What's the best David Bowie studio album

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Almost chose Low... then almost chose Station to Station. Ended up choosing Hunky Dory.

And Alfred is correct. "Strangers When We Meet" is an amazing song.

novaheat, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 02:27 (seventeen years ago) link

Cuz it doesn't have enough range and, when called upon to emote in settings demanding commitment it often signals his commitment to the genre instead of the emotion he's trying to convey.


these critics are stupid! compare "kooks" with "wild is the wind". sheesh!

this poll sucks! i seriously cannot choose between ziggy and low. the opposite ends of the bowie spectrum are the reasons why i love him. not to mention hunky dory and scary monsters and earthling and diamond dogs and everything.

ps: i like that if you use < or > a little thing pops up reminding you that nuILX does not like html!

Emily Bjurnhjam, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 03:35 (seventeen years ago) link

alfred, any examples of bowie failing to convey emotions?

Tim Ellison, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 04:16 (seventeen years ago) link

Why do critics always say Bowie doesn't have a good voice?

Cuz it doesn't have enough range and, when called upon to emote in settings demanding commitment it often signals his commitment to the genre instead of the emotion he's trying to convey.


Er...ever tried singing "Life on Mars?"or "Five Years" ?

i, grey, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 06:39 (seventeen years ago) link

I picked OUTSIDE, of course,

i, grey, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 06:40 (seventeen years ago) link

Outside is wonderful. I've long since given up on the promised trilogy to be completed... but hope springs eternal...

novaheat, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 07:32 (seventeen years ago) link

too damn tuff.
i love just about everything on this list. but plumped for the cuddlesome Hunky Dory in the end, as the love of that album probably sealed my relationship with my wife ..

mark e, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 07:55 (seventeen years ago) link

Alfred I've heard you say some wrong shit before but Bowie's range is well above average for pop - as for "Time," I dunno, as a Brecht-Weill nod it's pretty fucking OTM, and the nasal 'AAAH' in 'demaaaahhning Billy Dolls' is quite delish

Hans Rott, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 08:59 (seventeen years ago) link

I voted for Low.

for Tim: you should check the other Be Bop Deluxe albums, and Doctors Of Madness too!

Marco Damiani, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 10:35 (seventeen years ago) link

Station To Station is where it all comes together most perfectly - musically, stylistically, thematically. Station To Station is the essence of what 70s Bowie was about.

underpants of the gods, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 10:43 (seventeen years ago) link

"Station To Station is the essence of what 70s Bowie was about"

which is drugs as they say bout the session of this

Zeno, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 10:48 (seventeen years ago) link

Drugs, yeah, more specifically cocaine, which exaggerated all the elements of the 70s Bowie persona - the alienation, paranoia, delusions of grandeur, etc. And it's all there on STS. As is Bowie's 70s musical program of genres bleeding into one another, with rock and funk meeting in a head on collision.

underpants of the gods, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 10:57 (seventeen years ago) link

The other thing about STS is it's the only 70s Bowie album where the cover is not the worst song. In fact, the over-the-top delivery of Wild Is The Wind is really essential to the whole feel of the album.

Also the album art is sublime.

underpants of the gods, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 11:00 (seventeen years ago) link

alfred, any examples of bowie failing to convey emotions?

I listed a couple already. Also: "Win," "Someone Up There Likes Me." It's better just to admit that, at his best, Bowie sounds really cool, but vocal proficiency has nothing to do with it.

Newbies should seek the Bowie vs. Prince thread. Somebody (Matos, perhaps) summed it up: "Prince can sing, Bowie can't; therefore, Prince wins."

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 11:10 (seventeen years ago) link

Er...ever tried singing "Life on Mars?"or "Five Years" ?

That's why I didn't dis them!

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 11:19 (seventeen years ago) link

I voted for "Young Americans" - there are four or five others I like as much but I suspected YA would need the vote more.

