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By David Fricke

David Fricke

David Bowie has made a career of being anything and everything other than himself. As rock & roll’s consummate quick-change artist, he has created some of the greatest leading roles in the pop-art theater of the imagination: the bisexual charmer of Hunky Dory; the star-crossed alien lipstick-killer Ziggy Stardust; the white-soul dandy of Young Americans; that vampiric-looking beanpole the Thin White Duke; the disco sophisticate of Let’s Dance.

But Outside , Bowie’s first album since his 1993 debacle, Black Tie, White Noise — and a highly anticipated studio reunion with Brian Eno, the co-architect of Bowie’s bench-mark Berlin trilogy Low, “Heroes” and Lodger — is way too much of a good thing. Bowie’s almost pathological fear of dropping all the masks, of simply reveling in the power of a good chorus and the soulful quiver of his maturing tenor, has driven him into multiple-personality overdrive and forced melodrama. The music — a potent collection of avant-garage riffs and rhythm notions co-written mostly with Eno and echoing the weird science of Low and “ Heroes ” — feels shoehorned into the script with frustrating rigidity.

It didn’t have to be that way. When his voice isn’t being abused by synthetic effects to suit some plot device, Bowie sings with full-bodied vigor and an affecting drama that suits the burned-orange tinge of his and Eno’s industrial-apocalypse soundscapes. Bowie digs into the plastic rattling funk of “Thru’ These Architects Eyes” with a ragged enthusiasm, and his simple, shattering delivery of the words I shake in “The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (As Beauty)” broadcasts the homicidal delirium of the song much more effectively than the heavymental title.

Indeed, it’s the superfluous wordage — the intrusive spoken monologues, the jury-rigged cybernoir narrative, the overelaborate characterizations — that damn near sink the record. You can practically feel the weight of Bowie’s own description of his story line: “A nonlinear Gothic drama hypercycle.” Outside is really just a confusing highbrow detective fable — Sam Spade meets Neuromancer via Naked Lunch — laid out as the diary of Nathan Adler, a futurist shamus specializing in art-crime investigations (as opposed to crimes against art, which too often go unpunished in real life).

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On Outside , Adler is wrapped up a little too tightly in the high-concept ritual murder of Baby Grace Blue, an adolescent of undetermined sexuality. A colorful parade of riffraff with nifty handles like Algeria Touchshriek passes through the diary entries, but nothing much happens aside from Bowie and Adler’s fevered meditations on sculpted gore and the violent possibilities of self-expression. (Best line: “Art’s a farmyard. It’s my job to pick thru the manure heap for the peppercorns.”)

All that explication belies the smart, sharp stab of Bowie’s more effective lyric writing. The lines “Poor dunce/He pushed back the pigmen/The Barbs laughed/The fool is dead” in “A Small Plot of Land,” a looping piece of freakcabaret jazz, say much more about the long dark shadows and desperate, clawing evil poisoning of the Outside world than all of Bowie’s prose wordplay. “I Have Not Been to Oxford Town,” the jail-house lament of a petty thief falsely accused of the murder, is delivered by Bowie with a nice slice of wry: “And the prison priests are decent/My attorney seems sincere/I fear my days are numbered.” (Also note the song’s sly reference to Bowie’s 1975 hit, “Fame,” in the skittering, metallic rhythm guitar.)

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Taken in parts (a bit like the poor, disassembled Baby Grace), Outside has irresistible charms: the tense Euro-dance propulsion of “The Hearts Filthy Lesson”; the layered, circular-guitar locomotion of “Voyeur…,” like Philip Glass in a King Crimson mood. “Hello Space-boy” is the sound of Bowie and Eno going nuclear on Trent Reznor’s death-disco dance floor, hot-wiring the migraine gallop of Iggy Pop’s “Lust for Life” into a ferociously distorted whirl of slaughterhouse jive.

It’s too bad that Bowie and Eno don’t allow themselves the luxury of a straightforward pop song until the very end. You have to wade through 19 tracks of conceptual mischief to get to the simple melodic development and swelling chorus of “Strangers When We Meet.” The song doesn’t do much for Outside ‘s lack of dramatic resolution (the last line in Adler’s diary is “To be continued….”). But it shows that Eno can whip up great, uncomplicated pop when he lets his egghead defenses down and that in Bowie’s best work, a little drama still goes a long way.

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16 of David Bowie’s Best Live Performances You Can Watch Right Now

David Bowie Live In London

The music world has been gutted by the tragic and untimely death of David Bowie , not least because many fans never had the pleasure of seeing him perform onstage. The clips  below, of course, are no substitute, but rather a humble collection of some of the best Bowie performances available online today. In no way is it meant to be comprehensive, and we encourage you to add your picks in the comments.

“Space Oddity,” Hits a Go Go (1969) Bowie serving better ‘fro than Marc Bolan.

“Starman,” Top of the Pops (1972) Bowie’s Top of the Pops debut marks the first of many examples of his fashion genius. Also seen prominently here: guitarist Mick Ronson, Bowie’s go-to collaborator at the time.

“Oh ! You Pretty Things,” Old Grey Whistle Test (1972) Bowie at the piano looking ever the class act. (Fun fact: This didn’t make it to broadcast until ten years after it was originally filmed.)

“Moonage Daydream,” Hammersmith Odeon (1973) Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars at the height of their powers in London.

“The Jean Genie,” Top of the Pops (1973) In which he channels the American bluesman swagger in a song that he called a “smorgasbord of imagined Americana.”

“Young Americans,” The Dick Cavett Show (1974) When Bowie puts his hand on his hip, you better listen, because you ain’t a pimp, and you ain’t a hustler.

“Golden Years,” Soul Train (1975) Bowie made an appearance on Soul Train the same year he released Young Americans , the closest thing in his catalogue to a funk album. He once described it as “the squashed remains of ethnic music as it survives in the age of Muzak, written and sung by a white limey.”

“Station to Station,” Pacific National Exhibition Coliseum (1976) Bowie as the slinky, smooth, and sexy Thin White Duke.

“Heroes,” Top of the Pops (1977) Challenge: Try not to get lost in those penetrating eyes.

“The Man Who Sold the World”/”TVC 15”/”Boys Keep Swinging” feat. Klaus Nomi and Joey Arias, SNL (1979) Bowie invited cabaret stars Klaus Nomi and Joey Arias to back him during this unbelievable Saturday Night Live performance. They begin by carrying him in an Ubu Roi–looking getup to the microphone.

“Life on Mars?”, The Tonight Show (1980) Like an extra from Grease , but not lame.

“TVC 15,” Live Aid (1985) The man knew how to move those hips and work a microphone.

“Hurt,” The Outside Tour (1995) During this co-headlining tour with Nine Inch Nails, Bowie and  Trent Reznor would perform NIN’s “Hurt” before his full set.

“Quicksand,” Madison Square Garden (1997) Robert Smith of the Cure and Bowie tackling the Hunky Dory highlight during DB’s 50th birthday concert in New York City.

“China Girl,” Glastonbury (2000) One of the most epic Glastonbury performances in history, with some great hair to boot.

“Sound and Vision,” Live by Request (2002) Of course David Bowie makes playing air violin look cool.

“Rebel Rebel,” A Reality Tour (2004) From his final set of live dates.

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Essaying the pop culture that matters since 1999

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cover of OUtside (1995)

‘What a Fantastic Death Abyss’: David Bowie’s ‘Outside’ at 25

David Bowie's Outside signaled the end of him as a slick pop star and his reintroduction as a ragged-edged arty agitator.

david bowie outside tour youtube

Emerging with a clatter at the beginning of the internet age and peddling millennial paranoia through a confoundingly labyrinthine cyber-noir narrative, David Bowie ‘s 1995 album Outside looks both backwards and forwards simultaneously, marking the start of one of rock’s greatest third acts ever.

In the mid-’90s Bowie was at a crossroads. He’d lost his edge midway through the previous decade and struggled to regain credibility even after shrugging off the trappings of his commercial pop period by creating a back to basics rock band, Tin Machine. Whilst he appeared to claw his way back into critics’ and audience’s good graces with an album that merged shiny pop with house music (1993’s BlackTieWhiteNoise ), something altogether strange had nonetheless been fermenting. In a career full of oddities, 1995’s Outside is the longest, darkest and weirdest album Bowie produced, presaging themes as disparate as art-based mutilation, pre-millennial tension, and that nascent harbinger of cultural revolution: the internet.

