yeah..... and jim Morrison.... can't help but wonder the stuff they'd be knocking out if they'd have lived a full life good job they both managed to write and produce songs CONSIDERABLY ahead of their time.
Back in spring 1971 David Bowie got on the number 54 bus at the start of Southend Road, Beckenham. Apparently he ran through the Comme d' Habitude (My Way) opening melody in his head as he sat on the top deck. But this time the chords followed for the "But the film is a saddening bore" section and by the time the bus reached Bromley Road, Catford, Bowie had the full Life on Mars' chords and melody complete in his head. So, he jumped off the bus and crossed the road to catch another 54 bus back to Beckenham to record a version asap.
I believe he was on his way to Lewisham, possibly, to buy some shirts. The Tailor’s loss is our gain, and I say that as someone who grew up in Beckenham at the time and whose great Grandad was a tailor in Penge, on the bus route. I remember singing this song, loudly, with classmates waiting to go into a maths lesson - we got properly told off! Finally, let’s celebrate Mick Robson, Hull’s greatest export, including all the fish…
Great video! Hunky Dory was the first pop album I ever owned and I love it to this day. Who’d have thought that 12 years later I would end up working with Bowie on Labyrinth and he’d borrow a book from me I never got back. Still, made for a great story.
‘Life on Mars’ is so much more than ’My Way’ the similar part- the first 8 bars of the verse- are a jumping off point- Life on Mars is musically and lyrically sophisticated, and beautifully arranged and performed.
Comme D’habitude is great too, more emotional than either of its offspring. No where near as sophisticated and thought provoking as Life On Mars and the way I see it, Life On Mars is a post modern Warholian work in that it takes the relatively mundane My Way and uses it the create a cerebral, nostalgic masterpiece that makes every day life and the then-new phenomenon of consumerism seem like Monet’s gardens- at least what we’d been saddled with as the romance of the 18th century had completely faded. I mean, the lyric of “Is there life on Mars?” begs the question: is this all there is now?
For me it's Station to Station, blows my mind every time, it's like he was truly possessed by a demon or something (which is kind of true when you think about it)
This was a great documentary. I loved David Bowie (still do). In particular this song. My high school days, in the 70's, where filled with all his music. And just to show how great music is timeless, my kids in their 30's love this album and all his work. I think my introduction had something to do with it LOL. I had tears when I heard about his death. RIP David, you impacted my life. Thank you for producing this great video.
Im 63, my daughter's boyfriend recently bought me a Bowie T-Shirt for my birthday❤. I love it and I get a lot of comments when I wear it. Bowie is such a well loved artist. I've loved him since one of my brother's friends brought up his Aladin Sane album to listen to. That was the beginning of my love affair with DB. There are no dud albums, they are all excellent. Thanks for this lovely insight into a lovely song.
Love it... Huge Bowie fan! Little known fact: before Paul Anka, the song Comme d'habitude was offered to Montreal singer Tom Swift who was busy in studio recording his album, so turned down the opportunity!
Great video, and I'm delighted to hear the censored comments from Ronno at the end! One slight quibble: it might give some people an exaggerated idea of the similarity between the two songs. Bowie did indeed follow the opening chord progression of Comme d'Habitude, which is nice enough but not unusual, but once he gets beyond the opening the progression diverges radically from the French song. I remember that Imogen Heap was doing a radio concert years ago and someone asked her to do a cover of Life on Mars. She downloaded a copy and started trying to play it through by ear, but gave up because it would take far too long to learn it in the time available, saying 'it's got every chord progression in the known universe'.
An Occasional Dream on David Bowie/Space Oddity (1969) shares a similar chord sequence towards the beginning which predates Life on Mars, but another songwriter, Gilbert O'Sullivan, uses a chord sequence very similar in feel on Alone Again (Naturally) which is just as complex as Life on Mars and was recorded in the same year, 1971! Nobody seems to write songs of any complexity now, probably because they wouldn't be seen as being commercial.
As a Bowie devotee from the 70’s Thank you for putting the story out there. Thank you for mentioning Mick Ronson’s string arrangement. A very underrated musician. Rick Wakeman worked with Bowie from Space Oddity to Ziggy Stardust when he left to join Yes and then had a successful solo career. Mick Ronson worked with Bowie from Hunky Dory to Pinups after which Bowie disbanded the spiders from Mars.
Explosive years! Was anything explosive after 2000? For those who had no idea what the first pop revolution was (the 1960s), probably. The Britney Spears Wave has gone vintage now, but my ears keep staring at her, in disgust. Autotune, be damned!
@@willemvandeursen3105Rock did its big “garage” and “guitar” revival: White Stripes, Strokes, Jet, et al… not too “explosive” IMO, enjoyable but rehashed. Too PoMo. Nu-Metal was still pretty explosive, but it died out very quickly and without fanfare. Rave turned into club music and then died. DnB -> 2step -> garage/grime and dubstep. Very English. Burial had the last word. Club Music in the US hadn’t become “EDM” yet. There were fun House and Electro revivals, but most of the club music was empty, tasteless, and very bad IMO. Including hip-hop.
@@dethkon I think the only garage that matters is the early Kinks. Too soon they switched to Variety. Right now I running through my almost forgotten Yellow stack. Two peppy Austrians who made the most of electro percussion and even gave Auntie Shlrley Bassey a fresh hit. I like such ideas. And I think, wow, Yellow's music hasn't aged at all. Well done, boys!
