Unfit for Human Consumption
May 27th, 2009 by admin | 7 Comments | Filed in Unfit for Human ConsumptionWhich album is fit for no table?
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Tags: Bare Bones, Bowie, Starving for me gravy, Stewing Steak, worst albums
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Bowie’s Tin of Stewing Steak A pressurised cannister of Bowie-inspired irreverence
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Which album is fit for no table?
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Tags: Bare Bones, Bowie, Starving for me gravy, Stewing Steak, worst albums
I’m an Alligator,
I’m a Mama, Papa,
Coming for you,
I’m a Space Invader,
I’ll be a Rockin’, Rollin’ bitch for you
Tags: Alligator, Bowie, Life on Mars, Moonage daydream, Ray-gun, Space Invader, Spiders from Mars, Tall Venusian Spiders from Mars, Ziggy, Ziggy Stardust
Fact!
Mandolins are mentioned in two David Bowie songs. The instruments’ first name check occurs in Wild-eyed boy from Freecloud; the second in Bowie’s perfectly executed, if grandiose, rendition of Dimitri Tiomkin’s Wild is the Wind.
In a staggering coincidence, both songs contain the word ‘wild’ in their titles.
Fact!
A cocaine-fuelled Bowie was once quoted as saying ‘Adolf Hitler was one of the first rock stars’, making David a latter-day genocidal tyrant, who fatally underestimates Russian military strength.
Fact!
David Jones was born on a Wednesday.
Fact!
Bowie shares his birthday, the Eighth of January, with Elvis Presley, but the Burger King of Rock and Roll entered the world on a Tuesday.
Fact!
Though the ‘Duke’ and the ‘King’ never perforned a duet, collaborations with dead singers Marc Bolan, Freddie Mercury, Bing Crosby, and John Lennon do all feature in Bowie’s back-catalogue.
Fact! Bowie’s 1982 composition Cat People (Putting Out Fire) reached the top spot of the Swedish and Norwegian Charts.
Nominate your own Barely Interesting Fact!
Tags: Barely Interesting facts, Bowie, Burger King of Rock and Roll, Cat People, Dimitri Tiomkin, Drive in Saturday, Elvis, freecloud, Friday on my Mind, January, Love you til Tuesday, mandolins, Monday, Norway, Sweden, Thursday's Child, Wednesday's Child, Well I might stretch it to Wednesday, Wild-eyed Boy
The familiar ‘Unwashed’ is the second track of the Space Oddity album (originally the L.P. was simply named David Bowie). The poetry is so pitiful that a sixth-form Morrisey would be proud. The Beeb sessions produced this slightly shorter version, but she’s perhaps as addictive, and rewarding as her more celebrated sister.
I was introduced to the compositions of the ‘Duke’, as a callow youth in 1991. This coincided with a glut of Bowie compact discs being issued on the Ryko label. These technological innovations hosted bonus ditties, that to my mind will always be part of the records. Conversation Piece is one such example.
In keeping with the spirit of Space Oddity, Conversation Piece is a masterfully self-indulgent.
In the author’s opinion this is a marginally better listen than the original singular effort; both are good, if verging on the ludicrous.
Voted David Bowie’s greatest EVER song (amongst editors of Bowie’s Tin of Stewing Steak). Made an appearance on the early Nineties reissue of The Man who Sold the World. My personal copy of that album, spells the song ‘Lightening’, rather than ‘Lightning’, I don’t know which is correct.
“Move along now”…
Not to be mistaken with Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing, though they are both from the Diamond Dogs phase.
I’m in no position to judge his German accent, but to my untrained ears his yodelling sounds convincing.
Features as a bonus track on some re-releases of Lodger. Like most of the songs on that album, it might take a few listens.
Tags: "Heroes", Beeb, Bowie, Candidate, Conversation Piece, david bowie, Diamond Dogs, Eyes in my backside, Heldon, I pray Olé, Lightening Frightening, Lightning Frightening, Lodger, Memory of a Free Festival, move along now, Rare Cuts, Ryko, Space Oddity, Sweethead, Unwashed and Somewhat Slightly Dazed