A quarter of a century after its release, Outside still stands out as an odd, infuriatingly dense, and often brilliant record from (and of) an artist sho, having been one of popular music’s leading lights in the ’70s, was newly inspired – manically so. With Outside , Bowie was rewriting his creative legacy by tapping into the rock underground, and into Art as the guiding principle behind his music.

The established narrative is that 1993’s BlackTieWhiteNoise is the beginning of Bowie’s creative renaissance, kickstarting the ’90s as the decade where he turned things around, and there’s some truth to that. But stylistically it’s still a pop record, albeit a substantially less terrible one than either 1987’s career nadir Never Let Me Down or 1984’s curious but hollow Tonight . BlackTieWhiteNoise shows some signs, through its flirtation with house music, of a return to innovation and inspiration, but instead of immersing itself in that style’s revelatory transcendence through repetition and corporeality, it mostly attempts to drag house into the centre of the pop mainstream. It’s just as polished an album as either of his previous two – but some the songs are better. Its best moments (‘Jump They Say’ and ‘Pallas Athena’ amongst them) are invigorating, but there’s still plenty of aimless and contrived filler. BlackTieWhiteNoise is less a rebirth than a palette cleanser.

Outside , however, is the main course. And what a mess of a feast it is. Moreso, it’s the album where Bowie the provocateur re-emerges; Bowie the boundary-pusher – the art star. He leaves the pop mainstream for the underground – he quite literally goes “outside”. But instead of the cold minimalist who gave us Low and Heroes, everything about Outside is maximalist. It ditches everything, including the kitchen sink, and what it keeps it puts into a blender and maniacally cranks it to 11 — then throws the resulting sludge at the wall. Most of it sticks.

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A not insignificant aspect of that return to art for arts sake is the presence of Brian Eno , who collaborated on Bowie’s Berlin trilogy: 1977’s Low and Heroes and 1979’s Lodger . Eno brought his obtuse approach of musical creation to those albums, yielding some of Bowie’s most strikingly original and least commercially viable material. Their legacy within Bowie’s discography stands as one of his creative peaks and certainly a period of unrepentant dedication to his craft as (mostly) art over entertainment.

Bowie reconnected with Eno at his wedding to Iman Abdulmajid in 1992. They began a conversation about, as Bowie put it, “nibbling at the periphery of the mainstream rather than jumping in”. They visited a psychiatric hospital near Vienna whose patients used art to communicate, and convened a band in Montreux, Switzerland with nothing written (save for one track: ‘Strangers When We Meet’). The band jammed for two weeks straight. Bowie painted in the studio, joining them when his interest was piqued, cutting up lyrics using the custom Verbasizer software programme – not the first time he would employ the William S. Burrough’s-inspired cut-up approach – and decided on the fly whether he would read, sing or “perform” as one of a series of characters he was carving out as the band improvised around him.

That only one song was written prior to entering the studio, and that a reported 35- hours worth of material was eventually syphoned through to create the bare bones of Outisde ‘s tracks, speaks to Bowie and Eno’s intention to approach the album from an experimental angle. The use of Eno’s Oblique Strategies flashcards in the studio and Bowie’s use of Burroughs-ian lyrical cut-ups certainly indicate an intention to abstract the creative process too. Neil Tennant ‘s cut up version of the lyrics of ‘Space Oddity’ for the Pet Shop Boys remix of ‘Hallo Spaceboy’ echoes the strategy’s pivotal role within the creation of the album.

What emerged from the Montreux sessions was not the Outside album – not quite. Instead, the band came up with five 20- to 30-minute suites of music, which have subsequently come to be known collectively as the Leon suites. The tapes for two of the suites were reportedly destroyed, and Bowie pitched the remaining hour’s worth of music to various labels unsuccessfully. It’s worth remembering that in 1995, Bowie’s legacy as an innovator had been largely tarnished by the second half of the ’80s and recent efforts had only gone some way to restoring goodwill commercially and critically. Plus, what remains of Leon – or at least what has seen the light of day via leaked and unofficially remixed bootlegs — is a shambles, and not a particularly compelling one either. What labels were arguably pitched with Leon was evidently undercooked yet frustratingly dense – a sprawling, writhing mass of ideas that are promising but ultimately underdeveloped. Nonetheless, the Montreaux sessions yielded the majority of Outside ‘s backing tracks.

It’s arguably for the best that nobody wanted to release Leon , because Bowie returned home to New York and started refining many of the ideas that had emerged during the sessions that bore that material. Around this time Q Magazine had asked him to publish a ten-day diary around the recording of the album. Instead, he wrote a diary comprising 15 years in the life of Nathan Adler – one of the characters that emerged in Montreux, jumping as it does between New Years Eve 1999 in Oxford Town, New Jersey, 1994 in New York and 1977 in Kreutzberg Berlin – a nod, no doubt, to the time and place that Bowie had created his legendary trilogy with Eno. It’s no coincidence that Adler’s diary reflects the timeline between the album’s completion and its setting of five years – recalling the opening number of Bowie’s first concept album from 1972 and its “five years left of crying”.

Adler’s diary forms the basis, or rather a single element, of a wider story that comprises the album’s concept: a neo-noir cyberpunk murder mystery surrounding the ritualistic “art murder” of a 14-year-old girl named Baby Grace Blue. Supporting characters emerge: art-terrorist gang leader Ramona A. Stone, fall guy Leon Blank, and art-drug and DNA print dealer Algeria Touchshriek. These characters receive their own “segue” – short introductory passages with ambient backing soundscapes over which Bowie affects accents and employs digital effects on some of his most outlandish voice work.

Other tracks are sung from the perspective of the people of Oxford Town, the jury convicting Leon, and the artist – otherwise known as “the minotaur” – the image of which had become a recurring theme in paintings Bowie was making at the time. That’s really all that needs to be gleaned about the concept behind the album. Any more (and there is so much more, unpacked and nitpicked over on numerous blogs and fansites) becomes confusing and ultimately dilutes the impact of the album’s conceptual centre: death as art-ritual in a dystopian near-future.

Sex, violence, and death became key themes for Bowie in his consideration of the coming turn of the millennium. He had become influenced by extreme performance artist Ron Athey , whose signature “surgical crown of thorns” Bowie appropriated for the ‘Heart’s Filthy Lesson’ music video. He had asked Athey to perform it, Athey declined, and it was ultimately performed by porn actor Bud Hole. Bowie saw mutilation in performance art as a ritualistic re-rendering of paganism, with Outside ‘s art-murder narrative taking the concept further into the realm of fantasy as a sacrifice to the turning of the millennium. In this sense Bowie’s pre-millenial ruminations predicted Y2K panic, albeit in a gorier and more tantalising way, and one that was – in typical fashion – more than a little sexually charged.

Whilst Bowie had been at the forefront of progressing sexual politics in the early ’70s, he had left his personal dalliances with queer culture behind, having lived – by outward appearances at least – a hetero-normative lifestyle for decades, and of course marrying Iman in 1992. Whilst it’s all dress-up and play acting, Outside ‘s flirtation with the lexicon of BDSM at least positioned Bowie back in the realm of sexual provocation, albeit in a manner that was subsumed within so many other ideas that it was seemingly de-emphasized – just another aspect of a confoundingly dense conceptual approach.

Nonetheless, for an artist who had been “straight” for so many years, the album is an emphatic declaration of his love for and affinity with those who position themselves “outside” the mainstream. To quote what is arguably the album’s best remembered lyric, from ‘Hallo Spaceboy’: “Do you like girls or boys? It’s confusing these days” Bowie asks with a wink, reminding us that the svelte androgyne of the early 70s hadn’t disappeared but had merely been joined by a multiplicity of creative identities and personas.

Outside is never wanting for ideas – it’s bursting with them, as its central conceit indicates. That’s apparent from the 24-page booklet that comprises the CD artwork and the frenetic – and very ’90s – digital mash-up of the album art itself which, aside from its painted self-portrait cover, makes abundant use of just about every photoshop filter available at the time in its dizzying, sense-assaulting use of almost two dozen different fonts, all manner of early CG graphics, and layer upon digital layer of text, image and visual noise. There’s also the “db” logo used only on Outside era artwork. The short-lived nature of that particular visual motif is largely unsurprising – it does bear a striking resemblance to a phallus with testicles with the added alliterative component (“dick and balls” anyone?) adding a mischievous extra element of cheek. Another cryptic allusion to Bowie’s historical flirtations with sex as identity? Possibly.

