Bowie's "Low" vs "Heroes" ??? Which do you prefer?

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J0hn: Grand is pretentious, and pretentious is dull, and dull is abject, but abject, on the other hand, is grand, and grand, after all, is pretentious.

In answer to the question, 'Lodger'. Not only into it, I lodge here!

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 16:22 (nineteen years ago) link

low, I just think it has more songs I prefer. there's something about joe the lion and beauty and the beast that annoy me (something in the mixing, I think; they're very cluttered and hard to listen to). I find myself listening to station to station more than any of them these days; I'd rank that and Low as bowie's finest moments.

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 16:25 (nineteen years ago) link

I probably prefer Heroes, however when I get in the mood I tend to dive in and listen to all three of the Berlin trilogy and Eno stuff circa that period for a couple weeks until I am bored with it. Then I pick it all back up again in 8-12 months. Each time I've found something new to love and it's sent me off looking at the rest of my music a little differently. But I have had false starts to my cycle, where I throw on one of the albums and put it back away before I get into it. I guess women have lunar cycles and I have Bowie/Eno cycles.

Mike Salmo (salmo), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 16:26 (nineteen years ago) link

Ian Mathers just wrote about "Heroes" today on Stylus. It was quite good, I thought.

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 16:34 (nineteen years ago) link

Lodger.

Broheems (diamond), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 16:34 (nineteen years ago) link

None of these goddamn Lodger copouts (great album, though, I agree).

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 16:45 (nineteen years ago) link

mark s on the question of Lodger is a thing of wonder - I do, myself, think that Lodger contains, in "Fantastic Voyage," the best song of any of the three (nb yes I know this is heresy). And I would happily get drunk as fistfite over "Beauty and the Beast," whose "my, my!"s are a thing of wonder (as is "someone fetch a priest" as the probably-written-after-the-title-was-decided-upon rhyme). Still! There's a slightness to Low, a smallness, that Heroes lacks. And there's the vox on "Sound and Vision," which are miraculously emotional, given how coked-up everybody was when they recorded it.

So I say Low, again. Its cover is also way scary.

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 16:51 (nineteen years ago) link

Tell me what the tii-ii-ii-ii-iime is!

Keith Watson (kmw), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 16:53 (nineteen years ago) link

Heroes cuz I ain't some new age beeyatch

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 16:56 (nineteen years ago) link

The video for "Be My Wife" is also astounding. It's probably the best music video I've ever seen; just Bowie, on another planet, in a great pair of white flares, wandering about in a white studio, vaguely singing and occassionally messing with the guitar.

Keith Watson (kmw), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 16:59 (nineteen years ago) link

Heroes is just as interesting and unusual as Low and yet more accessible. So I'd pick Heroes. "Blackout" is amazing.

Lodger is great too.

wetmink (wetmink), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:09 (nineteen years ago) link

Lodger.

then Low.

then Heroes.

and Taking Tiger Mountain above all!

Dan Selzer (Dan Selzer), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:10 (nineteen years ago) link

well if you get to say that then I get to vote for Here Comes The Warm Jets

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:13 (nineteen years ago) link

loved that Ian Mathers piece on Stylus (a nice alternative for a coffeebreak earlier today :)

The video for "Be My Wife" is also astounding. It's probably the best music video I've ever seen; just Bowie, on another planet, in a great pair of white flares, wandering about in a white studio, vaguely singing and occassionally messing with the guitar.

I've been putting off buying that video compilation on DVD for too long I think, must get it tomorrow.

on-topic: Low is my favorite. Sometimes the effect on Bowie's voice on "Heroes" sounds too claustrophobically bathroomy to me, at other times that's what urges me to play the record...

willem (willem), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:28 (nineteen years ago) link

Re: Be My Wife video. I'm perhaps unusual in what I like in music videos! Most would probably think it's boring, given that it's just Bowie in a white room!

