26 September 2013

Ch-ch-changes

I'm not a child of the sixties, seventies, or even the eighties. I've never been to Scarborough Fair, met any self-proclaimed walruses, or visited any celestially themed houses of ill repute.
(I have, however, put flowers in my hair and danced around. I ain’t even gonna hide it.)

Despite all this, I still love a lot of the music made from before I was born. A lot of that love probably stemmed from the fact that I was an outsider looking in on that music, a time traveler going back to the origins of what I know and love from today. To a certain extent, I created my own mythology around these artists. When I was younger, I wished I could have written poetry with Jim Morrison (though honestly, I probably wouldn’t have understood a damn thing he said, and he probably wouldn’t have understood it himself either), or had a coffee chat with John Lennon (though maybe it wouldn’t have been as pleasant as I had imagined). And oh my gosh, would I have LOVED to meet with Freddie Mercury (and that will never change). 
(Or maybe I just would've spent that time staring at Jim Morrison)
More than any other artist, I, like countless others, fell in love with the mystique of David Bowie. By sheer virtue of being born when I was (Thanks a lot, universe!), I found out about him after his quote-unquote ‘sell-out’ days of Let’s Dance or Never Let Me Down, though I do remember hearing “Dancing in the Street” all the time. (Thankfully I didn’t see the video while growing up, or it would have ruined Bowie for me forever. Thanks a lot, universe!)

As a kid who didn’t really fit in and didn’t like most of the music that was popular as I was growing up, I clung to his themes of alienation and rebellion like a Ziggy wannabe to a stick of eye kohl. I went into his back catalogue and experienced it all for myself, without any real context or explanation. When I first listened to Station to Station, for instance, I had no idea that he had been strung out on blow and couldn’t even remember making that album. All I did know is that “Wild is the Wind” made me want to weep at his feet like a One Direction fan at a band autograph session. “Station to Station” made me feel immensely cool, like I was in on a secret that only the in-crowd knew. It, like the rest of his albums, epitomized what it was to be a rock star, and what real music could sound like. It could transcend music, and take on the form of Art.
Station to Station-era Bowie

By the time I had found him, despite his continual output of new albums until 2003, he had already passed into history. People waxed poetic about his glory days, how he was The Rock Rebel, his Berlin trilogy and groundbreaking experimentalism. He was always a “was”, never an “is.” History became legend. Legend became myth. And for (two and a half thousand) many years, David Bowie passed out of the public eye.

So when earlier this year, Bowie reemerged with new material, I was thrilled, perhaps in some ways even more than most. Keep in mind that in many ways I had created my own David Bowie. For me, David Bowie had never really been a living, breathing artist. I mean, sure I’d seen him in movies and TV shows. But in my mind he lived alongside Lennon and Morrison as a legend of a bygone era. With “Where Are We Now?”, however,  I saw him for the first time in Real time. And it was at once grounding and uplifting. Here was the man I had long respected and admired, but he was, gulp, human. His voice was aged and cracking, and as many others have stated, the song sounded as much as a swansong as anything else. But it was thrilling. Here was my hero, and he was glorious in his fragility, his fallibility. I shivered as I heard him sing of “walking the dead”. When the rolling drums of the bridge kicked in, I could feel my heart beat faster with excitement. Though he wasn’t the Bowie in my head—the invincible rock n’ roller from space—he was still Bowie, and he really was doing what Bowie does best; that is, creating a soundscape, a story, and drawing the audience into it.
Bowie, past and present

The Next Day has been met with universal acclaim, according to helpful web sources. Part of the reason that many music critics have said they like it so much is because it’s ‘like old Bowie’. But it’s not old Bowie; it’s old Bowie (see what I did there?). Today’s Bowie is not the same man who pranced around in a one-armed leotard singing of well-hung aliens. He’s a world-worn, experienced man who has a lot to say and a hell of a way of saying it. The chameleon of rock has changed again, only this time, it’s to reveal his own face…or at the very least, the closest approximation of it we’ve ever been shown.

Why the obsession with ‘before’ and ‘after’ Bowie? Sure, it may be the case that now instead of Beatles mania, we have Bieber fever ("Hide your children!"), and instead of the twist we have the twerk (Need I remind you of the need to protect your younglings?). Still, music, like the people who make and enjoy it, is constantly evolving and changing. That doesn’t make it better or worse, simply different. I mean, imagine how mindbogglingly dull it would be if, despite advances in technology and the ever-evolving, ever-diversifying world of listeners, music were the same as "back in the good old days." Albums like Funeral by Arcade Fire, for instance, though they hearken back to acts that came before them, just wouldn't have been made earlier--and for many reasons couldn't have been made earlier. And that's fine.



(And speaking of Arcade Fire, here's their newest single, feat. Bowie on backup vocals from around the 4 min mark)

Ultimately, the best music transcends time and epoch. It may capture the zeitgeist of its own time--I would argue that the best music does--but it does more than that. It reinvents, pushes the boundaries of its day. It continues to challenge its changing audience even beyond then and has them ascribe their own meanings to it. Why else would works like The Catcher in the Rye or The Great Gatsby continue to be so widely read today? (Other than the fact that they're forced upon unwitting high school students)

I think this calls for an explanation from the master of change himself.