@@northeything8568 more of the same Gene Hunt goodness, but based in the 80s. I much prefer the 80s aesthetic and music so it's naturally an improvement for me but Life On Mars is still great too. The end of Ashes To Ashes ties everything up too and makes everything make sense.
Only recently did I mention to my father that Hunky Dory is quite possibly my favourite album of all time, this reminded me that I’m right. Thank you for sharing.
It was my first Bowie album, and the one I always go back to. I put it on a couple of days ago, there's truly not a single bad/filler song on it, all of them are special gems, in their own little worlds.
Bowie was a genius. I think Life on Mars is a big improvement over My Way: prettier melody, more touching... I'm so glad we have this masterpiece... one of my fave Bowie compositions
As a life long fan of Bowie's and rock and roll music in general (I'm on my 60's now) I must say I learn a big deal from your videos, and appreciate your work.
these are some of the best videos on youtube, just fantastic work my man. your doing a lot of important work for music history and i think a lot of people will appreciate that in time. thank you.
In my teens (mid 70s) Bowie saved my mind with The Man Who.. and Hunky Dory, still my faves. Life in Mars I listened to death. Nowadays I listen to Ronno's guitar first and foremost. They really were a hugely creative duet.
David Bowie was my era. I was an early teenager as he was starting to become popular, at school when Hunky Dory, Ziggy Stardust and Aladdin Sane were all coming out. He was like a lightening bolt after the Beatles and Stones. He literarily dressed like a space man and pointed to us all during his TV performance of Starman. I was hooked like millions of others. My point is, he came across as such a weird person that performed weird songs. You never got to see him on TV apart from a documentary Cracked actor 1975. That film confirmed his weirdness. He was this weird star you would never get to meet. But when he was interviewed (as himself) he seemed perfectly normal, it was all an act and he was the indeed the Cracked actor. He was however, very clever and very determined.
In in the early 80s, when he achieved mainstream popularity, he was still the musician for weirdos. That's the great thing about mainstream success. The casual fans never bother looking deeper, so they had no idea who he really was. And the weird obsessives get to discover a wealth of back-catalog, and realize that he's putting on the persona of a mainstream pop star the same way he put on the persona of an alien. Of course, he's articulate, erudite, and personable in interviews, but at his core, I think he was definitely a full-blown weirdo. Not because he really was Ziggy, or the Thin White Duke, or the Cracked Actor. But because he was always wearing a persona. And, of course, while he pretended to the end of his career that those personas weren't him, there was always more of him in them than he was willing to admit, even to himself. After all, by his own admission, he really did take it all too far. But boy, could he play guitar.
We have to remember though that he wasn't as original as people now think. The glam rock movement had already been a thing before he joined in on it and hitched his wagon to it. Before that he was doing folk pop and before that he was a mod and a novelty song writer. In those early days he was always chasing the popular style of the day.
@@OzoneoceanMJM The Glam scene was coming up, but it didn't have music of its own before Bowie came along. Bolen and the rest were all jumping into it at the same time. It didn't all come from him, but he was a big part of the inception. He didn't just glom onto a well-established musical style and lay claim to it. And Bowie's costuming contributed more to its look than anyone else's. At least, according to the bios I read.
Great video David! I love Bowie. I write music and play guitar and sing. Bowie along with Nina Simone, Elizabeth Fraser, and Jeff Buckley are my greatest voice influences. Such fun to see the back story on this song. Cheers!
I have been watching your videos for about a year now, & I realize I haven't subscribed until now. Your well-informed and sublime commentary is much appreciated. Keep up the good work,mate!! Bowie Lives!
Hunky Dory is perfection from beginning to end. There isn't a single note on it out of place. It can still move me to tears. "I was Stone and he was Wax So he could scream, and still relax, unbelievable And we frightened the small children away And our talk was old and dust would flow Thru our veins and Lo! it was midnight Back at the kitchen door Like the grim face on the Cathedral floor..."
Rick Wakeman came to my school to give a talk about the music industry and play some songs. He closed the talk by playing Life on Mars?, and it was like Bowie was in the room.
Revived my interest in Bowie which for some reason vanished after Hunky Dory..but then life changed for me and I left school, friends and parties for European explorations! Such neat interviews. Excellent and restrained. Thanks for the musicxx
@@ingridfong-daley5899 Wakeman played the same 1898 Bechstein piano that was used by the Beatles for "Hey Jude", and later by Queen for "Bohemian Rhapsody". en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_on_Mars_(song)#:~:text=Wakeman%20played%20the%20same%201898,Queen%20for%20%22Bohemian%20Rhapsody%22.
@@ingridfong-daley5899 My understanding is the piano was ultimately sold to a private collector in New York. What a fantastic dinner party conversation piece that would be!
Bowie didn't just use instruments to make his music, he also used the talented musicians he surrounded himself with. Their creativity made songs fantasticly real and special. He knew that whatever they would do, it'd be great. It must've been a wonderful feeling to work with him ❤
Without question, one of the very best channels on RUclips. Informative, well scripted, highly engaging content superbly presented. I wish you every success!
The first Bowie record I heard was Space Oddity, it was one of those "here pop music stops, it can't possibly evolve any further! moments.I loved his first album, which was a sort of fairy tail-ish Syd Barrett collection of songs, but I heard him progress to greater things. Bowie wrote history for sure.
