David Bowie
Low


5.0
classic

Review

by pulseczar USER (67 Reviews)
November 21st, 2005 | 992 replies


Release Date: 1977 | Tracklist

Review Summary: This mixture of pop, ambient, krautrock, and Bowie sexiness proves to be one of his underrated classics.

#249 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of all Time

Everyone's favourite cross-dressing glam rocker reached a new level of innovation with Low in 1977. Starting his career as a club entertainer following the mod fashion in the 60s, as the early 70s rolled in he adapted an androgynous persona as he ventured into a unique brand of psychedelic rock/pop. A self-proclaimed music chameleon, Bowie's music and image constantly changed. Low was no exception. It was the first of the Berlin Trilogy, three albums made in collaboration with the Jesus of ambient music Brian Eno while Bowie was in Berlin, absorbing its culture and recovered from his big ass cocaine addiction. In the trilogy, Bowie's music slowly started becoming seen as more accessible, until the 1980s where he had begun to be considered a pop star. People will always argue which Bowie album is the best, but Low will always be the most influential and ground-breaking.

The first thing to point out about this album is that the first side is a collection of straightforward songs, influenced by Krautrock (you know, Kraftwerk right?) and the second is almost entirely instrumental and shows more of Eno's effect on the music. Each side is very different, but they join together naturally, in an ironically mechanical feeling album. The sharp guitars and dense synths ditch Bowie's past of glam rock and R& B, but side one still presents pop sensibilities through the curiously robotic layers of music. Bowie mixes and matches different bits of pieces of music, taking funky basslines, rock guitar riffs and quirky synthesizers as he makes his own music Frankenstein. But instead of a Frankenstein that goes and kills people, yearns for love and whatnot, this Frankenstein sets out to make sure it is known that Bowie is a genius!

Bowie's voice has that certain British charm that all the ladies (and lads??) love and is as flexible as Bowie's music itself. In Low it's about as quirky and variant, sometimes overdubbed to sound like a choir of shaky voiced old men like in What in the World. His voice is batted around in the mix of music, sometimes sinking below, other times springing up. Bowie makes his voice more accessible and natural in some songs like in Crashing in the Same Car, a slower and more serious song, outlining the darker things Bowie was writing about during the recovery from his cocaine addiction. The song foreshadows the more solemn, darker mood of side two. The song also shows that great guitar work is still present in Low, but spiced up to a spacey attire.

The second side is of an ambient nature as said before, where Eno's influence comes out more. Entirely instrumental, as are the bookends of side one, emphasizing the importance of atmosphere. The instrumentals sound futuristic and emit an ethereal feeling of both warmth and desolation, as Bowie, Eno and co-producer Tony Visconti shape different landscapes made through storms of electronic music in each instrumental. Tracks like Warszawa and Subterranean sound like cold, creepy classical pieces reinvented through claustrophobic synthesizers and eerie choirs.

Each song is unique, outlined by the variety of effects and synthesizers in each song, sometimes none at all. Be my Wife is driven by a thumping bassline and honky-tonk piano, which are suddenly subverted for a stylish R & B chorus, again showing the brilliant fusions of music. Low again shows Bowie slapping the expectations and boundaries of Rock in the face, and skyrocketing to a level of innovation and music exploration never seen before. It takes traditional and new instruments and morphs them in a beautifully flowing collage of avant-garde music that influenced endless amounts of 80s bands and newer acts like Nine Inch Nails and Billy Corgan, while still owing credit to bands like Kraftwerk, Can and Tangerine Dream. Rarely does an album capture so much ingenuity and still be so polished and appealing. To ignore Low as one of the greatest and inventive albums of the 70s is to deny a lot of modern music ever existed.

Low---------------------> 5 stars



Recent reviews by this author
Pharoahe Monch DesireEl-P I'll Sleep When You're Dead
Jaylib Champion SoundMF DOOM MM.. Food
RZA Afro Samurai SoundtrackEloy Inside
user ratings (2000)
4.4
superb
other reviews of this album
1 of


Comments:Add a Comment 
Jawaharal
November 22nd 2005


1832 Comments


Thats me boy. Nice work Galapwngos, I see you did get Low without my help.

Jawaharal
November 22nd 2005


1832 Comments


Oh and can you send me this album through soulseek plz plz plz!1!1!1!! I will have your babies if you do.

Ibanez Slayer
November 22nd 2005


11 Comments


nice review breh

Aakon_Keetreh
November 22nd 2005


448 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

a very good cd no doubt

Zebra
Moderator
November 22nd 2005


2647 Comments


Nice work, but I think you slightly overated this.

4/5, possibly even a 3.5/5, there are some great songs on here, but this is not a classic.

ocelot-05
November 22nd 2005


807 Comments


Thank God for this review. David Bowie is a pioneer. I love him.

Sepstrup
November 22nd 2005


1567 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Excellent review. I haven't heard this album nearly as much as it deserves. But it's up there on my list of things I need to hear.

Zebra
Moderator
November 22nd 2005


2647 Comments


^^^Funny thing is that it's the opposite for me.

innerdark
November 25th 2005


749 Comments


anything bowie does > other "classics"

innerdark
November 25th 2005


749 Comments


*oops*This Message Edited On 11.25.05

Sepstrup
January 19th 2006


1567 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Warszawa doesn't bore anyone.

Two-Headed Boy
September 16th 2006


4527 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Awesome album. Just awesome.

Your review is pretty awesome too.

pulseczar
September 16th 2006


2385 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

this album deserves more lurving.

Two-Headed Boy
September 16th 2006


4527 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

I can only give 10% of my lurving

Kage
September 25th 2006


1172 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

This is a phenomenal album; one of my favorites from Bowie.

industrialjunkie92
December 23rd 2007


167 Comments


havent heard this yet but my dad keeps going on and on about it so i must listen to it soon. cant find it anywhere though and im only 15 so i cant get it off the internet. damn!

Neoteric
December 23rd 2007


3243 Comments


Ask your parents to order it? I didn't think it would be hard to find in record stores.

industrialjunkie92
January 24th 2008


167 Comments


found it... cost me £15 though... worth it all the way. one of my favourites.

industrialjunkie92
January 24th 2008


167 Comments


this IS a classic. end of. it should be kept in a vault underground somewhere so it can be preserved for all time. thats how good it is!

MusicFan2007
February 12th 2008


35 Comments


Yes, indeed, this is a classic. One of his best.



You have to be logged in to post a comment. Login | Create a Profile





STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS // CONTACT US

Bands: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Site Copyright 2005-2023 Sputnikmusic.com
All Album Reviews Displayed With Permission of Authors | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy