I loved the thin white duke, a hateful, nihilistic fascist that is in love with the idea of love more than an actual person and wants not to share but to possess. Funny and tragic, but deservedly tragic indeed.
“Such is the stuff from which dreams are woven” is a reference to , or a paraphrase of, Shakespeare’s _The Tempest_ “We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life Is rounded with a sleep”
Thank you so much for reacting to this song, probably my favorite one from Bowie. As for the signification, as usual with Bowie, you can give several to the song, most of them perfectly valid. Some lines clearly relate to his own cocaine-addiction, and how he personaly felt during this period. Others contain obvious references to mysticism (Kabbalah, Christian philosophers, Aleister Crowley...). You can also point out the historical references : the Thin White Duke persona has been seen by many critics as an immoral, insensitive and cold aristocrat with delusions of grandeur and, in some ways, a clear but awkward fascination with fascist ideology and iconography ("Making sure white stains", "The European cannon is here") from the 1930's (hence, the steam-train sound in the beginning), while being at the same time too individualistic to really adhere to such mass movements. For me, the Thin White Duke always felt like a man with an inability to feel basic human feelings (like love, mistaken with cocaine's side-effects), while singing with affected and artificial intensity (some kind of robotic crooner, roughly). The Thin White Duke was not a sympathetic character, obviously, but IMO, it's one of his most fasincating :) ! Clearly, with each listen, one interpretation or another prevails. That's the power of a true artist : after it's been issued, a real work of art's signification is left to the beholders... Musically, the band Bowie got together in this album may be the best he ever had : Roy Bittan on piano is killing it. Great Earl Slick's howling guitar is out of this world ! George Murray on bass and Dennis Davis on drums are stellar (just listen to "Stay" from the same album, you'll be convinced !). And on top of that, Bowie's vocals are both intense and detached. The perfect mix of ice and fire on one song, and actually on the entire album !
That's all true, but you also have to remember that Bowie later said he was so messed up by this point that he didn't even remember recording this album.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but this song was also used in the soundtrack of "Christiane F." and the intro was used as part of the background music of a scene. Also, didn't Brian Eno have a hand in writing this?
The intro is a flanged noise guitar as "train" - hence, _Station To Station_ - a nod to Kraftwerk's _Autobahn._ The tension building, you have to imagine the '70s stadium Rock tour performance for which it was intended - Bowie as the Thin White Duke, walking out onto the stark lit stage, an audience enraptured in the atmospheric drama of the character.
Station to Station, classic song, classic album. One of my favorite Bowie albums, not a clunker on it. In this album, Bowie used the thin white duke personna to express a feeling of cold detachment. At the time, Bowie was on a cocaine bing and said after he barely remembered the production. Being awake days at a time, he read books on the Kabbal and Christianity. Station to station actually refers to Christ's stations of the cross. At the suggestion of Jimmy Page, Bowie also read about Aleister Crowly, so the album was full of references to Christianity and the occult. Very high times.
The intro was the sound of a steam train (station to station). Bowie was living in LA & really in a bad way with drugs at this time. Shortly after he escaped back to Europe, Berlin, with his mate Iggy Pop, both with the plan to clean themselves up, which they did. The great Berlin trilogy followed & for Pop "The Idiot" & "Lust for Life", two great albums.
You had to be there in 1976 at this tour....Bowie striding out dressed in black and white and using only white lights.... after that intro with the guitar. That is train sound Bowie is going for. Magnificent album with a very tight band -- especially the bass and drums throughout.
Thank you for your excellent analysis of a track that hit me between the eyes when I first heard it in 1976. Three of us were playing cards and shooting the breeze and listened to the first half of the album Station to Station - and we all said: "what just happened there?" And immediately listened to that side of the album again (a very rare occurrence believe you me). That tempo change in the middle of Station to Station is totally unexpected. And yes, the opening sounds are of a steam train engine - how else to travel from station to station?
It’s always been mine as well. Turned it up on the living room turntable and me and my 2 sisters would DANCE! Thank god our parents indulged everything we played❤️
He also was first musician artist to release a song or his music over internet to my knowledge... I saw this live in 1978 at age of 16 years...I was blown put water and totally mesmerised by him from that day on.. hence a life time fan still today..
Bowie's best album and my favorite album ever. This song is about the transformative nature of reality and our search for meaning and purpose in life. From the material world (Malkuth, cocaine reference) to the spiritual (Keter, love). It's Bowie's life in one song.