Keith Watson (kmw), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:32 (nineteen years ago) link

Anthony if you dig the instrumental stuff on Heroes then you are, in fact, King New Age Beeeyotch

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:33 (nineteen years ago) link

I don't dig it, I just can tolerate more cuz its spaced out rather than in one big Yannified blurt.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:35 (nineteen years ago) link

ROCKISM 4-EVA

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:35 (nineteen years ago) link

(my guilty secret in talking about Low and Heroes is that I don't count the instrumental shit as part of the records at all - I only really ever paid much attention to side one of Low, which rules, and to side one of Heroes, whose "Sons of the Silent Age" bores me too much wherefore Low wins. NB "Secret Life of Arabia" does not count as a song with vocals)

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:41 (nineteen years ago) link

whose "Sons of the Silent Age" bores me too much

*cries*

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:43 (nineteen years ago) link

That song is total shit. I first heard "Sons Of The Silent Age" when watching my ex-supervisor's copy of Bowie's Glass Spider TV Special. Peter Frampton sang the chorus.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:44 (nineteen years ago) link

I assumed it was some '80s bullshit track. I had no idea it was on the Berlin trilogy.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:44 (nineteen years ago) link

I love Sons of the Silent Age. In fact me and a friend were going to have a band called that, until some other band who seem to have since disappeared, turned up with that name.

It's a really odd song; about those dirty punk rockers apparently. It's got a very unusual tune and arrangement. Well done Bowie!

Keith Watson (kmw), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 17:49 (nineteen years ago) link

The very end of "Sons of the Silent Age", with the chorus vocals, is great.

wetmink (wetmink), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 18:05 (nineteen years ago) link

The "instrumental shit" is one-third of each record ... that's a lot of material to discount.

I think the instrumental music comprise the strongest tracks on each album (albeit less so on "Heroes", which is why I think it's a better record overall).

Barry Bruner (Barry Bruner), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 18:19 (nineteen years ago) link

I am keenly aware of how much of each release consists of instrumental material, having been listening to the stuff for twenty-plus years. I think discounting a third of what anybody who's way coked up has to say is a sound critical strategy.

J0hn "Oor, Aye Are Oold" Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 18:24 (nineteen years ago) link

But why discount only that third? The ambient stuff sounds more coked-up than the rest? "Joe the Lion" sounds highly coked-up to me, why not discount that (I often do).

Barry Bruner (Barry Bruner), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 18:34 (nineteen years ago) link

tough call but i'm rocking Low mainly at the minute; I think i prefer it's avantpopfunk/artnoise ratio better

james porter (james porter), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 18:49 (nineteen years ago) link

The best description of Low's pop side I read was how it was what Blur has always tried to be.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 18:50 (nineteen years ago) link

Props should at least be due to the ambition and innovation of the instrumental sides. It's not like Bowie was some marginal artist...

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 18:51 (nineteen years ago) link

haha "secret life of arabia" is the best song on "heroes" after "blackout"

g--ff (gcannon), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 19:32 (nineteen years ago) link

"the secret life of arabia" will be a better song than "heroes" when pigs fly out of my butt singing the Hallelujah chorus

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 19:35 (nineteen years ago) link

Does anyone know if there's a way of getting the tracks like "Some Are" and "All Saints" that were added for the 1990 reissues of the Bowie LPs?

I've just looked through Amazon and there's nothing obvious. It amazes me that you can't easily get these, Stage and David Live, and yet you can get "Peace On Earth" by Bowie & Bing Crosby for a fiver!

Keith Watson (kmw), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 19:36 (nineteen years ago) link

ok the pigs may sing but not fly (or vice versa) cos it's a tie. point being, it seems to be generally held that SLoA is a joke, which is bullshit! great song!

g--ff (gcannon), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 19:38 (nineteen years ago) link

Maybe not better than "Heroes", but "Secret Life of Arabia" is a great song. I like how it completes the cycle of the album, pulling you back out of the haze-like state of the instrumental material. ("when the heroin(e) dies"? heh.)

x-post

wetmink (wetmink), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 19:43 (nineteen years ago) link

all saints was on "all saints: collected instrumentals" as well as (I think) the philip glass orchestral version of "some are", but that album might be out of print already. there was another reissue of this on virgin or something at one point in the past several years that still had these songs on there.

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 19:44 (nineteen years ago) link

It's too bad, cuz "All Saints" is totally amazing.

sexyDancer, Tuesday, 15 June 2004 19:44 (nineteen years ago) link

so is Some Are! I really don't get Bowie's catalog reshuffling, at least Elvis Costello took his good ryko reissues away and replaced them with something more comprehensive; the Bowie reissues are a mess.

