David Bowie- Sweet Thing / Candidate / Sweet Thing (Reprise) (First Listen)

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  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2024
  • Hey there, welcome to my channel! I hope you enjoy my clean content as I listen to music and bands I'm unfamiliar with, or digging deeper into. Stick around with me and maybe we can all discover some new music together. Let me know YOUR thoughts on the song and leave me your suggestions as well.
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    Song Link: • Sweet Thing / Candidat...

Komentáře • 240

  • @SpaceCattttt
    @SpaceCattttt Před 3 lety +82

    This is easily one of David Bowie's most impressive achievements. Not only does this medley of songs show off his full range and theatrical power as a singer,
    but musically, there's a world of influences, rhythms, noises and unbelievable lyrics to enjoy. And if that isn't enough, there's also Mike Garson sprinkling his piano magic over everything.
    A fantastic piece of music. And Bowie just seemed to casually throw it out there! It's so easy for geniuses. 😁

    • @-davidolivares
      @-davidolivares Před 3 lety +8

      Give it up for Mike... beautifully played.

    • @SpaceCattttt
      @SpaceCattttt Před 3 lety +5

      @@-davidolivares For sure! He's right up there with Mick Ronson as far as essential Bowie collaborators go.
      I remember being thrilled when David brought him back for the Outside album and tour.

    • @Young_Jim
      @Young_Jim Před 3 lety +5

      @@SpaceCattttt - Mike’s own YT channel is great and has far too few subscribers in my opinion.

    • @gaiaeternal5131
      @gaiaeternal5131 Před 3 lety +5

      Love your description of Mike's playing. I know his playing on the Aladdin Sane album (don't know this one very well), and saw him live in Bowie's band more recently (I think it was the Reality tour). Great mixture of melody, rhythm and dissonance. I'll check out his channel (thanks, YoungJim)

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +4

      @@gaiaeternal5131 Definitely check out the 1.Outside version of Strangers When We Meet. The piano composition is absolutely gorgeous there!

  • @neilanderson7669
    @neilanderson7669 Před 3 lety +48

    Very difficult to say this, given Bowie’s amazing career, but this is probably my favorite “track” of his. It’s certainly in my top 5. Chilling, beautiful, scary, inspired genius.

    • @silvio.r8443
      @silvio.r8443 Před 2 lety

      This is my favorite album of his, a hard choice !

    • @belgand5555
      @belgand5555 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️

    • @georgesonm1774
      @georgesonm1774 Před rokem

      Top 5 here as well! Alongside Aladdin Sane, Subterraneans, Word on a Wing and Always Crashing (although it's a constantly shifting top ;))

    • @thomcadeau1384
      @thomcadeau1384 Před 9 měsíci

      Backstreet, New York alley sound.

  • @jonsey156
    @jonsey156 Před 3 lety +36

    It's a real hard choice .... But I do believe that Diamond Dogs is my very favourite Bowie album

    • @andyfletcher3561
      @andyfletcher3561 Před 3 lety +1

      This and Ziggy are his best.

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 Před rokem +2

      It's a candidate for one of his finest.

    • @georgesonm1774
      @georgesonm1774 Před rokem +1

      massively underrated - it's definitely a grower, too :) Took me a while to appreciate how wonderfully weird and eclectic it is. Probably in my top 5

  • @paulhart3812
    @paulhart3812 Před 3 lety +17

    My favorite Bowie album.
    Apocalyptic, dystopian, dark, brooding, bizarre... everything I love.

    • @MrJambug
      @MrJambug Před 2 lety +3

      Mine too Paul.
      It was when this album came out that I knew Bowie was just in a different league to everything else I'd heard, and in some cases loved.
      Every track is a masterpiece and this is the grand master, with like yourself a special mention for We Are The Dead.
      Even my wedding dance was When You Rock'n Roll With Me.

    • @dzulfikar68
      @dzulfikar68 Před 8 měsíci

      mee too

  • @jasontharp699
    @jasontharp699 Před 3 lety +24

    Favorite album. And my favorite Bowie moment is after the piano flourish when the crunching guitar comes in at the end. It sounds like decay, perfect for the subject matter.

    • @SpaceCattttt
      @SpaceCattttt Před 3 lety +4

      Mine is just before that, when Bowie sings about freezing your brain in a snowstorm.
      It's clearly about cocaine, but the music is gorgeous and David finishes the song on what I believe is the highest note he's ever sung.
      And THEN the crunching guitars come in, because why not? 😁

  • @tommycanadasmobazimmer
    @tommycanadasmobazimmer Před 3 lety +12

    Also love the David Live version of this..

    • @dana_brooke_27
      @dana_brooke_27 Před 3 lety +2

      That was my first Bowie album. I'd just turned 14. Station to Station tour was my first concert.

    • @Lundy.Fastnet.Irish_Sea
      @Lundy.Fastnet.Irish_Sea Před 2 měsíci

      The one on Cracked Actor is my personal favourite

  • @pauljensen9678
    @pauljensen9678 Před 3 lety +15

    One of the epic Bowie tracks. I think I hear something new every time I listen. Surprising to note that with Mick Ronson out of the picture, David plays most of the guitar parts on the album and quite effectively.

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +3

      As Justin will learn in the next song, Bowie could write riffs like an absolute champion. Ronson helped Bowie to create what he wanted to create, then Bowie took the initiative and expanded his talents in every possible direction so he could do it for himself. The Spiders allowed him to know where he stood as an artist, and from there, he could analyze what drove his ambitions. Glam rock, soul music, then ambient, then new wave, then industrial, then ultimately jazz rock. It was having a band that allowed Bowie to understand the way bands worked. When he doubted what he was doing, starting the Hype and Arnold Corns brought him people who could understand what he wanted to create. When he doubted what he was doing, it was starting Tin Machine in the late '80s that brought him people who could understand what he wanted to create. Those people gave him perspective and inspired him. Collaboration was the toolset that allowed him to keep things fresh.
      David Bowie was born to be a frontman, but he was much too talented not to be the greatest solo artist the world has ever seen. There will never be another one like him.

