No words can describe how i feel , so im just going to listen to every song this god of music ever did , may take me a while !! RIP Duke xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Jackson Oliveira - 🤣You’re joking, right? If not, please go back to rock school & learn the roots of rock ‘n’ roll THE BLUES! “Boom Boom” was written by John Lee Hooker, not Roxy Music, smh!
@@RnR-Rebel he is referring to the part around 4:40, which is from "In Every Dream Home a Heartache". Perhaps you should go back to rock school and learn to listen to the whole song before sounding like a pompous ass.
@@chrisfleischmann1346 - And “Boom Boom” isn’t nearly as well known or covered as the drivel you’re quoting? Been to any of their gigs? Know of all of their love of the blues? Sorry, no comparison & Bowie rarely if ever referenced Roxy but did with blues. Think you need rock school as well; what’s the very basis of R’n’R? Hint: it’s not any contemporary “R’n’R” (using the term to cover all types since its earliest days) artist?
@@RnR-Rebel there is no doubt that Boom Boom is better known, but that’s not the point. You attacked the original poster for getting the reference wrong, but he didn’t, you just didn’t know which song he was referencing. For the record, Chantilly Lace by the Big Bopper was also referenced in that interlude. And as far as Bowie referencing Roxy Music, Tin Machine did a cover of their song “If There is Something” on their second album and their live album.
@@mmoura1104 I envy the older generation so much, what i'd GIVE to of been 17 then and seeing Bowie face to face rather than being 17 now, condensed down to watching videos of him perform.
i meant the drumming flows really well and drumming is way harder than it looks. The way the track went required a lot of intuition and the drums were tight, aka efficient and fitting
The thing is...Bowie turned a rock gig into a Star vehicle...a film. And these guys are musicians in the King Crimson 'serious music' mold.... but with lotsa rough grit too. David had to go. Too much of a one-man act. It was delicious whilst it lasted. He needed a female presence too. And found it in Gail-Ann Dorsey.
anzatzi At the time, TM was a misunderstood band. Many critics gave them a hard time because Bowie was doing a band thing without the Bowie name and the material was a bit outside. Still, the outside nature of the band is what Bowie needed to get out from under the corporate rock veneer that enveloped him in the mid 80's.
I have q mar bolan and t.rex dvd dont get me wrong i love t.rex and i dont feel im being bius in the documentary it is said that t.rex was bigger in britain than david personally i dont agree i know marcs life was cut short and he was going to come out of retirement and record again but in my apinion he never had the genius of david bowie is a rock n roll legend rest in peace dear david from your loyal and life long fan
I like to sing like David Bowie but I could never ever have a band like that if I went to heaven I would have hunt Tony and Reeves reincarnate band with me I've seen my ass off
How would you classify this song? Existential speed metal? I love the references to tragedy and flesh. It’s like David converted to Christianity and suddenly realized the human condition.
Bowie was performing jacques Brel's My Death in the Ziggy Stardust early 1970's era. In his darkest drug days he wore the crucifix necklace his father gave him. Existentialism usually begins where Christianity leaves off. Except for Kierkegaard.
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It´s only rock and roll with a bit of experimentation.
guitarist riffs, runs, thrashes and distorts like Jimi , but he is a dime a dozen this guy . beneath Hendrix's flash and noise were some incredible melodies and rhythms .
Jebussss... They are so done with each other at this point. Not a smile to be found. Contractual performance. They almost light a spark at the end but still sad.
As much as I love David as a performer, actor artist etc Tin Machine were pretty shit. I bought both albums when they came out - Bowie and the Sayles boys should have been heaven but in retrospect the result of these 4 great artists was pretty piss poor. Still in light of his catelogue I can accept this as just a necessary step in his overall progression. Plus the idea of an artist as big as David was post let's dance trying to be just an ordinary band member in a new act was wonderful in itself - just a shame about the music.
I really don't agree with you. Tin Machine was ahead of its time. If they came out in the 90's when alternative rock became mainstream, they would have been a hit. The mainstream media were pigeon holing them in with metal. They were never a metal band to begin with. No one knew what to categorize as.