Groke, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 11:21 (seventeen years ago) link

i almost took that tactic with ALADDIN SANE which is my fave in a romantic sense, but at the end of the day FIVE YEARS isn't on it.

pisces, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 11:25 (seventeen years ago) link

I really disagree with Alfred Lord etc that "Win" is unsuccessful emoting - it's a good example of Bowie using his slightly glassy approach to emotion to serve the exhausted ends of the song. "Somebody Up There Likes Me" I'll give him, though.

Groke, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 11:28 (seventeen years ago) link

Honestly, I thought we all took his vocal deficiencies for granted! I hear whatever the fuck he does on "Wild is the Wind" and think, "Ooh, great sound effect" (and it's a better performance than goddamn "Time").

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 11:31 (seventeen years ago) link

In fact, sod it, let's procrastinate more:

David Bowie - god knows, like "The London Boys"
Space Oddity - rubbish from soup to nuts
The Man Who Sold The World - endearingly ridiculous, not heard for 20 years!
Hunky Dory - excellent: his most alive and awkward recd.
The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars - yes yes a classic but I only really listen to side 1
Alladin Sane - bit too Weimar
Pin-Ups - cock
Diamond Dogs - funny and overblown, "Skeletal Fam" actually scared me at 13
Young Americans - mmmmm plastic soul
Station To Station - magnificent nonsense
Low - side 1 redefined pop
"Heroes" - the Arabia one is funny. I am stony-hearted re. title track.
Lodger - need to hear again
Scary Monsters - heavy-handed
Let's Dance - light-footed
Tonight - my first Bowie album! nostalgia ruthlessly beaten down
Never Let Me Down - embarassing
Tin Machine - never actually heard!
Tin Machine 2 - ditto!
Black Tie White Noise - gave up at this point

Groke, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 11:33 (seventeen years ago) link

Regarding Bowie's singing, he has a tendency at times to sing badly on purpose because, well, it fits the mood, I guess. So to say.

As mentioned elsewhere, "Life On Mars" and "Five Years" are evidence enough he has a marvellous voice when he uses it to full effect without trying anything else. And I guess you might add "All You Pretty Things" too - even though he misses several high notes in that one it is still a brilliant example of his range and expressiveness.

Geir Hongro, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 11:59 (seventeen years ago) link

really one can only say "Bowie can't sing" if one means, by "sing," something other than is generally meant by the verb

Hans Rott, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 13:19 (seventeen years ago) link

Well, I do speak English.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 13:25 (seventeen years ago) link

Yeah, there's some vocals rockism going on in this thread:

, when called upon to emote in settings demanding commitment it often signals his commitment to the genre instead of the emotion he's trying to convey

I sort of agree (for some of his records, like Young Americans), but you're saying it like it's a bad thing. It's half the drama in itself, that tension between the lyrics and the voice. As the man himself says, ain't there one damn song that can make him break down and cry?

underpants of the gods, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 13:28 (seventeen years ago) link

No rockism! He's best when he doesn't try so hard, or deliberately makes himself into a cartoon (I get a kick out of "Across the Universe" and "Wild is the Wind"). If you relisten to, say, "Fantastic Voyage," there's a better marriage between vocal and lyrical melodrama than on "Time."

When his physical range doesn't match his emotional range, you best run for cover.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 13:34 (seventeen years ago) link

Hunky Dory = dark horse candidate??

will, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 14:11 (seventeen years ago) link

i voted ziggy.

Erroneous Botch, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 15:03 (seventeen years ago) link

This all strikes me as quite exotic news, this Bowie-can't-sing thing.

He has a solid two and a half (or more) full voice register, plus a strong falsetto and a sort of low head tone voice.

He can sing characters with style to match--the nasal, very high Ziggy voice, the Weill-y STS voice, the strangualted death-art voice of Outside and so on, the Scott Walkerisms of "Absolute Beginers".

As the REALITY tour DVD shows, he can do all of this for two hours running...at age 59 or so at the time.

The 'coldness' thing is an obvious technique--like luring desirables with feigned disinterest, or portraying misery by aping numbness.

The Prince vs Bowie thing doesn't make sense on an apples/oranges level. They both come from insanely different backgrounds with utterly different athestics, androgenyand character generation being the only real link, and even then, the methods are modes are in other worlds entirely.

i, grey, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 15:18 (seventeen years ago) link

the strangualted death-art voice of Outside and so on, the Scott Walkerisms of "Absolute Beginers"

If you like Scott Walker and strangled death-art.