Even the album’s title (it has two, because why not?) speaks to the maximalist pose Bowie was striking: on the album cover it’s 1. Outside , and on the album spine it’s Outside: The Nathan Adler Diaries: A Hyper Cycle . And that slice of cyberpunk short fiction that takes up six pages of the booklet is saddled with the clumsily phrased title The Diary of Nathan Adler Or the Art-Ritual Murder of Baby Grace Blue: A non-linear Gothic Drama Hyper-cycle . Hopefully it was apparent at this point that Bowie was throwing everything he could at this album and having a grand old time in the process, but the wider context surrounding it helps to flesh out this thesis.

Firstly to that simultaneously telling and somewhat misplaced numeral at the beginning of the album’s title: 1 . As Bowie mentioned around its release, Outside was planned as the first in a triptych or possibly even more in a series of albums leading up to the turn of the millennium – a way of counting down, of documenting the cultural, conceptual, existential transition into the 2000s. But just as quickly, Bowie’s creative attentions shifted and he moved on. This in itself speaks to this junction in his artistic evolution – Bowie’s mid-to-late ’90s as a one of the more fertile and art-centric periods in his four-decade career. There are the four albums released in a five-year time period, but there’s also his role as Andy Warhol in Julian Schnabel’s biopic of New York abstract painter Jean-Michel Basquiat – a reminder that art as a concept and raison d’être was never far from his mind at this time, added to by the fact that in 1994 he joined the editorial board of Modern Painters magazine.

Several years later Bowie would also, in collaboration with fellow board member novellist William Boyd , undertake a baffling art hoax by creating the fictitious “forgotten” modernist painter Nat Tate. Most tellingly however, is Bowie’s integration of the possibilities of the internet into his creative practice and commercial model – the seeds of which had certainly been sewn by the time of the Leon sessions. But more on that later. First, to the music itself.

If Bowie’s ’90s albums can largely be characterised as a sampler of electronic music sub-genres, then Outside sits in-between BlackTieWhiteNoise ‘s stab at house and Earthling ‘s flirtation with drum’n’bass as a marriage of several styles, chiefly industrial and trip hop, as filtered through the lens of art rock – whatever that broad-reaching and vague descriptor might summon. Both of the singles ‘The Hearts Filthy Lesson’ and ‘Hallo Spaceboy’ double down on their industrial tendencies, albeit in different ways. The former is slow and funky–it’s almost trip-hop, but there’s too much noise and weirdness–scraping, dirgy guitars, digital flotsam and Garson’s piano, which thunders and then twinkles; and the drums are heavy and foreboding.

The album mix of ‘Hallo Spaceboy’ is arguably the heaviest moment of the album, with an unrelenting 4/4 rhythm that sounds like a piece of machinery designed to flatten anything in its path. And yet there’s a lightness to Bowie’s mood as a vocalist. ‘Hallo Spaceboy’s noisy, almightily thudding production might sound heavy, but it’s not a “heavy” song in the way ‘Warszawa’ or ‘Lazarus’ are – its stomping intensity equates to dizzying fun.

Much like a lot of Bowie’s other work from the late ’60s onwards, and although he never embraced progressive rock fully (having Rick Wakeman on Hunky Dory may be the closest he got), Outside can perhaps be described as prog-adjacent. It recalls the dystopian concept-album status of Diamond Dogs, for one. The personnel on the record are another clue – the most immediate link being Eno, whose work in marrying traditional rock instrumentation and structure with electronic arrangements and experimentation is all over the record. Erdal Kızılçay ‘s multi-instrumental chops are another key – he only plays bass and keys on the record but his adaptability as an instrumentalist who has mastered both western and Middle Eastern instrumentation (he’s originally from Turkey) are apparent in his dextrous and versatile playing.

The key, however, to understanding the album’s avant-garde leanings lie with long-time collaborator Mike Garson – the musician responsible for the single most bafflingly virtuosic and mind-altering moment on any Bowie song: the piano solo from ‘Aladdin Sane’. On Outside , as with other Bowie recordings on which he’s appeared, Garson’s piano playing is routinely the most gripping element, dancing between structured melody and free playing whilst always in service of the song.

In one specific aspect Outside is still beholden to classic rock, and that’s in the tone and playing of Reeves Gabrels ‘ guitar. Whilst he creates an alarming squall and whips up all manner of frenzied textures, his chops are still fully on display in a manner that privileges dexterity over aesthetic – a trend that increasingly became the hallmark of old-school classic rock in an era of crunchy riff-based grunge and various permutations of “textural” playing in the (post)rock underground. Gabrels’ work in Tin Machine was always rough hewn but far more indebted to classic rock virtuosity than the bogus claims of proto-grunge would have us believe. His tone might be noisy but it’s searing, not muddy.

However, on ‘Heart’s Filthy Lesson’ and ‘Hallo Spaceboy’ for example, the scorching electricity of Gabrel’s undeniable chops give way to that dirgy, repetitive riffage. It’s no coincidence that in 1995’s heyday of alternative rock, those tracks were chosen as the singles. They may have failed to make much of an impact on the charts upon release, but they’ve remained more relevant and interesting than a fair chunk of Bowie’s post- Scary Monsters singles output.

The soundscapes on Outside , some of which are the musical backing for the spoken-word interstitials and others intros to longer tracks, sit parallel to the rock/electronic hybridity that was being pursued separate to the mainstream by artists who would subsequently be labelled under the moniker of post-rock. Outside is far too ensconced in structured rock songwriting to be labelled such, and its sonic palette is underpinned by generic signifiers of the day like trip hop and industrial music, but in its more spacious moments its tendrils flit towards the experimental rock underground, drawing at least passing interest in it if not out and out inspiration from it. And yet Outside doesn’t fit easily alongside Nine Inch Nails or Ministry as industrial rock, nor does it sit beside Tricky or Portishead as trip-hop. It certainly doesn’t belong alongside post-rock acts Talk Talk or Bark Psychosis , because despite hinting at – or plunging headfirst — into those genres, it’s songs are written by an artist decades older, one whose career has been shaped by classic rock song writing and whose earlier work was an inspiration for the genres he’s now working in.

Sonically Outside has most in common with the album that immediately preceded it, which wasn’t BlackTieWhiteNoise, but his soundtrack for the television mini-series adaptation of Hanif Kureishi ‘s The Buddha of Suburbia . This is something of a forgotten moment in Bowie’s career. It’s an odd collection of hastily written songs, experiments with sampling and atmospheric odds and ends that followed BlackTieWhiteNoise ‘s April 1993 release date by only six months. Whilst the majority of it feels fairly hurried and uninspiring, its very existence as an album that was commercially released (albeit one that’s been quietly excised from the official catalogue since) speaks to Bowie’s newfound confidence as an artist.

The Buddha of Suburbia shares some personnel – namely multi-instrumentalist EKızılçay and M Garson on a few tracks, and whilst its songs are largely lacklustre comparatively, its arrangements belie the collision of traditional rock instrumentation and early sample-based production that would become more fully realised on Outside . One track in particular, ‘Ian Fish UK Heir’, an ambient drone with pretty if largely formless and noodly classical guitar overlay, is almost a throwback to ‘Moss Garden’ from Heroes . But underpinning the track is a churning and slowly evolving noisescape of synthetic strings, breathy pads, and what could be a sample of a call to prayer of some kind, all buried under reverb and mixed so as to obscure detail. In its textural formlessness the track foregrounds the kind of layered cacophony that would comprise much of Outside ‘s production aesthetic.

Outside ‘s best songs (and there are plenty) are amongst Bowie’s best ever. It’s two longest tracks are a pair of moody art-rock epics – ‘A Small Plot of Land’ and ‘The Motel’. They’re equally dark in mood, as well as lyrically, but they almost invert one another in form. The former is brisk and propulsive – with Garson’s virtuosic piano dancing atop a tight jazz-funk rhythm and Bowie intoning some of his darkest, most cryptic and compelling cut up lyrics: “the brains talk, but the will to live is dead, and prayer can’t travel so far these days”. Gabrels’ cacophonously wailing guitar collides with washes of noise in a delirious, thrashing climax.

