear the manic screeches of a man traumatized by the war in Vietnam. In all honesty, this poor soul is what happens when you take someone with an already fragile mind and you give him a gun and tell him someone befitting a certain description is the enemy. Here he is in a small grey room, and he's convinced he's still got his gun, and he barely sleeps, for he spends his nights chasing "the enemy", slicing them 'til they're running red. I'm sad for him, but also glad he's living within these walls.


I'm a little antsy to get away from this shrill-voiced maniac. I make my way down the corridor and find myself engrossed in the ramblings of a man who describes a world where people have put a saviour machine in control of our collective destiny. What's particularly intriguing about this man is the way he switches between personalities from minute to minute. The deep wailing, mourning voice of the saviour machine himself sends chills down my spine, and there is even a moment where I'm convinced it's real... HE's real, and he's about to unleash some terrible plague or war upon us for his own amusement.


As I near the end of the asylum hall, I come face to face with the man himself, The Man Who Sold The World. This man is quite aware of the multiple personalities that exist within the walls of his cranium, but sadly, he's not sure who is living and who may have died, a long long time ago. Also sadly, he seems to be the most sane of the men here, someone who doesn't really belong here, but has given up the fight.


(And because I feel the need to address this, apparently there are still people who don't know that Bowie's was the original version of The Man Who Sold The World. The above happened in 1970; the good but rather superficial - stripped down, if you're a Nirvana fan -  Nirvana cover happened in 1993. You do the math. Yes, I'm Bowie-snobbing, deal with it.)

There are other men, other personalities, on this album who scare me and I'm not willing to go there, not even in my uninhibited scotch-drunk state. I can hear them throwing themselves against their cell doors and rattling the bars on their windows, trying to get at me. It's strange how a place filled with paranoid beings can fill you up with your own particular brand of paranoia.

*****
Myself in the Now, back again. I need to tell you that this album, as much as I enjoy it, has actually cast a whole new perspective onto my previous listening of Hunky Dory. What then seemed like floating through a disjointed dream that came from someone else's mind now seems like an amusement park, filled with unexpected and joyful rides, experiences and characters. Another symptom of my listening to the albums out of order. But I'm now putting it all into perspective, and to make this easier for you, dear reader, I have created a "Chronological Journey" tab, so that you might choose to listen to the albums, and Bowie's musical development, in the way in which it occurred, if you should so choose.

And now, that patch of floor looks really comfortable. Fond adieu... until next time.

Friday, January 31, 2014

Turn and face the strange.

I'm a little dazed and confused... but maybe that's just Hunky Dory.



That's where I've been these past couple of weeks. I'd like to describe to you what it looks like, feels like, and sounds like... I really would. But just when I think I get it, it changes and slips away, like a dream. But this dream is not mine. I'm floating through the deep waters of someone else's dreams, trying to find my way to the surface. It's not entirely dark, though the light only filters through fleetingly. I swim toward it only to find that I'm swimming toward something on the bottom that is merely reflecting.

The only way I have been able to begin to grasp Bowie's Hunky Dory (and my grasp is precarious at best) has been to shuffle the songs. I am aware that songs are arranged on an album in a specific way, for a specific reason. But in this case, each song is it's own complete whole; one is not dependent on another. It's as if they were written and sung by different people. It's quite hard to believe that the glammy Oh! You Pretty Things is sung by the same person belting out Life on Mars?, and then flouncing along to Fill Your Heart. Throwing the songs out of order each time I listen seems to impose a kind of order onto the experience, giving me a greater sense of comfort, alleviating the disorientation to some degree.

(May I just say that I admit skipping from 1967's David Bowie to 1972's The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars was a mistake, and is probably the reason why I'm so desperately searching for cohesion among the tracks on 1971's Hunky Dory. I did it wrong. I get it. I take full responsibility.)

Now let me do my best to replay the dream sequence for you. It's disjointed, but there are many wonderful moments, beginning with Life On Mars?.


