Outside (David Bowie album)
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Outside (stylised as 1.Outside and subtitled The Nathan Adler Diaries: A Hyper-cycle) is the twentieth studio album by the English musician David Bowie, released on 25 September 1995 through Virgin Records in the United States and Arista Records, BMG and RCA Records in other territories. Reuniting Bowie with the musician Brian Eno following the late 1970s Berlin Trilogy, the two were inspired by concepts "outside" the mainstream, such as various outsider and performance artists. Recorded throughout 1994, the experimental sessions saw Bowie conceive a world where "art crimes", such as murder, pervade society. The resulting Leon project initially faced resistance from labels due to its uncommercial nature. The project's bootlegging led to additional sessions in 1995 to revise the concept and record more commercial material, inspired by a diary Bowie wrote for Q magazine.
Influenced by the television series Twin Peaks, the nonlinear narrative of Outside concerns the residents of the fictional Oxford Town, New Jersey, and follows the detective Nathan Adler as he investigates the murder of a 14-year-old girl. The tracks show perspectives of specific characters, while spoken word between-song segues convey more character ideals; the story and Adler's diary entries were presented in the album's CD booklet. Musically, Outside displays styles from art rock, industrial rock and jazz, to electronica and ambient. The album cover is a self-portrait of Bowie.
Released at the height of Britpop in the UK, Outside received mixed reviews from critics. While most praised the music, others found the concept pretentious and hard to follow. Nevertheless, many considered it Bowie's finest record since 1980's Scary Monsters. Outside peaked at number 8 in the UK and number 21 in the US. The lead single, "The Hearts Filthy Lesson", performed poorly but the following singles, "Strangers When We Meet" and a remix of "Hallo Spaceboy" featuring Pet Shop Boys, performed well in the UK.
Bowie supported the album through the Outside Tour, but was criticised for not playing older hits. Multiple planned sequels to Outside never came to fruition, leaving the album's story on a cliffhanger. Instead, Bowie used musical ideas from the album and tour for his next record, Earthling (1997). Retrospectively, Outside has received more positive assessments, with most continuing to praise the music but criticising the story and length. The album was reissued in 2003 and remastered in 2021 as part of the box set Brilliant Adventure (1992–2001).
Background and inspiration
David Bowie formalised his marriage to the model Iman in a June 1992 ceremony that featured numerous celebrity guests, including the multi-instrumentalist Brian Eno,Template:Sfn whom Bowie previously worked with on his late-1970s Berlin Trilogy.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn Primarily known for his work in the ambient genre at that time, by 1992, Eno was a highly respected producer, working with bands such as U2 on Achtung Baby (1991).Template:Efn The BBC's radio presenter John Peel commented: "He's one of those peopleTemplate:Nbsp...who has drifted into a kind of elder statesman media role where people take everything he says terribly seriously."Template:Sfn At the wedding, Eno expressed interest in working with Bowie again after he gave him a tape that showcased the styles Bowie would explore on his then-upcoming album Black Tie White Noise (1993). After Eno listened to Bowie's The Buddha of Suburbia (1993), the two agreed to collaborate.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
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[Brian and I] realised we were both interested in nibbling at the periphery of the mainstream rather than jumping in. We sent each other long manifestos about what was missing in music and what we should be doing. We decided to really experiment and go into the studio with not even a gnat of an idea.[1]
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Bowie and Eno prepared for the new project in late 1993, which included sending each other ideas. The former's Tin Machine bandmate Reeves Gabrels recalled that one was the equivalent of "a mathematical problem".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to the author Paul Trynka, the ideas formed "harked back" to Bowie's musical findings during his first trip to America in early 1971.Template:Sfn Looking for inspiration, the pair visited the Gugging psychiatric hospital near Vienna, Austria, in January 1994, which contained a wing whose patients were well known for their "outsider art".[2][3] Bowie later told Interview magazine: "Some of them don't even do [their art] as an expression of themselves; they do it because their work is them."Template:Sfn The experience gave the upcoming album its title.[2]
Bowie also found captivation with the Minotaur, a mythical figure from classical antiquity. He painted the figure throughout the early 1990s and, after seeing a New York Times article discussing it, incorporated it as a motif for Outside.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn By 1994, Bowie's interest in contemporary art grew to the point where he joined the editorial board of Modern Painters magazine.Template:Sfn His interest in performance artists such as Rudolf Schwarzkogler, Ron Athey, Chris Burden,Template:Efn and Damien Hirst all influenced the new album's concept. Regarding the concept of death as art, Bowie told Vox magazine:[4]
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Apart from this unhealthy, almost obsessive interest in ritualistic artists,Template:Nbsp[...] [Outside] also has some sort of a feeling of this new paganism that seems to be springing up with the advent of scarifications, piercings, tribalisms, tattoos and whatever. It's like a replacement for a spiritual starvation that's going on [and] like a tribe with dim memories of what their rituals used to be. They're sort of being dragged back again in this new, mutated, deviant way, with so-called gratuitous sex and violence in popular culture and people cutting bits off themselves. For me, it seems like a natural kind of thing.
