The Buddha of Suburbia (album)

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The Buddha of Suburbia is the nineteenth studio albumTemplate:EfnTemplate:Sfn by the English musician David Bowie, originally released on 8Script error: No such module "String".November 1993 through Arista Records in the United Kingdom and Europe. The project originated following an interview between Bowie and the novelist Hanif Kureishi during a press tour for Black Tie White Noise (1993), where Bowie agreed to compose music for an upcoming adaptation of Kureishi's novel The Buddha of Suburbia (1990). After making basic tracks, Bowie decided to turn the project into a full album. Working with the musician Erdal Kızılçay, recording took place at Mountain Studios in Montreux, Switzerland and was completed in six days; Mike Garson contributed piano overdubs.

The album's music primarily consists of numerous motifs created using various instruments and contain references to his late-1970s works. Commentators recognised rock, pop, ambient, jazz and experimental themes throughout. The music itself bears little resemblance to the music of the BBC serial; only the title track featured in the programme. Aside from three instrumentals, the lyrics are non-linear, which Bowie utilised as a way to reduce narrative form.

Initially marketed as a soundtrack album, The Buddha of Suburbia flopped and received little promotion from Bowie himself, despite receiving positive reviews from British critics. It was not released in the United States until October 1995 through Virgin Records with updated artwork. It fell back into obscurity until a worldwide reissue through EMI in 2007, although it still remains one of Bowie's least-known works. Nevertheless, reviewers have praised The Buddha of Suburbia as a forgotten gem in his catalogue. Bowie himself named it his favourite album in 2003. A remastered version was released in 2021 as part of the box set Brilliant Adventure (1992–2001).

Conception and recording

An older man with gray hair and glasses
The Buddha of Suburbia began as a soundtrack for an adaptation of the 1990 novel of the same name, written by Hanif Kureishi (pictured in 2008).

While promoting his then-upcoming album Black Tie White Noise in February 1993, David Bowie spoke with the British novelist Hanif Kureishi for Interview magazine. Kureishi sought permission to use some of Bowie's older materialTemplate:Efn for an upcoming adaptation of his 1990 novel The Buddha of Suburbia.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The novel, about a teenage boy named Karim attempting to be an actor in the 1970s, featured a character named Charlie who becomes embroiled with the rock star life. The biographer Nicholas Pegg describes Charlie as an amalgamation of Bowie, Sid Vicious and Billy Idol.Template:Sfn Feeling the novel "reminded [him] of his own youth",Template:Sfn Bowie agreed to compose the music and months later, Kureishi and the serial's director Roger Michell ventured to Switzerland to investigate Bowie's progress.Template:Sfn According to Pegg, Bowie had completed close to 40 pieces by the early summer of 1993. Kureishi suggested revisions, after which Bowie decided to turn the project into a new album—what Chris O'Leary calls a "quasi-soundtrack".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Speaking with the journalist Dylan Jones, Kureishi stated: "[Bowie] said he wanted to write some songs for it because he wanted to make some money out of it."Template:Sfn

The album was recorded and mixed at Mountain Studios in Montreux, Switzerland and co-produced by Bowie and David Richards,Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn who previously co-produced Never Let Me Down (1987).Template:Sfn According to Bowie, it took only six days to write and record, but fifteen days to mix because of some "technical breakdowns".[1] For the album, Bowie worked with the Turkish musician Erdal Kızılçay, his former collaborator on numerous 1980s projects.Template:Sfn The two watched the serial repeatedly while making the album, with Kızılçay recalling that the album came from the stories they told one another while making it, as well as the connections Bowie had with Kureishi.Template:Sfn In 2003, Bowie recalled that he felt "very happy" during the making of the record.Template:Sfn Kızılçay later told the author Paul Trynka: "Something happened for that album. There wasn't a big budget; David explained the story before we started. It was a challenge, it was a small budget, but David just said, 'Let's go, let's do it,' and everything worked."Template:Sfn The pianist Mike Garson, who had recently reunited with Bowie on Black Tie White Noise, overdubbed piano parts for two tracks ("South Horizon" and "Bleed Like a Craze, Dad") in a single three-hour session at O'Henry Sound Studios in Burbank, California.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Music and lyrics

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I took each theme or motif from the play and initially stretched or lengthened it to a five or six-minute duration. Then, having noted which musical key I was in and having counted the number of bars, I would often pull down the faders leaving just the percussive element with no harmonic informations to refer to. Working in layers I would then build up reinforcements in the key of the composition, totally blind so to speak. When all faders were pushed up again a number of clashes would make themselves evident. The more dangerous or attractive ones would then be isolated and repeatedScript error: No such module "String"....Template:Sfn

