Site
created 12/15/97. |
|
review
added: 1/24/03
David
Bowie: Heathen
2002
(2002) - ISO Records (Sony Music)
review
by Bill Hunt, editor of The Digital Bits
|
Album
Rating: B+
Audio Ratings (SACD 5.1/2.0): A/A-
Extras Rating: B+
(see details below)
Specs and Features
72 mins, single-sided, single-layered, CD jewel case packaging with
plastic slip-sleeve, liner notes booklet, 4 bonus songs not found on
CD (When the Boys Come Marching Home,
Wood Jackson, Conversation
Piece and Safe),
track access (16 tracks - see track listing
below), audio formats: SACD DSD 5.1 & 2.0
|
Produced
by David Bowie & Tony Visconti
David Bowie (vocals/guitar/keyboards), Tony Visconti
(bass/background vocals), David Torn (guitar/loops), Matt
Chamberlain (drums/percussion/programming) and guests Pete
Townshend, Dave Grohl, Carlos Alomar, Gerry Leonard, Tony Levin, The
Scorchio Quartet, The Borneo Horns and others
|
With
his new album, Heathen, David
Bowie returns to his musical roots to a degree, crafting a release
that both recalls the classic days of his Space
Oddity and Heroes,
and yet merges them with a new and more modern quality as well - a
musical sensibility that seems delightfully older and wiser for its
years.
Guest artists here include The Who's Pete Townshend, Dave Grohl of
Foo Fighters and Nirvana fame and session player Tony Levin, a
long-time Peter Gabriel collaborator. Each adds their own unique
contribution to the mix. And Bowie has reunited for this album with
producer Tony Visconti, who served in the same capacity for many of
his best LPs, including Scary Monsters.
Bowie has chosen to cover an eclectic batch of songs for this album
(the Pixies' Cactus, Neil
Young's I've Been Waiting for You
and the Legendary Stardust Cowboy's I
Took a Trip on a Gemini Spaceship). But as good as the
covers are, the highlights are all Bowie's, including the soulful
I Would Be Your Slave, the
melancholy longing of 5:15 The Angels
Have Gone and the soaring Everyone
Says 'Hi', which can best be described as a glittering
and lazy afternoon flight through the stratosphere. The cumulative
result is, by turns, electronically creepy, ethereal, lonely,
haunting and always uniquely Bowie.
In terms of sonic quality, Heathen
is the sort of album that gets under your skin, shimmies up your
spine and infuses your brain with delight. Thankfully, both mixes
included on this SACD deliver in top form. The 2.0 stereo mix is
smooth, clean and well blended, and is very playful. The 5.1
surround mix feels simply like an extension of the stereo
presentation, where the extreme left and right portions of the
soundstage have been stretched out around and behind the listener.
And the surround mix is nicely immersive, rather than degenerating
into the sort of annoying, head-turning exercise that so often ruins
the 5.1 experience. Here, the surrounds deliver subtle percussion,
backing vocals and atmospheric electronic tones. Both mixes have a
very natural, organic quality about them. And the transparency of
DSD mastering, combined with the richness of SACD's superior
resolution, allows for completely easy enjoyment of the music.
Interestingly, this is a rare case where I actually prefer the 5.1
mix. Music like Bowie's has an experiential quality that very much
lends itself to surround presentation. And since this album is a new
release, it's much easier to accept a surround mix than it would be
on one of his classic releases.
Heathen comes in a standard CD
jewel case, with the usual plastic slipcover that identifies the
disc as an SACD and tells you it contains both stereo and
multi-channel audio options. You also get four bonus songs (mixed in
both 5.1 and 2.0) that were recorded for the Heathen
album but were omitted from the standard CD release. That's a pretty
nice reward for high-resolution fans.
As someone whose musical tastes came of age in the early 80s, I
really love it when these old guys show today's younger musicians
what's what. Like Peter Gabriel with Up
and Elvis Costello' with When I Was Cruel,
David Bowie proves with Heathen
that his musical talents are still as vital and relevant as ever.
And let me tell you, if you haven't heard Heathen
in high-resolution... you haven't heard it at all. This is probably
my favorite SACD release to date. Highly recommended.
Bill Hunt
billhunt@thedigitalbits.com
Track Listing:
Sunday
Cactus
Slip Away
Slow Burn
Afraid
I've Been Waiting for You
I Would Be Your Slave
I Took a Trip On a Gemini Spaceship
5:15 The Angels Have Gone
Everyone Says 'Hi'
A Better Future
Heathen (The Rays)
When The Boys Come Marching Home
Wood Jackson
Conversation Piece
Safe |
|
|