Agreed. I particularly love "Love You Till Tuesday" from that first album, such a delicious ear worm! We will all love you *forever* David. He was a REAL 🌟 in every sense of the word ❤🙌
Excellent video, man. I couldn't help but get a little emotional watching it, this is one of my favourite Bowie songs but I never knew the story behind it. Instant sub, thanks for your work.
I love this song a lot, as a child it was more of my favorite in the late 2000’s, and whoever called on a phone, thank god, thank you. I love hearing a telephone sometimes in a song :) and thank you for this video! :)
Sometimes a video about how a song came into being can be a godawful small affair. However, this is grand, not a Mickey Mouse thing, but something special; even American women in Norfolk can appreciate this well turned out video. The maker doesn't ask us to focus on anything in particular (except that f*cking telephone), and in the wake of Rick's sparking endorsement we can imagine that Lennon is sailing again. And while Frankie was stuck in Hollywood, David was free as a cloud, no touring shroud to cloak his dreams. Is there life on Mars? Maybe NASA's tortured brow will find out?
love your videos, always fascinating. And I imagine you know how many Ronno fans (of which I am one) feel his role in Bowie's music is still not recognised enough. Actually Life on Mars which of course is just a work of genius, (and I love hearing Rick Wakeman's take on it), but really you have to say Ronno's arrangements and soaring guitar are absolutely a key part of this song - not to take away in any way how great Bowie is, but just to recognise Mick Ronson's part in this story. Perhaps you should do something about Ronno, a very interesting musician.
Leather clad rocker Vince Taylor (Brand New Cadillac) and his band were skint so Vince went to France to get paid off their manager and Vince spent all the money on LSD and subsequently went insane. David Jones (then) knew Vince and bumped into him outside a London train station where Vince pulled out a map and proceeded to show David where the spiders from Mars would land. Vince was the inspiration for Ziggy. Presumably Vince regained his sanity because he later worked in a Swiss airport.
Always one of my favorite Bowie songs. When I bought Anjjun’s album Snow On the Sahara for the title track (1994?) the beautiful bonus was her cover of Life On Mars.
Finding the 'Hunky Dory' album in the basement of a second hand head shop I clerked in years ago started a remaining-life-long love of Bowie. I'd heard him some here and there, mostly later pop stuff, but that album made me wild to immerse. 'Quicksand' just blew me away, but the whole thing...not just great songs, a perfect 'album'. Was fortunate enough to get invited by a friend (thanks again, Sandra!) to a morning (9am) Bowie 'winners only' show (my friend won responding to tiny little single local newspaper notice) at Smith's Old Bar in Atlanta in 2016, just him on guitar and his drummer, with question and answer. Magical and charming. Also saw at International Ballroom in 1997 with a killer full band; they opened with 'Quicksand'!!
i also think Hunky Dory is Bowies’s greatest album, with some (as Wakeman says) great melodies. For me the puzzle is why didn’t Bowie carry on writing great melodies?
Paul Anka heard the song Comme d'habitude on the radio in 1968, when visiting Paris. Anka was captivated by the melody and bought the rights to the song. Bowie's lyric on Even a Fool Learns to Love, echoes the elegaic style, nd melancholic sentiments of Anthony Newley. It's a style and sentiment in keeping with Lindsey Kemp's theatrical work.
Interestingly, just like David Bowie was great at the songs recording at his first take, so was Roy Orbison. When “U2” asked Roy to record “Mystery Girl” he did it only once in a studio; and it’s still a version that gets more views on RUclips.
The song My Way did not revive Sinatra’s career because it didn’t need reviving. He was coming off of about 15 years of gigantic success in the second more mature phase of his musical career. My Way was kind of his farewell or summing up song.
Shoutout to Mick Ronno Ronson for creating the sounds that I love from the 1971 to 1973 Bowie albums. He also produced Lou Reed, John Cougar, Morrissey, and more.
I discovered Life On Mars when I was searching for musicals where Sophia Anne Caruso took part in. I came across the proshot of the musical and the stage, the cast, the unsettling and confusing yet amazingly artsy atmosphere... everything peaked my attention in the best way possible. I started searching about David Bowie and now I'm crying over really good music(the best and most consuming feeling tbh) and his death. I wish I had discovered him earlier and well before his death but I was six when he passed away so😔 Anyway, I'm gonna get deeper into this rabbithole I guess, rest in peace David🤍
Quite nicely done. Still, I have to point out that some of the dates ascribed to pictures are wrong. The photos marked 1967 (0:18) and 1971 (3:15 and 3:47) are all from 1973, and the picture marked 1970 (2:45) is actually from 1976. It's easy to spot this with Bowie, as he profoundly changed his look with frequency in those years. Even though the story was familiar to me, I'd never heard Ronno's swearing on the recording - a good add-in! Also interesting: after attending Bowie's "farewell" party in mid-'73, Barbra Streisand recorded and released the song - in a version Bowie publicly said he disliked.
Used to sing this song to warm up for gigs because it has such a range. One day a flatmate popped out of her room while I was belting it. She was sleeping off a long night. She was furious I woke her up playing a Bowie record so loud. I said, "Sorry, that was me, I have a gig." Her face lit up with a big smile. She was quite understanding after that. (Apparently, I have to edit: If this post makes you angry, you need to examine your life. I am not responsible for your sad state.)
@@thepagecollective Yourself. In this one comment you wrote, you managed to mention both how difficult "Life on Mars?" is to sing, but that you can do it, AND that you're a gigging musician. PLUS that you're sooo good at singing that you make women smile and forgive you anything. It's all "me, me, me" with you...