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 19:48 (nineteen years ago) link

Cheers for that; it's not a problem for me as I've still got the 1990 one; however, it'd have been nice to get all these guys on to a CD and I thought it might've happened given they've disappeared off of the CDs.

Keith Watson (kmw), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 19:48 (nineteen years ago) link

I tend to agree with the Lodger > Low > Heroes argument. Sticking to the topic, I like the songs on Low much better than those on Heroes. I don't think the instrumentals are particularly successful on either album - I'd be happier with a songs album and an instrumentals album, I think, or with the instrumentals scattered between the songs.

Can I be heretical here and say I've never really cared for "Heroes" the song?

noodle vague (noodle vague), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 19:57 (nineteen years ago) link

You're fired.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 19:58 (nineteen years ago) link

when pigs fly out of my butt singing the Hallelujah chorus

I think we've got an MGs video treatment right here.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 20:10 (nineteen years ago) link

I think discounting a third of what anybody who's way coked up has to say is a sound critical strategy

George Bush to thread.

As for Bowie, which ever one has 'Look back in anger'. I can't remember at the moment which one it's on.

Billy Dods (Billy Dods), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 20:18 (nineteen years ago) link

Lodger, though all the crucial tracks from each album are on that 2CD Rykodisc singles comp.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 20:20 (nineteen years ago) link

I also prefer Lodger over either of these albums. Although I think "Heroes" is Bowie's best song, I like the vocal side of Low more than the vocal side of "Heroes". Similarly, I like the instrumental side of "Heroes" more than the instrumental side of Low. So where does that leave me? A sad, broken shell of a man.

Kent Burt (lingereffect), Tuesday, 15 June 2004 23:29 (nineteen years ago) link

in my bowie hierarchy, low and station to station are tied for 1st. if we restrict this to the 1975-1981 realm, then the order of the rest would be lodger > scary monsters > heroes. (overall, i'd rank hunky dory a little bit above lodger and alladin sane in b/w lodger and station to station and the man who sold the world would be tied w/ heroes, but that's another conversation.)

i rank low so highly at least partly b/c it was the 1st berlin bowie that i'd heard on the CD reissue (i'd managed to get me hands on a cassette version of lodger circa 1989, which was no mean feat in those pre-bowie cd release days). in those halcyon days (circa 1985-1992), where getting anything before let's dance in ANY format qualified as something of a minor miracle, what rare snippets of the berlin-era songs that one would hear on the odd mix-tape were akin to tantalizingly incomplete ancient greek poems or plays. and largely for the same reasons -- in those days, one HEARD of how influential those berlin records were -- how one's favorites of those times like, say, numan or reznor or vince clarke or were but PALE COPIES of these records (or "influenced" by them [hello mr sinker!]). and, when "wild is the wind," "warszawa," or "beauty and the beast" appeared on those mix-tapes, one could SORTA grasp those connections (like a crawl through aeschylus or euripedes would shed light on what eugene o'neill was up to). otherwise, one had to take it on faith -- i hadn't heard those fabled (and, for all intents and purposes during that time period, "lost") recordings in their entirety. not to mention that it raised some intriguing questions re mr. bowie's oeuvre -- how could a guy who started out combining an orange mullet and ridiculous platform shoes with some japanese dude's vision of what a martian rockstar would wear turn 180 degrees and turn out these weirdly cold songs (i was naive and dumb back then too, "cocaine" meant "al pacino shouting 'come say hello to my li'l friend!!'" not "strange english dude making odd sounds in a german studio w/ an erstwhile pseudo-drag queen.") so when i managed to get my hands on a re-issued low, and sat enraptured through the clanging joy of "speed of life" through the calm loveliness of "all saints"*, it was rather like opening a box, discovering 1/3 of sophocles' lost works, and connecting the dots. (my then ardent love affair w/ NIN, nitzer ebb and KMFDM became less tender and tinder, to paraphrase another weird-looking english dude i liked back then.) (* -- i didn't then, and still don't, count the abominable "sound and vision" remix as anything worth getting worked up over one way or another.)

i could also point out that, as far as low goes, that i cottoned more to its cold kling-klang sheen masquerading very real and intense emotions (mr. numan DID learn something from the master!), as well as the odd juxtaposition of structurally and lyrically knotty pop-song fragments and glacial synth epics. in comparison, heroes' pop moments were much more staid (and the synth epics much more tenuous). (though i like heroes well enough -- "heroes," "beauty and the beast," "v2 schneider," and "the secret life of arabia" guaranteed that [sorry ned, "sons of the silent age" never did much for me -- to my ears, it sounds almost like an inferior remake of "the supermen"].)

and, of course, the whole station to station-to-scary monsters period is intriguing as a record of a very talented -- and very fucked-up -- artist slowly picking up the pieces of a shattered mind/muse/personality. but that's the common answer for these recordings, innit?