But, no, Prince vs Bowie never made sense either.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 15:20 (seventeen years ago) link

In the case of "Young Americans" I would say that, no, David Bowie is no soul singer, and he cannot possibly be one. Which is also part (but only part) of the reason why that album doesn't quite work and is my least favourite 70s album by Bowie other than "Pin-Ups".

Geir Hongro, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 15:36 (seventeen years ago) link

I really disagree with Alfred Lord etc that "Win" is unsuccessful emoting

-----

groke O.T.M.

pisces, Wednesday, 11 April 2007 16:50 (seventeen years ago) link

I agree with Geir , in that Young Americans is my least fave album of that period.

Brigadier Lethbridge-Pfunkboy, Thursday, 12 April 2007 11:58 (seventeen years ago) link

I agree with Geir too................................ mummy, I'm scared

Tom D., Thursday, 12 April 2007 12:02 (seventeen years ago) link

... tho I haven't actually heard "Pin Ups" since I was about 12

Tom D., Thursday, 12 April 2007 12:03 (seventeen years ago) link

I consider "Pin Ups" worse anyway. I mean, not that the versions are bad or anything, just that a covers album is rarely a good idea other than for crooners.

Geir Hongro, Thursday, 12 April 2007 12:22 (seventeen years ago) link

I went for Hunky Dory

zeus, Thursday, 12 April 2007 20:37 (seventeen years ago) link

I change my mind every day.

Brigadier Lethbridge-Pfunkboy, Thursday, 12 April 2007 21:35 (seventeen years ago) link

Hmmm. Looks like we need somewhat shorter voting times for these threads to stay on top. (Well, not as short as the Parliament poll, but... ;))

Geir Hongro, Thursday, 19 April 2007 11:47 (seventeen years ago) link

Hmmm. I want to hear a persuasive definition of 'good singing' that utterly excludes Bowie.

If it sounds good, then... um?! And is not singing in fact TOTALLY a 'sound effect' -- an effect achieved using, well, sound?

Stylisations that are outside of 'orthodoxy' are bad singing in the way that having a non-Queen's accent is bad talking, which is all well and good if you buy into those values I spose. (I think they're balls, personally.)

DB had a great range and a nice collection of styles in earlier yrs. Age/drugs/fags kinda stunted the vocal range a fair bit, tho' his heart-attack-inducing prowess over 110+ two-hour shows in '03/04 still impresses. He put a lot, i.e. probably too much, into all that.

So, IMO, a GREAT voice. He can go from Baal to Tin Machine (not that I like Tin Machine much) without looking stupid on either. I can't think of many others who can claim that.

Dunno what album to vote for, tho'.

chrissie_, Thursday, 19 April 2007 12:40 (seventeen years ago) link

BTW, I think all responses here should now begin 'Hmmm'. ;-)

chrissie_, Thursday, 19 April 2007 12:41 (seventeen years ago) link

If it sounds good, then... um?! And is not singing in fact TOTALLY a 'sound effect' -- an effect achieved using, well, sound?

Trouble is, this remains completely subjective.

There are also objective criteria when it comes to technically good singers - things such as range, power, not to mention the ability to hit the notes properly. David Bowie has all of these elements. When he wants to. Which undisputedly makes him a good singer. That's not to say everyone will neccessarily like his voice from a subjective point of view though. And his "artistic" way of using his voice may also put some people off.

Geir Hongro, Thursday, 19 April 2007 12:47 (seventeen years ago) link

Hmmm. Favorite Bowie album changes regularly with Low, Diamond Dogs, Station, Lodger, Hunky Dory being the top five. Of those I gather that Low has been my fave most of the times I've polled myself, so that gets my vote. Today.

willem, Thursday, 19 April 2007 12:48 (seventeen years ago) link

Hmmm... it is worth saying that -- DB has demonstrated good 'technical' skill on some of the material (that's why I mentioned Baal, which obviously is a much more straight, musical theatre performance and done quite credibly). But the subjective area means more to me. I like it even when he intentionally sings off-key... the song Time was mentioned: clearly, DB is singing that way deliberately, and it's wonderful... (Subjectively speaking.)