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Recording and production
Initial sessions
Recording for Outside began in March 1994 at Mountain Studios in Montreux, Switzerland. Production was handled by Bowie, Eno and David Richards,Template:Sfn the co-producer of Never Let Me Down (1987) and The Buddha of Suburbia.Template:Sfn Bowie and Eno were adamant about creating something different from the Berlin albums. The latter explained: "We don't want to make another record of a bunch of songs. There's got to be a bigger landscape in play than that."[5] Returning Bowie collaborators included Gabrels on guitar, Erdal Kızılçay on bass,Template:Efn and Mike Garson on piano.Template:EfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Also returning from Black Tie was Soul Asylum drummer Sterling Campbell, whom Bowie described as "spontaneous and extremely inventive. [He] plays a song differently every time; there are different shades of his teacher, Dennis Davis."Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn
Departing from the process of Bowie's most recent works,[6] the majority of the tracks were composed on the spot in the studio;[7] some were entirely improvised.Template:Sfn During the sessions, Bowie and Eno used experimental techniques previously utilised during the Berlin Trilogy, such as the latter's Oblique Strategies cardsTemplate:Sfn – "part-fortune cookie, part-Monopoly 'Chance' cards" intended to spark creative ideas.Template:Sfn Each one contained a written character, such as "You are the disgruntled member of a South African rock band. Play the notes that were suppressed." Bowie elaborated that the cards set the tone for each day, taking the music into "obscure" directions: "And it would very rarely lapse into the cliché."[7] Eno stated that this was done as a way for the musicians to "free you from being yourself".Template:Sfn Garson and Gabrels responded favourably to the cards, but Kızılçay was opposed at first, finding them confusing and useless.Template:Sfn He later complained about Eno's methods to the biographer Marc Spitz, stating "he cannot even play four barsTemplate:Nbsp...[nor] play two harmonies together. [...] I don't know how he became so famous."Template:Sfn
Bowie primarily painted during the sessions. According to Eno, he "almost sat out on the first few days of that record. [...] We were creating musical situations and occasionally he would join in if it became interesting."Template:Sfn In his diary entry dated 3 March 1994, Bowie wrote that he was happy with the current musical direction and had plans to remake the Buddha track "Dead Against It", although this never came to fruition.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn To compose the lyrics, Bowie ran words through an Apple Macintosh program, which mirrored the William S. Burroughs-inspired cut-up technique he had previously used for albums such as Diamond Dogs (1974).Template:Sfn[8] He explained: "I used bits of poems and articles out of magazines and newspapers, and I retyped them out and put them into the computerTemplate:Nbsp...it spews it all back out again, and I make of it what I will."Template:Sfn Each musician received their own corner of the studio,Template:Sfn which Trynka states contributed to the overall arrangement "as an art happening".Template:Sfn Discussing the studio atmosphere, Garson told biographer David Buckley: "It was one of the most creative environments I have ever been in. We would just start playing. There was no key given, no tonal centre, no form, no nothing."Template:Sfn The sessions were also filmed by a camera crew; Garson commented that "[the crew] knew it was special on some level."Template:Sfn
The backing tracks were completed in 10 days, while overdubs continued on and off until November 1994.Template:Sfn Roughly 25 to 30 hours of material was recorded, which was initially edited down to two CDs worth of content: an "improvised opera" titled Leon.Template:Sfn The material was mixed at Westside Studios in London.Template:Sfn Eno initially wanted to release the work with black cover artwork and no name attached. Gabrels elaborated: "Let it leak that it was David Bowie but put it out as a completely separate entity, like Prince's The Black Album [1994]. Use it as a work of art and lapse something that creates interest for the next project."Template:Sfn According to the biographer Chris O'Leary, the contents were bootlegged and resulted in Bowie's dismissal of the Leon concept.Template:Sfn Gabrels commented on his website in 2003 that Leon "would have been a very serious musical statement, and maybe pissed off more people than Tin Machine".Template:Sfn
Later sessions
Bowie initially faced opposition from record labels due to the uncommercial nature of the Leon recordings.Template:Sfn Gabrels told Buckley: "It was never said to me that it had been rejected for want of commercial material. I just thought the decision was made that [Leon] would have been insane to put out from a commercial point of viewTemplate:Nbsp…and that we needed to rerecord some more songs."Template:Sfn Bowie elected to record some more conventional tracks, for which sessions took place at the Hit Factory in New York City from January to February 1995. Songs recorded in New York included "Outside", "Thru These Architects Eyes", "We Prick You", "I Have Not Been to Oxford Town", "No Control", a rerecording of the Buddha track "Strangers When We Meet", and reworkings of "Hallo Spaceboy" and "I'm Deranged".Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn
New personnel additions included the guitarist Carlos Alomar,Template:Sfn Bowie's former bandleader who was fired following the 1987 Glass Spider Tour;Template:Sfn Tin Machine contributor Kevin Armstrong on "Thru These Architects Eyes";Template:Sfn and the jazz drummer Joey Baron, whom Bowie felt was "so steady" that "metronomes shake in fear".Template:Sfn Armstrong's song "Now", first attempted by Tin Machine during the sessions for their 1989 debut album, was adapted into the title track. Armstrong recorded his contributions at Westside.Template:Sfn
Concept and story
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With 1. Outside, placing the eerie environment of a Diamond Dogs city now in the nineties gives it an entirely different spin. It was important for this town, this locale, to have a populace, a number of characters. I tried to diversify these really eccentric types as much as possible [...] The narrative and the stories are not the content – the content is the spaces in between the linear bits. The queasy, strange textures.[9]
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The concept of Outside originated on 12 March 1994, during what Bowie called a "blindingly orgiastic" recording session.Template:Sfn As the band improvised, he conceived numerous characters on the spot, playing each out "for maybe five minutes at a time". He later revealed that "almost the entire genesis for [Outside] is contained in those three and a half hours".[2] In what Bowie labelled a "non-linear Gothic drama hyper-cycle",Template:Sfn he developed a world where "art crimes", which Jason Draper of Dig! magazine described as "murder and mutilation for public consumption", pervade society,[2] and "concept muggings" merit their own police division funded by the "Arts Protectorate of London".[10]
In late 1994, Q magazine asked Bowie to write a diary for 10 days as a way to contribute to their 100th issue. Fearing the diary would be uninteresting if presented as a pure day-by-day account, he revised the Leon concept and wrote what became the basis for Outside: The Diary of Nathan Adler or the Art-Ritual Murder of Baby Grace Belew.Template:Sfn The same story, with mild revisions, appeared in the album's CD booklet. According to Gabrels, Bowie "looked into [the Leon concept] further and revised and rewrote. [...] The order and plot were imposed/inventedTemplate:Nbsp...after the fact." While characters lacked motivations on Leon, they now had distinct personalities and motives on Outside, similar to the board game Cluedo.Template:Sfn Taking influences from the television series Twin Peaks, Outside concerns the fictional Oxford Town, New Jersey, and its inhabitants, including: a detective named Nathan Adler; a jeweler named Ramona A. Stone; a 14-year-old girl named Baby Grace Blue; a 78-year-old loner named Algeria Touchshriek; a mixed-race "Outsider" named Leon Blank; Paddy, one of Adler's informants; and a shadowy figure named the Artist/Minotaur.Template:Sfn Bowie, who portrayed all the characters,Template:Sfn stated that he based all of them on himself,Template:Sfn which AllMusic's Roch Parisien found "therefore, a component of all the previous personas Bowie has enacted over the years."[10]
The story of Outside takes place over two decades, between 1977 and 1999, and is presented in a nonlinear narrative. The album's CD booklet contained Adler's diary entries alongside song lyrics which were sometimes distorted and unreadable.Template:Sfn The album also invokes several spoken word segments as between-song segues, which provide more insight into the story and characters' thoughts. Parisien considered the segues reminiscent of the "Cockney campiness" of Bowie's 1960s tracks "Please Mr. Gravedigger" and "The Laughing Gnome".Template:Efn[10]Template:Sfn Described by some as a concept album,[11][12] Music WeekTemplate:'s Paul Gorman found the use of narrative on Outside a callback to Ziggy Stardust (1972) and Diamond Dogs.[8] Bowie described Adler, the protagonist, as an individual who uses nostalgia to look back on simpler times: "He's really rather despondent that things are broken into this fragmented chaotic kind of state."Template:Sfn O'Leary considers the character "more terse" on Outside than in Leon.Template:Sfn Adler's perspective is shown in "The Hearts Filthy Lesson",Template:Sfn "No Control" and two segues.[13]Template:Sfn Stone, the villain, begins as a punk rock "no-future priestess" and ends as a "good time drone" running a jewelry store. Bowie manipulated his own voice using various synthesisers to portray her.Template:Sfn Her point of view is given in a segue and "I Am with Name".[13]Template:Sfn
The dismembered body of Baby Grace Blue is found in a town museum. The scene is described in detail in the CD booklet while on the album, the girl's last words appear in a cassette tape ("Segue – Baby Grace (A Horrid Cassette)").Template:Sfn Bowie stated that Grace's voice meant the most to him as he based it on a close friend who was struggling with a relationship at the time.Template:Sfn After the body is found, Adler's primary goal is to find the murderer.Template:Sfn The character of Algeria Touchshriek "deals in art-drugs and DNA prints". Based on numerous characters from Bowie's 1960s songs, Touchshriek is described in a segue as walking near the museum where the body was found and that he "knew Leon once".Template:Sfn Blank, one of Stone's former lovers,[2] is an outsider artist and murder suspect. Bowie characterised him as a blend of musician Tricky and painter Jean-Michel Basquiat. Throughout the album, he is primarily viewed through the eyes of others ("Leon Takes Us Outside", "The Motel" and "Strangers When We Meet"),[13] but is given his own perspective on "I Have Not Been to Oxford Town",Template:Sfn where he denies his involvement with the killings;Template:Sfn Blank is also ascribed to "Thru' These Architects Eyes", although the track has little to do with the Outside narrative.Template:Sfn The Artist/Minotaur is a figure who "lurks behind the art-ritual murder" at the narrative's centre.Template:Sfn His point of view is given during "The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (as Beauty)", "Wishful Beginnings" and "I'm Deranged".Template:Sfn[13]Template:Sfn The residents of Oxford Town convey thoughts on "A Small Plot of Land",Template:Sfn while "We Prick You" concerns the ideals of the Members of the Court of Justice.Template:Sfn