Alternately ‘The Motel’ is a lament. Bowie often introduced the tune live as “a love song to desperation”, and it’s slow, shuffling beat and sullen synth washes morbidly, underpinning more wrist-slitting lyrical imagery: “there is no hell like an old hell”. It swells to an uneasy crescendo before slowly dragging itself off toward a dark horizon.

Bowie does one of his most convincing Scott Walker impressions on ‘Wishful Beginnings’, but Walker had a deeper register than Bowie and he doesn’t strain his voice trying to plumb those vocal depths, instead letting it sit at the breathy bottom end of his range. The track itself wouldn’t feel completely alien on Walker’s release from 1995, the daring avant-rock Tilt . Though that album preceded Bowie’s by four months, as production on Outside had wrapped by February that year, it’s unlikely it had any direct influence. But ‘Wishful Beginnings’ similarly moody, world-weary tone does more than ape one of Bowie’s favourite artists and biggest inspirations – its chiming keys and percussive clicks and whirs add to Outside ‘s vast sonic palette in a rare moment of musical pause. If Outside is largely an assault, then at track 13, ‘Wishful Beginnings’ is a welcome reprise from the onslaught.

Foreshadowing 1997’s underrated Earthling album, ‘I’m Deranged’ harnesses the dynamics of drum’n’bass in the service of a pop song, with its success largely down to a loose, open-ended song-structure that lets Bowie croon, Garson filigree, and Gabrels scratch and noodle away over a dubby chord progression, with the whole thing sitting neatly atop a juddering jungle-lite rhythm. It’s compellingly dark, visceral and confusing. No wonder it found a place on the soundtrack to David Lynch’s Lost Highway two years later.

As the album draws to a close the churning intensity of its most gripping early moments gives way to more reflective, slower-paced tracks in the almost optimistic electronic pop of ‘Thru These Architect’s Eyes’ and the mid-tempo AOR of album closer ‘Strangers When We Meet’, a track which first appeared in a less compelling arrangement on The Buddha of Suburbia . It’s an odd place to end an equally odd album – clearly an attempt to end a tumultuous and baffling narrative in the most cinematic of ways: injecting a sense of calm whilst perpetuating the noir-ish air of mystery.

Outside is far from a perfect record. At 74-minutes it’s far too long, a perspective Bowie came to himself after it had already made its way into the world. Five of its 19 tracks are longer than five minutes with its two most obtuse tracks: the avant-jazz of ‘A Small Plot of Land’ and the devastatingly moody ‘The Motel’ both over six and a half, which might be viewed as indulgent if those two weren’t amongst the best on the album. Released at the height of the popularity of CD as the preferred physical format for musical recordings, Outside takes full advantage of the extended playing time that the medium affords, arguably to its detriment. The album’s second half drags. Its final ten tracks contain four character “segues” as opposed to the first nine containing only one, and some of its weaker tracks bog down the album once it passes the half-hour mark.

It’s also infuriatingly dense – purposefully so, but nonetheless. Its concept, whilst laid out in its artwork and lyrics remains too busy to be clearly realised but too underdeveloped to have a truly significant impact. There are some fascinating ideas thrown around – it’s like a roiling stew of sex, death, drugs and technological paranoia, all set against a backdrop of a near-future where murder is a continuum with art and crime at each end of its axis. Outside arguably goes further than it might in pursuing these ideas by including the various spoken-word segues, which in the context of music are unnecessary and more often than not embarrassing, if not unlistenable.

Nathan Adler’s comically hammy gumshoe croak is funny once but outstays its welcome on repeated listens. Algeria Touchshriek’s raspy aged mumblings are effective but awkward. Baby Grace Blue’s rambling, vulnerable innocence, however, makes use of a pitch-shift effect to turn Bowie’s voice into that of an adolescent girl, and it’s utterly on-the-nose. But taken in another context the characters are also forgiveably corny. Bowie takes his persona-swapping to the nth degree, a doubling down of the “character as concept” that he began with Major Tom and flirted with across his career. They might be silly and throwaway, and the album retains them to its detriment, but they speak to the zeal with which ideas were flowing for Bowie at the time.

The segues also speak to the role of the Leon suites in the development of Outside as a multi-format work, of which the album is the final and most polished iteration, but by which time its narrative almost ceases to create an impact alongside the far more compelling music. Musically, Leon is also underdeveloped compared to the tighter and more nuanced Outside . Its loose jams are characterised by plodding beats and unformed repetitive structures that lack the dynamics that the album’s more developed songs would yield. As such, all seasoned players like Gabrels and Garson can do is scratch at the edges – they tinker and flail about, occasionally fumbling across a cogent or compelling phrase – inevitably something that would find itself more fully fleshed out on the album.

Bowie’s spoken word intro to what has come to be known as the ‘Enemy is Fragile’ suite is vaguely reminiscent of the track ‘Glass Spider’ from Never Let Me Down , which he used as a theatrical introduction to that tour. That comparison perhaps gives the best indication of how Leon should be considered: not as music in the traditional sense, but arguably as part of a layered, performance driven multi-media art concept. Indeed, Bowie had briefly considered performing the album as a theatre-based work, but couldn’t figure out how to do it. Taken in totality with Outside , Leon is a fascinating part of the puzzle. On its own it’s largely insipid and flat. And yet, like many other moments of Bowie’s career, it has inspired feverous fan attention, receiving numerous remixes that re-edit and re-order the material to various ends.

What comes across far more from the Leon sessions than the album itself is Bowie’s infatuation with the internet, then in its infancy but soon to become omnipresent. He waxes poetic as a series of characters, but almost always comes back to his own voice when speaking directly about the internet. In one excerpt he affects a slightly more plummy British accent, intoning: “I think we’re stuck in a web. A sort of nerve net. As it were a sort of nerve internet, as it were. We might be here for quite a long time.” Here he name drops Eno’s 1992 album Nerve Net , working it into his metaphor about the internet’s capacity to entice and trap people through its potential for connection, its promise of content, and its capacity to offer respite; belonging and fulfilment of various kinds. Elsewhere he builds upon the image of the “information superhighway”, comparing it to “a nineteenth century railroad that passes through the bandlands of the old west.”

Bowie’s prophetic pronouncements about the zeitgeist-redefining nature of the internet have become widely acknowledged in his 1999 interview with journalist Jeremy Paxman, which has gained a degree of viral permeation subsequent to Bowie’s death. Bowie recognised the potential for the internet as not only a communication tool – a new medium, but as a means for connection and community that would revolutionise communication. Less than a year prior he had launched Bowienet, his own subscription-based ISP and member-based website that offered benefits including exclusive content and access to the man himself.

Indeed, Bowie had always been an early adopter of new technology, from music video to CD-ROM, to streaming concerts online. The possibilities of the internet had obviously been playing on his mind as early as the Leon sessions in 1994, with that particular notion finding its way onto Outside as Algeria Touchshriek refers to an associate known as Wollof Bomburg, who is characterised as “a reject from the worldwide internet.” Bomburg is labelled “a broken man”, with Touchshriek also describing “watching the young advancing all electric.” Here, with the internet still in its infancy Bowie was already cognisant of its potential to change lives, and taken alongside Outside ‘s cyber-noir narrative its capacity to facilitate a kind of time travel based around access and nostalgia.

Several years later Bowienet’s chat rooms tapped into the internet’s facility to nurture fan communities, which was, of course, the birth yawp of what we know as social media. As an incidental aside, Bowienet was launched by London-based PR firm Outside Organisation , with whom Bowie was working at the time.

Outside found its way into the world in the final quarter of 1995 amidst the US and European tour of the same name, notable for its inclusion of Nine Inch Nails as the support act, or rather as a quasi co-headliner whereby their sets would overlap for a number of tracks. That particular touring partnership would facilitate Trent Reznor’s appearance in the ‘I’m Afraid of Americans’ music video and several remixes of Outside and Earthling material.

Aside from compilations and the occasional hit album ( Let’s Dance, for example) Bowie had never had significant chart success with albums around their original releases and Outside certainly didn’t disrupt that trend, peaking just within the US Top 10 and only staying in the charts for six weeks. None of its singles made many ripples either. Only ‘Hallo Spaceboy’ pierced the charts in multiple countries, thanks largely to the Pet Shop Boys remix, which draws out the song’s melodies and shears off its rough industrial edges.

