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capsule
reviews of miscellaneous titles by
DAVID BOWIE
David Bowie
1. Outside (1999)
Comments: The most complicated and underappreciated rock masterpiece of the 90s, I'd
venture to say. Bowie has in his head a dark and fascinating sci-fi story along the
lines of the work of Philip K. Dick and William Burroughs. He's taken the story,
scrambled the chapters, and then presented it like non-linear excerpts from a futuristic
murder mystery. While the visions presented here are bleak, the characters desperate,
broken, and lonely, this is only the beginning of the story. Love lurks around the
edges, acknowledged in these laments of its absence. The music is the product of
creative brainstorming sessions with master producer Brian Eno, and promises to be the
first of a series of installments. Unlike other aging rockers who merely try to
sustain the sounds that have made them popular, Bowie continues to follow his muse to new
places. And, rather than harness technology to make music about teen angst and
suicidal tendencies, as many of his imitators do, Bowie has taken the sounds at the
cutting edge and applied them to univeral themes and imaginative explorations. For
that, I admire him.
Outstanding tracks: "The Heart's Filthy Lesson", "No
Control", "I Have Not Been to Oxford Town"
Jeffrey's Sum-Up: A Masterpiece
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