Musical styles
Script error: No such module "Listen". Outside contains a wide variety of musical styles, including rock, jazz, electronica, industrial rock and ambient.Template:Sfn Writers for The Independent and BBC News retrospectively categorised it as art rock and industrial rock.[14][15] Adam Trainer of PopMatters similarly described the music as "chiefly industrial and trip hop, as filtered through the lens of art rock".[16] He further argued that the album's "soundscapes" showcased "the rock/electronic hybridity" that would be labeled by music analysts and the mainstream as post-rock.[16] The biographer Christopher Sandford finds the music evocative of the "faux-jazz stylings" found on Aladdin Sane (1973),Template:Sfn while in Spin magazine, Barry Walters noted the presence of progressive rock.[17] Other commentators, including Nick DeRiso of Ultimate Classic Rock, recognised styles of techno, grunge and industrial over "the electronic soundbeds" that exemplified the Berlin Trilogy.[18] Other styles recognised by Bowie's biographers include dark ambient ("Leon Takes Us Outside"),Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn acid jazz ("The Hearts Filthy Lesson"),Template:Sfn funk ("I Have Not Been to Oxford Town", "The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (as Beauty)"),Template:Sfn avant-garde jazz and classical ("The Motel", "A Small Plot of Land"),Template:Sfn and conventional pop ("I Have Not Been to Oxford Town", "Strangers When We Meet").Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Certain tracks, such as "The Hearts Filthy Lesson", "I'm Deranged" and "We Prick You", combine elements of jungle and drum and bass, genres Bowie fully explored on his next studio album, Earthling (1997).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Buckley says the album's overall sound is "dense and textural, underpinned by a booming rhythm section".Template:Sfn Writing for Rock and Roll Globe, Lee Zimmerman stated: "The music flow[s] in a continuous surge of sound and expression, a forward thrust that left little room for melody, but shared an intriguing atmospheric ambiance instead."[19] The author James E. Perone finds many tracks act as "mood pieces" for the entire album rather than as standalone tracks.Template:Sfn According to the writer Alan Franks: "The songs have a slow, careful build into the pay-off line but they're absolutely not written as pop songs and they're not particularly written as rock songs. It's almost like what Jacques Brel would be going now if he'd gone heavy."Template:Sfn Biographers have also compared certain sounds on Outside to Bowie's previous albums, such as Diamond Dogs,Template:Sfn Lodger (1979),Template:Sfn Scary Monsters (1980),Template:Sfn and Tonight (1984).Template:Sfn Nicholas Pegg characterises the segues' musical styles as mostly ambient, with guitar, piano and synthesiser backings.Template:Sfn Trainer commented that they "speak to the role of the Leon suites in the development of Outside".[16]
The first two tracks, "Leon Takes Us Outside" and the title track, musically set the stage for the rest of the album.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn "The Hearts Filthy Lesson" contains an almost atonal groove that Pegg calls "a slab of industrial techno-rock" over an "eccentric jazz-piano figure".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Continuing the jazz flavour is "A Small Plot of Land",Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn which builds to a climax to become, in Pegg's words, one of the album's "more challenging tracks".Template:Sfn "Hallo Spaceboy", which was developed from an instrumental written by Gabrels titled "Moondust",Template:Sfn is an industrial track that Pegg calls "a hardcore maelstrom of sci-fi noise, hypnotic high-speed drumming and an insistent, speaker-hopping four-note guitar riff".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Spitz names it Bowie's "most convincing rocker" since "Rebel Rebel" (1974).Template:Sfn
"The Motel", described by Pegg as the album's centrepiece,Template:Sfn is compared by Buckley to the Walker Brothers' "The Electrician" (1978),Template:Sfn while Perone compares "I Have Not Been to Oxford Town" to Queen's "We Will Rock You" (1977).Template:Sfn "No Control" brings a darker tone to the album, featuring a "hard-edged synth bassline".Template:Sfn Later on, "I Am with Name" reprises the "atmospherics" of the album's opening.Template:Sfn "Wishful Beginnings" evokes "a mysterious, abstract melody over slowly building, layered, synthesized electronic sounds".Template:Sfn "I'm Deranged" conveys similar musical styles that pervade the rest of the album.Template:Sfn Compared to the original version on The Buddha of Suburbia, the remake of "Strangers When We Meet" contains a more lush arrangement influenced by U2's Eno co-produced The Joshua Tree (1987).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Pegg writes that it resolves the album's "angst and black comedy" with a "soothing slice of conventional pop".Template:Sfn On the other hand, Trainer considered it an "odd" way to end the album, writing that it was "clearly an attempt to...inject a sense of calm whilst perpetuating the noir-ish air of mystery".[16]