Not only am I convinced that this is probably the best song ever composed and recorded, but I'm deeply in love with the ethereal creature in the video. You know what? I despise the word video. This is a short art film. Anyway, I can't stop singing it. Loudly. I sing it about eight times a day. That is not an exaggeration. I think my neighbours are probably plotting my death, which is fine with me because if I were to die while singing Life On Mars?, at least I'd meet my end while doing something wonderful and worthwhile, instead of choking to death on a piece of chicken or something.

I hate when Life On Mars? is over. I do enjoy when Eight Line Poem follows:

Tactful cactus by your window
Surveys the prairie of your room
Mobile spins to its collision
Clara puts her head between her paws

They've opened shops down west side
Will all the cacti find a home?
But the key to the city
Is in the sun that pins the branches to the sky


My sister is currently in Tucson, Arizona for a work conference, and today she sent me this photograph of this blatantly "untactful cactus". Look at it, smugly giving the world the finger.


When that's over, I'm very much ready to rock out. Song for Bob Dylan works, but if you've been reading this blog you might have learned that I am impatient and I kind of want to... well... blow my proverbial load RIGHT FUCKING NOW (dear me, where did that come from?!) So I go to Queen Bitch.


This is really the one song on Hunky Dory that hints at what's to come with Ziggy waiting just offstage. According to the Queen Bitch wikipedia page, this song was the inspiration for the Killers' Mr. Brightside. As I'm also a big fan of the Killers (they are brilliant live, by the way), I of course did a lyrical as well as an aural comparison and I do in fact detect a few similarities in structure, lyrics, and theme (a man who has fallen for a lady-of-the-night and is jealous of the time she spends with her johns, even more so when his own friend gets a date with her - at least, that's my interpretation).

When I'm listening to Hunky Dory on shuffle, inevitably things take a nightmarish turn when Andy Warhol begins. I love Warhol's work. I want to love this song. I simply don't. There, I've said it. I have made myself listen to it a number of times, to try and find one element of it that I can enjoy, and it continues to elude me. Sorry. This is thankfully one nightmare from which I can pull myself out. 

If there is one song on this album that is what I would refer to as a "skip-to" it's Changes. I can handle Changes anytime. I don't care what I'm listening to. If I need to skip a song, any song, Changes will always be accepted and enjoyed. Changes is like that part of a dream sequence where you are suddenly someplace familiar and cherished, and there is a large plate of brownies in front of you, and you can eat as many of them as you want because it's a dream after all, and dream brownies don't make you fat. 


This is the wrong album cover. It's wrong. I don't like it when things are wrong. Please just ignore it and listen to the song.


From grandma's brownies to aliens. It made sense in the dream. This is the glory that is Oh! You Pretty Things.


Only one person could write a song this brilliant about aliens coming down to take over Earth. The History Channel should really think about adopting this song as for their main theme and getting some of their credibility back.

After this I like to brain out to the philosophical Quicksand, chill out with the ghostly Bewlay Brothers, and then maybe prance about to the light and fluffy Fill Your Heart. Finally, like any good dream, things sometimes end on a kooky note.


This song is pretty adorable. I read something somewhere on the interwebs that David Bowie was listening to Neil Young when his son was born, and this song was the result. I definitely hear a Neil Young influence in the bass line and the chorus melody, though I'm having trouble pinning it to a specific song. Do you hear it, too? If anyone out there can verify that a Neil Young song inspired Kooks and identify the song I'd love to hear from you.

So. Cacti... prostitutes... aliens... babies... jealousy... disenfranchisement... love... art... Ultimately, the Hunky Dory dream is exactly that... it's a good dream, albeit a strange one, with layers upon layers of surreal images, many very beautiful, floating in a vast sea of ideas and musings. Despite my ongoing bewilderment, it is a dream that I find myself falling into and out of easily, even if it does leave me wondering who exactly this David Bowie creature really is. And so the journey continues...