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The Rise And
Fall Of Ziggy Stardust
And The
Spiders From Mars
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Side One
1 Five Years,
4:42
2 Soul Love, 3:33
3 Moonage Daydream, 4:37
4 Starman, 4:16
5 It Ain’t Easy,
2:57
Side Two
6 Lady Stardust, 3:21
7 Star, 2:47
8 Hang On To Yourself, 2:40
9 Ziggy Stardust, 3:13
10 Suffragette City, 3:25
11 Rock ‘N’ Roll Suicide, 2:57
Bonus Tracks
(on RYKO/EMI re-release 1990, EMI 064-79
4400 1 - LP)
12 John, I’m Only Dancing (Single B Side, 1979
Remix), 2:43
13 Velvet Goldmine (Single B Side), 3:09
14 Sweet Head
(Previously Unreleased), 4:14
15 Ziggy Stardust (Previously Unreleased Original Demo), 3:35
16 Lady Stardust (Previously Unreleased Original Demo), 3:15
Bonus Tracks
(on EMI re-release 2002, EMI 7243 5 39826 2
1)
12 Moonage Daydream (Arnold Corns Version), 3:52
13 Hang On To Yourself (Arnold Corns Version), 2:51
14 Lady Stardust (Original Demo), 3:15
15 Ziggy Stardust (Original Demo), 3:35
16 John, I’m Only Dancing (Original Single),
2:43
17 Velvet Goldmine (Single B Side), 3:09
18 Holy Holy (Studio
Version, 1971), 2:20
19 Amsterdam (1973
B Side Of Sorrow), 3:20
20 The Supermen (Alternative
Version), 2:41
21 Round And Round (Single B Side, 1973), 2:42
22 Sweet Head
(Studio Version, 1971), 4:47
23 Moonage Daydream (New Mix), 3:52
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Upon
the release of David Bowie's most thematically ambitious, musically
coherent album to date, the record in which he unites the major strengths
of his previous work and comfortably reconciles himself to some apparently
inevitable problems, we should all say a brief prayer that his fortunes are
not made to rise and fall with the fate of the "drag-rock"
syndrome -- that thing that's manifesting itself in the self-conscious
quest for decadence which is all the rage at the moment in trendy
Hollywood, in the more contrived area of Alice Cooper's presentation, and,
way down in the pits, in such grotesqueries as Queen, St. Nicholas' trio of
feathered, sequined Barbie dolls. And which is bound to get worse. For
although Lady Stardust himself has probably had more to do with androgynous
current fashionableness in rock than any other individual, he has never
made his sexuality anything more than a completely natural and integral
part of his public self, refusing to lower it to the level of gimmick but
never excluding it from his image and craft. To do either would involve an
artistically fatal degree of compromise. Which is not to say that he hasn't
had a great time with it.
Flamboyance and outrageousness
are inseparable from that campy image of is, both in the Bacall and Garbo
stages and in his new butch, street-crawler appearance that has him looking
like something out of the darker pages of City of Night. It's all tied up
with the one aspect of David Bowie that sets him apart from both the
exploiters of transvestitism and writers/performers of comparable talent --
his theatricality. The news here is that he's managed to get that
sensibility down on vinyl, not with an attempt at pseudo-visualism (which,
as Mr. Cooper has shown, just doesn't cut it), but through employment of
broadly mannered styles and deliveries, a boggling variety of vocal nuances
that provide the program with the necessary depth, a verbal acumen that is
now more economic and no longer clouded by storms of psychotic, frenzied
music, and, finally, a thorough command of the elements of rock & roll.
It emerges as a series of concise vignettes designed strictly for the ear.
Side two is the soul of the album, a kind of psychological equivalent of
Lola vs. Powerman that delves deep into a matter close to David's heart:
What's it all about to be a rock & roll star?
It begins with a slow, fluid
"Lady Stardust", a
song in which currents of frustration and triumph merge in an overriding
desolation. For though "He was Al right, the band was altogether"
(sic), still "People stared at the makeup on his face/Laughed at his
long black hair, his animal grace". The pervading bittersweet
melancholy that wells out of the contradictions and that Bowie beautifully
captures with one of the album's more direct vocals conjures the picture of
a painted harlequin under the spotlight of a deserted theater in the
darkest hour of the night.
