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409 articles found. Page 3 of 21.
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David Bowie: The Man Who Sold the World (Mercury)
Review by Colman Andrews, Phonograph Record, March 1971
THE MAN Who Sold the World is a vaguely-sophomoric, vaguely-mystical, thoroughly logical extension of the Music Hall tradition in British pop music. This is a ...
Review by Mick Farren, NME, 5 June 1976
I GUESS that one of the main functions of any greatest hits album is to explain to anyone who isn't a hard core fan exactly ...
Review by Caroline Sullivan, The Guardian, 12 September 2003
LIKE ALL PROPER Dave albums, Bowie's 26th has at its core a concept, around which 11 songs uneasily cluster to articulate the master's daft vision. ...
Review by Chris Roberts, Uncut, January 2008
The Dame's sonic sketchpad — restless, inventive and thrillingly experimental. ...
Review by Jon Savage, Melody Maker, 26 May 1979
ANOTHER YEAR, another record. Like Burroughs, David Jones, rootless, looks for unconventional commitment: Burroughs found it in junk, control-systems and predatory homosexuality; Jones found it ...
Review by Jon Savage, Sounds, 30 September 1978
SO: THE next stage. The ending of one, the beginning of another? But of course, all the world's a stage. Aaaaaaah... ...
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 22 January 1977
AND YOU'RE profile to profile with The Man Who Fell To Bits. Against an incandescent orange background, the cover of David Bowie's new album reprises ...
Review by Ian MacDonald, NME, 22 January 1977
YOU'RE JUST a little girl with grey eyes and you never leave your room. ...
David Bowie: The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars (RCA)
Review by Dave Marsh, Creem, September 1972
DAVID BOWIE may become a star this year, or he may not. This may or may not make a difference in your life. But, for ...
David Bowie: The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars (RCA)
Review by Jon Tiven, Phonograph Record, July 1972
DAVID BOWIE, Englands Answer-To-Alice-Cooper-But-Hes-For-Real, has finally made an album with positive commercial potential and consistent strength. Ziggy Stardust is the Aftermath of the Seventies, where ...
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 16 April 1983
"Put on your red shoes and dance the blues to the song they're playing on the radio..." ...
Review by Jeffrey Morgan, Creem, January 1979
"Uh, Id been listening to a Neil Young album and, uh, they phoned through and said that my wife had had a baby on Sunday ...
Review by Robot A. Hull, Creem, January 1975
ERIK IMPORTS proudly presents David Blow-Up onstage doing the martian hop in Philadelphia, dazzling in ghostly radiance in his new blue suit and shedding his ...
Review by Ron Ross, Phonograph Record, July 1974
RUFF-RUFF-BOW-BOW: Bowie's bewitched, bothered, bewildered and back to play – 25 eastern cities in an intense five week tour concluding mid-July with his single biggest ...
Review by Sandy Robertson, Sounds, 26 May 1979
ANOTHER THESIS would be the straw that broke the camel's back. Now there's a line that could easily have been snipped from one of David ...
Review by Kieron Tyler, The Arts Desk, 27 February 2013
The return of the Thin White Duke after a ten year silence does not disappoint ...
Review by Mike Diver, bbc.co.uk, January 2010
"DAVID BOWIE'S greatest hits live!" reads the sticker on the attractive packaging of this newly released (but recorded back in 2003) two-CD set. ...
Review by Ian MacDonald, New Musical Express, 15 March 1975
WHERE have all poppa's heroes gone? Living in New York, every one. A hard city by reputation, but presumably it has its compensations for someone ...
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