Leon recordings
Described by Gabrels as a "three-hour improvised opus", the Leon recordings are available through bootlegs in three separate "suites", each between 22 and 27 minutes long. A fully mixed 70-minute reel was also released by a private collector in 2003. According to Pegg, the released piece is significantly more uncommercial than the final Outside album, featuring a slew of "ambient soundscapes" and longer versions of the album's segues. It also features numerous repetitive phrases and loops amongst interplay between the musicians.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Trainer found the recordings to be "underdeveloped" compared to Outside, describing them more as "loose jams" typified by "plodding beats and unformed repetitive structures that lack the dynamics [the finished Outside album] would yield".[16]
The first suite is divided into three movements. The opening ten-minute number "I Am with Name" contains longer and more obscene variations of the Stone and first Adler segues. O'Leary notes that more voices appear on Leon than Outside, highlighting a character who "sounds as if rats are climbing over his body" four minutes into the suite. A more melodic five-minute movement titled "We'll Creep Together" follows, featuring Garson's "rippling" piano over a slew of sound effects such as gunshot noises. "I'd Rather Be Chrome" follows, displaying a repeating phrase throughout and contains more narration from Adler over, in Pegg's words, a "prowling, catchy riff", before the lyrics delve into topics previously explored on Low (1977).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The second suite, titled "The Enemy Is Fragile", is categorised by O'Leary as the centrepiece of Leon. It features patterns similar to "A Small Plot of Land", along with funk playing from the backing musicians, numerous sound effects and narration from Adler and Stone. Some of the narration reflects themes present in The Silence of the Lambs (1991). The piece builds to a climax with various repeated phrases before ending with a drum fill.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The rest of the suite consists of the first appearance of the Artist/Minotaur and various synthesisers, with additional piano and saxophone. One section, titled "Nothing to Be Desired", was issued as a bonus track on "The Hearts Filthy Lesson" CD single, and remains the only material from Leon that was officially released. Following "Nothing to Be Desired" is lengthy variations of the "Baby Grace" and "Algeria Touchshriek" segues.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The third and final suite, titled "Leon Takes Us Outside", further develops the character of Blank; the opening section became the opening to Outside. It begins as a jazzy instrumental with guitar, piano and synthesisers, with more repetitive phrases and narration from Adler and Stone; one sequence fully conveys Adler's story. According to O'Leary, the suite closes with feedback and a drum fill. Shortly after the release of Outside, Bowie expressed interest in making the Leon material officially available, although the idea never came to fruition.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Release
Without a label for the third time in three years, OutsideTemplate:'s release was delayed while Bowie attempted to find an American distributor, later commenting, "Nobody would take Outside when we first recorded it."Template:Sfn In June 1995, Bowie signed a contract with Virgin America Records,Template:Sfn telling Music Connection in September that the label were "extremely supportive" regarding the Outside concept and allowed Bowie full creative control in the studio.[20] Additionally, Virgin acquired the rights to Bowie's work from Let's Dance (1983) to Tin Machine, reissuing them throughout the rest of the year with bonus tracks. In Britain, Bowie entered a new deal with BMG, who issued Black Tie and Buddha in the country. BMG were now affiliated with RCA Records, Bowie's label throughout the 1970s and whom he had departed in 1982.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
"The Hearts Filthy Lesson" was released as the lead single on 11 September 1995.Template:Sfn It was accompanied by a music video directed by Samuel Bayer that was initially banned from MTV due to provocative imagery.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Commercially, the single performed poorly, peaking at number 35 on the UK Singles Chart and number 92 on the US Billboard Hot 100. Pegg and Trynka state that Bowie desired to display a video of "artistic merit" rather than for chart appeal.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Outside, stylised as 1. Outside – The Nathan Adler Diaries: A Hyper-cycle, was released on 25 September 1995 by Virgin America in the US and Arista, BMG and RCA in other territories on LP and CD formats.[3]Template:Sfn The CD release was the full 75-minute album, while the LP release was an abridged version titled Excerpts From 1. Outside, which featured shortened edits of "Leon Takes Us Outside" and "The Motel" and removed the tracks "No Control", "Wishful Beginnings", "Thru' These Architects Eyes", "Strangers When We Meet", along with multiple segues. The Japanese CD release included the outtake "Get Real". The cover artwork is a 1995 painting on canvas by Bowie himself called Head of DB.Template:Sfn[21] Commercially, Outside peaked at number 8 on the UK Albums Chart and number 21 on the US Billboard 200; Bowie's profile in America had been raised through the popularity of Nirvana's MTV Unplugged version of "The Man Who Sold the World", as well as artists who cited Bowie's influence such as Nine Inch Nails, the Smashing Pumpkins and Marilyn Manson.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Due to advance orders, Outside became Bowie's fastest-selling album since Tonight.Template:Sfn
