These days âdemo tapesâ are often radio-ready recordings, and bands often record one before theyâve even played their first gig. It’s a recent development, a byproduct of the revolution in affordable home recording technology. For most of the history of rock and pop music, demos were raw sketches, preserving ideas, tempos, changes, moods, but not at all ready to air. Listening back to demo versions of songs we already know well can be like excavating strata underneath a site like Stonehenge. Sometimes you find nothing but sediment. Sometimes you find another Stonehenge. Take for example John Lennonâs hypnotic demo recordings of âStrawberry Fields Forever,â the Beatlesâ acoustic White Album demos, or Roger Watersâ early demos of The Wall. Intriguingly rough gems all.
Today we bring you demo recordings of another artist whose work typically bespeaks polish and studio panache. As in the past, songwriters today still push play on cheap voice recordersâor expensive iphonesâand capture new songs on the fly. But nobody today writes like Bowie did in his âZiggy Stardustâ phase. At the top of the post, hear Bowieâs solo acoustic demo recording of that song. Youâll find it on the second CD of the 30th Anniversary edition of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, which also includes a demo version of âLady Stardustâ and two versions of âMoonage Daydreamâ and âHang on to Yourselfâ by “Arnold Corns,” the original name of Ziggy. Iâve heard more solo acoustic versions of âZiggyâ than Iâd care to remember, played by earnest coffee-shop crooners and guitar-bearing party guests. But Bowieâs original demo I could listen to again and again.
While the âArnold Cornsâ incarnations of Ziggy Stardust songs definitely fall into the category of not-Stonehenge, the 1969 demo recording of âSpace Oddityâ has a very monumental feel indeedâif that monument were 2001âs enigmatic Monolith. Set here to clips from that film, it seems like the perfect accompaniment to the glossy foreboding of Kubrickâs space vision. This drumless arrangement sounds somehow more contemporary than the recording weâve heard countless times. It also sounds much closer to the psychedelic folk on the rest of the Space Oddity album, a collection of songs many Bowie fans, myself included, greatly admire, but which his first audience didnât take to so readily. âSpace Oddityâ went through at least one more iteration before landing on the album. Hear the slightly more funked-up version, and see its awkward video, below.
Perhaps no song other than âAshes to Ashesâ so well articulates the creative destruction of Bowieâs many rock star personaeâand the toll those metamorphoses takeâthan 1971âs âChanges.â But itâs a song written and recorded early in his career, before Ziggy Stardust, the character that first broke him into superstardom. The song appears on Hunky Dory in a recording with the Stardust bandâMick Ronson, Trevor Bolder, and Mick Woodmanseyâbut itâs such a Bowie-centric lyric that it outlasted hundreds of costume changes and served as the obvious choice of title for the 1990 compilation Changesbowie.
Does the piano demo above reveal an alternate pre-history? Not really. The handclaps and odd vocalizations are half-formed ideas at best, and the poor audio quality is not a feature. But what it does demonstrate, as do all of the rough recordings above, is that Bowie is Bowieâa stellar songwriter and vocal performerâwhether captured on a cheap home tape machine or the best studio equipment money can buy. Studio wizardry of the present can do things producers forty years ago could only dream about, but no amount of technology can substitute for raw musical talent, nor for the long years of practice Bowie endured.
Related Content:
David Bowie Recalls the Strange Experience of Inventing the Character Ziggy Stardust (1977)
The Story of Ziggy Stardust: How David Bowie Created the Character that Made Him Famous
A 17-Year-Old David Bowie Defends âLong-Haired Menâ in His First TV Interview (1964)
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
Hear Demo Recordings of David Bowie’s “Ziggy Stardust,” “Space Oddity” & “Changes” is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
The post Hear Demo Recordings of David Bowie’s “Ziggy Stardust,” “Space Oddity” & “Changes” appeared first on Open Culture.
Hear Demo Recordings of David Bowieâs âZiggy Stardust,â âSpace Oddityâ & âChangesâ
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