—David Bowie on his working methods for the album

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According to O'Leary, the music Bowie made for The Buddha of Suburbia consisted of short "motifs – combinations of guitar, synthesiser, trumpet, percussion, [and] sitar".Template:Sfn In the extensive liner notes for the album, Bowie stated that the collection "bears little resemblance to the small instrumentation of the BBC play".[1] He also presented a list of influences that he drew from when creating it, including the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds (1966), Roxy Music, T. Rex, Neu!, Kraftwerk and Brian Eno.[1]

Reviewers have recognised numerous references to Bowie's 1970s works,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn with AllMusic's William Ruhlmann naming The Man Who Sold the World (1970), Aladdin Sane (1973) and Low (1977).[2] The GuardianTemplate:'s Mark Hooper considered Buddha "a gloriously experimental mish-mash of 70s influences",[3] while Julian Marszalek of The Quietus found a mix of "glam, jazz, funk, ambient soundscapes and pop".[4]

Biographers have similarly observed the presence of pop, jazz, ambient, experimental and rock material.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Aside from the three instrumental tracks, Pegg considers the album's lyrics "non-linear", which he believes suggests an adoption of the working methods of Eno, who Bowie listed as an influence in the liner notes.Template:Sfn Bowie stated that he used "great dollops of pastiche and quasi-narrative" when crafting the lyrics as a way to reduce proper narrative form, which he considered "redundant".[1]

Songs

The title track was written as a pastiche of Bowie's early 1970s sound. It contains musical and lyrical references to his past compositions "Space Oddity" (1969), "All the Madmen" (1970) and "The Bewlay Brothers" (1971).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Lyrically, it primarily follows Kureishi's novel and was the only track to actually appear in the BBC serial.Template:Sfn "Sex and the Church" uses a beat similar to "Pallas Athena" from Black Tie White Noise,Template:Sfn which Buckley compares to the music of Prince.Template:Sfn Pegg states that the two themes present throughout Kureishi's novel—sexuality and spirituality—combine to form the theme of "Sex and the Church".Template:Sfn Bowie's vocals are distorted using a vocoder while the track ends with a sequence similar to Aladdin Sane's "The Jean Genie".Template:Sfn "South Horizon" is an avant-garde jazz instrumental that Pegg believes foreshadows the experimental tracks found on Bowie's next album Outside (1995).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Bowie said that "all elements, from lead instrumentation to texture, were played both forwards and backwards. The resulting extracts were then intercut arbitrarily".Template:Sfn It was his favourite track on the album.Template:Sfn

The album's longest track, "The Mysteries", is an ambient instrumental piece evocative of Bowie's Berlin Trilogy.Template:Sfn Featuring various electronic sounds and synthesiser loops,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Bowie stated that "the original tape was slowed down, opening up the thick texture dramatically and then Erdal would play thematic information against it".Template:Sfn "Bleed Like a Craze, Dad" features contributions from the trio 3D Echo (Rob Clydesdale, Gary Taylor, Isaac Daniel Prevost), who were recording an EP at Mountain at the same time Bowie was.Template:Sfn He almost raps during one section, which Buckley compares to his vocal on Lodger's "African Night Flight" (1979);Template:Sfn Pegg also mentions the presence of "Lodger-style percussion" with Robert Fripp-type guitar licks.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn "Strangers When We Meet" uses a sound akin to the late-1970s works of Roxy Music with a guitar riff from the Spencer Davis Group's "Gimme Some Lovin'" (1966).Template:Sfn Pegg calls it one of the album's "more conventional" tracks, featuring impressionist lyrics about the beginning of a relationship.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn O'Leary describes it as "tense, compact and nerv[y]".Template:Sfn Bowie rerecorded the track for Outside.Template:Sfn

"Dead Against It" is evocative of various New York new wave bands from the late 1970s.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn O'Leary finds the lyric "clotted with internal rhymes and consonance".Template:Sfn Bowie considered rerecording the song during the sessions for Outside and Earthling (1997), but the idea was scrapped.Template:Sfn "Untitled No. 1" contains a dance beat influenced by Indian music.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Bowie's phased vocals are both discernable (such as the line "It's clear that some things never change") and incomprehensible, with various "Ooohs" throughout.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn "Ian Fish, U.K. Heir" is an ambient piece reminiscent of the electronic work on "Heroes" (1977).Template:Sfn It contains gramophone static and a slowed and distorted version of the title track's melody.Template:Sfn In the liner notes, Bowie wrote: "The real discipline isScript error: No such module "String".... to pare down all superfluous elements, in a reductive fashion, leaving as near as possible a deconstructed or so-called 'significant form', to use a 30's terminology."[1] The title is an anagram of Hanif Kureishi.Template:Sfn The album ends with an alternate version of the title track (labeled the "rock mix"), featuring Lenny Kravitz on guitar.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Release and reissues