Still can't pick an album. Dogs? "Heroes"? Sadly, it will be pre-Let's Dance, and I say that even tho I'm a supporter of a lot of the stuff 1993-on (Reality is hard to defend, mind you).

chrissie_, Thursday, 19 April 2007 14:06 (seventeen years ago) link

Jesus Christ, I was just about to begin a post with "Hmmm" too, without even looking at willem's or chrissie's posts directly above, no shit!

Myonga Vön Bontee, Thursday, 19 April 2007 16:37 (seventeen years ago) link

Anyways...

Hmmm. I'd have leapt at the chance to match Side One of Alladin Sane ("Panic In Detroit" my alltime fave) with Side Two of Man Who Sold The World, but that's cheating. So I'll go with boring ol' Ziggy. Very impressive achievement at the time, to have been so campy/theatrical yet convincingly hard-rocking.

Myonga Vön Bontee, Thursday, 19 April 2007 17:42 (seventeen years ago) link

Diamond Dogs

o. nate, Thursday, 19 April 2007 17:51 (seventeen years ago) link

Another vote for Hunky Dory

darin, Thursday, 19 April 2007 18:43 (seventeen years ago) link

I went for Hunky Dory too.

The best thing about his voice is the range of emotions and atmospheres he can get out of it - his singing can be alien and otherworldly one minute and warm and homely the next, while always retaining its unmistakeable Bowieness. My current favourite moment is when he drops from the top to the bottom of his range for the start of the second verse of Fantastic Voyage

chap, Thursday, 19 April 2007 19:01 (seventeen years ago) link

looks like Hunk Dory's going to smoke the competition. I kinda surprised...

will, Thursday, 19 April 2007 19:17 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm

will, Thursday, 19 April 2007 19:17 (seventeen years ago) link

the bowie songs on TMII are great. I've skipped over the Sales songs consistently since the album came out.

akm, Monday, 1 June 2020 16:44 (three years ago) link

let's dance is a wonderful album. if only he hadn't tried to follow it up with a 'soundalike' album that didn't sound like it and was super weak as far as songs

akm, Monday, 1 June 2020 16:45 (three years ago) link

"Goodbye Mr. Ed" and "Shopping for Girls" >>>>>>>>>>>>>> the first Tin Machine album

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 1 June 2020 16:49 (three years ago) link

I have a weird relationship to Tin Machine— I seem to be the lone asserted that “Reeves Gabrels was Bowie’s best guitarist”, iirc that was the case when it was polled.

My adoration for Gabrels is not just the fact that he technically stands head and shoulders above Alomar and Ronson— and Fripp never really cut loose on a Bowie album— Gabrels was taken on during the most challenging imaginable comeback, Bowie in his 40s, trying to be a “lad” and failing, then trying to do pop-industrial (and knocking it out of the park), then trying to do rock-jungle (and turning in an admirable effort). (Hours, the album, does not exist to me— I listened to it once and never again.)

So, Tin Machine tries so hard, and does a lot right, and Gabrels (in particular) is carrying much of the weight, but it’s where it falls short that destroys it and makes it “legacy souring”. Bowie has always been a thief, but with Tin Machine he is along Black Francis so excruciatingly, and getting it so wrong, that it’s absolute toxic waste music. The worst offender afaic “Baby Universal”— it’s the sound of a standup comedian doing bad impressions, a grotesque misinterpretation of What Is Good about early Pixies, Charles frankly should have lodged a complaint

flamboyant goon tie included, Monday, 1 June 2020 17:48 (three years ago) link

*aping, not along

flamboyant goon tie included, Monday, 1 June 2020 17:49 (three years ago) link

You seem to have quite a lot of eccentric opinions when it comes to Bowie, if you don't mind me saying so.