    • @chrisf.7980
      @chrisf.7980 Před 3 lety +2

      @Chris Meadows Yes, yes, yes! My kindred spirit when it comes to writing a paragraph about our hero. Been a few weeks, good to see you! 😁

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +2

      @@chrisf.7980 and you! 😄

  • @michaelbedford8017
    @michaelbedford8017 Před 3 lety +11

    'Les Tricoteurs' were the women who knitted by the guillotine during the French revolution.

    • @lewismaddox4132
      @lewismaddox4132 Před 3 lety

      Wow, nice and gruesome! They must have knitted up a storm, cause those guillotines weren't idle.

    • @sexysadie2901
      @sexysadie2901 Před 2 lety

      Tricoteuses

  • @togashi8287
    @togashi8287 Před 3 lety +5

    Oh my lord, the solo between Sweet Thing and Candidate has to be one of my favorite solos of all time. It's just so perfect and powerful. Really underrated Bowie suite.

  • @stevenmurano7863
    @stevenmurano7863 Před 3 lety +21

    THIS!!!!! if i had to give someone 5 bowie songs they HAD to hear, this would be on there. no question. The song is like a movie in itself, and for my money one of Bowie's best vocal performances. He also plays all the guitars...mellotron and sax. Yes...this is bowie's first foray into that DEEP vocal range. Mike garson's piano is incredible. always. of course, this all works better when you listen to the whole album in one shot. that said...wanna hear another one that I feel is incredible (i'm in the minority) form this album. We Are the Dead. it manages to be gorgeous and freakin creepy all in one shot. MORE BOWIE PLEASE ;O)

    • @wpollock1
      @wpollock1 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, absolutely agree. We Are The Dead encapsulates the whole 1984 imagery and, with Big Brother are the so true to the vision of this album. The so-called experts panned this album and gave no love to David Live which, I feel, are some of the best of Bowie. Bowie's guitar and sax are PERFECT for this.......so trashy, decadent sounding.

    • @georgesonm1774
      @georgesonm1774 Před rokem

      @@wpollock1 yeah, screw these experts (probably some old rockist assholes from Rolling Stone who felt it lacked 'authenticity' or something) - David Live is a stunning live album, the band is amazing, the renditions of older tracks - fascinating, and David was at the top of his game vocally (and on lots of coke, if I'm not mistaken) during this very interesting, transitional period

  • @chrisf.7980
    @chrisf.7980 Před 3 lety +10

    One of my favorite Bowie songs ever, I see his dystopian world when I hear it. When Bowie was denied the rights to George Orwell's book 1984 by Orwell's widow, he modified his vision for this concept by blending proto-punk & Dickensian themes together & came up with his "Halloween Jack" persona to finish the album. The songs 1984, Big Brother, & We Are The Dead follow his original Orwellian ideas, the other songs more are in line with the latter concept.
    He also employed his cut up technique for his lyrics on this album that he learned from William Burroughs. He wrote them on paper, then cut them into phrases & rearranged them into different sequence, creating a very nonlinear storyline. He utilized similar techniques throughout his career, using a computer program in later years.
    I remember hearing this wearing headphones on as a teen, sitting in my darkened bedroom & being transported to his dystopian world. Bowie's voice was mesmerizing & Garson's piano was hauntingly beautiful. It still takes me there today. Mission accomplished Bowie!

  • @danbal4185
    @danbal4185 Před 3 lety +5

    this is musical modern art masterpiece. David freaking Bowie ladies and gents...

  • @sv-uw1lc
    @sv-uw1lc Před 3 lety +16

    been a big fan of his for a very long time... love this track... the version on david live is nice too...

    • @Jillyconjem
      @Jillyconjem Před 3 lety +4

      “Live at the Tower Philadelphia” is one of my deserted island albums. So great. 💜
      Also, fan since “Young Americans”. 💜

  • @scottmcgregor562
    @scottmcgregor562 Před 3 lety +11

    There is a live performance on CZcams that is phenomenal and chilling. In this particular video Bowie is rail thin and probably at the height of his addictions but his voice is dramatic and hypnotizing as ever. This performance also includes band members Mike Garson, David Sanborn on tenor sax, Luther Vandrose on background vocals, and the incredible Earl Slick on guitar.

    • @wpollock1
      @wpollock1 Před rokem +1

      Couldn't agree more. David Live is special....

  • @RobinHartJones
    @RobinHartJones Před 2 lety +3

    Possibly one of my favourite Bowie songs. It is pure theatre.

  • @edwardmeradith2419
    @edwardmeradith2419 Před 3 lety +6

    I love the juxtaposition between Bowie’s instrumental work on this -
    It’s Bowie as lead guitarist, and a sax section, - limited in technique but not imagination - playing against Mike Garson’s virtuosic
    piano, it’s messy and so grand...

  • @Lellos_
    @Lellos_ Před 3 lety +7

    Such an overlooked song! It's my favorite from the album. Great video!

  • @anabellelei8540
    @anabellelei8540 Před 3 lety +10

    Oh My! What a damn great thing to wake up to. My all time favorite Bowie song and that says a ton since about my top 100 are Bowie. Thank you so so much for this welcome wakeup!

  • @dalebaker9109
    @dalebaker9109 Před 3 lety +6

    Diamond Dogs is an incredible album, was only 12 when this came out. This song drips talent and creativity on each second on it. Bowie was very much number one in a field of one. To quote the title of a song Nobody does it better!

  • @CliffordLake
    @CliffordLake Před 3 lety +5

    This my favorite Bowie album.

  • @-davidolivares
    @-davidolivares Před 3 lety +8

    Love that low manipulated vocal at the beginning... and it just gets better weirder. Before AIDS, the sexual revolution was an exciting time. Since I was in basically a small university town it was not nearly as “seedy” as larger cities.
    Listening to this album back then let us imagine that world. People were grabbing other people in bars, trying out their new freedom and whisking off into the night... we were young. Androgynous David was a creepy scary sex symbol of the times.
    The cover folds out to a continued dog body. Very bold.
    Great that you came back, great album, great memories. Thank you.
    Take care everyone, ( manipulated low voice) maassskksss ppplllsss,
    Peace and dark seedy Music

    • @kelvinkloud
      @kelvinkloud Před 2 lety

      bowie was projecting forward where this was all going.... he was creating a berlin of the '20's into the future as the 20th century was winding down... believable dark dystopic world. blade runner but not quite as techy future. sex was played out. now just a world of deepening release from a descending floor.

  • @davidfisher8821
    @davidfisher8821 Před 3 lety +3

    Excellent reaction, Bowie was a full-on genius...what vocals, what an imagination.

  • @gregdavis4978
    @gregdavis4978 Před 3 lety +5

    Thank you for continuing with this. It may have been mentioned previously that this was originally supposed to be a musical based on Orwell's 1984 but Bowie was denied this by the author's estate. Bowie was also hanging out with Beat writer William S. Burroughs at the time. There was definitely a gay subtext here, and Bowie was borrowing Burroughs' cut and paste technique with the lyrics. By the way, the collision of the Sweet Thing reprise into Rebel Rebel is one of the greatest moments in rock and roll.

  • @swilkins2524
    @swilkins2524 Před 3 lety +8

    Wow!
    Out of all the channels I watch, thought you'd been the perfect person to react to those songs! And I was right!
    Always meant to request you to do these songs! Kept forgetting!
    Thanks! You do a great work of dissecting songs!👍

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety

      Haha ty H Wilkins! Appreciate that!

  • @emmejayeh.5995
    @emmejayeh.5995 Před 3 lety +6

    As I'm sure everyone below has probably told you, this was originally meant to be less of an album, and more of a cast album to a musical he was developing based on the book 1984. But when Bowie asked for the rights, Mrs. Orwell said, "Nah". So he cobbled _Diamond Dogs_ together by rewriting some songs and writing new ones.
    It's a disjointed album for sure, but it has some of my favorite Bowie songs on it. This suite and "We Are The Dead" are the standout tracks for me. And "Rebel, Rebel" is always fun. Also worth hearing is the original version of "Candidate", known today as "Alternative Candidate". It's a standalone song, and Mike Garson's piano heavily features in it.

    • @idemandabetterfuture
      @idemandabetterfuture Před 2 lety

      It has a musical story line running through it. Intermission is when you flip the record.

  • @mvjonsson
    @mvjonsson Před 3 lety +3

    Diamond Dogs is a masterful album and one of Bowie's very best. His last glamrock album, at the same time it points forward to the plastic soul of Young Americans.

  • @wpollock1
    @wpollock1 Před 3 lety +6

    Think of 1974 for a moment.....who was creating music like this at that point? No one. There is a beautiful decadence to it.....he carried this into his tour with a re-creation of a street scene.

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +2

      This song was Bohemian Rhapsody before Bohemian Rhapsody.
      Bowhemian Rhapsody! 😎

    • @chrisf.7980
      @chrisf.7980 Před 3 lety +2

      Bowie would have loved the pun, just sayin'

    • @wpollock1
      @wpollock1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@chrismeadows4216 Think of the genius of Bowie....he could have had Sanborn and Slick or Ronson on guitar/sax, but no....he does them himself and it comes out with the decadent "feel" that mirrors the intended atmosphere of the songs.

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +1

      @@wpollock1 it makes one wonder if he would've needed them at all. On tour, obviously he did, and they certainly made great embellishments in the studio, but maybe he could've done the job on other projects if he wanted to. It's very nice of him to have allowed other people to be a part of the records and give them a job. Some of them caught a huge break because of him.

    • @kelvinkloud
      @kelvinkloud Před 2 lety +1

      agree.... the mid 70s was the bottom nihilistic hell hole that the summer of love 8 years earlier had launched. all the deceit & usary w/ nothing to believe in. bowie put the spotlight on the truth of the era better then any of his artistic peers in that era.

  • @newpanzer8362
    @newpanzer8362 Před 3 lety +2

    Best Bowie track ever. That’s it.

  • @bobjames7589
    @bobjames7589 Před 3 lety +2

    Had the Diamond Dogs poster in my room. My grandfather stayed over woke up to the poster which terrified him🤣😂

  • @Pcrimson1
    @Pcrimson1 Před 3 lety +5

    Ha! One of my friends had the album cover as as big poster on his bedroom wall. It's like a train wreck, you can't look away. This album is one of Bowie's more challenging ones, but, as in the case of these 3 songs, well worth the effort.

  • @Young_Jim
    @Young_Jim Před 3 lety +3

    Really pleased you reacted to this, one of the best parts from one of my all time favourite albums.