@@SpaceCattttt I clearly stated "Used to sing." I'm stunned if I get a few hundred views on youtube these days.. "Life On Mars" IS difficult to sing. I just happen to know that. Maybe you should focus on what you can do to better your life instead of trying to knock me down for a memory. You seem so bitter. It's not a good look.
The music for My Way, which included how to sing it without lyrics, was made by the French composer, Bowie gave his lyrics version, Ankar gave his lyrics version, the song was then sold to Ankar, who gave to Frank Sinatra. So no plagiarism, and everything fair!
Ironically the response to Life on mars was recorded prior in 1965 and it's called ballad of thin man, as if Bob Dylan was way ahead of the curve. When you find this connection and a dialogue between them it will blow your mind, you just have to realize how relative timespace really is and how some people have more insight then others who live through their own mistakes.
Fantastic video! I thought I knew everything about this song but you gave a lot of new information. I always found the piano and the phone in the fade-out to be so haunting and mysterious. When I listened to Life on Mars it always was as a single song so i figured that the phone would be a hint to the next song on the album, like a sort of concept album of sorts. But when I started listening to Hunky Dory in full, I never understood why the phone was there. Great video, Keep it up!
I will always associate Life On Mars with the tv show that used the name, and that show and song were both so deeply melancholic that the song is still difficult for me to listen to.
Over the last year I'd gotten really into looking into songs that were adapted from one language into English, which led me to the original French version of what became My Way, Comme d'habitude, which let to me learning how it very likely could have become a David Bowie song in an alternate timeline, and yes, its just such an interesting fascinating story. I also just love Comme d'habitude, while really disliking My Way, its the favorite song of the worst people in the world.
Still miss Bowie.
One of the all time greats in music.
The world has gone to shit since he left us.
yeah..... and jim Morrison.... can't help but wonder the stuff they'd be knocking out if they'd have lived a full life
good job they both managed to write and produce songs CONSIDERABLY ahead of their time.
@@pbobak73Prince near the same time, ugh.
No lies detected
One of the all time greats in m̶u̶s̶i̶c̶ humanity.
Back in spring 1971 David Bowie got on the number 54 bus at the start of Southend Road, Beckenham. Apparently he ran through the Comme d' Habitude (My Way) opening melody in his head as he sat on the top deck. But this time the chords followed for the "But the film is a saddening bore" section and by the time the bus reached Bromley Road, Catford, Bowie had the full Life on Mars' chords and melody complete in his head. So, he jumped off the bus and crossed the road to catch another 54 bus back to Beckenham to record a version asap.
On the buses.
I believe he was on his way to Lewisham, possibly, to buy some shirts. The Tailor’s loss is our gain, and I say that as someone who grew up in Beckenham at the time and whose great Grandad was a tailor in Penge, on the bus route. I remember singing this song, loudly, with classmates waiting to go into a maths lesson - we got properly told off! Finally, let’s celebrate Mick Robson, Hull’s greatest export, including all the fish…
@@blackrosecomb "You can walk around in New York while you sleep in Penge."
@@davidcopson5800 David Bowie's "Did You Ever Have A Dream" Pengetastic! ruclips.net/video/b_EZITEBsPk/видео.html
@@blackrosecomb Ronson!?!
Great video! Hunky Dory was the first pop album I ever owned and I love it to this day. Who’d have thought that 12 years later I would end up working with Bowie on Labyrinth and he’d borrow a book from me I never got back. Still, made for a great story.
Incredible. What was the book?
@@TexacoRodeoClownYe pickpockets of o'l London town.
That is the coolest story I've heard in a long time sir.
Working my way through books David enjoyed, a few are debatable !!
@@TexacoRodeoClown the return of ye old pickpockets of london town.
‘Life on Mars’ is so much more than ’My Way’ the similar part- the first 8 bars of the verse- are a jumping off point- Life on Mars is musically and lyrically sophisticated, and beautifully arranged and performed.
Comme D’habitude is great too, more emotional than either of its offspring. No where near as sophisticated and thought provoking as Life On Mars and the way I see it, Life On Mars is a post modern Warholian work in that it takes the relatively mundane My Way and uses it the create a cerebral, nostalgic masterpiece that makes every day life and the then-new phenomenon of consumerism seem like Monet’s gardens- at least what we’d been saddled with as the romance of the 18th century had completely faded. I mean, the lyric of “Is there life on Mars?” begs the question: is this all there is now?
@cobeyc.b5946 your 5 years in comparative media studies finally paying off in that comment
(Or it was chatgpt)
@cobeyc.b5946 I'm just glad a barista with a useless degree has free time to comment online in this way. Congratulations.
@@docsavage8640j
Best Bowie song ever. Sends shivers down my spine - even after this many years. Lyrics, vocals, arrangements and music. He did it his way
For me it's Station to Station, blows my mind every time, it's like he was truly possessed by a demon or something (which is kind of true when you think about it)
Wonderful content! I love these deep dives and behind the scenes details! Bowie forever!
This was a great documentary. I loved David Bowie (still do). In particular this song. My high school days, in the 70's, where filled with all his music. And just to show how great music is timeless, my kids in their 30's love this album and all his work. I think my introduction had something to do with it LOL. I had tears when I heard about his death. RIP David, you impacted my life. Thank you for producing this great video.
I had tears, for a week. They'd return at times.
