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Album reviews: The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, by David Bowie

The song goes up a notch and a string section and a chorus of voices carry the song into a higher gear as Ronsons guitar finally comes into play, and then the song just seems to fall apart and its back to the drum beat.

Soul Love has a warmer sound, acoustic guitar and bass shuffling through a calypso rythymn and taking it through into a more recognisable Bowie rock song complete with the man himself on Saxaphone, his original instrument.


The guitar kicks in leaving spaces for the typically obscure lyrics of Moonage Daydream, a re-working of an earlier Bowie number

Starman, well what can you say about Starman that hasnt already been said. If you know only one Bowie song, its probably this one. Building slowly through guitar and a downbeat vocal style until you hit that "crazy cosmic jive" and the keyboards kick in sounding like start of news at ten into the chorus. Guitars and strings weave a background pattern as a platform for the lyrics, and by the end every one is singing along to the La La La play out.
It Aint Easy, the only none Bowie composition on the album, again a minimal song that only buils up on the chorus, all vocals and slide guitars, and then back to the single not bass line and high pitched vocal.

The star imagary continues with Lady Stardust, a song of a androgenous musician singing his songs, an autobiography perhaps. Again a piano led mellow affair, showing like so many of his songs that you dont need to over do the power to make a song hit home, a subtle approach and great arrangements will do the job just as well.
The dream of rock and roll stardoom continues on Star, a paced song of thumping piano which mellows out to at the end. The counterpoint is delivered in the form of Hang On To Yourself, the first full on rock number of the album. The Spiders from Mars are now in place and doing well. These two songs are completeed by the infamous title track Ziggy Stardust, the final act in the trilogy, evryonr knows that riff, the scream that follows it in and the story of the band who hit the high time and burn out " when the kids had killed the man had to break up the band". The rivalry, clashing egos and fickle nature of the industry are examined and told by someone who knows the it only too well.

The album rocks out with Suffragette City, a great culmination of wailing guitars and sing along chorus and a journey from the dark imagary of the end of days, through the highs of music and the rock and roll burn out and finally you find your self on the wrong side of one of the greatest albums of all time "wham bam Thank you Ma`am" and its all done. And out of this silence Bowie on vocal and guitar serenades his broken dreams on the reflective Rock and Roll suicide, which builds with the aid of a brass section as he screams his regrets and hopes "youre not alone" and fade out.
Rightly seen as one of the most enduring and original of Bowies albums, this is a must for any fan of great music, but what am I saying..youve already got this haven`t you....you havent? Why not?

Thanks to www.5years .com for back ground info. Do check out this site.

Learn more about this author, Dave Franklin.
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Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Album reviews: The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, by David Bowie

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    by Steve Morris

    Ziggy Stardust came down to save the World using naught but the power of his haughty voice and glam rock guitar styling.

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    by Harry Windsor

    Ziggy Stardust is an incredible album and was an important factor in Bowie's rise to fame in the early 70s. It is a concept-like

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