  • @br.martindallyosb1147
    @br.martindallyosb1147 Před 3 lety +8

    Interestingly, on my copy of this album on cd is an outtake of another song called "Candidate" that is so beautiful. It's entirely different from this "Candidate". It's worth looking up. This album is Bowie at his glammiest (is that even a word?). I just love the how melodic the music is, and how well it rocks out. I also love how Bowie's gay persona out rocked many ardently straight rock bands. This was subversive music back in the day. It made parents uncomfortable if their sons listened to this. ;-) Bowie's influence in society goes beyond his music. The world is a better place because of him.
    Another tidbit: the album art was painted by the same artist who did the cover art of the Rolling Stones' "It's Only Rock 'n' Roll" album. Bowie raced to get his album released before theirs because of this, partly so no one would think he was copying the Stones (despite the fact that "Rebel Rebel" is the best Stones imitation ever!).

    • @swilkins2524
      @swilkins2524 Před 3 lety +1

      David Bowie claimed that he was a "closet straight"! Meaning outwardly he was gay/bi, but he really was straight and was hiding that in the closet. Eventually he did come out from the closet.
      That was the weirdest thing I ever heard!

    • @br.martindallyosb1147
      @br.martindallyosb1147 Před 3 lety +1

      @@swilkins2524 True indeed. I think it's wonderful that he and Iman were able to pull off one of the more stable marriages in rock. I remember when he "came out" straight some in the gay community felt betrayed. I was disappointed briefly, but got over it soon enough. You are what you are, after all is said and done.

    • @Reprodestruxion
      @Reprodestruxion Před 3 lety

      @@br.martindallyosb1147 oh he was bi but more than Jagger it was Lindsay Kemp

  • @1nelsondj
    @1nelsondj Před 3 lety +6

    An excellent choice, Bowie really gets to show his singing range on this one, starting really low and slow, working his way up to the high note at the end. Nice changes in this one too, how he starts slow then winds himself up in the middle section.
    This is my 2nd favorite Bowie album after "Station to Station" so I really like the order you're going in. It's a shame he couldn't get the rights to use "Nineteen Eighty-Four" but I think that just made him more creative in the end.

  • @delorangeade
    @delorangeade Před 3 lety +6

    This is my favourite Bowie track, and I think it's his best vocal. I would describe it as some kind of warped progressive punk cabaret. I like the way the crude simplicity of Bowie's playing challenges the relative sophistication of some of the music. It adds a real edge to it.

  • @stephendennis8739
    @stephendennis8739 Před 3 lety +3

    My favourite David Bowie album cd diamond dogs

  • @patrickdoake6022
    @patrickdoake6022 Před 2 lety +2

    David live lp version absolutely mind blowing, whole lp great live version of moon age daydream blistering!

  • @markgatica12
    @markgatica12 Před 3 lety +3

    Glad to see that you finally got back to this album. Great video. Looking forward to the rest of the album.

  • @deanjohnson6074
    @deanjohnson6074 Před 3 lety +2

    Arguably his greatest work, pure poetry. Bleak and Orwellian. So ahead of its time, the ending is so sleazy. It's hard to find anything to compare to this during that era. My favorite lyric is "we'll buy some drugs and watch a band, jump in a river holding hands" followed by a dirty, screaching sax that echoes their desperation. Rebel, rebel is a welcome relief from the gloom.

    • @kelvinkloud
      @kelvinkloud Před 2 lety +1

      bulls -eye.... catches the mirrored wall narcissitic nihilism that was the pit of the mid 70s. no artist reflected the darkness of the period then bowie.

  • @silgen
    @silgen Před 3 lety +3

    Love this little song cycle - top five Bowie for me.

  • @BradMurray
    @BradMurray Před 2 lety +1

    Love hearing a reactor who's got something to talk about. Stellar reaction.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 2 lety +1

      Really appreciate that Brad, ty

  • @a.k.1740
    @a.k.1740 Před 3 lety +13

    Yes, the "Sweet Thing"/"Candidate"/"Sweet Thing (Reprise)" suite is one of the greatest Bowie tracks !
    In comparison, the glam-rock of "Rebel Rebel" and the soul ballad "Rock 'n' Roll with Me" are much more classic and less exciting (although good) but "We Are the Dead", "1984", and "Big Brother"/"Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family" revive the research and atmosphere of "Sweet Thing" !

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +5

      I'd phrase Rebel Rebel as a token hit about identity and Rock N' Roll with Me as an identity crisis. What they lack in uniformity, they make up for in terms of their specific signature. Rebel Rebel is that last stop before punk rock and one of the definitive classics, and Rock N' Roll with Me is Bowie shifting between personas to say he'd rather be himself than any of them because his music brings everyone together so effectively. Hippie Bowie, Soul Bowie, and Ziggy Stardust form this one incredible artist who's trying to reclaim his sense of self. A rock opera track gets all facets of his ch-ch-ch-ch-changes across to let whoever's listening to him know how much David Jones values the connection between himself and those who appreciate his music. Very vulnerable stuff on his most aloof '70s record. Not the most fitting tracks for the overall concept, but very admirable in their own right.

    • @a.k.1740
      @a.k.1740 Před 3 lety +2

      @@chrismeadows4216 As you brought up the identity crisis subject, Bowie was looking for himself at the time as much on the human level as on the musical side. being a cocaine addict in the mid-70s must not have helped him psychologically and physically (he was particularly skeletal in 74/75). The album David Live recorded & released in 1974 perfectly transcribes his state of mind at that time! (and the cover speaks for itself!).

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +1

      @@a.k.1740 That's really the largest issue he seemed to have at the time. On one hand, he was this chaotic glam superstar. On the other, he wanted to make some laid back soul music. What you see on the cover of David Live is an orange-haired person in a suit with a fractured personality. He looks uncomfortably like cocaine; pale, a thin line, very unpredictable. He was Halloween Jack and he wanted to be David Bowie. He tried to be both. He was out of breath, but not quite doubting. There was a struggle and a confidence at the same time, and that went as far as his performance. I love the era, but hate what he went through to create it. Who Can I Be Now? is another song like Rock N' Roll with Me that more people should really hear to know just how much David was afraid of losing himself within these characters. Not fully essential to the era, but a look at who David was behind the characters he wanted us to see.

