Side One
1 Watch That Man, 4:25
2 Aladdin Sane (1913-1938-197?), 5:07
3 Drive In Saturday, 4:29
4 Panic In Detroit, 4:25
5 Cracked Actor, 2:56
Side Two
6 Time, 5:09
7 The Prettiest Star, 3:26
8 Let’s Spend The Night Together, 3:05
9 The Jean Genie, 4:05
10 Lady Grinning Soul, 3:54
Bonus Tracks
(on EMI re-release 2003, EMI 7243 5 831202)
11 John, I’m Only Dancing (Sax Version),
2:40
12 The Jean Genie (Original Single Mix),
4:05
13 Time (US Single Edit), 3:40
14 All The Young Dudes, 4:10
15 Changes (Live in Boston, 1 Oct 1972),
3:19
16 The Supermen (Live in Boston, 1 Oct 1972),
2:42
17 Life On Mars (Live In Boston, 1 Oct 1972),
3:25
18 John, I’m Only Dancing
(Live in Boston, 1 Oct 1972), 2:40
19 The Jean Genie (Live in
Santa Monica, 20 Oct 1972), 4:09
20 Drive In Saturday (Live in
Cleveland, 25 Nov 1972), 4:53
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Recorded: Trident Studios, London, UK
(December 1972 – 24 January
1973)
Musicians: David Bowie, vocals, guitar,
harmonica, saxophone
Mick Ronson, guitar, piano, vocals
Trevor Bolder, bass
Mick Woodmansey, drums
Ken Fordham, saxophone
Brian ‘Bux’ Wilshaw, saxophone,
flute
Mike Garson, piano
Juanita ‘Honey’ Franklin, backing
vocals
Linda Lewis, backing vocals
Mac Cormack, backing vocals
Producers: Ken Scott, David Bowie
Released: 13 April 1973
Label: RCA Victor RS 1001
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DAVID BOWIE: "Aladdin
Sane" (RCA Victor). Homo superior or The Man Who Fooled The World? I'm
begining to wonder…
Oh, he's good all right. Image-wise, he carries it
all off with a dazzling, effortless sense of style which makes every-other
band in the glam/glit/outrage/theatre-rock field look like something out of
a Camping For Beginners. And musically, he and Mick Ronson and Mick
Woodmansey and Trevor Bolder and the rest are light-years ahead in their
cruel precision..
But how deep does it go? Is
David Bowie really saying anything much at all? As Ziggy Stardust, rock and
roller, he gets it on, no doubt about it. But judged against the standards
of the astral image which he and his followers have nurtured - the whole
Starman, Stranger In A Strange Land aura - his achivements have been
disapointing.
This was brought home forcibly the other week by
Bowie's appearance on the Russel Harty TV show. While he was singing he was
perfect: the whole scintillating bisexual image, guaranteed to throw the
entire population of straight Britain into panic. And musically, he and the
band were machine-tooled perfection. But as soon as he sat down to talk,
the whole image dissolved like runny mascara. What he had to say was in no
way futuristic, or profound, or controversial. He was as The Prettiest
Starlet.
It's not that I expect profundity from a rock star.
But when your songs deal in cosmic concepts you are inviting judgement at a
pretty high level. And the sad truth is that five minutes of a film like
2001 or one chapter of Asimov or Clarke says more about what Man can or
will become than the entire body of Bowie's "futuristic" songs.
It's the same story with this
latest album, which is superficially stunning and ultimately frustrating.
The title is a pun, of course, and a deadly accurate one: the lyrics are
more intense, more strung-out, more fragmented than anything he's done
before: splintered nightmare images of a journey across America. At times
the lyrics reach that level of obscurity which it is fashionable to
describe as "oblique" but which sound to me merely confused and
hastily thrown together.
Musically, the songs are
executed with a brutal panache which puts this album closer to satanic
"Man Who Sold The World" than "Hunky Dory" or
"Ziggy Stardust." Meleodically the songs have Bowie's usual flair
- "The Jean Genie" and Drive-In Saturday" have already
proved themseleves as singles and most of the others here are just as
catchy, especially "The Prettiest Star," a very poppy reworking
of an old song from "Space Odyessey" days. "Watch That
Man" and "Panic In Detroit" are stormers with a strong
Rolling Stones feel - although Bowie's version of "Let's Spend The
Night Together" is very un-Stonesy, precise and asexual. "Cracked
Actor" is probably the most successful cut: a vividly powerful tale of
Hollywood, heroin and sexual cruelty. But the two key works here, I supose,
are the title track and "Time." Both have a strained alienated
feel, heightened by the fractured jagged piano of new man Mike Garson, but
the lyrics promise far more than they actually deliver - which is the way I
feel about the whole album.
There is much to dazzle the eye
and ear, but little to move the mind or heart. It is clever, but icy cold,
and I have a feeling that the songs here will not be long remembered.
But maybe that's the way Mr
Bowie wants it, as he makes his plans to go into movies and talks about
farewell tours. Perhaps, as his spirit Andy Warhol once said, everybody
should be famous for just 15 minutes.
MELODY MAKER
19
April 1973
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