Is Lou Reed a Good Singer? (Tom D.), Monday, 1 June 2020 17:50 (three years ago) link

Just bc I listen extensively and deeply and disagree with dogmatic precepts about Bowie's discography doesn't make me eccentric. I still fundamentally like all the same albums everybody else likes (I just think Outside is really the best), and dislike the same albums albums everybody else dislikes (except Heroes which I think is garbage aside from the title track)

flamboyant goon tie included, Monday, 1 June 2020 18:18 (three years ago) link

I was moved to try and recall an old Bowie website that had polls on his best songs and albums, conducted in the 90s-- this was the poll that ranked "Ashes To Ashes" as #1 and "Quicksand" as #2. I couldn't remember anything about the website except that the webmaster described Mick's guitar on Aladdin Sane as "the sound of a guitar smashing atoms in the basement". So I Googled "smashing atoms in the basement". This was the sole result:

Internet nostalgia

flamboyant goon tie included, Monday, 1 June 2020 18:20 (three years ago) link

Versatility isn't a be-all end-all, but Alomar's as a funk guitarist who abjured most fun cliches, not to mention the protean way in which he forced the material to accommodate to him on albums as different as Low and 1. Outside, impresses the hell out of me.

A lot of Gabrels' work grates, but that's the point -- Bowie wanted ugly sounds.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 1 June 2020 18:26 (three years ago) link

fun = funk

lol

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 1 June 2020 18:27 (three years ago) link

a little confused by fgti's dislike of heroes, i don't think it's as good as the two before it but it's still certainly a top 5 bowie album for me. i really love "beauty and the beast".

on the other hand i've always felt hunky dory is quite overrated. it's solid enough but i've never thought of it as a masterpiece as many seem to. the section from "fill your heart" through to "song for bob dylan" is pretty weak and only "quicksand" is really up there with my favourite bowie songs.

ufo, Monday, 1 June 2020 18:38 (three years ago) link

what was bowie's favorite of his own albums?

reggie (qualmsley), Monday, 1 June 2020 18:53 (three years ago) link

Strikes me as the sort of guy who just answer, "The last one".

Is Lou Reed a Good Singer? (Tom D.), Monday, 1 June 2020 19:05 (three years ago) link

nice to see lodger creeping up the lists (lists nevertheless remaining bad)

or "the lodger" as i inexplicably titled it when i pitched for its full reappraisal 18 long years ago: Is THE LODGER David Bowie's best record?

mark s, Monday, 1 June 2020 19:05 (three years ago) link

The Hunky Dory just ahead The Low according to ILX.

Is Lou Reed a Good Singer? (Tom D.), Monday, 1 June 2020 19:08 (three years ago) link

what was bowie's favorite of his own albums?

― reggie (qualmsley), Monday, June 1, 2020

The Buddha of Suburbia.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 1 June 2020 19:08 (three years ago) link

I love "Beauty And The Beast". I love "Heroes"-- two top-class songs. The rest of the album is completely forgettable and/or actively awful ("Joe The Lion", "...Arabia"). I feel like "Heroes" popularity upon release was people making up for being non-plussed by Low, maybe?

I just mistyped just now and feel compelled to name my own next album "Herpes"

flamboyant goon tie included, Monday, 1 June 2020 19:08 (three years ago) link

"Joe the Lion" would make my top ten of Bowie songs tah-day. The Fripp intro is one of his and Bowie's best.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 1 June 2020 19:10 (three years ago) link

I had a conversation with Bowie and Garson in 2005 where I spoke about how much I admired Outside and asked if he'd ever consider revisiting that sound, songs from that album, and they both got really excited by the suggestion, and said they'd had conversations exactly to that effect. I know Bowie felt Earthling was way better than people gave him credit for, and I tend to agree. And I don't know Alfred if you're being facetious but I think you're actually correct, I think I remember reading that Bowie rated that album highly-- I actually have never heard it at all :o

flamboyant goon tie included, Monday, 1 June 2020 19:12 (three years ago) link

My top 3 Bowie albums would be 'Diamond Dogs', 'Low' & 'Outside'. Nothing really out of the ordinary there.