Eisbär (llamasfur), Wednesday, 16 June 2004 02:18 (nineteen years ago) link

insert "insert name of late 80s/early 90s techno/industrial whiz" in between "or vince clarke or" and "were" above. i'm sapphic!!

Eisbär (llamasfur), Wednesday, 16 June 2004 02:21 (nineteen years ago) link

three months pass...
Low>cool>Joy Division

Heroes>hot>Visage

Edmundo (Edmundo), Sunday, 10 October 2004 18:51 (nineteen years ago) link

The video for "Be My Wife" is also astounding. It's probably the best music video I've ever seen; just Bowie, on another planet, in a great pair of white flares, wandering about in a white studio, vaguely singing and occassionally messing with the guitar.

I was watching that in Japan last month, and I think it is remarkable, perhaps the video that keeps its appeal after many of the others on the Bowie DVD have faded. I think what's really unusual about it is the half-heartedness, the clumsiness. It's basically a rock video featuring a pierrot act, a mime sketch of a rock star making a rock video, yet too comically glum and sulky to go through the required hoops, and lacking the necessary gung ho conviction. 99% of rock videos have full-throttle conviction, conviction turned up to 11. But here Bowie mimes a desultory half-heartedness with deft physical theatre. The character (because it isn't really Bowie, it's a fellow, a sad sack, a thin-lipped melancholic) makes to play his guitar and gives up half way through the phrase. He just can't be bothered. He's awkward, but the awkwardness is performed very gracefully. There's something of Buster Keaton in the performance, the grace with which clumsiness is evoked. (Keaton gets a little homage in a much later Bowie video, 'Miracle Goodnight'.)

'Fashion', while lacking the winning tentativeness of the 'Be My Wife' video, does have some of the same deliberate clumsiness; the Bowie character makes a silly rat-like gesture at one point, stops, sniffs, wipes his nose with the back of his hand, and continues. It's a great little piece of actor's business, a sort of Brechtian alienation effect. Very few rock stars have the degree of theatrical sophistication it takes to risk ambiguity like that. And very few rock stars are attractive enough to risk making 'ugly' gestures or giving 'mixed messages'.

Momus (Momus), Sunday, 10 October 2004 19:56 (nineteen years ago) link

LOW

latebloomer (latebloomer), Sunday, 10 October 2004 20:00 (nineteen years ago) link

As for the first sides of both albums, I think it basically comes down to whether you prefer pop Bowie (Low) or rock Bowie (Heroes). The second sides are more interesting. The Low tracks feel much more composed and structured - more Bowie than Eno to my ears. The reverse is the case on Heroes. Those instrumentals seem much more random and ambient, and therefore more Eno, and better for it.

I'll split my vote: first side goes to Low, second side goes to Heroes.

Revivalist (Revivalist), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 10:03 (seventeen years ago) link

"'Heroes'" > Low > Heroes.

mike t-diva (mike t-diva), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 10:24 (seventeen years ago) link

Low and Heroes were amelodic noodles that caused 20 people to commit suicide. It is the moral that you don't make records while you take cracks cocaine. Bowie did not make a good record until the eighties when he correctly switched to drum machines, synthesiser and accessible melody and unleached his 1985 masterpiece Let's Dance.

Comstock Carabineri (nostudium), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 11:38 (seventeen years ago) link

unleached his 1985 masterpiece Let's Dance

Unleach the hounds!

Edward Bax (EdBax), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 12:49 (seventeen years ago) link

The Hounds of Love of course

Who Are You... The Nerve... I Wanna Get Out, I Wanna Get Out (Dada), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 13:00 (seventeen years ago) link

They're a bugger to get off, leaches.