    • @idemandabetterfuture
      @idemandabetterfuture Před 2 lety

      Rebel Rebel is the closing song of the first half of the musical. The bumpkin has a place in the urban scene. Rock 'n' Roll with Me is the opening number of the second act, when the disillusionment sets in.

  • @davidvornsand6054
    @davidvornsand6054 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for sharing, you said before that Bowie is not your genre. Bowie is his own genre! Hope you continue to explore this unique artist who really changed our heads since the sixties.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety +1

      Ty David, I definitely plan to listen to more

  • @linusfotograf
    @linusfotograf Před 3 lety +3

    I love Bowie's voice and I respect his legacy, but some of his music I will never understand.

  • @cazgerald9471
    @cazgerald9471 Před 3 lety +2

    I was around 12 when this came out - my hip older cousin had the most awesomest album collection

  • @gidgetmaurer123
    @gidgetmaurer123 Před 3 lety +2

    For me this is Bowies greatest work of art. I love probably 90% of his output, but this still gives me chills. You should have just let it play to the next track.

  • @Ertursenty
    @Ertursenty Před 3 lety +6

    I think you will also like We are the Dead from the same album :)

    • @a.k.1740
      @a.k.1740 Před 3 lety +2

      I think so !
      "We are the Dead" is one of my favorite Bowie songs but unfortunately never played on stage.

  • @brucebrown73
    @brucebrown73 Před 3 lety +5

    Sadly, his passing caused us to loose a pioneer in progressive music. Furthermore, actually his passing supposedly caused Keith Emerson’s depression to deepen and caused us to loose a second amazing talent. RIP to both. Great music

    • @dannycasson1551
      @dannycasson1551 Před 3 lety

      Wow...I had not heard that relation between the two.
      Two greats are gone that all I know. 😥

  • @Rowenband
    @Rowenband Před 3 lety +4

    I really love that album. My Bowie favorite. As usually I'm impatient to hear your reaction. Well you should have continued with Rebel rebel…
    I think I said that before but the cover artist is Guy Pellaert who was an innovative comics creator (Pravda and Jodelle). He also created the book "Rock babies”. A very influential artist. I had the chance to interview him in the 90'.

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +2

      David recruited Guy to make Mick Jagger mad. It's a funny story. David was working on It's Only Rock N' Roll (But I Like It) with The Rolling Stones and heard Mick talking about Guy, so he hired him to do Diamond Dogs. Mick later said "You can't wear nice shoes around David Bowie" or something to that effect because David constantly absorbed everything around him that people would flaunt. David was truly a Jagger Swagger Jacker! 🤣

    • @chrisf.7980
      @chrisf.7980 Před 3 lety +1

      @Chris Meadows haha, he certainly did! If I remember correctly, he said something like "Bowie will tell you he likes your shoes, and when you turn around he is wearing them & doing it better than you!" One of the funniest & most accurate comments ever, especially between these two. I always wondered how Jagger felt when Bowie hooked up with his ex-wife Bianca.

  • @gog583
    @gog583 Před 3 lety +4

    Love this song! These & "We are the Dead" are my favorites off Diamond Dogs. "Sweet Thing" (the three) are Bowie's most Proggy IMO.
    Plus.........This is also the song(s) that turned me onto Genesis (Gabriel). Sounds strange I know. I had never heard them, but saw pictures of Gabriel fronting Genesis. And somehow, I got the idea that maybe Genesis would sound like this. lol
    On a side note, since you mentioned movies, Bowie wasn't a bad actor as well. Really liked "Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence", in which he plays an English officer in a Japanese POW camp during WWII. Bowie then wages war against the Japanese commander of the camp the only way he can. That being psychological as the Japanese were veryspiritual people during that time (as opposed to being very westernized in current times).

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety

      Sounds like a pretty good movie!

  • @dannycasson1551
    @dannycasson1551 Před 3 lety +1

    What an incredible artist. The last two releases before his death was some of
    his best work in my opinion. I really miss him.

  • @Richard_Jones
    @Richard_Jones Před 3 lety +1

    How have I never heard this track before? Brilliant!

  • @spongo
    @spongo Před 3 lety +2

    You have an admirable knowledge of the post-apocalyptic film genre.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety +1

      Well ty. I used to watch a LOT of movies

  • @UbiquitousMrluv
    @UbiquitousMrluv Před 3 lety +3

    The lyrics seem absurd or surreal at times because he used Brion Gyson and William Burroughs cut-up method to write some of the lyrics on this album. It created some really interesting results that we don’t get on any other album.

  • @williamfranz6639
    @williamfranz6639 Před 3 lety +1

    Bowie plays the guitar lead on the album here. You caught MIKE GARSON in your 1,2,3 air piano.
    The DAVID LIVE( look for the remastered version) on Sweet Thing features one of the coolest guitar/ Sax interplays you will ever hear in music. Ever!
    Earl Slick I believe( this is one of Bowie's songs that seems written for Slick but that's just me) and a young saxophone player who seemed to have promise at the time named David Sanborn.

  • @rondegroot1508
    @rondegroot1508 Před 3 lety +1

    one of my fav songs of bowie

  • @michaelz9892
    @michaelz9892 Před 3 lety +3

    Masterpiece. Lovely dissonance.