I agree - this was a brilliant documentary.
Bowie never stopped evolving. A true artiste.
Thanks for being a real person and not a robot voice which is becoming all too common on RUclips. Very interesting btw.
The computers are getting better and better at mimicking real humans, so this may be a computer as well.
@@thomasfrick5413 lol defo not
I grew up listening to David's songs, at one point I had the majority of his albums (now they're cd's). He was genuinely ONE OF A KIND, R.I.P Mr Jones
Im 63, my daughter's boyfriend recently bought me a Bowie T-Shirt for my birthday❤. I love it and I get a lot of comments when I wear it. Bowie is such a well loved artist. I've loved him since one of my brother's friends brought up his Aladin Sane album to listen to. That was the beginning of my love affair with DB. There are no dud albums, they are all excellent. Thanks for this lovely insight into a lovely song.
I loved this song 50 years ago and I still love it. One of the most beautiful songs I ve heard.
Love it... Huge Bowie fan! Little known fact: before Paul Anka, the song Comme d'habitude was offered to Montreal singer Tom Swift who was busy in studio recording his album, so turned down the opportunity!
Great video, and I'm delighted to hear the censored comments from Ronno at the end!
One slight quibble: it might give some people an exaggerated idea of the similarity between the two songs. Bowie did indeed follow the opening chord progression of Comme d'Habitude, which is nice enough but not unusual, but once he gets beyond the opening the progression diverges radically from the French song. I remember that Imogen Heap was doing a radio concert years ago and someone asked her to do a cover of Life on Mars. She downloaded a copy and started trying to play it through by ear, but gave up because it would take far too long to learn it in the time available, saying 'it's got every chord progression in the known universe'.
An Occasional Dream on David Bowie/Space Oddity (1969) shares a similar chord sequence towards the beginning which predates Life on Mars, but another songwriter, Gilbert O'Sullivan, uses a chord sequence very similar in feel on Alone Again (Naturally) which is just as complex as Life on Mars and was recorded in the same year, 1971! Nobody seems to write songs of any complexity now, probably because they wouldn't be seen as being commercial.
As a Bowie devotee from the 70’s Thank you for putting the story out there.
Thank you for mentioning Mick Ronson’s string arrangement.
A very underrated musician.
Rick Wakeman worked with Bowie from Space Oddity to Ziggy Stardust when he left to join Yes and then had a successful solo career.
Mick Ronson worked with Bowie from Hunky Dory to Pinups after which Bowie disbanded the spiders from Mars.
Explosive years! Was anything explosive after 2000? For those who had no idea what the first pop revolution was (the 1960s), probably. The Britney Spears Wave has gone vintage now, but my ears keep staring at her, in disgust. Autotune, be damned!
@@willemvandeursen3105Rock did its big “garage” and “guitar” revival: White Stripes, Strokes, Jet, et al… not too “explosive” IMO, enjoyable but rehashed. Too PoMo.
Nu-Metal was still pretty explosive, but it died out very quickly and without fanfare.
Rave turned into club music and then died. DnB -> 2step -> garage/grime and dubstep. Very English. Burial had the last word.
Club Music in the US hadn’t become “EDM” yet. There were fun House and Electro revivals, but most of the club music was empty, tasteless, and very bad IMO. Including hip-hop.
@@dethkon
I think the only garage that matters is the early Kinks. Too soon they switched to Variety.
Right now I running through my almost forgotten Yellow stack. Two peppy Austrians who made the most of electro percussion and even gave Auntie Shlrley Bassey a fresh hit. I like such ideas. And I think, wow, Yellow's music hasn't aged at all. Well done, boys!
@@willemvandeursen3105 I think you mean Yello but Dame Shirley shares a birthday with the Thin White Duke!
@@senutylloj
Yes, of course, YELLO. Damn typos! 🥴
I love how the TV Series "Life on Mars" used this song, it was perfect for it, including the ringing telephone.
Just as Sam Tyler walked into the station. it's 1973 I'm avin hoops
Oh yes, I loved this series !
Just rewatched Life On Mars and Ashes To Ashes, both completely amazing, some of the best television ever produced in my mind.
@@mcgrewpunk 'Ashes To Ashes' my next watch ?
@@northeything8568 more of the same Gene Hunt goodness, but based in the 80s. I much prefer the 80s aesthetic and music so it's naturally an improvement for me but Life On Mars is still great too. The end of Ashes To Ashes ties everything up too and makes everything make sense.
I have always loved that song❤
It cries of sadness and loss.
Only recently did I mention to my father that Hunky Dory is quite possibly my favourite album of all time, this reminded me that I’m right. Thank you for sharing.
It was my first Bowie album, and the one I always go back to. I put it on a couple of days ago, there's truly not a single bad/filler song on it, all of them are special gems, in their own little worlds.
Bowie was a genius. I think Life on Mars is a big improvement over My Way: prettier melody, more touching... I'm so glad we have this masterpiece... one of my fave Bowie compositions
😆 🤣 😂 fanboy detected. Bowie has never written anything of that level
@@docsavage8640 oh no an opinion
@@docsavage8640 he did
As a life long fan of Bowie's and rock and roll music in general (I'm on my 60's now) I must say I learn a big deal from your videos, and appreciate your work.
these are some of the best videos on youtube, just fantastic work my man. your doing a lot of important work for music history and i think a lot of people will appreciate that in time. thank you.
