From The Beginning: David Bowie – David Bowie AKA Space Oddity (1969-1970)

David Bowie’s 1969 had an auspicious start – while heΒ recorded an ambitious promotional video to try to generate new label interest he simultaneously ended a serious relationship (perhaps during the actual filming).Β However, it was something that had happened just before those events that would define his year and even his entire career.

That something was his penning a song called β€œSpace Oddity.”

Before Space Oddity – Early 1969

Early demos of β€œSpace Oddity” from spring of 1969 show it had all the fine skeletal structure that makes it an arresting performance even today – the countdown, the layered β€œground control” vocals, the drifting outΒ in a tin can, and the extended break. A notable early demo features a live duo performance with Bowie handling the countdown himself. Yet, this tune was admittedly another curio – a gimmick song coinciding with increasing attention on the space race. Just as Bowie’s debut album couldn’t be shaped entirely around the theme of a giddy gnome, β€œSpace Oddity” couldn’t set the theme for the rest of its record alone.

After the recording of the LP but shortly before its release, Bowie appeared on the BBC for a three-song set. OnlyΒ β€œUnwashed and Somewhat Dazed” saw radio playΒ at the time, although the session’s other two songsΒ were releasedΒ onΒ Bowie At The Beeb.

β€œUnwashed” has a similar feel to β€œSpace Oddity” to start, with major-to-minor guitar strumming and chiming high electric guitars. It transforms into something much heavier as the band enters, thanks to a big, rubbery bass and forcefulΒ drumming. There is not an obvious hook, yet it’s more enjoyable than the entirety of his debut. β€œLet Me Sleep Behind You” is more driven than the original recording, but that beat pushes too quickly past the distinct melodic hooks on the β€œlet your hair hang down / wear the dress your mother wore” refrain. β€œJanine” has an southern-rock feel to it, with Bowie even effecting an American accent.

The sound of this session is much hipper than Bowie’s previous incarnation. However, the bandΒ still had not found any special alchemy together, despite their time in the studio.

β€œSpace Oddity” b/w β€œWild Eyed Boy From Freecloud” – Released July 11, 1969

β€œSpace Oddity” is a singularly peculiar song. Everything about it is peculiar, from it’s slow fade up and wheezing stylophone, to its measured countdown leading to liftoff, to it’s insistent lack of choruses. David Bowie told many fantastical stories in the songs ofΒ his debut LP with Deram, but none so dramatic or immediate as this one. It’s the little touches that make it memorable, like the love to his wife and the oscillating flutes behind the β€œsitting in a tin can refrain.”

This singleΒ had the great fortune to see release less than two weeks before man first set foot on the moon. After a series of failed singles and a flop of an album, David Bowie was finally gaining notice. Yes, it wasΒ on another song that could be accused of being a novelty, butΒ this one thankfully did not include laughing gnome. While the song was not a hit in the US, it reached the top five in the UK.

The B-Side is an early acoustic guitar and cello take on the fantastical β€œWild Eyed Boy From Freecloud.” It is missing its first verse and orchestral accompaniment to truly set up its scopeΒ andΒ drama, but this version (which went long unearthed until seeing release in the Sound+Vision box set) is simply an astounding performance. I’d hold up Bowie’s β€œreally you, really me” refrain here as one of his finest vocals of all time, and the cello has many intricate little passes to suggest the motion of the later version.

David Bowie AKA Space Oddity – ReleasedΒ November 4, 1969

For as many people who know β€œSpace Oddity” today, few have heard another song from David Bowie’s redebut, which was later rechristened in name of its oneΒ hit – more massive in later years than it had been at the time.

The only other single from the album is the peculiar β€œMemory of a Free Festival,” which bookends the disc with β€œSpace Oddity.” Β It starts dirge-like, thrumming on a lone electric organ, perhaps an elegiac memory of the recent-passed summer of love.

We claimed the very source of joy ran through
It didn’t, but it seemed that way
I kissed a lot of people that day

Oh, to capture just one drop of all the ecstasy that swept that afternoon
To paint that loveΒ upon a white balloon
And fly it from the toppest top of all the tops
That man has pushed beyond his brain
Satori must be something
just the same

In a tangle of noise, a refrain emerges: β€œThe Sun Machine is Coming Down, and We’re Gonna Have a Party.” Eventually a chorus of voices swallow Bowie’s vocal until it disappears, and all that is left is the chorus, a fuzz bass, and a ponderous drum beat, which too fade until we are back to Bowie himself beating on his tiny toy organ.

It’s weird, evocative, and remarkable in almost the exact same way as β€œSpace Oddity” despite the two songs having nearly nothing in common other than appearing on the album together. Both are perfect frames to peer through to seeΒ a specific person and place, even though this one does not have a primary character or even tell a narrative story. Despite the music not being very interesting or catchy up until the refrain, β€œFestival” is distinct and memorable.

