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Ashes to Ashes (David Bowie song)

"Ashes to Ashes" is a song by English singer-songwriter David Bowie from his 14th studio album, Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) (1980). Co-produced by Bowie and Tony Visconti, it was recorded from February to April 1980 in New York and London and features guitar synthesiser played by Chuck Hammer. An art rock, art pop and new wave song led by a flanged piano riff, the lyrics act as a sequel to Bowie's 1969 hit "Space Oddity": the astronaut Major Tom has succumbed to drug addiction and floats isolated in space. Bowie partially based the lyrics on his own experiences with drug addiction throughout the 1970s.

"Ashes to Ashes"
One of the UK artwork variants
Single by David Bowie
from the album Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps)
B-side"Move On"
Released1 August 1980 (1980-08-01)
RecordedFebruary–April 1980
Studio
Genre
Length
  • 3:35 (single)
  • 4:23 (album)
LabelRCA
Songwriter(s)David Bowie
Producer(s)
David Bowie singles chronology
"Crystal Japan"
(1980)
"Ashes to Ashes"
(1980)
"Fashion"
(1980)

Released as the album's lead single on 1 August 1980, "Ashes to Ashes" became Bowie's second No. 1 UK single and his fastest-selling single. The song's music video, co-directed by Bowie and David Mallet, was at the time the most expensive music video ever made.[1] The solarised video features Bowie as a clown, an astronaut and an asylum inmate, each representing variations on the song's theme, and four members of London's Blitz club, including Steve Strange. Influential on the then-rising New Romantic movement, commentators have considered it one of Bowie's best videos and of all time.

Bowie performed the song only once during 1980 but frequently during his later concert tours. Initially viewed with mixed critical reactions, later reviewers and biographers have considered it one of Bowie's finest songs, particularly praising the unique musical structure. In subsequent decades, the song has appeared on compilation albums and other artists have covered, sampled or used its musical elements for their own songs. The song's namesake was also used for the 2008 BBC series of the same name.

Writing and recording

Backing tracks

 
Co-producer Tony Visconti in 2007. He created the piano sound using a flanger.

The sessions for David Bowie's Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) commenced at the Power Station in New York City in February 1980, with production handled by Bowie and longtime collaborator Tony Visconti. The backing tracks for "Ashes to Ashes" were recorded under the working title "People Are Turning to Gold".[2][3][4] The band, as for Bowie's previous four albums, consisted of Carlos Alomar on guitar, George Murray on bass and Dennis Davis on drums. Roy Bittan, a member of Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band who were recording The River (1980) in the adjacent studio, contributed piano while session musician Chuck Hammer played guitar synthesiser.[a][2][3] Hammer, who dubbed his work "guitarchitecture",[4] formerly toured for Lou Reed and was hired by Bowie after he sent tapes of his work to him. Visconti stated that Hammer "would pick a note and out of his amplifier would come a symphonic string section".[5]

For their parts, Alomar played "opaque reggae" and Murray played a funk bassline using a mixture of fingerstyle and slapping.[3][6][7] Davis initially struggled with the ska drumbeat. Bowie played the beat he envisioned for the drummer on a chair and cardboard box, which Davis studied and learned, recording the final take the next day.[5][3] Although desiring a Wurlitzer electronic piano to tape Bittan's piano part, Visconti ran a grand piano through an Eventide Instant Flanger to imitate the sound of one upon learning the real Wurlitzer would take too long to deliver.[5][3] For his parts, Hammer layered four multi-track guitar textures, each given different treatments through the Eventide Harmonizer, which were recorded in the studio's back stairwell to add extra reverb. According to biographer Chris O'Leary, he played "various chord inversions for each chorus section", although Visconti said that "it's the warm string choir you hear on the part that goes, 'I've never done good things, I've never done bad things...'"[5][3]