But as for my more unusual opinions, one album I'd immediately put into the next tier would be the dreamy, pretty thing known as 'Space Oddity' - this is one that doesn't get enough acclaim in my opinion. I love it to bits.

I have to say that think quite highly of 'Never Let Me Down' - I like it much better than Bowie himself did. I also think 'Tin Machine II' has a lot of really good songs on it, especially 'Amlapura' and 'Shopping for Girls'.

I still find value even in what I think to be his weakest work, which would probably be the first Tin Machine. 'Hours' is an album I praised massively when it was released but thought less and less of as time went by, to the point where I just felt disillusioned and came to think of it as Bowie's weakest; writing my initial reaction down to being a very naïve overoptimistic 19y old back then. However, in recent years it grew on me again, especially due to 'New Angels of Promise' and 'If I'm Dreaming My Life' - I'm quite loving those two tracks.

Valentijn, Monday, 1 June 2020 20:02 (three years ago) link

Great post fgti, I love Earthling too, especially that Wonder / Satellites / Letter / Tibet opening salvo. It shares a lot of DNA with ★.
I cannot fucking BELIEVE that The Man Who Sold the World is FIFTY years old now (like me). And Hunky Dory will be 50 next year. They seem 20 years old at most.

an incoherent crustacean (MatthewK), Monday, 1 June 2020 22:15 (three years ago) link

With all the goodwill for Outside it’s a shame that I missed his last date here which was on that tour (Dec 1995, I was 12); setlist was predictably heavy on the new album along with various 70s staples

Master of Treacle, Tuesday, 2 June 2020 00:57 (three years ago) link

I'll try a "Consumer Guide" style assessment, leaving out the ones I've yet to explore in-depth:

David Bowie (1967) - dud
David Bowie (1969, a.k.a. Space Oddity) - choice cut: "Space Oddity"
The Man Who Sold The World - ("The Width of a Circle," "All the Madmen," "Black Country Rock" and the title track) **
Hunky Dory - A
The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars - A
Live Santa Monica '72 - A
Aladdin Sane - A
Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars - film gets an A-, soundtrack is a B+
Pin-Ups - ("Sorrow") *
Diamond Dogs - choice cuts: title track and "Rebel Rebel." I strongly prefer the outtake "1984/Dodo" (with Ronson et al) over what was used here
David Live - C
Young Americans - (title track, "Fame") ***, try to get a version with the outtakes from "The Gouster" (but not the alternate mixes, which are disposable)
Station To Station - A
Live Nassau Coliseum '76 - A
Low - A
"Heroes" - A
Stage - B
Welcome to the Blackout (Live London '78) - A
Lodger - A-
Scary Monsters - A
Let's Dance - choice cuts: title track, "China Girl," "Modern Love" (you're not really missing anything if you have to settle for 45 edits), but some reissues helpfully include "Under Pressure"
Tonight - choice cuts: "Blue Jean," "Loving the Alien," but reissues helpfully include "This Is Not America" and "Absolute Beginners" as bonus tracks
Never Let Me Down - choice cut: title track, maybe "Day-In Day-Out" and the 'MM Remix' of "Time Will Crawl" for those who really want to dig further for gems
Tin Machine - Neither
Tin Machine 2 - Neither
Black Tie White Noise - choice cuts: "I Know It's Gonna Happen Someday," "Jump They Say"
1. Outside - Neither, the single version of "Hallo Spaceboy" (remixed by the Pet Shop Boys) is charming if innocuous
Earthling - choice cuts: "Little Wonder," "I'm Afraid of Americans" (the latter best-heard and best-known for the single version remixed by Trent Reznor)
'hours...' - choice cut: "Thursday's Child"
"Heathen" - ("Slow Burn," "Afraid," "Everyone Says 'Hi'") ** (basically the first album since SCARY MONSTERS that might be worth having)
"Reality" - ("New Killer Star," "Never Get Old," "She'll Drive the Big Car," "Bring Me the Disco King") **
A Reality Tour - the concert DVD is an A-, as 'legacy' tours go, you can't do much better
The Next Day - B+
Blackstar - A-

birdistheword, Tuesday, 2 June 2020 17:12 (three years ago) link


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