This is the unique power that Bowie had found, seemingly from the ether, in the two years since his last release. While that album is full of story songs, none of them set a precedent for the sudden raw power of Bowie’s inventive song structures and arranging. What might we credit for this transformation? Was it simply the music that surrounded Bowie in the popular culture of the day? Was it his future wife Angela? The team at Mercury Records?Β Did he β€œJoin the Gang” he warned us about on that last record, merrily running alongside β€œLondon Boys” until he was ragged and sick from the pills?

The album that stands between the bookend singlesΒ is fascinating because that veryΒ identity struggle is on display across its length. Bowie vacillates between respectable young man, member of anΒ art movement, and an untrustworthy longhair. He takes that last role on the would-be single, β€œUnwashed and Slightly Dazed.” It’s a scorcher – a bluesy stomp about stalking around the house of a pretty upper-classΒ girl. It begins disguised as another β€œSpace Oddity” with minor chords abuzz on Bowie’s twelve-string, but once the pretty girl looks down her nose at Bowie it explodes into rock. It blends in themes of class warfare with hallucinogenic imagery. β€œUnwashed” wears the vocal stamp of Dylan, the contemporary influence of the Stones, and could neatly serve as prelude to Jethro Tull’s tramp in β€œAqualung” two years later.

I’m a phallus in pigtails
And there’s blood on my nose
And my tissue is rotting
Where the rats chew my bones
And my eye sockets empty
See nothing but pain
I keep having this brainstorm
About twelve times a day
So now, you could spend the morning walking with me, quite amazed
As I’m UnwashedΒ and Somewhat Slightly Dazed


There is more poetry and sheer lusty power in a single verse of this song than on Bowie’s entire last album, so it can be forgiven for an over three-minute funk breakdown that inexplicably brings in a horn section before the end. It’s hard to believe no one pushed for it as a single (perhaps in an edited version).

β€œLetter To Hermione” is a folk song with a slight jazz influence that feels more of a piece with Joni Mitchell’s Clouds, released the same year. The theme of an unrequited love letter might have fit better on Bowie’s debut, but the texture of multiple acoustic guitars adds new depth to Bowie’s repertoire. It’s unfortunate that he acquires a frog in his throat at the midway point, as prior to that it’s one of his prettiest vocals. Despite lacking a traditional hook, the refrain of β€œI’m not sure what I’m supposed to do” clings after each listen.

β€œCygnet Committee” is Bowie going full 1969, complete with backwards guitar. It starts out a soundalike to β€œDear Prudence,” with a stepwise descending bass with a a tremendous vocal performance from Bowie. Yet, this isn’t another love letter, nor is it a lusty blues. This is one of Bowie’s first dystopian song stories (β€œAs a love machine lumbers through desolation rows, plowing down man, woman, listening to its command, but not hearing anymore”), complete with an uplifting ending refrain that presages β€œRock’n’Roll Suicide.” ItΒ still stands as one of his most complex epics. Unfortunately, the ring of adolescent petulance still clings – it reads like the spiteful goodbye letter to an ungrateful school club (and, in fact, was likely about Bowie’s disillusionment with theΒ Beckenham Arts Laboratory he helped to found). Yet, there’s just not enough fuel for this one – the petulant lyrics in its buildup deflate what should be a victorious ascending climax emerging from theΒ serpentine structure spread across its nine-minute length.

The one other fine specimen here is β€œWild Eyed Boy From Freecloud,” which finds Bowie in the same fantastical mode asΒ β€œWhen I Love My Dream” from his debut. Yet, β€œFreecloud” is not just a neutered love song, but a fantasy epic about a messianic young boy who is embraced by nature just as his village rejects him. It is magnificent in scope, switching from orchestral Disney musical to glam rock, stopping for a cartoon-climax worthy refrain ofΒ β€œIt’s really me, really you and really me.”

β€œFreecloud” could easily be expanded into its own rock opera – there’s enough thematic content there for an entire album. In fact, it’s eerily similar to β€œZiggy Stardust.” Sure, Ziggy didn’t live in a Henson-esque fantasy world, but he was another of Bowie’s messiah figures who was briefly a savior until the kids consumed him and his sweet hands were crushed. TO get from here to there Bowie simple switched the fantasy to sci-fi and brought his fictional Christ to down to earth – plus squeezed him into a more-traditional AABAB song structure.

Among the remaining chaff is β€œJanine,” not transformed much from its live debut on BBC radio; the sappy, flute-tinged β€œAn Occasional Dream;” and a Dylan-influenced, finger-picked protest-song β€œGod Knows I’m Good” (β€œthe cash machines were shrieking on the counter”). These weaker songs are the puzzle of this album, and not just for their weakness. You can feel Bowie trying to find his voice, and these songs are remnants of some sensitive in-between phase we missed – the one that swallowed up his lovely debut B-side, β€œLet Me Sleep Beside You.”