It's actually general-Bowie-knowledge that's been told on Bowie sites for years. All of this is very old news.
@@apollomemories7399 Not to me and many others.
In my teens (mid 70s) Bowie saved my mind with The Man Who.. and Hunky Dory, still my faves. Life in Mars I listened to death. Nowadays I listen to Ronno's guitar first and foremost. They really were a hugely creative duet.
Mic was amazing, Pin Ups is an often overlooked Bowie album of covers. Ronson really makes that album great.
Duo
David Bowie was my era. I was an early teenager as he was starting to become popular, at school when Hunky Dory, Ziggy Stardust and Aladdin Sane were all coming out. He was like a lightening bolt after the Beatles and Stones. He literarily dressed like a space man and pointed to us all during his TV performance of Starman. I was hooked like millions of others. My point is, he came across as such a weird person that performed weird songs. You never got to see him on TV apart from a documentary Cracked actor 1975. That film confirmed his weirdness. He was this weird star you would never get to meet. But when he was interviewed (as himself) he seemed perfectly normal, it was all an act and he was the indeed the Cracked actor. He was however, very clever and very determined.
In in the early 80s, when he achieved mainstream popularity, he was still the musician for weirdos. That's the great thing about mainstream success. The casual fans never bother looking deeper, so they had no idea who he really was. And the weird obsessives get to discover a wealth of back-catalog, and realize that he's putting on the persona of a mainstream pop star the same way he put on the persona of an alien. Of course, he's articulate, erudite, and personable in interviews, but at his core, I think he was definitely a full-blown weirdo. Not because he really was Ziggy, or the Thin White Duke, or the Cracked Actor. But because he was always wearing a persona. And, of course, while he pretended to the end of his career that those personas weren't him, there was always more of him in them than he was willing to admit, even to himself. After all, by his own admission, he really did take it all too far.
But boy, could he play guitar.
We have to remember though that he wasn't as original as people now think. The glam rock movement had already been a thing before he joined in on it and hitched his wagon to it. Before that he was doing folk pop and before that he was a mod and a novelty song writer. In those early days he was always chasing the popular style of the day.
@@OzoneoceanMJM Oh yes, he was definitely a magpie but a very good songwriter.
@@OzoneoceanMJM It was Mick Ronson that made him a star.
@@OzoneoceanMJM The Glam scene was coming up, but it didn't have music of its own before Bowie came along. Bolen and the rest were all jumping into it at the same time. It didn't all come from him, but he was a big part of the inception. He didn't just glom onto a well-established musical style and lay claim to it.
And Bowie's costuming contributed more to its look than anyone else's. At least, according to the bios I read.
Delving into this makes me understand why listening to this beautiful song has so much impact. Captivating, magical, I just cannot define it✨
you’re one of the best and most consistent music content creators on this platform, never skip a video ❤
Thanks for watching!
I'm a Bowie fan, another excellent video 🤩
Thanks DH. Excellent storytelling. Bowie was a major influence on my life and your story just enhanced that.
Great video David! I love Bowie. I write music and play guitar and sing. Bowie along with Nina Simone, Elizabeth Fraser, and Jeff Buckley are my greatest voice influences. Such fun to see the back story on this song. Cheers!
One of my favorite Bowie songs and albums. Thanks for the explanation of how the song was made.
I have been watching your videos for about a year now, & I realize I haven't subscribed until now. Your well-informed and sublime commentary is much appreciated. Keep up the good work,mate!! Bowie Lives!
this is my favourite channel on youtube right now, just wish there were hundreds more videos like this.
Two sides of the same coin, Hunky Dory and Station to Station...priceless.
Great video.
Agreed ! My two favourite albums too though also some more excellent tracks on other albums. Prefer his earlier work though.
Hunky Dory is perfection from beginning to end. There isn't a single note on it out of place.
It can still move me to tears.
"I was Stone and he was Wax
So he could scream, and still relax, unbelievable
And we frightened the small children away
And our talk was old and dust would flow
Thru our veins and Lo! it was midnight
Back at the kitchen door
Like the grim face on the Cathedral floor..."
Rick Wakeman came to my school to give a talk about the music industry and play some songs. He closed the talk by playing Life on Mars?, and it was like Bowie was in the room.
Great video! I've been listening to this song for 50-odd years. and it's great to learn some of the details behind it. Thank you.
Well done! I have been thinking about early Bowie the last few days, and this was good to hear.
Revived my interest in Bowie which for some reason vanished after Hunky Dory..but then life changed for me and I left school, friends and parties for European explorations! Such neat interviews. Excellent and restrained. Thanks for the musicxx
Hunky Dory, my first and favorite Bowie album.
I discovered Hunky Dory in about 1980, and it remains one of my all-time favourite albums.
So happy I just saw this video, excellence inn all respects, thanks!
You didn't mention the piano used by Rick Wakeman to record the song. It was the same piano used on Hey Jude, You're So Vain and Bohemian Rhapsody.
The Bluthner at Abbey Road?
@@ingridfong-daley5899 Wakeman played the same 1898 Bechstein piano that was used by the Beatles for "Hey Jude", and later by Queen for "Bohemian Rhapsody".
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_on_Mars_(song)#:~:text=Wakeman%20played%20the%20same%201898,Queen%20for%20%22Bohemian%20Rhapsody%22.
@@ivanjulian2532 I'm thinking of Let It Be or Long and Winding Road... you're right, my bad.