Critically the album received mixed reviews, with almost unanimous opinion that although musically challenging and inventive, it was ultimately weighed down by its bloated attempt at world-building. But critical reappraisal has shifted its place in Bowie’s oeuvre. In a 2018 Consequence of Sound article, Outside is ranked as his seventh greatest album, one above Blackstar , which is perhaps fitting: there would be no Blackstar without Outside. A direct line can be drawn between the avant-jazz/rock fusion of ‘A Small Plot of Land’ and ‘Sue (Or in a Season of Crime)’ for example, or between the devastating vastness of ‘The Motel’ and the latter album’s title track. Junkee ranked his albums two years later with Outside coming in eighth.

A significant part of this reappraisal is no doubt due to the reflexive view cast over Bowie’s back catalogue in the years following his death, and what’s become apparent from surveying the peaks and troughs of one of the most varied and consistently boundary-pushing bodies of work in popular music is Outside ‘s place at the nexus of a very particular shift in Bowie’s career. It signalled the end of Bowie as a slick pop star and his reintroduction as a ragged-edged arty agitator. Although he’d attempt all manner of styles over the next two decades – from bland adult-oriented pop on 1999’s hours… to back-to-basics rock on The Next Day , it was always done as an artist looking backwards as much as forwards, taking stock and not necessarily retreading the past but certainly paying homage to it.

Even Earthling – released the year Bowie turned 50, acknowledges in its title at least that the man who fell to earth had finally decided to call this planet home. The restless innovation is still there but it’s tempered by an an acceptance; a calm that comes with age. Outside is the first time that artful fervour is balanced against an assuredness that comes from innovating and experimenting for so long.

Outside might not be Bowie’s best album – track for track Ziggy and Low are both faultless and peerless — and despite its best moments it’s flabbier than a number of others. But it’s arguably his Bowie-est album. Outside is often brilliant and inspired, daringly experimental, and on occasion frustratingly close to genius but falling slightly short. It is, arguably, more than any other album in his catalogue, completely in love with ideas and throwing itself at them with conviction and abandon. Bowie liked to think of himself as a curator, picking through culture for interesting notions and trying them on. On Outside he does this with greater eagerness and relish than perhaps ever before or since.

If the album’s not completely setting the musical agenda it’s at least running a very close parallel to it and keeping pace. By the ’90s Bowie had already had his time defining and ushering in new musical trends, with the bulk of his ’70s output still considered utterly revelatory. It’s fairly unreasonable then, to expect a 48-year-old artist to continue to set trends, but Outside parallels what was happening on the fringes of ’90s rock culture – only just in the underground, as alternative enmeshed with mainstream.

Looking back a quarter of a century at Outside there are some undeniable markers of its time that have dated it: its themes of millennial masochism and murder, congealing in cyber-noir window dressing are very of their time. That’s never more apparent than leafing through the album artwork – little of it has aged well. Some of its production – airy pads, glitchy electronic textures and the balance of crunch and sheen on the guitars for example locate it very much within the mid-’90s sonically. But more often than not its aesthetic preoccupations are so odd and out of step with anything else at the time that they consolidate its weirdness, they distract from its missteps. And of course all of it; the lumpen markers of mid-’90s alterna-electro-avant-rock and the bristling, stirring strangeness is put to use in the service largely of compelling and thoroughly unique songs.

Outside remains a compelling, complicated, frustrating and flawed listen. Its best moments could have made for one heck of a 40-minute album – arguably top five amongst a career of persistent genius. But despite its bloated length and conceptual breadth it remains somehow incomplete – the marker of that telling 1. again. Bowie and Eno were reportedly contemplating a return to the project before his death. Who knows what might have come from such? But instead we have this – simultaneously too much and not enough; detailed, layered and yet ultimately unfinished. That Bowie never completed the album cycle isn’t necessarily a shame so much as it speaks to his career-long tug of war between creating worlds and stories with his albums and what’s left unsaid – in allowing the myth and meaning-making to be completed by his audience. Surely that’s the way it was meant to be.

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Works Cited

Brown, Mark. “ The Thin White Earthling “. Addicted to Noise . Retrieved from Algonet.se. 1997.

Carr, Cynthia. “ Ron Athey’s Artful Crown of Thorns “. The Village Voice . 15 November 1998.

Charazi, Stefan. “ Portrait of the Artist : David Bowie”. Soma Magazine . Retrieved from BowieWonderworld.com. 2000.

Charney, Noah . “ Never forget David Bowie masterminded ‘the biggest art hoax in history'”. Salon . 23 February 2019.

Earp, Joseph. “ Every David Bowie Album Ranked From “Worst” To Best. Junkee . 21 July 2020.

Geoghegan, Kev. Saunders, Emma. “ Reaction to David Bowie’s death “. BBC Online . 11 January 2016.

Goble, Blake. Blackard, Cap. Levy, Pat. Philips, Lior. Sacklah, David. “ Ranking : Every David Bowie Album from Worst to Best.” Consequence of Sound . 8 January 2018.

Gorman, Paul. “David Bowie (Interview)”. MBI . Minneapolis, Minnesota: MBI Publishing Company LLC. 1995.

Gundersen, Edna. “Cover Story: Bowie, beyond fame and fashion”. USA Today . McLean, Virginia: Gannett Company: D1–2. 14 September 1995.

Horowitz, Hal. “ Darker Side of David Bowie Illuminated by Streaming Collection of 1997 Tour. American Songwriter . 17 May 2020.

Moody, Rick (1995). “ Returning to the Sound of Those Golden Years “. The New York Times . 1995.

Stuart, Keith. “ BowieNet : how David Bowie’s ISP foresaw the future of the internet.” The Guardian . 11 January 2016.

(uncredited) “ 1. Outside “. BowieBible.com

(uncredited) “ Bowie talks to Paxman about music, drugs and the internet.” BBC Online . 11 January 2016.

(uncredited) “ Inside Outside – An Extended Stay at the Leon Suites”. FacingTheStranger.com

(uncredited) “ Tin Machine “. BowieBible.com

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David Bowie – detail from 1.Outside album cover

  • David Bowie songs

1. Outside album cover

Released: 25 September 1995

Available on: 1.Outside Ouvrez Le Chien (Live Dallas 95)

‘Outside’ was the title track of David Bowie’s nineteenth studio album, 1995’s 1.Outside .

The song began life as ‘Now’, a discarded Tin Machine piece co-written by Bowie and Kevin Armstrong, which itself emerged from their 1988 reimagining of ‘Look Back In Anger’ with Reeves Gabrels.

Outside, Track 2 – Outside This is a very nice song. My friend @kevarmst is a great guitarist and he also co-wrote this song with David. #TimsTwitterListeningParty — Mike Garson (@mikegarson) July 5, 2020

Tin Machine performed ‘Now’ just twice during their 1989 tour, at London’s National Ballroom on 29 June 1989, and St George’s Hall, Bradford, on 2 July.

Only the opening lines made it to the 1.Outside recording. The rest were mostly variations on “I want you now/I hold you now”, suggesting that Bowie originally envisaged it as a love song of sorts. It was clearly a work-in-progress, one of many chances for the band to improvise on stage.

The album version is restless, twisting, ever-changing. Beginning with a vamp on the chords of F and E, it switches to two bars of C and two of G, before settling into the main sequence: repeating cycles of F/E♭/B♭ and Dm/Em/F/Am.

In the studio

‘Outside’ was recorded in February 1995 as a late addition to the album.

After the main album sessions had ended the previous month in New York, Bowie brought Brian Eno and Kevin Armstrong to Westside Recording Studios in London. There they reworked ‘Now’ into ‘Outside’, after which additional instruments were overdubbed.

So great to hear my friends playing music again on this one. Sterling sounds great on drums. As do @reevesgabrels and @guitarlos1 on guitar and Erdal – a very creative bass player. #TimsTwitterListeningParty — Mike Garson (@mikegarson) July 5, 2020

During the Earthling Tour in 1997, Bowie and his band reportedly recorded a new version of ‘Outside’ at Sono Studios near Prague. Three different mixes were prepared, but were never released.

Live performances

‘Outside’ was often performed during the Outside Tour in 1995. A performance from Dallas on 13 October can be heard on the 2020 release Ouvrez Le Chien (Live Dallas 95) .