The Buddha of Suburbia was released solely in the United Kingdom and Europe on 8Script error: No such module "String".November 1993[5] with the catalogue number 74321Script error: No such module "String".170042.Template:Sfn Arista Records (in association with BMG International) marketed it as a soundtrack album instead of a David Bowie album.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The original album sleeve, featuring a still from the BBC serial's stage production of The Jungle Book overlaying a map of Beckenham, lacked Bowie's face and made his name almost unnoticeable.Template:Sfn Bowie also did nothing to promote the album, aside from attending one photo session with Kureishi and filming a music video for the title track.Template:Sfn With little promotion, the album flopped,Template:Sfn charting at a mere 87 on the UK Albums Chart.[4] It was further overshadowed by EMI's The Singles Collection, released a week after Buddha and which reached the UK top ten.Template:Sfn The title track was released as a single, with "Dead Against It" as the B-side, on 22 November and reached number 35 on the UK Singles Chart.Template:Sfn

The album remained unavailable in the United States until 24Script error: No such module "String".October 1995,[2] when it was reissued by Bowie's new label Virgin Records with alternate cover artwork depicting a black and white photo of Bowie sitting on a bed.Template:Sfn By this time, Bowie had already released Outside.Template:Sfn Buddha received a worldwide reissue by EMI in September 2007,Template:Sfn featuring a sepia-tinted version of the 1995 cover art,[6] although this reissue was also met with little fanfare.[4] In 2021, the album was remastered and included as part of the box set Brilliant Adventure (1992–2001). With this release, it became available on vinyl for the first time in almost 30 years.[7][8]

Critical reception

Template:Album ratings Despite receiving positive reviews from British critics on release,Template:Sfn with Q magazine saying that "Bowie's music walks a knife-edge once again",Template:Sfn The Buddha of Suburbia remains one of Bowie's least-known works.Template:Sfn He later stated: "The album itself only got one review, a good one as it happens, and is virtually non-existent as far as my catalogue goes – it was designated a soundtrack and got zilch in the way of marketing money. A real shame."Template:Sfn Ten years after its release, he named Buddha his favourite album.Template:Sfn

Latter-day reviews have praised Buddha as Bowie's "lost great album",Template:Sfn[3] a return to form,[9] his finest in a decade,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and even his most important and best release of the 1990s.Template:Sfn[9] Some reviewers labelled it—at the time—his best work since Scary Monsters (1980).[4][3] Michael Keefe of PopMatters argued it was Bowie's most enjoyable record of the ten years' worth of material that preceded it.[10] Others recognised Buddha as foreshadowing Bowie's subsequent 1990s and 2000s works.Template:Sfn[10][11] Marszalek wrote that it "contains an approach and execution that not only captures the best of Bowie's past but also kick starts his future".[4] Trynka labels it one of "Bowie's triumphs" that "benefitted from its rushed creation",Template:Sfn while James E. Perone finds it "a thoroughly listenable album and one that makes for interesting study".Template:Sfn AllMusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine later called it "an excellent, adventurous album that flew under the radar in 1993".[12] Regarding its obscurity, Pegg states that it "remains one of the choicest treasures awaiting discovery among Bowie's less familiar work", one that displays him "at his most bravely experimental".Template:Sfn In 2024, Uncut ranked the album at number 459 in their list of "The 500 Greatest Albums of the 1990s", calling it a "lost gem" that mingled the "glorious" title track and an early version of "Strangers When We Meet" with "instrumentals containing echoes from the '70s."[13]

Buddha has also attracted mixed reviews, critics feeling it does not represent one of Bowie's major works.[2] Record Collector's Jason Draper even thought it was "perhaps still best approached as a soundtrack".[14] David Sackllah of Consequence of Sound summarised: "The album doesn't find Bowie diverging from anything he'd done before and feels like another middling entry in the midst of a decade where he would put out some of his most disappointing work," concluding "this record doesn't have much to offer to anyone who isn't a die-hard fan".[15] In his Consumer' Guide, Robert Christgau called it a dud.[16] Buddha has ultimately placed low in lists ranking the artist's studio albums.[17][15]

Track listing

All songs are written by David Bowie.[1]

Template:Tracklisting

Personnel

According to the liner notes and the biographer Nicholas Pegg:Template:Sfn[1]

Production

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

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Sources

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External links

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