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Book Reviews of David Bowie's Low (33 1/3)Book Review: An excellent and fun book Summary: 5 Stars
Seems quite meticulously researched. (The Amazon description should make some mention of that; it seems unnecessarily vague is describing what the book is.)
I did find 1 minor factual error in the first few pages (it was Gus Dudgeon who produced the "Space Oddity" single, not Paul Buckmaster!).
But given the density of detailed information packed into this relatively small book (culled from a variety of books and music articles published over the past few years), that may be a forgivable offense.
Overall, this book is filled with interesting facts, beginning with the recording of Station to Station, then the actual recording of Low and the beginning of Bowie's Berlin period.
Among other things, the book recounts:
- how various influences (Kraftwerk, Neu!, etc.) actually worked their way onto the album
- how Eno recorded the album's signature drum sound
- some of the strange devices used in the studio to "inspire creativity"
- an insight into Bowie's working methodology at the time
- and generally does a great job of analyzing the album in the context of Bowie's career and mindset
I have found this a very enjoyable read, and I recommend it to all Bowie enthusaists and especially fans of one of Bowie's very best albums, Low.
Book Review: Oh if only I hadn't read this one first Summary: 5 Stars
Hugo Wilcken, you've ruined me for other 33 1/3 books.
The bar has been set high. I expected other writers to educate me as thoroughly, to supply with the same richness of information.
Granted, I've not read many of the 33 1/3 series. But when nothing else has come close to being in the same echelon of your tome.
Some of the 33 1/3 series seem a little self-indulgent, a little self-absorbed.
In this case the subject is indeed the subject, and the only time you find yourself thinking about the writer is when you murmur to yourself, "wow, this guy did some serious research."
There are different ways of being a fan of the music. And when you're a fan of the music, you talk about the music. Not so much about your experience with the music. I don't mean for my review to be about this book being what the others aren't, and how I wish more of the writers took this route. So what I'll say about this book is: enjoy.
Book Review: Absolute best in series Summary: 5 Stars
I read Hugo Wilcken's "Low" and Joe Pernice's fellow 33&1/3 volume for "Meat is Murder" in the same day and the difference between the two books is staggering. Wilcken crafts the definitive volume in the series, full of meaty anecdotes, interesting cultural references, and more thought-provoking revelations into the album, artist and cultural milieu than you can shake a proverbial stick at.
Pernice gives us some dodgy sixth-form fiction vignette about teen suicide. Zzzz. Regrettable that that book is even allowed to stand in the same general company as Wilcken's masterful read.
Book Review: Bring Back Hugo! Summary: 5 Stars
This is perhaps the finest, most detailed analysis of Bowie's work I've ever read, and I earnestly entreat the author to consider taking on the remainder of the Berlin trilogy albums. In spite of the minor error or three (that's Walter Tevis who wrote The Man Who Fell To Earth, not Travis), this book answers so many questions I've always wanted to ask about "Low"-- which is saying a lot, as this has remained one of the most important albums of all time to my own musical work. Great stuff!
Book Review: Low is a Bowie high point ... Summary: 5 Stars
Hugo Wilcken does an excellent job of bringing on the ambience of Bowie's world, circa mid 70s, not only focusing on the first disc of the Berlin Trilogy, Low, but capturing the mindset of the world in which Bowie lived, one full of drugs, Iggy Pop's The Idiot, Station to Station and so much more. Informative, not quite perfect, but too good not to give the full five stars and my personal fave of this series so far.
JCS
More Customer Reviews: 1 2
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