Vocals and overdubs

The backing tracks were recorded without lyrics or melodies pre-written. Unlike his recent Berlin Trilogy, wherein Bowie wrote lyrics almost immediately after the backing tracks were finished, he wanted to take time writing melodies and lyrics for the Scary Monsters songs.[8] Feeling nostalgic, he had the idea of writing a sequel to his first hit "Space Oddity" (1969), a tale about a fictional astronaut named Major Tom, after re-recording the song in 1979 for The "Will Kenny Everett Make It to 1980?" Show.[3][9] Bowie stated in 1980:[10]

When I originally wrote about Major Tom, I was a very pragmatic and self-opinionated lad that thought he knew all about the great American dream and where it started and where it should stop. Here we had the great blast of American technological know-how shoving this guy up into space, but once he gets there he's not quite sure why he's there. And that's where I left him.

Reconvening in April 1980 at Visconti's own Good Earth Studios in London, Bowie and Visconti recorded the vocal tracks and additional overdubs for the now-titled "Ashes to Ashes".[2][3] Author Peter Doggett states that Bowie originally sang "ashes to ashes" as "ashes to ash" and "funk to funky" as "fun to funky" before settling on the final lines.[11] For overdubs, Visconti added additional percussion and contributions from session keyboardist Andy Clark, who had been introduced to Visconti by Kenny Everett Show "Space Oddity" drummer Andy Duncan. According to biographer Nicholas Pegg, Clark "provided the symphonic sounds" that end the track,[5] while O'Leary says his parts are "a high pitch in the chorus".[3] Upon finishing the track, Visconti recalled: "We love[d] it immensely and knew it was one of the major tracks."[4]

Composition

Music

 
"Ashes to Ashes" features guitar synthesiser by Chuck Hammer (pictured in 2018).

Characterised by commentators as art rock, art pop and new wave;[12][13][14] Pegg describes "Ashes to Ashes" a culmination of Bowie's late 1970s experimental period.[5] With a funk rhythm, a guitar synth-led sound and complex vocal layering,[15][6] author James E. Perone considers it the most musically accessible song on Scary Monsters and on any Bowie album in several years. The author likens Murray's funky bass playing to the plastic soul of Young Americans (1975) and Station to Station (1976).[16]

The song's musical structure is unique and unusual, which Perone argues made it stand out in pop music at the time.[16] As an arpeggio figure, the piano riff appears to have a "missing bar" rather than repeating every three bars, creating a feeling of being in 3/4 time in a 4/4 setting. The vocal melody also matches the piano riff through its use of contrasting beats, such as "funk" on the downbeat and "fun-ky" on the off-beat.[3] Visconti called the beat "a mind-bender".[9] Additionally, the vocal melody features contrasting phrasing, meaning the verses consist of unrelated sections, singing through bars ("Major To-om's"), key changes, large vocal register changes and contrasting singing styles.[3][16] O'Leary comments: "It's as if the conductor of an orchestra is also the lead tenor."[3]

"Ashes to Ashes" takes melodic inspiration from "Inchworm" by Danny Kaye, who was one of Bowie's earliest influences. Originating from the 1952 musical film Hans Christian Andersen, Bowie stated in 2003 that the song's chords were some of the first he learned on guitar, calling them "remarkable" and "melancholic": "'Ashes to Ashes' is influenced by that. It's childlike and melancholic in that children's story way."[5] Like "Inchworm", "Ashes to Ashes" contains moves from F to E-flat to close out verses. The song itself is in the key of A-flat major, with the intro and outro featuring "intrusions" of B-flat minor. O'Leary refers to the two bridges as a "series of arcs", as Bowie starts low in his register, rising to high and descending back to low in the same breath. The second verse features dead-pan backing vocals "delay-echoing" the lead vocal.[3][6]

Lyrics

It really is an ode to childhood, if you like, a popular nursery rhyme. It's about space men becoming junkies.[10]