@@ingridfong-daley5899 My understanding is the piano was ultimately sold to a private collector in New York. What a fantastic dinner party conversation piece that would be!
@@ivanjulian2532 OMG i'd either cry or wee a little in excitement, yes! 😆
Nice to hear the back story on genuinely great songs ~ Good job ~ Subscribed!
Bowie didn't just use instruments to make his music, he also used the talented musicians he surrounded himself with. Their creativity made songs fantasticly real and special. He knew that whatever they would do, it'd be great. It must've been a wonderful feeling to work with him ❤
Bowie had a real gift for choosing the right musicians and then leaving them to do their thing. Hunky Dory is full of great piano playing from Rick.
Without question, one of the very best channels on RUclips. Informative, well scripted, highly engaging content superbly presented. I wish you every success!
The first Bowie record I heard was Space Oddity, it was one of those "here pop music stops, it can't possibly evolve any further! moments.I loved his first album, which was a sort of fairy tail-ish Syd Barrett collection of songs, but I heard him progress to greater things. Bowie wrote history for sure.
Agreed. I particularly love "Love You Till Tuesday" from that first album, such a delicious ear worm!
We will all love you *forever* David. He was a REAL 🌟 in every sense of the word ❤🙌
Excellent video, man. I couldn't help but get a little emotional watching it, this is one of my favourite Bowie songs but I never knew the story behind it. Instant sub, thanks for your work.
I would always love how your videos look high quality yet you have so few subs and views, I see a lot of good content from you
I love this song a lot, as a child it was more of my favorite in the late 2000’s, and whoever called on a phone, thank god, thank you. I love hearing a telephone sometimes in a song :) and thank you for this video! :)
This needs to be spreaded! As a Bowie fan I was fully aware of that.
I had no idea how much i didn't know about my favourite Bowie song.
This track always breaks me down. But in the good way.
What a Star, Man.❤
Sometimes a video about how a song came into being can be a godawful small affair. However, this is grand, not a Mickey Mouse thing, but something special; even American women in Norfolk can appreciate this well turned out video. The maker doesn't ask us to focus on anything in particular (except that f*cking telephone), and in the wake of Rick's sparking endorsement we can imagine that Lennon is sailing again. And while Frankie was stuck in Hollywood, David was free as a cloud, no touring shroud to cloak his dreams. Is there life on Mars? Maybe NASA's tortured brow will find out?
love your videos, always fascinating. And I imagine you know how many Ronno fans (of which I am one) feel his role in Bowie's music is still not recognised enough. Actually Life on Mars which of course is just a work of genius, (and I love hearing Rick Wakeman's take on it), but really you have to say Ronno's arrangements and soaring guitar are absolutely a key part of this song - not to take away in any way how great Bowie is, but just to recognise Mick Ronson's part in this story. Perhaps you should do something about Ronno, a very interesting musician.
The irony that My Way is a cover is actually beautiful
"Time" is another great song. 🎹🎸🎆
Five Years is looking horribly prophetic.
Leather clad rocker Vince Taylor (Brand New Cadillac) and his band were skint so Vince went to France to get paid off their manager and Vince spent all the money on LSD and subsequently went insane. David Jones (then) knew Vince and bumped into him outside a London train station where Vince pulled out a map and proceeded to show David where the spiders from Mars would land. Vince was the inspiration for Ziggy. Presumably Vince regained his sanity because he later worked in a Swiss airport.
Van Morrison references this when he sings about Vince in the song Goin Down Geneva
"Alone on a train, aimless in wander; an outdated map, crumpled in my pocket" DCFC.
Claude François: "Look, I made this".
Bowie: "... I made this".
Sinatra: "... I made this".
That's some nifty playing Rick. Nice!
Absolutely perfect song.
Thank you. Elegantly put together.
Always one of my favorite Bowie songs. When I bought Anjjun’s album Snow On the Sahara for the title track (1994?) the beautiful bonus was her cover of Life On Mars.
Finding the 'Hunky Dory' album in the basement of a second hand head shop I clerked in years ago started a remaining-life-long love of Bowie. I'd heard him some here and there, mostly later pop stuff, but that album made me wild to immerse. 'Quicksand' just blew me away, but the whole thing...not just great songs, a perfect 'album'.
Was fortunate enough to get invited by a friend (thanks again, Sandra!) to a morning (9am) Bowie 'winners only' show (my friend won responding to tiny little single local newspaper notice) at Smith's Old Bar in Atlanta in 2016, just him on guitar and his drummer, with question and answer. Magical and charming. Also saw at International Ballroom in 1997 with a killer full band; they opened with 'Quicksand'!!
Second hand heads?
@ Second hand outfits/vintage ephemera/head (weed/drug paraphernalia) shop. A freak boutique.
Brilliant analysis of a classic song. Genius.
i also think Hunky Dory is Bowies’s greatest album, with some (as Wakeman says) great melodies. For me the puzzle is why didn’t Bowie carry on writing great melodies?
Very interesting, well done
I never knew this until today. Life on Mars is one of favourite Bowie songs.
This is cracking, informative, good angle, well made, and presented. Thanks.
Paul Anka heard the song Comme d'habitude on the radio in 1968, when visiting Paris. Anka was captivated by the melody and bought the rights to the song.
Bowie's lyric on Even a Fool Learns to Love, echoes the elegaic style, nd melancholic sentiments of Anthony Newley. It's a style and sentiment in keeping with Lindsey Kemp's theatrical work.