Greetings from Brighton! I have been binging your channel for the last few hours, especially Pink Floyd. Thank God I have found an intelligent reactor to quality music! And now you have posted this, an epic song of David Bowie. I hope you will listen and react to Steely Dan. They are awesome lyrically and musically. Perhaps start with "Kid Charlemagne" 1976.
Some Bowie songs connect instantly. Others require repeated listening, with Station to Station it took me quite a few listens to really get into it. So that can be a problem when you are listening to a lot of different music and just giving a judgement on one listen. Some tracks just need the opportunity to grow on you.
The first time I saw Bowie perform was, of all places, the Dinah Shore Show. He performed Stay while dancing The Freak. Afterwards, during the interview, he was so wired and agitated that he couldn't sit still and his hands were writhing in his lap. Dinah leaned forward, grabbed his hand and held it to calm him down. The whole audience said, "Awww!" He visibly relaxed and they did the rest of the interview holding hands. For those of you who've never heard of her, Dinah Shore was a very genteel Southern lady singer who had a morning talk show in the 70's toward the end of her decades-long career. She liked to push the envelope as evidenced by the fact that she had Bowie on again and that time he introduced her audience to Iggy Pop.😊
Wow another great one. This man just kept evolving constantly, and he always had really good musicians around him. Love it. It's doubtful that you will see this but I'm going to say it anyway. I love your actions and I watched a ton of them but consistently, you always have the content or the media volume abnormally low compared to your microphone. I would bump that shit up at least 6 dB. The way it is, it's so quiet compared to your voice and if I turn it up to where it's normal, much less if I want to crank it because it is something that really rocks, then your voice is thunderously loud and then I have to ride the volume up and down. You could solve it all in one Fell Swoop if you just permanently set your media playback volume up significantly. Just listen to a playback and test it basically
Considering you seemingly weren't familiar with this track you had a great pull apart of the lyrics, themes and possible interpretations. Well above average music reaction video man. Great to see you appreciate the soundscape that sets the scene on this too. Great stuff. Greetings from Glasgow.
StS is a dark song that somehow lifts you up. It’s been reported that during these sessions he lived on Milk, Green Peppers and .. the coke. ‘Wonderful, wonder who, wonder when’
dmn23…how fun! I saw Adrian was in the lineup for that David Bowie music tour. I know Adrian didn’t play guitar on the song and album Station To Station but I know he did the tour with David. I saw a live performance of them doing the song Station To Station on UA-cam and it was SO GOOD! I always say Adrian Belew is the happiest lead guitarist I’ve ever seen haha! He always seems to have a smile on his face. No Rock Star posing and grimacing, just sheer breathtaking talent❤️
One of Bowie's greatest... first time in rock where jeans & T's are out the door, so are the flashing multi-colored lights & trash flash attire... Bowie is all black & white in every way! His vocals are now adjusted to his lower register for which he was mostly known throughout his life... check out 'Stay' from same Lp, killer hybrid rock funk original track
This period is great. My observation of your taste leads me to believe you would appreciate the Ziggy Stardust era a little more. Don't leave that out!
Great song and album. Reminds me of driving around with my friend who had a light blue Volkswagen bug listening to this, I forget if it was an 8 track or cassette.
Something tells me that David Byrne listened to this song (and album). I had not heard this track before, but I know his Berlin period and his trying to get clean and his work with Iggy Pop, etc. This song has a lot to say and a lot to digest. It's like Bowie is just getting stuff off his chest! But it presages some of the performance art that is Talking Heads, whose first album came out just a year later.
The noise at the intro is ment to be the noise of a steam locomotive rather than just a electronical distortion.Its part of the metapher : train goes from station to station. Unfortunately nowadays youngsters wouldn´t even recognise...
When you start getting into Bowie's later career you need to check out Blue Jean. And another song that should be on your radar is Heroin by the Velvet Underground.
This is from the Hebrew qabalah tree of life, the spheres both ascending and descending the tree of creation, from the ideal to actual. From Kether (crown) to Malkuth (foundation 3D actual). The dark space he is in is the area known as Daàth, between the top three spheres of Kether, Chokmah & Binah (the great sea) the ocean he's overlooking, and the lower triad of the spheres Geburah, Netzach and Tiphereth. Then you have the remaining spheres below to Malkuth.