—David Bowie, NME, 1980

Melancholic and introspective,[17] the song's lyrics act as a sequel to "Space Oddity", which ends with Major Tom alone floating out in space.[9] Eleven years after liftoff,[5] Ground Control receives a message from Major Tom, who has succumbed to drug addiction and increased paranoia following his abandonment to space: "Strung out in heaven's high / hitting an all-time low."[9] Ground Control are not keen on the astronaut's reappearance – "Oh no, don't say it's true" – and pretend that he is fine, in Doggett's words mimicking "government agencies everywhere".[15][11] The astronaut reflects on his life and hopes for the future and wishes he could break free from his "caged psyche".[b][9] His pleas are disregarded by the public, leading him to proclaim that he has "never done good things", has "never done bad things" and "never did anything out of the blue".[15] The song ends with the nursery rhyme lines "My mother said / to get things done / you'd better not mess with Major Tom".[9][15]

Described by the artist as "a story of corruption",[10] Bowie wanted to see where Major Tom ended up in the 1970s:[3]

We come to him 10 years later and find the whole thing has soured, because there was no reason for putting him up there ... [So] the most disastrous thing I could think of is that he finds solace in some kind of heroin-type drug, actually cosmic space feeding him: an addiction. He wants to return to the womb from whence he came.

Regarding the song's drug references, Bowie joked about getting the word "junkie" past the BBC's censors in an interview with NME in September 1980.[10] Comparing "Space Oddity" with "Ashes to Ashes", NPR's Jason Heller evaluated the latter's technological undertones compared to the "psychedelically spacious" former.[9] Writer Tom Ewing wrote that it was as if "Major Tom thought he was starring in an Arthur C. Clarke story and found himself in a Philip K. Dick one by mistake, and the result is oddly magnificent".[3]

Analysis

Reviewers have interpreted "Ashes to Ashes" as commentary on Bowie's own personal struggles with drug addiction throughout the 1970s.[c] Several said the song represents Bowie's reflection and acknowledgement of the past, at the same time offering hopes for the future.[11][16][18] Bowie himself said the Scary Monsters album was an attempt to "accommodate" his "pasts", as "you have to understand why you went through them".[5] The lyrics describe Major Tom as a junkie who has hit "an all-time low". NME editors Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray interpreted the line as a play on the title of Bowie's 1977 album Low, which charted his withdrawal inwards following his drug excesses in the US a short time before, another reversal of Major Tom's original withdrawal "outwards" or towards space.[17]

Biographer David Buckley argues that Bowie offered a comment on his entire career "using a rather sarcastic piece of self-deprecation" with the line "I've never done good things / I've never done bad things / I never did anything out of the blue."[1] Bowie himself said that these three lines "represent a continuing, returning feeling of inadequacy over what I've done."[10] On the artist's future, Buckley interprets the axe line as his desire to move into less experimental territory and more "normalised" ground.[1] Years later, Bowie said, "I was wrapping up the seventies really for myself, and that seemed a good enough epitaph for it – that we've lost him, he's out there somewhere, we'll leave him be."[5] Heller agreed, arguing that it provided closure for the artist's "most momentous decade".[9]

Release

"Ashes to Ashes" was released in edited form as the lead single from Scary Monsters on 1 August 1980,[3][19] with the catalogue number RCA BOW 6 and the Lodger track "Move On" as the B-side.[20] RCA emphasised the relationship of "Space Oddity" and "Ashes to Ashes" by releasing a nine-minute promo on 12" vinyl in the US titled "The Continuing Story of Major Tom", which segued the former into the latter.[9][5][19] The British single came in three different picture sleeves, each packaged with four different sheets of adhesive stamps, all featuring Bowie in his Pierrot costume from the music video; Pegg says this was RCA adopting "the craze for limited-edition collectables" that pervaded the 7" single market at the time.[5] On Scary Monsters, released on 12 September,[3] "Ashes to Ashes" was sequenced in its full-length form as the fourth track on side one of the original LP, between the title track and "Fashion".[2]