It was again played during the 1997 Earthling Tour, during which Gail Ann Dorsey often sang the lead vocals. The final performance took place on 8 October 1997 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

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25 years after it was taped, a new Bowie live album is finally getting released

No Trendy Réchauffé, recorded on David Bowie’s Outside tour, will be released later this month

David Bowie

A recording of the final show on David Bowie ’s Outside tour, his appearance at the Birmingham NEC on December 13, 1995, is to be released for the first time on November 20 via Parlophone.

No Trendy Réchauffé is the second of six scheduled releases due for release as limited one run only pressings as part of the Brilliant Live Adventures series. The first of the six albums, Ouvrez Le Chien , documenting Bowie’s performance at the Starplex Amphitheatre in Dallas, Texas, on October 13, 1995, was released on October 30.

The set featured on No Trendy Réchauffé includes two versions of Hallo Spaceboy , the second of which was filmed on the night with the view to it accompanying the song’s release as a single. However, the video was never completed, as the track was subsequently remixed by the Pet Shop Boys for single release and an alternative promotional video made.

Excerpts from the show were broadcast by the BBC, and Moonage Daydream and Under Pressure were mixed for release on the Hallo Spaceboy CD single. Both versions on this album are previously unreleased, included here as played and mixed on the night they were performed.

The tracklisting for the CD version of No Trendy Réchauffé is:

1. Look Back In Anger 2. Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps) 3. The Voyeur Of Utter Destruction (As Beauty) 4. The Man Who Sold The World 5. Hallo Spaceboy 6. I Have Not Been To Oxford Town 7. Strangers When We Meet 8. Breaking Glass 9. The Motel’ 10. Jump They Say 11. Teenage Wildlife 12. Under Pressure 13. Moonage Daydream 14. We Prick You 15. Hallo Spaceboy (version 2)

BLA PART 2 - NO TRENDY RÉCHAUFFÉ (LIVE BIRMINGHAM 95) “Slinky secrets, Hotter than the sun...” VINYL AND CD AVAILABLE EXCLUSIVELY VIA THE DAVID BOWIE OFFICIAL STORE & WARNER MUSIC GROUP’S DIG! STORE https://lnk.to/DB-BLA2 (Temp link in bio) ‘BRILLIANT LIVE ADVENTURES’ PART 2: 'NO TRENDY RÉCHAUFFÉ (LIVE BIRMINGHAM 95)’ SECOND LIVE ALBUM TO BE RELEASED ON CD AND 2xLP 20 NOVEMBER Parlophone Records is proud to announce further details for DAVID BOWIE 'BRILLIANT LIVE ADVENTURES', a series of six live albums from the 1990s which will be released on vinyl and CD as limited one run only pressings. The second release on CD and double vinyl is NO TRENDY RÉCHAUFFÉ (LIVE BIRMINGHAM 95) a previously unreleased live album recorded live at the Birmingham NEC 13th December 1995. This was the final show of the Outside tour in 1995 and was the first night of a five night festival promoted as "The Big Twix Mix Show”. The set list features rare live performances of 'Jump They Say’ and 'Strangers When We Meet’—the latter featuring lyrics that inspired the album’s title. The album also features two versions of 'Hallo Spaceboy,’ the second of which was filmed as ’Spaceboy’ was the intended next single at the time. The video was never completed, as the track was subsequently remixed by the Pet Shop Boys for single release and an alternative promotional video made. Excerpts from the show were broadcast by the BBC, and 'Moonage Daydream' and 'Under Pressure' were mixed by David Richards for release on the 'Hallo Spaceboy' CD single. Both versions on this album are previously unreleased, included here as played and mixed on the night they were performed. NO TRENDY RÉCHAUFFÉ was produced by David Bowie and performed by Bowie – vocals and saxophone, Carlos Alomar – rhythm guitar, Reeves Gabrels – lead guitar and vocals, Gail Ann Dorsey – bass and vocals, Zachary Alford – drums, Peter Schwartz - musical director, keyboards and synthesisers, George Simms – vocals, and Mike Garson – piano and keyboards. Full PR with track listing and pre-order link here: https://smarturl.it/BLA2BNetPR #BowieBirmingham95 #DBBLA #BrilliantLiveAdventures David Bowie A photo posted by @davidbowie on Nov 9, 2020 at 7:55am PST

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Outside Tour

1995–96 concert tour by david bowie / from wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, dear wikiwand ai, let's keep it short by simply answering these key questions:.

Can you list the top facts and stats about Outside Tour?

Summarize this article for a 10 year old

The Outside Tour was a tour by the English rock musician David Bowie , opening in September 1995 and lasting over a year. The opening shows preceded the release of the 1. Outside album which it supported. The tour visited stops in North America and Europe.

The US leg of the tour was supported by Nine Inch Nails as part of their extended Self Destruct Tour , who segued their set with Bowie's to form a continuous show. Morrissey was the support act for the entire European leg, but withdrew from the tour after nine dates. On selected dates Reeves Gabrels performed songs from his album, The Sacred Squall of Now in addition to performing with Nine Inch Nails and David Bowie.

An official live recording from the tour, Ouvrez le Chien (Live Dallas 95) was released in July 2020, and another, No Trendy Réchauffé (Live Birmingham 95) , was released in December 2020.

In a 2012 Rolling Stone reader's poll, the tour (pairing Nine Inch Nails with Bowie) was named one of the top 10 opening acts in rock history. [1]

The Bowie of many voices was at play on this 1995 rediscovery of core musical values. He dusted off some of his best ideas—Berlin-era electronic music (with Brian Eno), scathing guitar, limber jazz piano—and created a song suite with a loose narrative that allowed him to switch suddenly from urbane crooner with a London twang (“The Motel,” “Outside”) to muttering alien lizard (“The Hearts Filthy Lesson”) at the drop of an arched eyebrow. “Hallo Spaceboy” is a particular peak, a theatrical, grinding push through industrial beats that announced the old, weird Bowie was back in business.

September 25, 1995 19 Songs, 1 hour, 14 minutes ℗ 1995 ISO Records under exclusive license to Parlophone Records Ltd, a Warner Music Group Company

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  • The Motel Play Video
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  • I Have Not Been to Oxford Town Play Video
  • The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (As Beauty) Play Video
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  • Hallo Spaceboy Play Video
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  • Breaking Glass Play Video
  • Jump They Say Play Video
  • We Prick You Play Video
  • Nite Flights ( The Walker Brothers  cover) Play Video
  • Under Pressure ( Queen  cover) Play Video
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david bowie outside tour youtube

Double J is 10 years old. Here are 10 highlights from its first decade

Zan Rowe Tim Rogers Tim Shiel Karen Leng standing together holding a cutout of the Double J logo

Next Tuesday, Double J celebrates its 10th anniversary, with a star-studded array of guests set to drop by to be a part of the celebrations. If you've never listened, here's how to get on board wherever you are .

What follows here is not an exhaustive list of the best things Double J has done: How could it be when it doesn't include Tim Ross and Paul Kelly's Christmas specials, our broadcast of Crowded House live from the Opera House, or our annual all-killer New Year's Eve playlist?

That's the beauty of radio: Everyone's connection to it is different, and each of those connections is as special and important as each other.

So, in celebration of this momentous anniversary, here are just 10 of the many big things that have come from Double J's first 10 years.

The launch of Double J

With performances from Paul Dempsey and Kate Miller-Heidke, a speech from then-ABC managing director Mark Scott, and then-Double J Lunch host Myf Warhurst smashing the shit out of a small guitar for some reason, we were off.

For those who don't know, Double Jay was the original name of the ABC's youth radio station, before it rebranded to triple j when it switched to the FM band in 1980.

But we wanted to make a radio station for music lovers who no longer felt completely at home with the youth-focused triple j.

It can be difficult reclaiming the name of a much-loved cultural institution, and it's something we did not take lightly. So, of course, there was a lot of discussion about what the first song on the new Double J would be.

Let's cut to the chase: We did not start with Skyhooks classic You Just Like Me 'Cos I'm Good in Bed, the banned song that was the first thing played on the original Double Jay in 1975. We chose Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds' 2004 song Get Ready for Love.

Cave has been one of the key artists for almost the entirety of Double/triple j history, and one we continue to support this day.

His music has never really sat comfortably on any other Australian radio network, and the energy and sentiment of the song just felt right.