Revivalist (Revivalist), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 13:00 (seventeen years ago) link

Secret Life of Arabia is a fantastic song, ludicrous art-disco... it always makes me smile.

But Low is the better album, more extreme in its pop-soundtrack divide, more concise, less "rock" more "soul" in terms of the base materials for its songs...

gekoppel (Gekoppel), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 15:45 (seventeen years ago) link

"Secret Life of Arabia" begat Spandau Ballet.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 15:47 (seventeen years ago) link

i think Low sounds better than Heroes. Heroes sounds...weird. the mix (in every version I've heard, original vinyl, original CD issue, and ryko cd issue) is kind of...muddy and thin? is that possible? Secret Life of Arabia and Joe the Lion being the worst sounding ones. I love the record though.

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 15:50 (seventeen years ago) link

Perhaps, but it also spawned the associates...

gekoppel (Gekoppel), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 16:13 (seventeen years ago) link

"Secret Life of Arabia" begat Spandau Ballet

Much as James Brown begat MC Hammer

Who Are You... The Nerve... I Wanna Get Out, I Wanna Get Out (Dada), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 16:49 (seventeen years ago) link

"cracks cocaine" - ROFFLES

Oh, and I agree completely w/Ned's choice waaay upthread. "Heroes" for me.

Jay Vee's Return (Manon_69), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 17:09 (seventeen years ago) link

The best description of Low's pop side I read was how it was what Blur has always tried to be.

Except I hear nothing of Blur in anything by Blur. "Trouble In The Message Center" is "Heroes"-by-numbers though.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 21:06 (seventeen years ago) link

Much as James Brown begat MC Hammer

If you mean that Brown taught Hammer how to wear ridiculous clothes and sing/shout banalities over beats, then yeah.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 21:39 (seventeen years ago) link

"Be My Wife" is such a nice song. Low by a nose.

M. Biondi (M. Biondi), Tuesday, 6 June 2006 22:31 (seventeen years ago) link

"Be My Wife" is phenomenal, it's probably my favorite Bowie song. And the video is just plain breathtaking imo.

willem -- (willem), Wednesday, 7 June 2006 04:57 (seventeen years ago) link

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kB7skYEv_EM

willem -- (willem), Wednesday, 7 June 2006 04:58 (seventeen years ago) link

this thread makes me both happy and sad, especially considering the fact that i listened to both albums on a long, rainy drive last weekend and reaffirmed for the 8 thousandth time how these are if not my favorite albums of all time, then in my top 5 or something. brilliant, the whole lot, from beginning to end.

Emily B (Emily B), Wednesday, 7 June 2006 20:19 (seventeen years ago) link

one year passes...

What's going on with the reissues? I expected to see a 30th Anniversary double deluxe just like the early albums a couple years ago, but no show. There's a couple pricey 2007 issues, but I don't know if they're remastered from the 1999 Virgin version. My Rykodisc Low is sounding a little brittle to me.

There's a brand new book out about the Berlin era by Thomas Jerome Seabrook called Bowie in Berlin: A New Career In A New Town. I flipped through it. Nice pictures, but it doesn't seem to improve on the Berlin section in David Buckley's Strange Fascination. Also released since the last post, David Bowie Under Review: 1976-1979. It's next in my Netflix, will report back.

I wonder how the albums would have differed if Bowie convinced Michael Rother (Neu!, Harmonia) to join in.

Fastnbulbous, Sunday, 1 June 2008 13:27 (fifteen years ago) link

The instrumentals would've been better.

Noodle Vague, Sunday, 1 June 2008 13:32 (fifteen years ago) link

Lodger tends to be overshadowed by these two, but it has a few of my favourite Bowie tunes on (Fantastic Voyage, Yassassin, Look Back in Anger). To be honest I find the instrumental tracks on Low and Heroes to be a bit of a waste, as I adore his voice so much.

chap, Sunday, 1 June 2008 13:34 (fifteen years ago) link

Lodger's the best of the 3, and I think that's also something of an ILM consensus, not that that counts for owt.

Noodle Vague, Sunday, 1 June 2008 13:38 (fifteen years ago) link

Between Low and Heroes - Sons of the Silent Age is my favourite track on either album, so Heroes wins.

chap, Sunday, 1 June 2008 13:50 (fifteen years ago) link

i don't understand the ILX love for "sons of the silent age," i think it's the weakest track on heroes.

