David Bowie - Hunky Dory (1971/1990)

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David Bowie - Hunky Dory (1971/1990)

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1 	Changes 	3:33
2 	Oh! You Pretty Things 	3:12
3 	Eight Line Poem 	2:53
4 	Life On Mars? 	3:48
5 	Kooks 	2:49
6 	Quicksand 	5:03
7 	Fill Your Heart		3:07
8 	Andy Warhol 	3:53
9 	Song For Bob Dylan 	4:12
10 	Queen Bitch 	3:13
11 	The Bewlay Brothers 	5:21
12 	Bombers (Previously Unreleased)	2:38
13 	The Supermen (Alternate Version)	2:41
14 	Quicksand (Demo Version)	4:43
15 	The Bewlay Brothers (Alternate Mix)	5:19

David Bowie – Vocals, Guitar, Saxophone, Piano
Mick Ronson – Guitar
Trevor Bolder – Bass
Rick Wakeman – Piano
Mick Woodmansey – Drums

 

After the freakish hard rock of The Man Who Sold the World, David Bowie returned to singer/songwriter territory on Hunky Dory. Not only did the album boast more folky songs ("Song for Bob Dylan," "The Bewlay Brothers"), but he again flirted with Anthony Newley-esque dancehall music ("Kooks," "Fill Your Heart"), seemingly leaving heavy metal behind. As a result, Hunky Dory is a kaleidoscopic array of pop styles, tied together only by Bowie's sense of vision: a sweeping, cinematic mélange of high and low art, ambiguous sexuality, kitsch, and class. Mick Ronson's guitar is pushed to the back, leaving Rick Wakeman's cabaret piano to dominate the sound of the album. The subdued support accentuates the depth of Bowie's material, whether it's the revamped Tin Pan Alley of "Changes," the Neil Young homage "Quicksand," the soaring "Life on Mars?," the rolling, vaguely homosexual anthem "Oh! You Pretty Things," or the dark acoustic rocker "Andy Warhol." On the surface, such a wide range of styles and sounds would make an album incoherent, but Bowie's improved songwriting and determined sense of style instead made Hunky Dory a touchstone for reinterpreting pop's traditions into fresh, postmodern pop music. --- Stephen Thomas Erlewine, allmusic.comi

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Last Updated (Saturday, 13 January 2018 23:02)