There are several epic ‘live’ recordings of this track Bowie and his tour Band were on top-form, 1976-80 That is my favorite period of Bowie’s music. …of course, he was out of his head on Cocaine, and later claimed he couldn’t recall about some of this recording. Perhaps why the Live recordings are so grand, getting off major drugs, moving back to Europe.
The Thin White Duke. Bowie revealing his darkest side until Blackstar. Much is autobiographical given his cocaine insanity at the time and the Duke’s obsession with the occult and right-wing esoterica
The best David Bowie song IMO! Super strange, experimental, but also awesome and super visual. As for the next song you should do/a recommendation, I give you the song "Intrasport" by King Gizzard. Its a cool, super unusual introduction to a super unusual band, blending 90s acid house with the microtonality of Turkish folk music. All around, they're a really sick band and you should absolutely check out one of their songs if not "Intrasport?" (and with something like 23 albums out, they have plenty of songs to chose from)
Later in life, Bowie would confess that he had little to no memory of making this album. This was at the height of his cocaine addiction and he barely slept or ate. It's a cliche to say "I don't know how he survived," but after seeing his clothes from this era up close, it was clear that he couldn't have weighed much more than 90-100 lbs. Great album, but I'm so glad we had him around for a few more decades after!
Absolutely stonking track, is it one of his best? Possibly! One question for all Bowie lovers out there: is this a slightly different recording to 'the norm'? When verse 2 kicks in sounds slightly slower and less vibrant than what I'm used to.
I think the version I'm used to ends with a return to: The return of the Thin White Duke, throwing darts in lovers eyes...' Am I thinking of a live version?
As is said , cocaine is a helluva drug, and without a crushing addiction that led to psychosis, this era likely would have gone down much differently.The take away ,- however glamorous things might appear, - is that he stated repeatedly what a nightmare this era of his life was.No fun,- raving paranoia, and reduced to such flawed personal judgements that he nearly alienated all he loved, - and lost his life. Stay, TVC 15, and Golden Years are genius compositions, no question, and there is no filler on this LP.
It is pretty pointless but definitely interesting trying to analyse Bowie's lyrics. Pretty much everything he ever wrote is about personal isolation and alienation and as every human being is a victim of both, his lyrics, whether he meant them to be or not, will mean different things to each of us. At the same time, it feels as though he is writing for the listener personally. It is very, very clever and explains why he is so enduringly admired. It doesn't matter whether you are listening to his best work or his worst, every track is immaculately produced and played by outstanding musicians. I love listening to him,always have since I first saw him live in 1973, always will. Nice review, always interested to hear what other people are taking from his music.
A Bowie biographer named Doggett wrote in 2012 he’s likely referencing pretentiously the art of Kraftwerk and Berlin theatre that had his attention at the time (technological and specifically Euro constructs) or that it could be cannon. The character would consider himself part of that new canon. See The Man Who Sold The World (2012) by Doggett.
This is a fantastic song off a fantastic album, but you’ve still completely missed out his classic early albums Hunky Dory and - especially - Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars. Unless you’ve heard these you’ve not really heard Bowie!!
Uh, dude, pretty sure the opening was supposed to invoke the sound of an old-fashioned steam locomotive. Y'know, as in *station to station.* Edit: Any more internet-know-it-alls want to give me shit for pointing out this starts with a train sound? Here's a quote from Rolling Stone: "A new musical direction was immediately evident on the album’s opener, the 10-minute title track. Starting with the sound of an approaching train, more than three full minutes pass of a slow, hypnotic instrumental march before Bowie’s voice appears. " I've got another one from Nicholas Pegg below.
Uh, dude, Bowie himself said that the song's title refers to the Kabbalah's tree of life. Alternatively, you could also read it as the Christian stations of the cross, which makes the sounds of a train all the more comical.
It's the titular track and the album opens with it; I figure he must have liked it himself. I'm not feeling argumentative, but it's too late. Golden Years, Stay and Wild Is The Wind are the ones I really like in STS.
The Thin White Duke is one of Bowie’s best incarnations. It’s a great album from start to finish.
THE CRAZY THIN WHITE DUKE ! station to station and stay 🤩 i like the fascit thin white duke 😉
I loved the thin white duke, a hateful, nihilistic fascist that is in love with the idea of love more than an actual person and wants not to share but to possess. Funny and tragic, but deservedly tragic indeed.
@@Remedy462 yes 👍
@@bowiev2schneider58 You have good taste Bowie, as always. ;)
@@ezechielamadeus2828 real
A masterpiece. One of Bowie's finest.