There was probably one whole, good, folk-tinged rock album in Bowie in this time period – one that could giveΒ context to β€œGod Knows I’m Good,” where β€œLetter To Hermoine” could be a rightful centerpiece, and where β€œJanine” could have teed up the meltdown of β€œUnwashed and Slightly Dazed” on a follow-up record. That might have been anΒ album that yieldedΒ great commercial success – but we all had the misfortune to miss it.

It’s probably better for his career that we got this instead: an uneven album dotted with weird narrative monsters that feel doubly strange when held against the slighter songs in their midst.

β€œThe Prettiest Star” b/w β€œConversation Piece” – Released March 6, 1970

There are several intriguing elements of this single.

First, it’s not on the album – having been recorded in January 1970. Second, it features Marc Bolan of T-Rex on lead guitar.

Third, this recordingΒ of the song is not the one you’re thinking of – most Bowie fans are familiar with the version fromΒ Aladdin Sane. This early version is too disarmingly pretty, with its twinkling chimes, compared with the more sour-sounding later cut. Still, the fine quality of Bowie’s songwriting shows through – this cannot be compared to anything on his debut, or even the more forgettable songs onΒ Space Oddity.

B-Side β€œConversation Piece” is a stumbling monologue that would have felt more at home on the prior album.

β€œMemory of a Free Festival Part 1” b/w β€œMemory of a Free Festival Part 2” – Released June 12, 1970

In a peculiar move, Bowie’s record company passed over β€œUnwashed and Slightly Dazed” to have Bowie re-recored thisΒ odd pick of a single. I can’t help but think they had become enamored with the idea of him as a gimmick singer at this point, although that begs the question why they didn’t run with β€œWild Eyed Boy From Free Cloud” (and then from there directly to the bank).

Granted, this recording carries a bit more structure and kick, overlaying an acoustic three-piece, Mick Ronson’s Bowie guitar debut, and spacey Moog synthesizer. Together, it brings the song much more in line with β€œSpace Oddity.” It’s downright anthemic. Also, for purposes of 45rpm single length, it splits the majority of the β€œSun Machine” section into a second cut.

Even if it wasn’t much of a success, I’m happy we have this version for comparison and posterity. Score one for the A&R guys, I guess?

Other Space Oddity Era Material

Bowie committed a rocking update of β€œLondon, Bye, Ta-Ta” to record in January 1970 but passed over it to make β€œThe Prettiest Star” a single. He probably should have gone with β€œLondon,” because’s it’s a knockout. It has the queazy style mash-up quality of hisΒ Young AmericansΒ work, evoking that same plastic soul feel. Particularly, the β€œI loved her” refrained backed by a cooing girl group is fantastic.

(There’s also cleaner mix without the phased vocal effect, but it might be a little tooΒ normal, you know?)

β€œSpace Oddity” was repurposed as β€œRagazzo Solo, Ragazza Sola” – β€œLonely Boy, Lonely Girl” – for single release in Italy to ward off bands covering Bowie’s hit. It’s performed to the original β€œSpace Oddity” track, but the song is completely different! Not only is it not at all about an astronaut, but there are different combinations of voices and uses of harmony. I can’t comment on Bowie’s performance in Italian.

Bowie provided music for a piece of theatre called Pierrot in Turquoise orΒ β€œThe Looking Glass Murders” that was later broadcast on BBC. The recordings included an all-organ version of β€œWhen I Live My Dream,” the manic β€œThreepenny Pierrot” played on a ragtime piano to the tune of β€œLondon Bye Ta-Ta,Β plus two new songs. β€œColumbine” is an acoustic ode to the traditional leading lady ofΒ commedia dell’arte, while β€œThe Mirror” bemoans the simple and foolishΒ Harlequinn. The latter is quite a lovely bit of poetry, especially if you know your dell’arte archetypes:

Wash your face before your faded make-up makes a mark
The mirror will watch over you
Pierrot never comes so pack your face and chase the dark
The mirror’s hung up on you
Don’t be last, your friends and your reflection
It’s all so direction now
Poor harlequin, you’re quite an exception
Fay troubadour, on a downer
Gay harlequin, doesn’t believe in you
Doesn’t believe it’s true, such a downer.

An alternate mixΒ of β€œWild Eyed Boy From Free-Cloud” plays down the rock elements – it’s good, but not as great.

##

Despite a brief breakthrough, Bowie entered 1970 much in the same position as he began the prior year despite considerably more acclaim for his secondΒ David Bowie than he’d received for his first. However, the process of playing behind this album netted him Tony Visconti, who would produce bothΒ his next LPΒ as well as many later-in-life albums, and the kinetic guitar playing of Mick Ronson.

 

byΒ CRUSHING KRISIS

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