Commercial performance

After years of dwindling commercial fortunes, "Ashes to Ashes" was a return to commercial form for Bowie.[3] Debuting at No. 4 on the UK Singles Chart, the single secured the top spot from ABBA's "The Winner Takes It All" a week later following the music video's broadcast on Top of the Pops. It became Bowie's fastest-selling single up to that point and his second number one single following the 1975 reissue of "Space Oddity".[5][3][1][19]

Compared to the single's strong UK performance, the US release fared worse. With "It's No Game (No. 1)" as the B-side, the US single reached No. 79 on the Cash Box Top 100 chart and No. 101 on the Billboard Bubbling Under the Hot 100 chart.[21] Elsewhere, "Ashes to Ashes" charted at No. 3 in Australia and Norway,[22][23] 4 in Ireland,[24] 6 in Austria, New Zealand and Sweden,[25][26][27] 9 in West Germany,[28] 11 in the Netherlands' Dutch Top 40 and in Switzerland,[29][30] 15 in Belgium Flanders and the Netherlands' Dutch Single Top 100,[31][32] and 35 in Canada.[33] The song also reached No. 14 in France in 2016.[34]

Critical reception

"Ashes to Ashes" initially received mixed reviews from music critics. Amongst positive reviews, a writer for Billboard magazine said the song combines "rock and dance beats" with "tight rock rhythms lay[ing] the groundwork for the nuance-rich melody".[35] In their reviews of the Scary Monsters album, Billboard and The Spokesman-Review's Tom Sowa highlighted "Ashes to Ashes" as one of its best tracks.[36][37]

On the other hand, Deanne Pearson called the song a "strange choice for a single" in Smash Hits, one that was ultimately "not a hit" and should have been left as an album track.[38] Rolling Stone's Debra Rae Cohen described the song as Bowie's "most explicit self-indictment", and one that mirrors "the malaise of the times". Although Cohen found the track's imagery "chilling", she ultimately felt it was hard to see it "as anything but perverse self-aggrandizement".[39] Ronnie Gurr of Record Mirror was negative, finding the song "not in truth a great effort".[40] The magazine ranked it the second best single of 1980, behind "Going Underground" by the Jam,[41] while NME ranked the song the fifth best single of the year.[42]

Music video

 
The music video was partly filmed at Beachy Head (pictured in 2011).

The music video for "Ashes to Ashes" was co-directed by Bowie and David Mallet,[43] who had previously directed the videos for Lodger (1979).[44] Filmed at a cost of £250,000,[d][45] it was the most expensive music video ever made at the time and has remained one of the most expensive of all time.[1] Shot in May 1980 over a period of three days,[e] Bowie storyboarded the video himself, planning every shot and dictating the editing process.[5][46] Mallet used the new Paintbox computer programme to alter the colour palette, rendering the sky black and the ocean pink.[5][9] Writer Michael Shore described Mallet's direction as "deliberately overloaded": "demented, horror-movie camera angles, heavy solarisations, neurotic cuts from supersaturated colour to black-and-white."[44]

The video utilised multiple locations, including at Beachy Head and Hastings.[5] Shooting at the beach was Mallet's idea; he later said: "[It is] one of the very rare places you can get right down to the water and there's a cliff towering over you."[46] The crew found an abandoned bulldozer on the beach and were able to contact its owners and employ the vehicle for the shoot.[46] Meanwhile, the "padded cell" and "exploded kitchen" sets were developed from the Kenny Everett Show performance of "Space Oddity", also shot by Mallet, the year prior.[5][47] Similar to Bowie's other music videos, "Ashes to Ashes" does not tell a story, instead being filled with strange images that Buckley compares to a "dreamlike mental state".[44] Discussing the connections between the different locations, Shore states "the stunningly elegant self-referential video-within-video motif, wherein each new sequence is introduced by Bowie holding a postcard-sized video screen displaying the first shot of the next scene".[44]