Bowie promoted Outside through various television appearances.Template:Sfn "Strangers When We Meet" was issued as a double A-side single with a new recording of "The Man Who Sold the World" mixed by Eno on 20 November 1995. It reached number 39 in the UK and was supported by a music video, again directed by Bayer.Template:Sfn Bowie performed the song at the European MTV Awards the same month.Template:Sfn "Hallo Spaceboy" was released as the third and final single on 19 February 1996 in a new remix featuring the English duo Pet Shop Boys.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The idea originated from Neil Tennant, who added lines referencing Major Tom from "Space Oddity" (1969).Template:Sfn Pet Shop Boys subsequently appeared in the song's video, directed by longtime Bowie director David Mallet, and performed the song with Bowie at the Brit Awards in February and on Top of the Pops in March. The single itself performed well commercially, peaking at number 12 in the UK. The remix later replaced "Wishful Beginnings" on the March 1996 European reissue of Outside titled 1. Outside Version 2.Template:Sfn
Art-Crime Comic
Anticipating that the narrative of the album might be inaccessible to fans when it was released, one of the record executives in Mexico, Arturo López Gavito, commissioned a comic to clarify the story. The comic, a one-off called Art-Crime, was created by two young illustrators, Victor "Pico" Covarrubias and Jotavé (Jazmin Velasco-Moore).[22] It was given away with the CD.[23]
Context
In 1995, the UK music scene was dominated by Britpop bands such as Suede, Blur, Pulp and Oasis, all of whom were indebted to Bowie's 1970s works. In his book The Last Party, the British journalist John Harris states, "David Bowie was a far greater influence on Britpop than any artist of the '60s."Template:Sfn Pegg writes that while older artists such as Paul Weller and Adam Ant were releasing successful Britpop records in 1995, Bowie stood in tangent with industrial rock artists like Nine Inch Nails and techno artists such as Tricky, Goldie and the Chemical Brothers.Template:Sfn Buckley says that the only record that was stylistically similar to Outside at the time was Scott Walker's Tilt,Template:Sfn released four months prior.[16]
Further analysing the cultural landscape beyond music at that time, Pegg states that Outside arrived alongside the "glamorous cruelty" of Pulp Fiction (1994); it "inhabited the trashy cyberpunk milieu" of films such as Judge Dredd, Tank Girl and 12 Monkeys (all 1995); and exhibited elements of "extraterrestrial conspiracy theories" brought to the forefront on television by The X-Files.Template:Sfn Outside was also one of the first albums in the age of the internet and showcased the same "pre-millennial angst" as Pulp's late 1995 single "Disco 2000". Tracks from Outside were also used in entertainment. "The Hearts Filthy Lesson" was played over the end credits of Seven (1995), while "A Small Plot of Land" was the theme song for the 1996 BBC miniseries A History of British Art. Pegg concludes: "For the first time since [1980's] Scary Monsters, Bowie had released an album that accessed the zeitgeist at all levels."Template:Sfn
Critical reception
Template:Album ratings Critical reviews of Outside were mixed on release. While the majority praised the music as challenging, many felt the overarching concept was hard to follow,[16] with some finding it "pretentious".[11][24][25] Among positive reviews, critics considered Outside Bowie's best record since Scary Monsters.Template:Efn A writer for Time Out magazine elaborated: "[The] edifice of sounds, cultures, rhythms, samples and textures, with randomised lyrics that don't much tell a story as create word-moods, regards the open-minded listener with Bowie's best album for 15 years."Template:Sfn In The Daily Telegraph, Charles Shaar Murray welcomed "an excellent David Bowie album, a genuine creative rebirth. Threatening and murkyTemplate:Nbsp... His gift for the charismatically disturbing seems to have reasserted itself."Template:Sfn Later on in Mojo magazine, Murray considered it Bowie's "official" comeback album, praising the music as a callback to the Berlin Trilogy and concluded: "[It's] a mad, bad, dangerous album – by turns, chilling, pretty, ugly, scary, gripping and vastly intriguing."[11]
Some reviewers found the music among Bowie's most innovative;[26] a writer for Melody Maker announced that Bowie "is poised to be a healthy influence once more on a fifth generation of glamorous chameleons."Template:Sfn An NME reviewer stated, "Bowie's scalpel is certainly closer to the pulse than for years."Template:Sfn Other publications, such as Today, considered Bowie's vocal performances throughout the record some of his finest.Template:Sfn David Fricke of Rolling Stone appreciated the lyrics as "smart", "effective" and "sly", especially on "I Have Not Been to Oxford Town" and "A Small Plot of Land".[27] He mostly criticised the spoken segues, arguing that they "damn near sink the record".[27] Paul Verna of Billboard found the album "stumbles" on the segues, stating that they "advance the plotline but hold little musical interest". They argued that if listeners "cherry-pick" throughout, Outside "stands a chance of reestablishing Bowie as a vital artist".[12]