."Star"
springs along handsomely as he confidently tells us that "I could make
it all worthwhile as a rock & roll star". Here Bowie outlines the
dazzling side of the coin: "So inviting - so enticing to play the
part." His singing is a delight, full of mocking intonations and
backed way down in the mix with excessive, marvelously designed
"Ooooohh la la la"'s and such that are both a joy to listen to
and part of the parodic undercurrent that runs through the entire album....."Hang On To Yourself" is
both a kind warning and an irresistible erotic rocker (especially the
hand-clapping chorus), and apparently Bowie has decided that since he just
can't avoid cramming too many syllables into is lines, he'll simply master
the rapid-fire, tongue-twisting phrasing that his failing requires.
"Ziggy
Stardust" has a faint ring of The Man
Who Sold The World to it -- stately, measured, fuzzily electric. A
tale of intra-group jealousies, it features some of Bowie's more
adventuresome imagery, some of which is really the nazz: "So we
bitched about his fans and should we crush his sweet hands?
"David Bowie's supreme
moment as a rock & roller is "Suffragette
City", a relentless, spirited
Velvet Underground - styled rushing of chomping guitars. When that second layer
of guitar roars in on the second verse you're bound to be a goner, and that
priceless little break at the end -- a sudden cut to silence from a mighty
crescendo, Bowie's voice oozing out as a brittle, charged "Oooohh Wham
Bam Thank You Ma'am!" followed hard by two raspy guitar bursts that
suck you back in to the surging meat of the chorus - will surely make your
turn do somersaults. And as for our Star, well, now "There's only room
for one and here she comes, here she comes."
But the price of playing the
part must be paid, and we're precipitously tumbled into the quietly
terrifying despair of "Rock 'N' Roll Suicide". The
broken singer drones: "Time takes a cigarette, puts it in your
mouth/Then you pull on your finger, then another finger, then your cigarette."
But there is a way out of the bleakness, and it's realized with Bowie's
Lennon-like scream: "You're not alone, gimme your hands/You're
wonderful, gimme your hands". It rolls on to a tumultuous, impassioned
climax, and though the mood isn't exactly sunny, a desperate, possessed
optimism asserts itself as genuine, and a new point from which to climb is
firmly established. Side one is certainly less challenging, but no less
enjoyable from a musical standpoint.
Bowie's favorite themes -
Mortality ("Five Years", "Soul
Love"), the necessity of reconciling oneself to Pain
(those two and "It Ain't Easy"), the New Order vs. the
Old in sci-fi garments (“Starman”) - are presented with a consistency, a
confidence, and a strength in both style and technique that were never
fully realized in the lashing The Man Who Sold The World or
the uneven and too often stringy Hunky Dory Bowie
initiates "Moonage Daydream" on side one with
a riveting bellow of "I'm an alligator" that's delightful in itself
but which also has a lot to do with what Rise and Fall... is all about.
Because in it there's the perfect touch of self-mockery, a lusty but
forlorn bravado that is the first hint of the central duality and of the
rather spine-tingling questions that rise from it: Just how big and tough
is your rock & roll star? How much of his is bluff and how much inside
is very frightened and helpless? And is this what comes of our happily
dubbing someone as "bigger than life"? David Bowie has pulled off
his complex task with consummate style, with some great rock & roll
(the Spiders are Mick Ronson on guitar and piano, Mick
Woodmansy on drums and Trevor Bolder on
bass; they're good), with all the wit and passion required to give it
sufficient dimension and with a deep sense of humanity that regularly
emerges from behind the Star facade. The important thing is that despite
the formidable nature of the undertaking, he hasn't sacrificed a bit of
entertainment value for the sake of message.
By Richard Cromelin
Rolling Stone, 20 July 1972
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Recorded: Trident Studios, Soho, London
(9 September 1971 – January
1972)
Musicians: David Bowie, vocals, guitar, saxophone
Mick Ronson, guitar, piano, vocals
Trevor Bolder, bass
Mick Woodmansey, drums
Dana Gillespie, backing vocals on
‘It Ain’t Easy’
Producers: Ken Scott, David Bowie
Released: 6 June 1972
Label: RCA Victor SF 8287
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