In the video, Bowie portrays three different characters—a clown, astronaut and asylum inmate—all of whom represent variations of the song's "outsider theme".[f] His four followers, donning black clerical robes,[46] were members of London's Blitz, a "Bowie-worshipping nightclub" that housed several up-and-coming artists of the New Romantic era, including Steve Strange, a future member of Visage.[g][5][44] Strange later told biographer Marc Spitz that his robe kept getting caught in the bulldozer: "That's why I kept doing that move where I pull my arm down. So I wouldn't be crushed."[h][46] Strange's friend Richard Sharah did Bowie's make-up for both the video and the Scary Monsters photo shoot the previous month, while his Italian Pierrot costume was designed by Natasha Korniloff, whose affiliation with the singer dated back to his days as a mime with Lindsay Kemp in 1968.[5][4] The elderly woman who appears at the video's end, acting as Bowie's mother, was not, according to popular belief, his actual mother.[i][5][44]

[It conveyed] some feeling of nostalgia for a future. I've always been hung up on that; it creeps into everything I do, however far away I try to get from it ... The idea of having seen the future, of somewhere we've already been, keeps coming back to me.[5]

—David Bowie on the video as a whole

In his book Strange Fascination, Buckley states that the video conveys an "Edwardian queasiness", depicting "a world of nostalgia, childhood reminiscence and distant memories".[44] Pegg and Buckley interpret that Bowie's three characters, archetypes that had permeated his songwriting for a decade, act as an "exorcism of his past".[5][44] Bowie himself described the shot of him and his followers walking up the shoreline while the bulldozer trails behind them as symbolising "oncoming violence".[46][48] He also said the followers have religious undertones, "an ominous quality that's rooted quite deeply".[5] Scenes of the singer in a space suit—which suggested a hospital life-support system—and others showing him locked in what appeared to be a padded room, referred to both Major Tom and to Bowie's new, rueful interpretation of him.[5][44] The former scenes were "intentionally" derived from H. R. Giger's designs for the 1979 film Alien.[5]

Live performances

Bowie only performed "Ashes to Ashes" once in 1980, on 3 September for an appearance on NBC's The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. In subsequent decades, Bowie performed the song on the 1983 Serious Moonlight, 1990 Sound+Vision, 1999 Hours, 2002 Heathen, and 2003–2004 A Reality tours.[5] A Serious Moonlight performance, recorded on 12 September 1983, was included on the live album Serious Moonlight (Live '83), released as part of the Loving the Alien (1983–1988) box set in 2018 and separately the following year.[49] The filmed performance also appears on the concert video Serious Moonlight (1984).[50] Bowie's 25 June 2000 performance of the song at the Glastonbury Festival was released in 2018 on Glastonbury 2000,[51] while a recording from a special performance at the BBC Radio Theatre, London, on 27 June 2000 was released on the bonus disc of Bowie at the Beeb.[52][53] Another live recording from the A Reality Tour, recorded in Dublin in November 2003, is included on the accompanying DVD and live album.[54][55] Although O'Leary believes no live performances ever came close to matching the studio recording in quality,[3] Pegg believes "Ashes to Ashes" made "successful transitions" to the stage.[5]

Influence and legacy

It's certainly one of the better songs that I've ever written.[5]

—David Bowie, 1999

In later decades, reviewers and biographers consider "Ashes to Ashes" one of Bowie's best songs.[5] Praise is given to its musicality and unique structure;[1][16][56] Biographer Paul Trynka, in particular, attributes the song's success to its "melodic inventiveness".[4] Regarding its structure, O'Leary says the track "seems built by a surrealist watchmaker" due to the details present in the mix, deeming it one of Bowie's finest studio recordings.[3] Writing for Consequence of Sound, Nina Corcoran stated the song "makes the most of Bowie's musical creativity" and overall represents "an ode to the '70s".[56] American Songwriter's Jim Beviglia called the song a "dark masterpiece".[15] Rhino Entertainment argued the song predicted the subsequent decade with its "ominous clash of synthesized guitars, hard funk bassline and dissonant guitars".[57]