“Such is the stuff from which dreams are woven” is a reference to , or a paraphrase of, Shakespeare’s _The Tempest_
“We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life Is rounded with a sleep”
Thank you so much for reacting to this song, probably my favorite one from Bowie.
As for the signification, as usual with Bowie, you can give several to the song, most of them perfectly valid. Some lines clearly relate to his own cocaine-addiction, and how he personaly felt during this period. Others contain obvious references to mysticism (Kabbalah, Christian philosophers, Aleister Crowley...). You can also point out the historical references : the Thin White Duke persona has been seen by many critics as an immoral, insensitive and cold aristocrat with delusions of grandeur and, in some ways, a clear but awkward fascination with fascist ideology and iconography ("Making sure white stains", "The European cannon is here") from the 1930's (hence, the steam-train sound in the beginning), while being at the same time too individualistic to really adhere to such mass movements. For me, the Thin White Duke always felt like a man with an inability to feel basic human feelings (like love, mistaken with cocaine's side-effects), while singing with affected and artificial intensity (some kind of robotic crooner, roughly). The Thin White Duke was not a sympathetic character, obviously, but IMO, it's one of his most fasincating :) !
Clearly, with each listen, one interpretation or another prevails. That's the power of a true artist : after it's been issued, a real work of art's signification is left to the beholders...
Musically, the band Bowie got together in this album may be the best he ever had : Roy Bittan on piano is killing it. Great Earl Slick's howling guitar is out of this world ! George Murray on bass and Dennis Davis on drums are stellar (just listen to "Stay" from the same album, you'll be convinced !). And on top of that, Bowie's vocals are both intense and detached. The perfect mix of ice and fire on one song, and actually on the entire album !
Great assessment.
That's all true, but you also have to remember that Bowie later said he was so messed up by this point that he didn't even remember recording this album.
A magnificent album. Followed by Low, Heroes, to some extent Lodger, and then Scary Monsters. These few years Bowie was making eternal music.
The beginning " sound effect" is suppose to represent a distant train getting closer to the station ( Station to station ).
It's stations on the Kabbalah
Kethur to Malketh
Really, I had known idea
@@mister3566 I think the album name is intended to confuse radio stations / train stations / stations of the cross
This song makes me cry just for its sheer perfection
Tvc-15 is another great track from this album
Station to Station bridged the gap between Bowie’s “plastic soul” and his art-rock Berlin period. It's the best of both worlds.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but this song was also used in the soundtrack of "Christiane F." and the intro was used as part of the background music of a scene. Also, didn't Brian Eno have a hand in writing this?
The intro is a flanged noise guitar as "train" - hence, _Station To Station_ - a nod to Kraftwerk's _Autobahn._ The tension building, you have to imagine the '70s stadium Rock tour performance for which it was intended - Bowie as the Thin White Duke, walking out onto the stark lit stage, an audience enraptured in the atmospheric drama of the character.
It's not about trains
@@lukepepper3949 It's Earl slicks guitar on feedback
This album came out years before kraftwerk so it isn't a nod to them
Station to Station, classic song, classic album. One of my favorite Bowie albums, not a clunker on it. In this album, Bowie used the thin white duke personna to express a feeling of cold detachment. At the time, Bowie was on a cocaine bing and said after he barely remembered the production. Being awake days at a time, he read books on the Kabbal and Christianity. Station to station actually refers to Christ's stations of the cross. At the suggestion of Jimmy Page, Bowie also read about Aleister Crowly, so the album was full of references to Christianity and the occult. Very high times.
The whole vibe is train. A real heavy train that grinds into movement and gradually accelerates. What a start to an album!
The intro was the sound of a steam train (station to station). Bowie was living in LA & really in a bad way with drugs at this time. Shortly after he escaped back to Europe, Berlin, with his mate Iggy Pop, both with the plan to clean themselves up, which they did. The great Berlin trilogy followed & for Pop "The Idiot" & "Lust for Life", two great albums.
You had to be there in 1976 at this tour....Bowie striding out dressed in black and white and using only white lights.... after that intro with the guitar. That is train sound Bowie is going for. Magnificent album with a very tight band -- especially the bass and drums throughout.
