The Best of David Bowie 1974/1979
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
UK version of superb 'Best Of' collection which was only available in the states for a limited time. 20 tracks including the classics you'd expect like 'Golden Years', 'Young Americans', 'Fame', 'Sound And Vision', 'Look Back In Anger'with relative obscurities like 'It's Hard To Be A Saint In The City' and 'John I'm Only Dancing (Again)'. An impressive, reasonably thorough overview of Bowie's glam years. 1998 release. Standard jewel case. --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.
The Best of David Bowie 1974/1979, Music, David Bowie, Album Rock, Blue-Eyed Soul, Experimental Rock, Glam Rock, Hard Rock, Pop, Pop/Rock, Popular Music, Prog-Rock/Art Rock, Proto-Punk, Rock
Average customer rating:
- Another Bowie Comp Done Right. . . .Mostly (* * * * 1/3)
- Skip it....
- 4.5 ACTUALLY!
- These were truly his golden years!
- great collection of work
|
Best of 1974-1979
David Bowie
Manufacturer: EMI Int'l
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Proto Punk
| Hardcore & Punk
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Experimental Rock
| Rock
| Alternative Styles
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Pop Rock
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Blue-Eyed Soul
| Soul
| R&B
| Styles
| Music
General
| Soul
| R&B
| Styles
| Music
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Progressive Rock
| Progressive
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Hard Rock & Metal
| Styles
| Music
Hard Rock
| Hard Rock & Metal
| Styles
| Music
Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)
| Classic Rock
| Styles
| Music
Glam
| Classic Rock
| Styles
| Music
Alternative Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
Classic Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
Similar Items:
- The Best Of David Bowie 1969-1974
- Best of David Bowie 1980/1987
- Earthling
- Heroes
- The Best Of 1980-1987 (CD/DVD JWL BOX)
ASIN: B000009RNP
Release Date: 2000-09-26 |
Tracks:
- Sound and Vision
- Golden Years [Single Edit]
- Fame
- Young Americans [Single Version]
- John, I'm Only Dancing (Again)
- Can You Hear Me
- Wild Is the Wind
- Knock on Wood
- TVC 15 [Single Version]
- 1984
- It's Hard to Be a Saint in the City
- Look Back in Anger
- Secret Life of Arabia
- DJ
- Beauty and the Beast
- Breaking Glass
- Boys Keep Swinging
- Heroes [Single Version]
Album Description
UK version of superb 'Best Of' collection which was only available in the states for a limited time. 20 tracks including the classics you'd expect like 'Golden Years', 'Young Americans', 'Fame', 'Sound And Vision', 'Look Back In Anger'with relative obscurities like 'It's Hard To Be A Saint In The City' and 'John I'm Only Dancing (Again)'. An impressive, reasonably thorough overview of Bowie's glam years. 1998 release. Standard jewel case.
Album Details
Compilation captures Bowie during the waning & post-Ziggy Stardust days. Includes 'Fame', his collaboration with John Lennon, 'John, I'm Only Dancing (Again)', 'Heroes', '1984', 'Young Americans' & thirteen more.
Customer Reviews:
Another Bowie Comp Done Right. . . .Mostly (* * * * 1/3).......2006-09-01
The Best of David Bowie 1974/1979 starts off sounding invincible. The first four tracks are some of Bowie's very best songs, certainly of the latter half of the 70s. "Sound & Vision", "Golden Years", "Young Americans", and "Fame" are all taut, meticulously crafted, shimmering chunks of white soul and white funk. "Fame" - an unlikely candidate for his first #1 single - starts off with those slithery riffs that became a Bowie trademark during this era, and which pop up more than a few times on this disc. Several of the lesser-known tracks included here - "Can You Hear Me", "Look Back In Anger", "Breaking Glass" - are damn good, too.
Some have been critical of this disc for the reason that several of the songs ("Golden Years", "Young Americans", "TVC 15", "Heroes") are presented in their single-edit form. Yes, this is unfortunate, but almost all career-spanning compilations of Bowie's career do the same thing. Thus, I consider this to be a forgivable shortcoming. It is also too bad that the disc is cut off in 1979, since it has become a rule in rock criticism to describe every decent new release by Bowie to be his best since Scary Monsters, which was released in 1980. Again, forgivable. In my opinion, the major flaw of this CD is the absence of the song "Be My Wife". This is one of Bowie's best hard pop songs from this era, and its absence leaves its parent CD, Low, represented by only two tracks, whereas Young Americans, Station To Station, Heroes, and Lodger are all represented by three. This omission is particularly disturbing when one considers the fact someone judged the 7-minute "John, I'm Only Dancing (Again)" to be more worthy of inclusion. (The 3-disc, 39-track set Singles 1969-1993 swaps "Breaking Glass" for "Be My Wife", leaving Low better represented in terms of quality, if still not quantity.)
Still, as a collection of Bowie's latter 70s songs, 1974/1979 is about as good as one could hope. As stated above, four of his albums from this era are represented by 3 songs each, so his collaborations with Brian Eno are featured prominently. Since it begins chronologically in the same year that the previous compilation left off, there is also space for the topically trite but musically dynamic "1984" from Diamond Dogs. And like the 1969/1974 disc, this one also has two cover songs: "Knock on Wood" from David Live and an interesting take on Bruce Springsteen's "It's Hard To Be a Saint in the City". The fan who is reluctant to purchase Bowie's CDs from the late 70s - which is understandable, since there are many experimental instrumentals on them - will find about all they need on this disc. It achieves a rare feat for a compilation: it does the artist justice.