  • @marceloduartepoppolino9772

    There is a live version of this on the "David Live" album (1974) that is totally mind-blowing

  • @mariosandri4010
    @mariosandri4010 Před 3 lety +4

    Here Bowie does what he always did best... being a genius. Nobody in modern arts has been so consistently creative for almost 50 years. (P.S.: no hope at all in Matheson's novel "I am legend" ending: the movie was an excruciating betrayal)

    • @timpindar
      @timpindar Před 3 lety +1

      I know what you mean about being consistently creative. I’d add Bob Dylan to that short shortlist, though.

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +1

      I think we can all appreciate how the different adaptations portrayed Matheson's story even if they're not faithful. The Last Man on Earth, The Omega Man, and I Am Legend are very different films in terms of delivery, but great artistic triumphs cinematically. I Am Legend as a film provides hope where The Omega Man is very bleak. The novel could use a particularly dark adaptation in the future, though most viewers need a glimpse of light to connect with. It's a huge tradeoff of making a film. I Am Legend has a darker alternate ending to make up for it.

    • @mariosandri4010
      @mariosandri4010 Před 3 lety

      @@chrismeadows4216 Hollywood targets the box office, and the movie market has its rules. As a marketing person myself, I understand the need to bring action and to upgrade the protagonist by portraying him as a scientist. What I cannot condone (but of course my opinion is worth nothing) is overturning what is one of the finest and most poetic final line in dystopian literature.

    • @mariosandri4010
      @mariosandri4010 Před 3 lety

      @@timpindar You're right. How could I forget Bob?

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mariosandri4010 One of the great tragedies, for sure. I Am Legend is ironically the weakest of the three adaptations and fixates on the scientific aspects the most, and I can't say it was worth it.

  • @mana3735
    @mana3735 Před 3 lety +3

    I've always counted Future Legend/Diamond Dogs as ONE song...and Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing as the SECOND song. Rebel Rebel being the 3rd and final song of side one.
    The opening note Bowie sings on Sweet Thing is his lowest ever note recorded apparently.

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +1

      He has quite a few lower notes on songs like I Feel Free, Miracle Goodnight, and China Girl, but his lowest is on the track 'I Took a Trip on a Gemini Spaceship' by Legendary Stardust Cowboy, a G1 fry note. The cover was a tribute to the OG for not suing over the name Ziggy Stardust. The two were on Mercury Records together in the late '60s, and David was so inspired by the weirdness of his music that he knicked the name. It's fitting that the cover should hold such an honor.

    • @chrisf.7980
      @chrisf.7980 Před 3 lety +2

      That has always been one of my favorite Bowie stories. I was in for a surprise when I checked out "The Legendary Stardust Cowboys" work! WOW is the only way to describe it. 😂😂😂

    • @ziggsstar
      @ziggsstar Před 3 lety

      I think Leonard Cohen might give him a run for the lowest note 'candidate'... see what I did there lol

  • @nomisnestral6956
    @nomisnestral6956 Před 3 lety +1

    "I'll make you a deal." And you knew something had forever changed.

  • @jimcarmer1685
    @jimcarmer1685 Před 3 lety +3

    Imo I think this his best album. Yes Ziggy Stardust is good too, but I still think this album is better. Not a bad song on the album.. Keep up the great comments Justin.😋

  • @thomwilliamson8425
    @thomwilliamson8425 Před 3 lety

    ONE OF MY ALL TIME FAV TRACKS

  • @robertjewell9727
    @robertjewell9727 Před 3 lety +4

    This section of songs is masterful. David had a way of making strange places seem right next door in the way he creates atmospheres and sings and even speaks those atmospheres without being removed from something heartfelt and his character trying to get a message out that is deeply oppressed by some weird smiling malevolence.

  • @chriscockerton4018
    @chriscockerton4018 Před měsícem

    This album blew my mind as a youngster…

  • @nomisnestral6956
    @nomisnestral6956 Před 3 lety +1

    BTW Les tricoteuses - the knitting ladies - is pure cut-up Burroughs/Gysin post-Beat writing applied to rockunroll.

  • @Tawny6702
    @Tawny6702 Před 6 měsíci

    From the very first time I head this in 1974 to hearing it now in 2024 it still has the very same effect on me! This hasn’t even dated….nothing this brilliant could!

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 6 měsíci +1

      Its just that good :)

  • @markspooner1224
    @markspooner1224 Před 3 lety +1

    This is great stuff, I love those 3 songs and Herbie Flowers plays bass! Good review too.

  • @rjnuzzi1648
    @rjnuzzi1648 Před 2 lety

    Best musical & vocal performance of his career... hands down! Only Bowie would do this...

  • @musicbybackinnyc1
    @musicbybackinnyc1 Před 3 lety +2

    This song is epic

  • @frozenborderline2109
    @frozenborderline2109 Před 2 lety +1

    My faveourite Bowie song/sequence from my faveourite album (along with Hunky Dory!). Also hear how he pretty much creates the vocal template for many if not all late 70's-80's post-punk, dark-wave male lead singers. Though sure he surely must have taken some influence from Scott Walker among others way back when.

  • @timlynch5710
    @timlynch5710 Před 3 lety

    Understanding and acceptance without judgement is the key to art. Well done!!!!

  • @michaelbedford8017
    @michaelbedford8017 Před 3 lety +1

    It was written for a project which never reached fruition, called 'The 1980 floorshow', and of course was to be based on George Orwell's novel 1984.

    • @chrisf.7980
      @chrisf.7980 Před 3 lety +2

      Bowie's 1980 Floor Show was actually filmed as a Midnight Special episode in late 1973, right after the "retiring" statement he made at the Hammersmith Odeon concert. It was his last time performing as Ziggy Stardust & only Ronson & Bolder were still with him at the Marquee Club. Only members of his fan club were invited to attend, I believe. Anyway, the costumes were out-of-this-world & there were some very odd performances by others as well, but that is par for the Bowie course. The whole show is found on CZcams, great fun!