Thank you for your excellent analysis of a track that hit me between the eyes when I first heard it in 1976. Three of us were playing cards and shooting the breeze and listened to the first half of the album Station to Station - and we all said: "what just happened there?" And immediately listened to that side of the album again (a very rare occurrence believe you me). That tempo change in the middle of Station to Station is totally unexpected. And yes, the opening sounds are of a steam train engine - how else to travel from station to station?
This is my favorite Bowie track ever.
It’s always been mine as well. Turned it up on the living room turntable and me and my 2 sisters would DANCE! Thank god our parents indulged everything we played❤️
Bowie is my favorite solo artist. He was always over the top. ❤️
He also was first musician artist to release a song or his music over internet to my knowledge... I saw this live in 1978 at age of 16 years...I was blown put water and totally mesmerised by him from that day on.. hence a life time fan still today..
Bowie's best album and my favorite album ever. This song is about the transformative nature of reality and our search for meaning and purpose in life. From the material world (Malkuth, cocaine reference) to the spiritual (Keter, love). It's Bowie's life in one song.
Greetings from Brighton! I have been binging your channel for the last few hours, especially Pink Floyd. Thank God I have found an intelligent reactor to quality music! And now you have posted this, an epic song of David Bowie. I hope you will listen and react to Steely Dan. They are awesome lyrically and musically. Perhaps start with "Kid Charlemagne" 1976.
The live version is a beast.
Which one?
@@jasonmartin3292 live 78 l intro 💥💥 13 mn waouh !! Adrien belew 🤩
Studio is far better
Some Bowie songs connect instantly. Others require repeated listening, with Station to Station it took me quite a few listens to really get into it. So that can be a problem when you are listening to a lot of different music and just giving a judgement on one listen. Some tracks just need the opportunity to grow on you.
For whatever reason I have never been introduced to enough David Bowie to really appreciate his now seemingly genius songwriting. Thanks Syed!
Can't wait for Stay from the same album!
The first time I saw Bowie perform was, of all places, the Dinah Shore Show. He performed Stay while dancing The Freak. Afterwards, during the interview, he was so wired and agitated that he couldn't sit still and his hands were writhing in his lap. Dinah leaned forward, grabbed his hand and held it to calm him down. The whole audience said, "Awww!" He visibly relaxed and they did the rest of the interview holding hands. For those of you who've never heard of her, Dinah Shore was a very genteel Southern lady singer who had a morning talk show in the 70's toward the end of her decades-long career. She liked to push the envelope as evidenced by the fact that she had Bowie on again and that time he introduced her audience to Iggy Pop.😊
Wow another great one. This man just kept evolving constantly, and he always had really good musicians around him. Love it. It's doubtful that you will see this but I'm going to say it anyway. I love your actions and I watched a ton of them but consistently, you always have the content or the media volume abnormally low compared to your microphone. I would bump that shit up at least 6 dB. The way it is, it's so quiet compared to your voice and if I turn it up to where it's normal, much less if I want to crank it because it is something that really rocks, then your voice is thunderously loud and then I have to ride the volume up and down. You could solve it all in one Fell Swoop if you just permanently set your media playback volume up significantly. Just listen to a playback and test it basically
Good reaction - you’ve shown me a different side of this song. Thank you!
Considering you seemingly weren't familiar with this track you had a great pull apart of the lyrics, themes and possible interpretations. Well above average music reaction video man. Great to see you appreciate the soundscape that sets the scene on this too. Great stuff. Greetings from Glasgow.
If you love the keys just listen to Aladdin Sane, just the most awesome piano ever.
One of my favourite album from Bowie, he has so many records that I consider 5 star albums so this is hard to place but It could be top 5 albums.
Keter is the Crown and Neptune. Malkuth is Earth plane. Concave Earth
StS is a dark song that somehow lifts you up.
It’s been reported that during these sessions he lived on Milk, Green Peppers and .. the coke.
‘Wonderful, wonder who, wonder when’
I got to see Adrian Belew play this live about two weeks ago.
dmn23…how fun! I saw Adrian was in the lineup for that David Bowie music tour. I know Adrian didn’t play guitar on the song and album Station To Station but I know he did the tour with David. I saw a live performance of them doing the song Station To Station on UA-cam and it was SO GOOD! I always say Adrian Belew is the happiest lead guitarist I’ve ever seen haha! He always seems to have a smile on his face. No Rock Star posing and grimacing, just sheer breathtaking talent❤️
A classic- Listen to Aladdin Sane - “Lady Grinning Soul “or Diamond Dogs -- listen to the whole albums❤
One of Bowie's greatest... first time in rock where jeans & T's are out the door, so are the flashing multi-colored lights & trash flash attire... Bowie is all black & white in every way! His vocals are now adjusted to his lower register for which he was mostly known throughout his life... check out 'Stay' from same Lp, killer hybrid rock funk original track
FYI White Stains is a book of poems by Aleister Crowley, occultist and "the most evil man in the world."