So why 4 1/3 stars instead of 5? Well, I can recommend the 1969/1974 compilation to anyone, but I would never suggest that one buy it in place of the CDs The Man Who Sold The World, Hunky Dory, or Ziggy Stardust. Those albums are just too good. However, I can recommend that the frugal Bowie newcomer start with 1974/1979 before moving on to the proper albums from this era. Granted, these albums were challenging and cutting edge, but not as equally brilliant and entertaining as the early ones. (Oops, if I had any rock critic cred to lose, that statement would do it for me.) Thus, I would give this collection 5 stars for usefulness, but not for how good all of the material is. Yes, some of it is great, but some of it...not so much. But Bowie should certainly be praised for his willingness to shed the Ziggy Stardust image, and his ability to successfully mine new musical territory.
(While reviewing the 2 compilations of Bowie's 70s material, I discovered that there is now a 3-CD, 57-track set available called The Platinum Collection. This includes both 1969/1974 and 1974/1979, as well as a 1980/1987 disc. The disc of 80s material is not, as far as I can tell, available as a disc by itself. This is unfortunate for those who already have the other two, but for those who have none of them, it makes The Platinum Collection all the more with the money, as 1980/1987 contains four songs from Scary Monsters, "Under Pressure", and all the MTV hits that one would expect.)
Skip it...........2004-04-29
An 80s child, and the daughter of a massive Bowie fan, I'm a massive Bowie fan myself. I have played 'The Best of David Bowie: 1969 - 1974', 'The Singles Collection', 'Hours', 'Reality' and even 'Best of Bowie' (DVD) a thousand times each, and don't become bored of them. I listed to 'The Best of David Bowie: 1974 - 1979' once, and felt like throwing it straight out the window. I've not listened to it since.
Don't buy it. I can see why it was only $10.
David, darl, you have many late 70s songs far better than these ones. What were you thinking when you complied this one?
4.5 ACTUALLY!.......2003-09-22
I find it funny when people review a compilation cd and criticize it for either not having their favorite songs or for having edited versions of songs. These songs became hits because they were played on the radio. The versions that were played on the radio were edited! I am probably different than most in that I enjoy having an edited version on a compilation, since most of the songs I already have the album version on the album. What does bother me is when obvoius hits are left off in leu of other material or worse just left off leaving 15 or 20 minutes of space on a cd that could have been filled! Look at The Police, Synchronicity II, Secret Journey and So Lonely were all singles and left off of most compilations of theirs. My ownly complaint about this particular compilation is that of another reviewer in that it did not go up to 1980 and include songs from Scary Monsters.
These were truly his golden years!.......2003-02-11
This great compilation reflects my favourite Bowie period, the middle to late seventies. Drawn from the albums Young Americans, Station To Station, Heroes and Lodger, it covers his "plastic soul" excursion, the Thin White Duke period and the three albums of synth experimentation. The sequence of tracks is odd - I think a chronogical one would have made more sense. My favorite tracks from Low are here: the sublime Sound & Vision and the ominous Breaking Glass, of which the latter inspired Nick Lowe's brilliant song I Love The Sound Of Breaking Glass from 1978. Station To Station, in my opinion the best ever Bowie album, provides the energetic TVC15, the classic soulful Golden Years and the wistful ballad Wild Is The Wind, but a serious omission has been the magnificent Word On a Wing, one of the greatest and most poetic Bowie tracks of all time with its transcendent spiritual quality, its inspired lyrics and soaring melody. Fame and Young Americans, the "plastic soul" songs, still sound good after all these years, especially next to the disco version of John, I'm Only Dancing. I don't find some of these tracks from Heroes, like Secret Life Of Arabia or Beauty And The Beast, as memorable as some of the other songs here, but I love his cover of Knock On Wood and of course the title track of Heroes remains a landmark composition, one of the most psychologically trenchant songs of all time. Artists as diverse as Blondie and Nico have covered it and I still listen to the German and the French versions on vinyl. To me, Lodger was the least satisfying of the trilogy of Eno albums, but Boys Keep Swinging still swings after all these years and I remember its dramatic video clip from 1979. I consider this his most creative period based on the sheer quality of songs such as Sound & Vision, Breaking Glass, Heroes, Golden Years, Fame, Young Americans and Wild Is The Wind. That's why, although I regret the omission of the breathtaking Word On A Wing, I have awarded this album five stars
great collection of work.......2002-02-09
This David Bowie captures his career of the second half of the 1970s. It really shows the best songs from the period like 1984 and young americans.
Music:
- The Boy With The Arab Strap
- The Family Values Tour '98 [Explicit Lyrics] [Live]
- The In Sound from Way Out!
- The Man Who Sold the World
- The Ukulele Freedom Front Presents: Wanna Takea Ride
- This Is Hardcore [Extra tracks]
- Tigermilk
- Under the Milky Way [CD-single]
- Version 2.0
- what a beautiful waste
Music
music
Music
Circus Therapy [Explicit Lyrics]
Dweller in My Deathless Dream
Hank Williams - 40 Greatest Hits
Letter From Home
Lapsus
Meditation Music: #1 Hits: 1975-1979
Joy Williams
Complete Chamber Music 3
Grouchyfriendly
Gerardo
Everything's Fine
Gala Des Stars: 40 Original Hits [Import]
Flipside
Handful of Aces
Rough & Ready