Hottest 100 replays

Some people find their enjoyment of triple j's Hottest 100 diminishes with every passing year. No Grampa Simpson memes here; nobody's making you feel bad for not liking the music that's exciting to those in their teens and early 20s.

In early 2017, we decided to wind the clock back 20 years and replay the Hottest 100 of 1996 for those of us who want to relive the countdowns that soundtracked some of the biggest parties of our younger days.

Countless incredible moments have stemmed from these revived countdowns. Alex Lloyd lamented the way he handled fame in the 00s, Australian musicians wrote a love letter to a Powderfinger classic, and Tim Shiel tracked down the listener who won triple j's big Hottest 100 prize 20 years ago.

By far the most controversial moment came when we decided to let the audience have another crack at voting in the Hottest 100 of 1999 , which was initially won by The Offspring for their divisive earworm Pretty Fly (for a White Guy).

Despite our insistence that we were just having fun, and not at all trying to rewrite history, Offspring fans were not thrilled with the idea, even though the band themselves thought it was a great move.

"We totally get it," the band's guitarist Noodles posted on social media in February 2019. "Our song may have been played a time or two too many.

"So let's fix this historical error by voting for The Living End's Save The Day as the #1 song of 1998. They had 3 songs in the top 20 that year. They earned it!"

Much as we appreciated the sentiment, it didn't work out the way Noodles had planned. When The Offspring posted the link to their millions of fans, those fans all went and voted for Pretty Fly anyway and it romped home in our re-counted Top 10.

Reliving the Hottest 100 of 20 years ago is still an annual tradition – be sure to join us when we relive the 2004 countdown early next year.

Musical Chairs

For a short while in 2015 and 2016, Double J hosted a YouTube series called Musical Chairs.

The premise was simple: Get an amazing artist, put them in an amazing space, let the magic happen.

Our live music and video teams really outdid themselves on these stunning videos, which could be one of the most underrated things Double J has ever produced. Check out this incredible performance from the late, great Sharon Jones at Sydney Town Hall.

Then watch these clips from Alabama Shakes , Leon Bridges , Waxahatchee , The Milk Carton Kids , Shakey Graves and Aussies including  Emma Donovan , Tim Rogers & the Bamboos , Steve Smyth , and more.

It's not the only video series in Double J's history. We also welcomed everyone from The National to Grinspoon to Missy Higgins for the Finish This Sentence series in 2018. Minutes of fun for the whole family.

Take 5 comes to Double J

We stole Zan Rowe from triple j in 2018, and we're still not sorry about it. This also meant we got to take the excellent Take 5, which fills us with pride every week.

A few key live events brought Take 5 to the people, kicking off with an enthralling conversation between Rowe and the legendary Ice Cube at Sydney Opera House in 2018.

Then there was a deep chat with the great Warren Ellis amid a freezing Hobart winter, and an intimate evening with the mighty Briggs in his hometown of Shepparton as part of triple j's Shepparton takeover in 2022.

And now it's a whole bloody TV show !

As incredible as these achievements are, the best thing about Take 5 will always be exploring the depth of our connection to music.

Whether it's Kylie Minogue gushing about Donna Summer, Wet Leg telling us why we need to hear new Irish singer-songwriter CMAT, or Hilltop Hoods giving us a history lesson in Australian hip hop, Take 5 is a fulfilling offering for anyone who's ever felt glee, sadness or comfort from a piece of music.

A place to grieve and celebrate

The rumours started coming through late in the afternoon on Monday January 11, 2016. Within about half an hour, it was confirmed: David Bowie was dead.

Bowie's music and legacy had been a key part of the Double J story over the preceding years.

He played a major role in our first-ever Artist in Residence, as Robert Forster vividly recounted the life-changing moment of hearing Bowie as a 15-year-old in suburban Brisbane.

We hosted our first-ever outside broadcast from the David Bowie Is… exhibition at ACMI, less than six months before his death. And Bowie's final album Blackstar had been our Feature Album just the week prior.

The next big blow came three months later, when we woke to the confounding news that Prince had also died. The enigmatic genius had just been in Australia, where he'd blown our minds with a string of intimate solo shows. And now he was gone.

On both occasions, Double J scrapped every plan in the wake of the awful news and turned the radio over to the artists — we played nothing but their music for days while we came to terms with the loss of such legends.

We've had to say goodbye to far too many brilliant artists over the past 10 years to mention them all, but these two blows in such a short space of time were especially significant. These artists had never played by the rules and remained creative, compelling and brilliant to the very end. Their deaths were unexpected and deeply affecting.

It's an honour to act as a space where music fans can both grieve and celebrate the incredible lives and careers of these stars who changed our lives.

Back to the Big Day Out

In October of 2019, we went all-in on a celebration of the now-defunct Big Day Out — one of the most iconic music events on the planet.

We spoke to plenty of people who were there . We celebrated the music of the artists who made it so special. We looked at the changes it inspired in our country's music scene.

But the most vital thing to come from it was the brilliant Inside The Big Day Out podcast .

If you have even the remotest interest in a great music story, you must hear this show. It's an immersive trip into the event that looks at it from all angles.

You hear about how it got started, how it got to be so popular, how it was rocked by the tragic death of Jessica Michalik, and how it ultimately crumbled after its 2014 event – all from the mouths of those who were right there amongst it.

The J Files

One of the biggest undertakings for the new Double J team way back in the mid-10s was to bring back The J Files, the music history program that had been responsible for teaching a lot of us about our favourite artists through the 90s and 00s.

The music history show launched with a deep dive into the great Something for Kate, and has covered literally hundreds of artists and musical movements in the decade since.

Where else are you getting a beginner's guide to System of a Down one week, a deep-dive on the brilliant No Fixed Address the next, and then a look back at the impact of Camp Cope ?

On the radio show, acts including Hot Chip and Groove Armada broke down their biggest hits for us. The Audreys' Taasha Coates gave a beautiful tribute to her deceased co-founder Tristan Goodall. I got into arguments about The Cure, The Beatles and Creedence Clearwater Revival with Gemma Pike and Richard Kingsmill.

We had lots of fun outside of the radio side of things, too. Teeth and Tongue performed perhaps the best cover of The Smiths' There Is a Light That Never Goes Out you'll ever hear. We played Aphex Twin songs to strangers to gauge their reactions. Somehow, someone convinced Kingsmill to dress up as a member of Daft Punk .

The J Files has been an amazing source of education, and also a great excuse for us to dig into the rich triple j and ABC archives and unearth some gold that may have otherwise been lost to history.

Special shout-out to recent host Caz Tran, whose long-running Classic Albums series has served much the same purpose.

No one has enough time to read all the things, hear all the albums, watch all the shows and critique all the fashion in this world.

So, Myf Warhurst and Zan Rowe decided they'd take one for the team and unpack the biggest stories of the week in their podcast Bang On .

Hundreds of episodes later, we still cherish every recommendation and every explanation they offer us.

Listening to podcasts is generally a solo endeavour, but listening to Bang On feels more like checking in on a really good group chat.

When you're listening and laughing along to an episode of Bang On, you know you're in a safe space.

This podcast has become way more than a round-up of pop culture stuff we don't have time to consume ourselves. After a while, listeners started referring to themselves as Bang Fam, and it really has come to feel like a family.

Need proof? Massive crowds have flocked to see Warhurst and Rowe on Bang On's first-ever national tour and the feedback has been glowing.

The 50 best albums

Ever get to the end of the year and discover that you can't recall any of the great music you discovered this year?

Or, even worse, that you have barely listened to any new music at all?

Every summer, Double J has tried to help by printing a cheat sheet of what we believe to be the 50 best albums of the year. It's a pretty democratic process – we all pitch in our votes and sometimes have some heated discussions about what makes the cut and what misses out. You'd be surprised how quickly we get to 50 amazing albums.

Looking back on the 500 albums that moved us over the years is part-nostalgia trip/part-reminder of some great pieces of art. When's the last time you spun Rosie Lowe's beautiful Control album, or Charlie Collins's excellent debut Snowpine?

We've expanded the “50 best” concept too, shining a light on everything from film soundtracks to the most under-appreciated songs and the very popular  most influential women of the 90s.

Welcome to the house of fun

It was a couple of years into Double J before we convinced Richard Kingsmill to put together a show for us. It was, without question, very much worth the wait.

For years, The Funhouse was the destination for the best party soundtrack of the week.