My #1 Bowie tune ❤
oh man this will be fun
This period is great. My observation of your taste leads me to believe you would appreciate the Ziggy Stardust era a little more. Don't leave that out!
Great reaction. Bowie is fascinating.
"Such is the stuff from where dreams are woven" is basically from Hamlet by Shakespeare.
Ashes to Ashes is my favorite Bowie song.
Great song and album. Reminds me of driving around with my friend who had a light blue Volkswagen bug listening to this, I forget if it was an 8 track or cassette.
This song isn't about trains. He's referring to the stations of the Kaballa. The rise of man to god. Kether to Malkuth.
Something tells me that David Byrne listened to this song (and album). I had not heard this track before, but I know his Berlin period and his trying to get clean and his work with Iggy Pop, etc. This song has a lot to say and a lot to digest. It's like Bowie is just getting stuff off his chest! But it presages some of the performance art that is Talking Heads, whose first album came out just a year later.
Just love him
Yes! Finally someone checked this it sounds really slow though
Beginning part makes me think of a heartbeat.
The noise at the intro is ment to be the noise of a steam locomotive rather than just a electronical distortion.Its part of the metapher : train goes from station to station. Unfortunately nowadays youngsters wouldn´t even recognise...
It's a train. The clue is in the title.
if you like the keys, react to Lady Grinnin Soul. Thanx for reacting BTW
When you start getting into Bowie's later career you need to check out Blue Jean.
And another song that should be on your radar is Heroin by the Velvet Underground.
I believe the beginning is the sound of a train which moves from Station to Station.
It's not about trains
This is from the Hebrew qabalah tree of life, the spheres both ascending and descending the tree of creation, from the ideal to actual. From Kether (crown) to Malkuth (foundation 3D actual). The dark space he is in is the area known as Daàth, between the top three spheres of Kether, Chokmah & Binah (the great sea) the ocean he's overlooking, and the lower triad of the spheres Geburah, Netzach and Tiphereth. Then you have the remaining spheres below to Malkuth.
It’s a train. Going from Station to Station.
You should check out the live footage of this song from the Montreal Forum in 1976, it's mesmeric; as is the Christiane F version.
David Bowie’s strange fascist period with the Thin White Duke was always very controversial
There are several epic ‘live’ recordings of this track
Bowie and his tour Band were on top-form, 1976-80 That is my favorite period of Bowie’s music.
…of course, he was out of his head on Cocaine, and later claimed he couldn’t recall about some of this recording. Perhaps why the Live recordings are so grand, getting off major drugs, moving back to Europe.
The Thin White Duke. Bowie revealing his darkest side until Blackstar. Much is autobiographical given his cocaine insanity at the time and the Duke’s obsession with the occult and right-wing esoterica
great album RIP bowie
This is one of the best albums ever.
The best David Bowie song IMO! Super strange, experimental, but also awesome and super visual. As for the next song you should do/a recommendation, I give you the song "Intrasport" by King Gizzard. Its a cool, super unusual introduction to a super unusual band, blending 90s acid house with the microtonality of Turkish folk music. All around, they're a really sick band and you should absolutely check out one of their songs if not "Intrasport?" (and with something like 23 albums out, they have plenty of songs to chose from)
Later in life, Bowie would confess that he had little to no memory of making this album. This was at the height of his cocaine addiction and he barely slept or ate. It's a cliche to say "I don't know how he survived," but after seeing his clothes from this era up close, it was clear that he couldn't have weighed much more than 90-100 lbs. Great album, but I'm so glad we had him around for a few more decades after!
I always thought that the second half of the song would have been crazy fun to polka too. Probably my Eastern European roots showing. 🙂
Best Bowie album and character
You did both Dogs and Station to Station.? Instant follow.
It's a train, dude. The song is called "Station to Station". It's a train.
Could Ziggy be so kind and propose Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing (Reprise) for him?
Masterpiece
Bowie ♥️
check out "Secret Life of Arabia "off Heros. killer beat and guitar ...Vocal amazing...