  • @hansmahr8627
    @hansmahr8627 Před 3 lety +1

    Have you ever listened to the German Krautrock band Can? If not I highly recommend them. They are at the same time one of the most highly influential rock bands of all time (they've influenced Brian Eno, Sonic Youth, the entire Post-Punk scene, early electronic music, hip hop producers, etc.) and totally unknown to most people. What made them special was the fact that the band members came from very different fields: the bass player and the organist were classically trained and had avantgarde sensibilities (they studied with Stockhausen), the guitarist came from a rock background, the singer was a street musician and the drummer (Jaki Liebezeit, one of the greatest drummers of all time) was originally a Jazz drummer. Together they created incredible music, far ahead of their time, always carried forward by Jaki's insanely precise drumming (as band members once said: the difference between Jaki and a drum computer is that the drum computer has a humanizing function).
    If you want to check them out, here are a couple of recommendations: their song Vitamin C, which sounds like a drum and bass track at times, decades before drum and bass existed. Then there's Halleluwah, an 18 minute tour de force based on an incredible drum beat, in my eyes the greatest rock song of all time. Mother Sky is another song where you will marvel at Jaki Liebezeit's drumming. Then there's Future Days from the album of the same name. On that album they basically invented ambient music back in the 70s. I could go on and on, they have so many great tracks and they're all utterly unique. If you want to go for whole albums: Tago Mago, Ege Bamyasi and Future Days. But pretty much everything they did in the 70s is amazing (later they dropped off a bit). You definitely won't regret it.
    Edit: I'm blind, I just saw you did Vitamin C a couple of weeks ago.

  • @stephenpesta1550
    @stephenpesta1550 Před 3 lety +1

    Bowie’s Diamond Dogs again ... cool! Congrats on 14k Mr JPman!

  • @maryelizabethreynoldsprice2135

    I sure do ,love that I stumbled back 2 years ago. This is probably my favorite Bowie and that's a hard thing to narrow down. His vocals...OMG.... Love your channel!!! One last thing.. This song on the David Live album at The Tower Philadelphia is awesome.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před rokem +1

      Thanks Mary Elizabeth!

    • @maryelizabethreynoldsprice2135
      @maryelizabethreynoldsprice2135 Před rokem

      @@JustJP Thank you Justin. Yours is such a lovely channel. Always on such a fun and positive note. You can call me Mary. Have a great night!

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před rokem +1

      @@maryelizabethreynoldsprice2135 i appreciate the kindness, thanks Mary🙃

    • @maryelizabethreynoldsprice2135
      @maryelizabethreynoldsprice2135 Před rokem

      @@JustJP My pleasure.

  • @sylvanm4216
    @sylvanm4216 Před 3 lety +2

    Not to change the subject, but you really ought to do Van Morrison's unrelated but also amazing song "Sweet Thing" :) - as for Bowie, I've listened to a fair amount of his work, but I never knew he did anything this far towards prog rock. Strong stuff, very glad to have heard it!

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +3

      Since you're not JP and you can freestyle a little more with listening to songs whenever you want, I've got Bowie recommendations that will definitely pique your interest:
      Cygnet Committee
      Wild Eyed Boy from Freecloud
      All the Madmen
      Quicksand
      The Bewlay Brothers
      Five Years
      Soul Love
      Rock N' Roll Suicide
      Aladdin Sane
      Time
      Lady Grinning Soul
      John, I'm Only Dancing (Again)
      What in the World
      Always Crashing in the Same Car
      Sons of the Silent Age
      Blackout
      The Secret Life of Arabia
      Fantastic Voyage
      African Night Flight
      It's No Game (No. 1)
      Teenage Wildlife
      The Drowned Girl
      Cat People (Putting Out Fire)
      Loving the Alien
      Neighborhood Threat
      Within You
      As the World Falls Down
      Time Will Crawl
      Zeroes
      Glass Spider
      Shining Star (Makin' My Love)
      Girls
      I Have Not Been to Oxford Town
      The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (As Beauty)
      Strangers When We Meet
      Battle for Britain (The Letter)
      Seven Years in Tibet
      Dead Man Walking
      Bring Me the Disco King
      You Feel So Lonely You Could Die
      Heat
      Blackstar
      Dollar Days
      Bowie's one of the most progressive artists of all time, though his singles don't generally put that on full display. You'll definitely find quality music with all of these songs. They adapt other styles, but all find their place in the progressive rock genre. You'll never find a greater master, even if some of the songs seem odd to you at first.

    • @chrismeadows4216
      @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +1

      There are about 400 David Bowie songs in total, so please forgive me for the list being so long! 😅

  • @dana_brooke_27
    @dana_brooke_27 Před 3 lety +1

    So glad your listening to David again...1984 Changes and Rock and Rock Suicide are good ones when you get around to it. Check out Life on Mars..Rick Wakeman is on piano.