Other reviewers expressed more mixed assessments. Entertainment WeeklyTemplate:'s David Browne found the majority of the record sounding like "fodder" and felt that it would benefit from a visual aid, such as through tour performances.[28] Sandy Masuo of the Los Angeles Times enjoyed certain tracks but felt overall, Bowie was experimenting in genres that, by 1995, were being made more successfully by other artists.[29] Select magazine's Gareth Grundy also found a lack of musical innovation, albeit highlighting "Hallo Spaceboy", "No Control" and "We Prick You" as standouts.[30]
Some reviewers believed the album would appeal to Bowie's longtime fans, but displease newer ones.[17] QTemplate:'s Tom Doyle said: "Regulars might feel short-changed on the tune front and those legions who came in on Let's Dance will most certainly be left completely and utterly bewildered. Perhaps, though, that's entirely the point."[31] The album also attracted negative responses. Grundy, in particular, called Outside "the daftest thing Bowie's done" since the Glass Spider Tour. IkonTemplate:'s Taylor Parkes complained that "Bowie's desperate desire to be considered 'highbrow' has snuffed out any potential of accidental alchemy" and promptly dismissed the record as a "sorry sack of shitTemplate:Nbsp... facile, confused and immatureTemplate:Nbsp... quite simply, rubbish."Template:Sfn
Tour
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In an interview with Music Week in early 1995, Bowie expressed no interest in performing the Outside material live, calling it "far too ambitious a project".[8] Nevertheless, after enduring pressure from Virgin, Bowie rescinded and began rehearsals to tour America in August 1995, thereafter extending the number of dates by early September and adding a European leg.Template:Sfn The tour's lineup included Gabrels, Garson and Alomar, with new additions including the vocalist George Simms from the 1983 Serious Moonlight Tour, the musical director Peter Schwartz, the drummer Zachary Alford and the bassist Gail Ann Dorsey,Template:Sfn both of whom continued to work with Bowie frequently in subsequent years. The Outside Tour commenced on 14 September.Template:Sfn
Nine Inch Nails opened the American shows. The frontman Trent Reznor was intimidated by the idea at first but graciously accepted.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The setlists mostly consisted of the Outside material and more unknown tracks from Bowie's career, along with reworkings of older tracks to fit the new album's styles. Towards the end of the opening sets, Bowie joined Nine Inch Nails on stage, where the two artists played songs from their own catalogues such as "Subterraneans" (1977) and "Hurt" (1994), respectively.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The fusion of the two artists was met with resistance from both artists' fanbases. MojoTemplate:'s Chris Jones reported that during one performance, Bowie was pelted with debris from the confused crowd.[32] The American leg concluded at the end of October.Template:Sfn The tour's partnership between Bowie and Reznor facilitated the latter's undertaking of numerous Outside and Earthling remixes, as well as his appearance in the music video for "I'm Afraid of Americans" (1997).[16]
The European leg commenced in November 1995 with shows at the Wembley Arena in London, with Morrissey as the opening act.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Tensions between Bowie and Morrissey rose, leading the latter to depart shortly into the tour's leg; the remaining dates were opened by various local bands.Template:Sfn The tour concluded on 20 February 1996.Template:Sfn The UK shows, particularly Morrissey's appearances, were generally panned by concert reviewers.Template:Sfn Throughout the tour, many criticised Bowie's decision not to sing well-known hits, to which he replied: "If they didn't know that I wasn't going to be [playing the hits], they must have been living under a rock."Template:Sfn Despite the tour's poor reception from contemporary reviewers, Pegg states that it showcased Bowie's musical progression and was his finest tour in 20 years.Template:Sfn Recordings from the tour were later released in 2020 on the live albums Ouvrez le Chien (Live Dallas 95) and No Trendy Réchauffé (Live Birmingham 95),[33][34] as part of the series Brilliant Live Adventures (2020–2021).[35]
Legacy
Proposed sequels
The story of Outside ends on a cliffhanger,[2] with a "to be continued..." tagline in the CD booklet.[11] Bowie initially envisioned the album as the first in a series of records that would be released each year until the end of the millennium.[3]Template:Sfn He stated, "This is a once-in-a-lifetime chance, by a narrative device, to chronicle the final five years of the millennium. The over-ambitious intention is to carry this through to the year 2000."[8] He further explained to Ikon:[9]
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Overall, a long-term ambition is to make it a series of albums extending to 1999—to try to capture, using this device, what the last five years of this millennium feel likeTemplate:Nbsp... Oh, I've got the fondest hopes for the Fin de siècle. I see it as a symbolic sacrificial rite. I see it as a deviance, a pagan wish to appease gods, so we can move on. There's a real spiritual starvation out there being filled by these mutations of what are barely remembered rites and rituals. [...] We have this panic button telling us it's gonna be a colossal madness at the end of this century.