Absolutely stonking track, is it one of his best? Possibly! One question for all Bowie lovers out there: is this a slightly different recording to 'the norm'? When verse 2 kicks in sounds slightly slower and less vibrant than what I'm used to.
I think the version I'm used to ends with a return to: The return of the Thin White Duke, throwing darts in lovers eyes...' Am I thinking of a live version?
He's playing the original album track. You must be listening to a live version.
As is said , cocaine is a helluva drug, and without a crushing addiction that led to psychosis, this era likely would have gone down much differently.The take away ,- however glamorous things might appear, - is that he stated repeatedly what a nightmare this era of his life was.No fun,- raving paranoia, and reduced to such flawed personal judgements that he nearly alienated all he loved, - and lost his life.
Stay, TVC 15, and Golden Years are genius compositions, no question, and there is no filler on this LP.
Ahh the heavy cocaine use years!
Still great though.
The beginning is supposed to sound like a train thus station to station
Great track.
(Attaway to yak over the guitar solo)
In 1976 Bowie was heavily into drugs
The thin White warlock
My favorite from Bowie
It is pretty pointless but definitely interesting trying to analyse Bowie's lyrics. Pretty much everything he ever wrote is about personal isolation and alienation and as every human being is a victim of both, his lyrics, whether he meant them to be or not, will mean different things to each of us. At the same time, it feels as though he is writing for the listener personally. It is very, very clever and explains why he is so enduringly admired. It doesn't matter whether you are listening to his best work or his worst, every track is immaculately produced and played by outstanding musicians. I love listening to him,always have since I first saw him live in 1973, always will. Nice review, always interested to hear what other people are taking from his music.
The European canon is him right?
A Bowie biographer named Doggett wrote in 2012 he’s likely referencing pretentiously the art of Kraftwerk and Berlin theatre that had his attention at the time (technological and specifically Euro constructs) or that it could be cannon. The character would consider himself part of that new canon. See The Man Who Sold The World (2012) by Doggett.
Hey Syed, curious if you have a "mission statement" for your site - where you hope it goes and why? Love the Bowie so far.
Sounds like a train to me
This is a fantastic song off a fantastic album, but you’ve still completely missed out his classic early albums Hunky Dory and - especially - Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars. Unless you’ve heard these you’ve not really heard Bowie!!
kabbalah
Kabbalah = Mystical Judaism. Yes. Author Aryeh Kaplan's, Sefer Yetzirah (The Book of Creation), is a very good Entrance into Kabbalah.
❤️❤️❤️
While your there... try STAY
a train station
I would like to suggest to you a Bowie song called Diamond Dogs.
Sounds like a train, perhaps? *coughing, stationToStation, cough, cough*
The entire album was recorded in approximately 8 to ten hours on massive amounts of cocaine. David like to work fast. There were really no rehearsals.
Hey you should to react to the song Life without you by Stevie ray vaughan
no. life is but a dream.
I don't believe that he changed as a person, rather his artistic persona.
Sounds like Gorillaz took something from this track for Clint Eastwood.
Uh, dude, pretty sure the opening was supposed to invoke the sound of an old-fashioned steam locomotive. Y'know, as in *station to station.*
Edit: Any more internet-know-it-alls want to give me shit for pointing out this starts with a train sound? Here's a quote from Rolling Stone: "A new musical direction was immediately evident on the album’s opener, the 10-minute title track. Starting with the sound of an approaching train, more than three full minutes pass of a slow, hypnotic instrumental march before Bowie’s voice appears. " I've got another one from Nicholas Pegg below.
The song is about the stations of the cross
@@Frankincensedjb123 never heard of a double entandre?
Uh, dude, Bowie himself said that the song's title refers to the Kabbalah's tree of life. Alternatively, you could also read it as the Christian stations of the cross,
which makes the sounds of a train all the more comical.
@@SpaceCattttt and this contradicts what I said, how? also, what makes you think that it's comical?
@@BalbazaktheGreat It is nothing to do with train stations man.
bowie was so drugged during this album that he almost didn't remember working on it
Diesel train.
A helicopter? Lol It’s called Station to Station. Not helipad to helipad
Its a train
Bowie has a lot of deep cuts I like... This is not one of them. It comes off flat. Might make more of an impact within the album.
It's the titular track and the album opens with it; I figure he must have liked it himself. I'm not feeling argumentative, but it's too late. Golden Years, Stay and Wild Is The Wind are the ones I really like in STS.