  • @sandraandmichaelfield1602

    Love Bowie! Seen several of his live shows. Please check out "Dead Man Walking" a song written by David Bowie and Reeves Gabrels and released as single from the 1997 album Earthling. THEN watch him and Reeves perform a total different version live on Late Night with Conan O'Brian in 1997. Not many artists can cover their own songs with such originality guitar riff used in the intro dates back to the mid-1960s when Jimmy Page taught it to Bowie

  • @wpollock1
    @wpollock1 Před 3 lety +1

    RCA brought out the original artwork on this album and the dog was "anatomically correct" .....they brushed that out! 😊

  • @hoggers7572
    @hoggers7572 Před rokem

    I always played these three tracks as one ..a great part of Diamond Dogs

  • @darrensample8734
    @darrensample8734 Před 2 lety

    My favorite track, good review

  • @johnhouse9983
    @johnhouse9983 Před 3 lety

    i managed to see Bowie only once when they kicked off the Isle of Wight festival ,what ever year that was....., anyhooo, fantastic set that covered alot of the oldies and up to his current album which at the time was ''Reality'' ( great album) but what comes across as he chats and spends time to interact with the audience is what a genuine down to earth warm bloke he is despite the fame.

  • @jeffmiller4832
    @jeffmiller4832 Před 3 lety +1

    Outta the blue CZcams decided I needed to see your reaction while I was scrolling my life away. Before the end of your first sentence I subscribed. Thank you for the flashback to my teen years. Have you reacted to anything from Aladdin Sane yet? 🍻🖖

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety +2

      Haha ty Jeff! Haven't done Aladdin Sane yet, finishing Diamond Dogs and I did Station to Station first :)

  • @steelyd2
    @steelyd2 Před 3 lety +1

    Diamond dogs is one of those records I didn’t get at first and then on the 5th listen or so it suddenly clicked.

  • @pilesovinyl
    @pilesovinyl Před 3 lety

    Good job again. I do, however, love the title track. This album really drew me into his work.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety

      I've definitely warmed up to it a lot more now, just wasn't what I initially expected ar the time lol

  • @chrismeadows4216
    @chrismeadows4216 Před 3 lety +1

    We got him, boys! The Diamond Dogs are poachers and they hide behind trees!
    The song is about a young guy falling for an escort. The Hunger City Secret Police want to recruit him, but he and this escort essentially are attempting to escape, whether literally or through physical loving and cocaine, as you picked up on. Rebel Rebel is gonna be such a fun listen, if you haven't gotten to it in this session. The 2nd half of the record is the 1984 side. You'll definitely love that side.
    Low won't be as epic, but I'm sure you'll appreciate the artistic value in it. Ziggy after that will definitely impress. I'm excited for your retrospective video after you finish this album, though. Your ranking could really go in any direction!
    Keep up the great work, Justin! 🧡

  • @georgelabauve3469
    @georgelabauve3469 Před 2 lety

    Sweet thing/candidate/Sweet thing(reprise), Quicksand, It's Gonna be Me, Cygnet Committee, width of a circle, Teenage wildlife, Wild is the wind, Lady Grinning Soul, and countless others.

  • @rayryeridge3313
    @rayryeridge3313 Před rokem

    when this album was released i was a bit dissappointed,being just a teen,wanting more of the ziggy glamrock stuff,but since then us has just grown and grown in signifigence.I mean its an obvious masterpiece among so many Bowie masterpieces.And the sweet thing has such a thrilling blend of hopelessness and beauty.Beauty and despair comes at you fused into one creature so overwhelming we are not sure its an angel or a demon approaching us in the dark.A song who has all the hallmarks of a epic movie,with Bowies voice narrating like a snake from a forbidden and f heaven.What Bowie albums to check out from the 70s? ALL of them,i mean every single track!

  • @keithrichman6918
    @keithrichman6918 Před 3 lety

    Wow! Perfect Song! Great reaction Jason!

  • @Lynn-ce8rr
    @Lynn-ce8rr Před rokem

    Diamond Dogs, is actually based on a true story that Bowie was very, very interested in at that time.

  • @brucebrown73
    @brucebrown73 Před 3 lety +1

    If you like saxophone use at its best, try Loggins and Messina. Mother Lode album “ Move on” or off Full Sail “ Pathway to Glory” ! They ebb and flow from vocals to elegant instrumentals. “ Keep me in Mind”, and “ Angry Eyes” are great too.

  • @SebGeddy
    @SebGeddy Před 3 lety

    Great guess on the analogy you drew between David's voice here and Peter Hammill's. Another singer inspired by Peter Hammill : Fish (Marillion)

  • @paulhorgan6152
    @paulhorgan6152 Před 2 lety +1

    Our Elvis we miss Starman

  • @ricobonifacio1095
    @ricobonifacio1095 Před 3 lety +1

    i never noticed that organ in the chorus good ears JP

  • @hellemarc4767
    @hellemarc4767 Před 3 měsíci

    For those who wonder, "les tricoteuses" (the knitting women) were women in the audience of the revolutionary tribunals during the French Revolution. They would watch the trials while knitting.

  • @xfishnutzx
    @xfishnutzx Před 3 lety

    With a tip of the hat to Anthony Newley on his vocal delivery. Bowie played the guitar and the solos on these three giants... and then that lead into Rebel Rebel’s guitar hook making it a four song masterpiece. Wow. Just sublime. Bowie at his best.

  • @summertime_blooz
    @summertime_blooz Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the video. I was hoping you would get around to listening to this because it seemed like it would be right up your alley. I bought this album the summer I graduated from high school. I listened to it all that summer, living away from home for a summer job, so as you might imagine, it has a very personal space in my head. I think this particular song holds up better musically than most of Bowie's work and it's one of his very best. I hope you'll listen to the song 'Aladdin Sane' sometime soon, as I think you would also appreciate the musicality of that one too.

  • @avantprog6902
    @avantprog6902 Před 3 lety

    This is fantastic!

  • @rogerwitte
    @rogerwitte Před 2 lety

    hint: The inspiration for this album, conceptually, is George Orwell's novel, 1984.

  • @gidgetmaurer123
    @gidgetmaurer123 Před 3 lety

    This album was originally slated to be his theatrical version of George Orwells 1984.