It always amazed me that a talent like David's took so long to get noticed.
Whoa! A fellow Hartley! Not a super common name over here across the pond. Glad I found your channel. It’s excellent.
Interestingly, just like David Bowie was great at the songs recording at his first take, so was Roy Orbison. When “U2” asked Roy to record “Mystery Girl” he did it only once in a studio; and it’s still a version that gets more views on RUclips.
What a lovely video for one of my favourite songs. Thank you. I’ve just subscribed.
The song My Way did not revive Sinatra’s career because it didn’t need reviving. He was coming off of about 15 years of gigantic success in the second more mature phase of his musical career. My Way was kind of his farewell or summing up song.
Congrats on 100K!
Shoutout to Mick Ronno Ronson for creating the sounds that I love from the 1971 to 1973 Bowie albums. He also produced Lou Reed, John Cougar, Morrissey, and more.
I discovered Life On Mars when I was searching for musicals where Sophia Anne Caruso took part in. I came across the proshot of the musical and the stage, the cast, the unsettling and confusing yet amazingly artsy atmosphere... everything peaked my attention in the best way possible. I started searching about David Bowie and now I'm crying over really good music(the best and most consuming feeling tbh) and his death. I wish I had discovered him earlier and well before his death but I was six when he passed away so😔 Anyway, I'm gonna get deeper into this rabbithole I guess, rest in peace David🤍
Thanks for this. God, how I love this song. 👍
Live on mars, my favorite song of all time, it stood the test of time for generations
Excellent video 👌🏽
Beautiful video David,thank you.❤️❤️❤️
Nice work!
My favorite Bowie song. That part with the recorders is really nice
There's an awesome live version of Bowie and Garson performing Life on Mars on Parkinson around 2002. 👌
It was Mick Ronson who made that song great, as he did with so much of Bowie's work at that time. Gone but not forgotten...
Didn’t know! Such a brilliant song. Thank you. 🤙🏻
Nice video man, thanks
Quite nicely done. Still, I have to point out that some of the dates ascribed to pictures are wrong. The photos marked 1967 (0:18) and 1971 (3:15 and 3:47) are all from 1973, and the picture marked 1970 (2:45) is actually from 1976. It's easy to spot this with Bowie, as he profoundly changed his look with frequency in those years. Even though the story was familiar to me, I'd never heard Ronno's swearing on the recording - a good add-in! Also interesting: after attending Bowie's "farewell" party in mid-'73, Barbra Streisand recorded and released the song - in a version Bowie publicly said he disliked.
Thanks!
Thank you!
Always been my favourite Bowie song, ever since it was recorded by Lulu. 😉
funfact davi bowie also wrote english lyrics to port of amsterdam, he was an ace at writing english lyrics to foreign songs and singing them
wow
Used to sing this song to warm up for gigs because it has such a range. One day a flatmate popped out of her room while I was belting it. She was sleeping off a long night. She was furious I woke her up playing a Bowie record so loud. I said, "Sorry, that was me, I have a gig." Her face lit up with a big smile. She was quite understanding after that.
(Apparently, I have to edit: If this post makes you angry, you need to examine your life. I am not responsible for your sad state.)
Shameless self-promotion.
@@SpaceCattttt Promoting what? It's just a story from a Bowie fan?
@@thepagecollective Yourself. In this one comment you wrote, you managed to mention both how difficult "Life on Mars?" is to sing, but that you can do it, AND that you're a gigging musician. PLUS that you're sooo good at singing that you make women smile and forgive you anything.
It's all "me, me, me" with you...
@@SpaceCattttt I clearly stated "Used to sing." I'm stunned if I get a few hundred views on youtube these days.. "Life On Mars" IS difficult to sing. I just happen to know that. Maybe you should focus on what you can do to better your life instead of trying to knock me down for a memory. You seem so bitter. It's not a good look.
Thats singers for you😂😂😂
The music for My Way, which included how to sing it without lyrics, was made by the French composer, Bowie gave his lyrics version, Ankar gave his lyrics version, the song was then sold to Ankar, who gave to Frank Sinatra. So no plagiarism, and everything fair!
Ironically the response to Life on mars was recorded prior in 1965 and it's called ballad of thin man, as if Bob Dylan was way ahead of the curve. When you find this connection and a dialogue between them it will blow your mind, you just have to realize how relative timespace really is and how some people have more insight then others who live through their own mistakes.
Being force to sing a song with the hook "Much more than this, I did it my way" is tragically ironic.
Wonderful video
Fantastic video! I thought I knew everything about this song but you gave a lot of new information. I always found the piano and the phone in the fade-out to be so haunting and mysterious. When I listened to Life on Mars it always was as a single song so i figured that the phone would be a hint to the next song on the album, like a sort of concept album of sorts. But when I started listening to Hunky Dory in full, I never understood why the phone was there. Great video, Keep it up!
I will always associate Life On Mars with the tv show that used the name, and that show and song were both so deeply melancholic that the song is still difficult for me to listen to.
Life on Mars is a powerful peice that will always take me somewhere.
Thanks for posting this.
Over the last year I'd gotten really into looking into songs that were adapted from one language into English, which led me to the original French version of what became My Way, Comme d'habitude, which let to me learning how it very likely could have become a David Bowie song in an alternate timeline, and yes, its just such an interesting fascinating story. I also just love Comme d'habitude, while really disliking My Way, its the favorite song of the worst people in the world.