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Having recorded hours of extra material during the sessions, he considered releasing a companion album to Outside before revealing in early 1997 that the follow-up would be called 2. Contamination, and had sketched out characters for the project (including some "17th-century people").Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn[36] He also mentioned the possibility of releasing an album called Inside which would have been a making-of about Outside: "Our working method [will be] detailed on it, a couple of jams and more of those voices."[37] However, none of these projects came to fruition. Following his experience on the Outside Tour, Bowie took musical ideas and themes from Outside and utilised them to create Earthling.Template:Sfn
In 2016, one day after Bowie's death, Eno recalled: "About a year ago we started talking about Outside—the last album we worked on together. We both liked that album a lot and felt that it had fallen through the cracks. We talked about revisiting it, taking it somewhere new. I was looking forward to that."[38]
Retrospective assessments
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Outside is often brilliant and inspired, daringly experimental, and on occasion frustratingly close to genius but falling slightly short. It is, arguably, more than any other album in [Bowie's] catalogue, completely in love with ideas and throwing itself at them with conviction and abandon. Bowie liked to think of himself as a curator, picking through culture for interesting notions and trying them on. On Outside, he does this with greater eagerness and relish than perhaps ever before or since.[16]
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Following Bowie's death, the editors of Prog magazine stated that Outside would be due for a re-evaluation as one of his finest works.[39] Like on its original release, later reviewers continue praising the music as challenging, innovative and among his finest, but find the story self-indulgent.Template:Sfn[40]Template:Sfn Perone argues that its nonlinear narrative makes for a hard-to-follow listening experience, and one where certain tracks that are inherently tied to the album's theme—particularly the segues—prove ineffective as standalone tracks.Template:Sfn
In the decades following its release, Trynka contends that the rise of iTunes and nonlinear listening patterns through shuffling have made reactions to Outside more positive, with Garson later calling it a career highlight.Template:Sfn Parisien later argued: "The effort required to adequately 'process' [the album] pays off in a richly voyeuristic experience where Bowie once again reflects fringe culture onto the mainstream and forces us to consider that the differences are not so great."[10] Zimmerman stated that beyond the tracklisting itself, the album "offered little in the way of cohesive melodies".[19] Some also found the production dated,Template:Sfn with Spitz calling it Bowie's "most of-its-time work since his late-sixties hippie folk material".Template:Sfn
Several have criticised Outside as overlong;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn at nearly 75 minutes, it is Bowie's longest studio album.Template:Sfn At the time, Bowie remarked that it was "extremely long by most current CD standards" and that accessibility was not a top priority when making it.[20] However, he and Eno later regretted its long duration,Template:Sfn with the former stating in 1997, "There's too much on it. I really should have made it two CDs."[41] Sandford agrees, stating that it could have used more polishing and trimming.Template:Sfn Furthermore, Perone finds that it "really begs to be listened to [in one] sitting",Template:Sfn while Trainer stated the second half drags.[16]
Reviewing Outside on its 25th anniversary, Trainer said it stands out as "an odd, infuriatingly dense, and often brilliant record from (and of) an artist sho [sic], having been one of popular music's leading lights in the 70s, was newly inspired".[16] He criticised the production as dated and concept as too underdeveloped to have a long-lasting impact, but noted that its best tracks rank among Bowie's greatest. He concluded that the record "remains a compelling, complicated, frustrating and flawed listen", and due to its incomplete state, he argued that fans can finish it on their own.[16] Pegg finds Outside was made for fans of Diamond Dogs, Low and Lodger rather than Let's Dance. Describing it as "a triumphantly queasy, deliciously unpleasant album", he concludes: "Outside remains as brilliant and intriguingly inconclusive as it was surely always supposed to be."Template:Sfn
In a 2016 retrospective ranking all of Bowie's 26 studio albums from worst to best, Bryan Wawzenek of Ultimate Classic Rock placed Outside at number 19, writing, "It's a solid framework for Bowie and Eno to get creative within – the backgrounds are reliably intriguing, if not always satisfying."[42] Two years later, the writers of Consequence of Sound ranked Outside number seven in a similar list, above acclaimed records such as Blackstar (2016) and Station to Station (1976), stating that the album "succeeded because Bowie bought in completely to its concept and strangeness".[43] In 2024, the editors of Uncut ranked the album at number 112 in their list of "The 500 Greatest Albums of the 1990s", calling it a "boldly experimental" album that eschewed Bowie's earlier styles and adding that "amid the avant-gumshoe business, Mike Garson and other old pals created engrossing drama."[44]
Reissues
In 2003, Columbia Records reissued Outside on CD in the UK, with another reissue following a year later that contained bonus tracks, including 14 remixes and B-sides. In 2015, almost 20 years after its original release, Friday Music released the full-length album on vinyl as a double-LP set.Template:Sfn In 2021, the album was remastered and included as part of the box set Brilliant Adventure (1992–2001).[45][46]
Track listing
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Personnel
According to the liner notes and the biographer Nicholas Pegg:Template:Sfn[13]
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Musicians
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Production
Design
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Charts
Weekly charts
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Notes
References
Sources
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External links
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- 1995 albums
- Albums produced by David Bowie
- Albums produced by Brian Eno
- Albums produced by David Richards (record producer)
- Arista Records albums
- Art rock albums by English artists
- David Bowie albums
- Dystopian music
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