Sometimes Richard would just let loose and play the songs he thought we'd want to hear, other times he'd pull together fun shows based on themes. His year-focused decade specials were legendary, and we'll never forget his "backyard blues" episode during COVID .

Kingsmill was a key part of Double J's inception, as was our former boss Meagan Loader. Both left the ABC late last year, but their impact on this place and Australian music culture will not be soon forgotten.

That doesn't even scratch the surface, though. So many people have worked tirelessly to make Double J an exciting space for music lovers over the past decade.

Announcers including Karen Leng and Tim Shiel have been with us since day one, as has our brilliant music director Dot Markek. Our live music team have set up in muddy fields and beautiful theatres to help showcase some of the greatest live talent from Australia and beyond.

In the past decade, we've had a ton of incredible people in front of and behind the mic, all pulling together to create something geared towards people who love music (and who just happen to not be 18 anymore).

Double J isn't stopping or slowing down any time soon. Whether you've been rusted on since day one or are still yet to listen, please give us a go.

We promise you'll be joining a great community of people who care about music just as much as you do.

Double J celebrates 10 years on the air on Tuesday April 30, with a day packed full of special guests. Get all the details here .

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IMAGES

  1. David Bowie

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  2. David Bowie _ Outside Tour 1996 _ Milan Italy 08 February , live

    david bowie outside tour youtube

  3. David Bowie

    david bowie outside tour youtube

  4. David Bowie

    david bowie outside tour youtube

  5. David Bowie live Outside Tour Wembley (Nov 15th 1995)

    david bowie outside tour youtube

  6. David Bowie Outside Tour Live in Tel Aviv 03.07.1996

    david bowie outside tour youtube

VIDEO

  1. David Bowie

  2. 11. David Bowie. Outside. Kevin Armstrong. Outside. 1995

  3. David Bowie Outside Tour Rehearsals Elstree Studios nov 8-13 1995 SOUNDBOARD ( audio )

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COMMENTS

  1. David Bowie

    Watch David Bowie perform live at the Loreley Festival in 1996, as part of his Outside Tour. This video features songs from his album Outside, as well as some of his classic hits. Enjoy the sound ...

  2. Outside Tour

    A collection of performances from David Bowie's Outside Tour 1995-96

  3. David Bowie live Outside Tour Wembley (Nov 15th 1995)

    IntroThe MotelLook Back In AngerThe Heart's Filthy LessonScary MonstersThe Voyeur Of Utter Destruction (As Beauty)I Have Not Been To Oxford TownOutsideAndy W...

  4. David Bowie

    01 - Boys keep swinging 00:0002 - Strangers when we meet 03:4203 - I'm Deranged 11:1004 - Breaking glass 16:4705 - We prick you 22:0206 - Night flights 26:25...

  5. David Bowie 08-12/11/1995 Outside Tour Rehearsals Elstree Studios

    David Bowie Outside Tour Rehearsals 08-12/11/1995 Elstree Studios BorehamwoodSetlist01 - Boys Keep Swinging.02 - Strangers When We Meet. 03 - I'm Deranged...

  6. David Bowie

    Artist: David Bowie.Song: Outside.Album: 1. Outside. Lyrics:Now. Not tomorrow.YesterdayNot tomorrowIt happens todayThe damage todayThey fall on todayThey bea...

  7. Outside Tour

    The Outside Tour was a tour by the English rock musician David Bowie, opening in September 1995 and lasting over a year.The opening shows preceded the release of the 1.Outside album which it supported. The tour visited stops in North America and Europe. The US leg of the tour was supported by Nine Inch Nails as part of their extended Self Destruct Tour, who segued their set with Bowie's to ...

  8. David Bowie

    Rip Tv - mkv -

  9. Outside

    Outside. By David Fricke. October 19, 1995. David Bowie has made a career of being anything and everything other than himself. As rock & roll's consummate quick-change artist, he has created ...

  10. David Bowie (Leon, 1.Outside & Earthling era)

    1. Outside (subtitled The Nathan Adler Diaries: A Hyper-cycle) is the nineteenth studio album by English recording artist David Bowie. It was released on 25 September 1995 through Arista Records, BMG, and RCA Records in Europe and Virgin Records in the United States. It marked Bowie's reunion with Brian Eno, whom he had worked with among others on his Berlin Trilogy in the 1970s. Outside ...

  11. 1. Outside (The Nathan Adler Diaries: A Hyper Cycle)

    David Bowie - 1. Outside (The Nathan Adler Diaries: A Hyper Cycle) / David Bowie Full Album (Full playlist) Here are the songs from 1. Outside (The Nathan Ad...

  12. Outside Tour commences 25 years ago today

    Thus spoke David Bowie to USA Today on the opening day of The Outside World Tour, hot on the heels of the release of The Hearts Filthy Lesson single and ahead of the release of the 1. Outside album. ... As you know, Parlophone released a live recording from this first US leg of the tour: David Bowie Ouvre le Chien (Live Dallas 95) on 3rd July ...

  13. 16 of David Bowie's Best Live Performances You Can Watch ...

    "Hurt," The Outside Tour (1995) During this co-headlining tour with Nine Inch Nails, Bowie and Trent Reznor would perform NIN's "Hurt" before his full set. "Quicksand," Madison ...

  14. 'What a Fantastic Death Abyss': David Bowie's 'Outside' at 25

    David Bowie. RCA. 25 September 1995. Emerging with a clatter at the beginning of the internet age and peddling millennial paranoia through a confoundingly labyrinthine cyber-noir narrative, David ...

  15. Outside

    Personnel. 'Outside' was the title track of David Bowie's nineteenth studio album, 1995's 1.Outside. The song began life as 'Now', a discarded Tin Machine piece co-written by Bowie and Kevin Armstrong, which itself emerged from their 1988 reimagining of 'Look Back In Anger' with Reeves Gabrels. Outside, Track 2 - Outside. This ...

  16. A recording of the closing night of David Bowie's Outside tour is to be

    A recording of the final show on David Bowie's Outside tour, his appearance at the Birmingham NEC on December 13, 1995, is to be released for the first time on November 20 via Parlophone. No Trendy Réchauffé is the second of six scheduled releases due for release as limited one run only pressings as part of the Brilliant Live Adventures series.

  17. David Bowie Concerts 1995-1996

    David Bowie Concert appearances in 1995 and 1996 1995-1996 THE OUTSIDE WORLD TOUR Opening on the 14th September 1995, The Outside World Tour took in twenty six countries and produced a total of ninety two performances. The band consisted of: David Bowie (vocals/saxophone), Peter Schwartz (keyboards/backing vocals), Reeves Gabrels (lead guitar ...

  18. Outside Tour

    The Outside Tour was a tour by the English rock musician David Bowie, opening in September 1995 and lasting over a year. The opening shows preceded the release of the 1. Outside album which it supported. The tour visited stops in North America and Europe.

  19. David Bowie & Gail Ann Dorsey

    David Bowie and Gail Ann Dorsey performing Under Pressure live at Point Theatre in Dublin, Ireland in 2003 during the A Reality Tour.#DavidBowie #GailAnnDors...

  20. ‎Outside

    The Bowie of many voices was at play on this 1995 rediscovery of core musical values. He dusted off some of his best ideas—Berlin-era electronic music (with Brian Eno), scathing guitar, limber jazz piano—and created a song suite with a loose narrative that allowed him to switch suddenly from urbane crooner with a London twang ("The Motel," "Outside") to muttering alien lizard ...

  21. David Bowie Average Setlists of tour: Outside

    Jump They Say. We Prick You. Nite Flights. ( The Walker Brothers cover) Under Pressure. ( Queen cover) White Light/White Heat. ( The Velvet Underground cover) Teenage Wildlife.

  22. David Bowie

    Box Set. Boys Keep Swinging. David Bowie. Released. 2019 — Europe. Vinyl —. 7", 45 RPM, Single, Limited Edition, Picture Disc. Add to List. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2020 Vinyl release of "Outside Tour (Live '95)" on Discogs.

  23. David Bowie

    View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2022 Vinyl release of "Outside Tour (Live '95)" on Discogs.

  24. Double J is 10 years old. Here are 10 highlights from its first decade

    We hosted our first-ever outside broadcast from the David Bowie Is… exhibition at ACMI, less than six months before his death. And Bowie's final album Blackstar had been our Feature Album just ...