Eisbaer, Sunday, 1 June 2008 14:57 (fifteen years ago) link

Lodger's the best of the 3, and I think that's also something of an ILM consensus, not that that counts for owt

it is? i missed that meeting.

grimly fiendish, Sunday, 1 June 2008 17:43 (fifteen years ago) link

i missed that meeting too; hence the poll on the other thread :)

stephen, Sunday, 1 June 2008 19:46 (fifteen years ago) link

ten months pass...

"Beauty and the Beast" -- my favorite cut from "Heroes" and after all these years, still can't figure out what Eno did to treat Fripp's guitar that way. First take, too.

Naive Teen Idol, Thursday, 16 April 2009 02:07 (fifteen years ago) link

ten years pass...

Fripp: "Currently we are in dispute with the David Bowie estate and PPL, who refuse to acknowledge that RF is a featured performer on both Heroes and Scary Monsters albums."

WmC, Monday, 23 September 2019 21:50 (four years ago) link

I had to ask on FB what PPL does (which I forgot); it collects royalties for performers on songs, rather than just the writers. A bit stupid for the estate to not own up to this; also a bit lame for Fripp to air his dirty laundry on FB the way he did on this topic, it makes him look unbelievably petty.

akm, Monday, 23 September 2019 22:13 (four years ago) link

Has he ever cared how he looks?

WmC, Monday, 23 September 2019 22:23 (four years ago) link

true, i just don't know what he expects to get out of that post.

akm, Monday, 23 September 2019 22:25 (four years ago) link

Not sure, but I think this is the same tack he took when he had that brief dispute with Kanye over Schizoid Man royalties. Ask nicely and privately once and then air it out. Never again with the Endless Grief.

WmC, Monday, 23 September 2019 22:31 (four years ago) link

someone posted this on stupid steve hoffman forums which clears this all up: "At the Crimson pre-show last night, David Singleton explained that PPL informed DGM that Fripp would no longer be paid royalties as a 'featured' performer on Heroes since the production credits do not list him as such. PPL cited a law that went into effect around 1990 with regards to this issue and are arguing that even though Heroes was made in the 70's the ruling can be applied retroactively. It's another case of the music industry ripping off the artist. Lawyers for the Bowie estate are siding with this ruling.
The fact that Tony Visconti and others involved in the making of Heroes acknowledge that Fripp was a co-creator and collaborator on Heroes, as well as interview transcripts of Bowie saying the same, is being disregarded since the album does not use the words 'featured' artist/player/etc.
It's easy to see why Fripp is pissed."

akm, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 17:45 (four years ago) link

I don't get what Bowie's estate gets out of siding with PPL on this.

WmC, Friday, 27 September 2019 13:59 (four years ago) link

Low is better

treeship., Friday, 27 September 2019 14:03 (four years ago) link

three years pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xC9FkNJt1Q

MaresNest, Friday, 30 June 2023 23:25 (nine months ago) link

Spanish language version of “Heroes” icymi
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xqmu84ltzl0

Looking For Mr. Goodreads (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 30 June 2023 23:53 (nine months ago) link

"Heroes" is stronger if you want songs: Low basically doesn't have any. You know it's rough sledding when your lead single is "Sound and Vision" (fourteen lines of lyrics, and no chorus) because it's the only thing on the disc (along with "Be My Wife") that even resembles a pop song. It's mainly compositions and fragments.

But Low's instrumental side is better. "Warszawa" thru "Subterraneans" gives Side B a nice arc, while "Heroes" has a slight sense of fizzling out at the end. And I think Low has to get points because it came first.

Both are amazing; among the best things he ever did.

Coagulopath, Monday, 3 July 2023 03:35 (nine months ago) link

not sure abt yr definition of songs

heroes has 1 really really great tune but low has an almost perfect side of tunes

corrs unplugged, Monday, 3 July 2023 06:45 (nine months ago) link

low 4 me

ava (paolo), Monday, 3 July 2023 09:30 (nine months ago) link

heroes is probably my fave bowie tune though, i know that's a super obvious pick but there you go

ava (paolo), Monday, 3 July 2023 09:30 (nine months ago) link


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