Experiencing David Bowie: A Listener's Companion
By (Author) Ian Chapman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
1st September 2015
United States
General
Non Fiction
Composers and songwriters
Popular music
782.42166092
Hardback
254
Width 160mm, Height 233mm, Spine 24mm
503g
In Experiencing David Bowie: A Listener's Companion, musicologist, writer, and musician Ian Chapman unravels the extraordinary marriage of sound and visual effect that lies at the heart of the work of one of the most complex and enduring performers in popular music. Still active in a career now well into its fifth decade, Bowies influence on music and popular culture is vast. At the height of the glam rock era, Bowie stood head and shoulders above his peers. His influence, however, would extend far beyond glam through successive changes of musical style and stage work that impacted upon wider popular culture through fashion, film, gender studies, theatre, and performing arts. As Chapman suggests, Bowie recognized early on that in a post-war consumer culture that continued the cross-pollination of media platforms, the line between musician and actor was an ever-thinning one. Opposing romantic notions of authenticity in rock, Bowie wore many faces, challenging listeners who consider his large body of work with a bewildering array of musical styles, covering everything from classic vaudeville to heavy metal, glam rock to soul and funk, electronic music to popular disco. In Experiencing David Bowie, Chapman serves as tour guide through this vast musical landscape, tracing his development as a musical artist through twenty-seven studio albums he generated. Pivotal songs anchor Chapmans no-nonsense look at Bowies work, alerting listeners to his innovations as composer and performer. Moreover, through a close look at Bowie's visualsin particular his album covers, Chapman draws the lines of connection between Bowie the musician and Bowie the visual stage artist, illuminating the broad nature of his art. This work will appeal to not only fans of David Bowie, but anyone interested in the history of modern popular music, fashion, stage and cinema, and modern art.
What I particularly enjoyed was the writers passion for Bowies music, often recalling his excitement as a teenager at listening to each new release on vinyl for the first time. The innovations of each track are explored along with the visual impact and meanings of Bowies album covers. Despite his enthusiasm, Chapman acknowledges and explains the reasons behind Bowies less successful works in the 1980s and 90s. This work will greatly appeal to fans of David Bowie as well as anyone interested in the history of modern popular music, fashion, stage and cinema, and modern art. * Sixtyplusurfers *
David Bowie is one of the most daring and influential artists of his generation. Ian Chapman, musicologist and musician, serves as our tour guide, taking us through the ever-evolving art of Bowie. Chapman goes into great detail about every studio album, as Bowie glides from music hall to metal, glam to soul, disco to electronica. Bowies compulsion to innovate becomes clear. And Chapman includes in this study an exploration of the visual aspects, so vital to Bowies impact. The book gives us a far deeper understanding of a complex musical force. * Pop Culture Classics *
Chapmans narrative approach is to describe the discovery of each new album in a kind of second-person voice: you go to the record store. You wait in line (yes, we used to do that). You take the record home. You look at the front and back covers. You put the record on the turntable. You flip it over after the side finishes. And so on. . . .[I]n Chapmans hands [this] works quite well, especially I should think with readers who actually did experience new records exactly that way. . . .Chapman makes the case for many of Bowies more recent albums. . . .[And] the critical analysis he brings to bear upon such late-period Bowie albums as Heathen and Reality has gotten me interested enough that I just might check out those titles. And realizing that makes me say to Ian Chapman, 'Job well done.' * Musoscribe *
Ian Chapman is a senior lecturer in music at the University of Otago, New Zealand. A music iconographer and specialist in glam rock, he is a former professional musician and the author of several books, including Kiwi Rock Chicks, Pop Stars & Trailblazers (2010).