Pavilionaire
Well-known member
- Jul 7, 2003
- 31,256
Up until 5 years ago Bowie to me had always been a singles man - I'd never bought one of his albums in my 47 years, although I had taped Let's Dance off a mate.
Then Bowie died having just released his final album and that got me interested. That time conincided with me working late churning out Tax Returns before the 31 January deadline. I listened to Low - it was not what I expected, far better indeed. Then Station to Station and Heroes. I now love that Berlin period.
Just recently I've started listening to his early 70s stuff - Hunky Dory is an incredible piece of work.
I watched most of last night's TV output with great interest. What gets me is how influential he was. You can hear so many artists clearly inspired by his riffs, lyrics and looks - Blur, Suede, The Killers, Gary Numan, New Romantics - the list goes on.
I would say he's arguably as influential as any British artist there's ever been and his back catalogue is rich in depth, style and content. An incredible man.
Then Bowie died having just released his final album and that got me interested. That time conincided with me working late churning out Tax Returns before the 31 January deadline. I listened to Low - it was not what I expected, far better indeed. Then Station to Station and Heroes. I now love that Berlin period.
Just recently I've started listening to his early 70s stuff - Hunky Dory is an incredible piece of work.
I watched most of last night's TV output with great interest. What gets me is how influential he was. You can hear so many artists clearly inspired by his riffs, lyrics and looks - Blur, Suede, The Killers, Gary Numan, New Romantics - the list goes on.
I would say he's arguably as influential as any British artist there's ever been and his back catalogue is rich in depth, style and content. An incredible man.