Some critics analysed the song against Bowie's entire career. O'Leary opines that while his career was far from over when the song was released, "Ashes to Ashes" is "his last song" or "the closing chapter that comes midway through the book". He concludes: "Bowie sings himself onstage with a children's rhyme: eternally falling, eternally young."[3] The Guardian's Alexis Petridis said the song represents a moment in his catalogue where "the correct response is to stand back and boggle in awe", because "everything about it – [its] lingering oddness of its sound, its constantly shifting melody and emotional tenor, its alternately self-mythologising and self-doubting lyrics – is perfect".[58] Chris Gerard of PopMatters even considered the track one of Bowie's signature songs.[59]

Artists who have covered "Ashes to Ashes" live or in-studio include Tears for Fears for the 1992 Ruby Trax charity album, Uwe Schmidt, Northern Kings, the Shins, the Mike Flowers Pops and John Wesley Harding.[5] Songs that used musical elements or lyrics from "Ashes to Ashes" include Marilyn Manson's "Apple of Sodom" (1997), Landscape's "Einstein a Go-Go" (1981) and Keane's "Better Than This" (2008).[5] Songs that directly sampled "Ashes to Ashes" include Samantha Mumba's UK top five hit "Body II Body" (2000) and James Murphy's remix of Bowie's 2013 single "Love Is Lost".[60][5] The song's namesake was also used for the 2008 BBC sequel series of their popular time-travelling crime drama Life on Mars,[5][61] which itself took its name from another Bowie song.[62]

The music video has also received praise and recognition as a major influence on the then-rising New Romantic movement.[5] Initially voted by Record Mirror's readers as the best music video of 1980, together with "Fashion",[41] Rolling Stone placed it at number 44 in their list of the 100 best music videos of all time in 2021. Discussing the video's influence upon its release, Andy Greene wrote: "MTV came onto the airwaves exactly one year later, and it would give rise to a whole new generation of Bowie imitators, but none of them could compete with the real deal."[45] Dig! website also included the visual in their list of 20 essential clips of the 1980s. Luke Edwards argued that the video "truly captured the spirit of the MTV age" before the channel's golden era.[13]

Commentators hail the video as not only one of Bowie's finest, but one of the medium's high points.[1][46] Considered "the defining early music video" by Buckley, and "one of the most significant and influential of the age" by Dave Thompson,[44][19] its techniques and effects influenced videos of artists including Adam Ant, Duran Duran and the Cure.[5] Pegg argues the visual "define[d] rock video for the early 1980s",[5] while Heller contended it proved music videos were "viable promotional investments".[9] Videos that later mimicked or took appropriation from the "Ashes to Ashes" video included Peter Gabriel's "Shock the Monkey" (1982), Erasure's "Chorus" (1991) and Marilyn Manson's "The Dope Show" (1998).[5]

"Ashes to Ashes", in both its single edit and full-length forms, has made appearances on compilation albums. The single edit is included on Changestwobowie (1981),[63] Best of Bowie (2002),[64] The Platinum Collection (2006),[65] Nothing Has Changed (2014) and Legacy (The Very Best of David Bowie) (2016),[66][67] while the album version is included on the Sound + Vision box set (1989),[68] Changesbowie (1990) and The Singles Collection (1993).[69][70] The single edit was also included on Re:Call 3, part of the A New Career in a New Town (1977–1982) compilation, in 2017.[71] An unreleased extended version, allegedly 13-minutes long and featuring additional verses, a longer fade-out and a synthesiser solo, is rumoured to exist, although a 12-minute version that appeared on bootlegs was fake, simply repeating and splicing the verses.[5][19] In 2020, Visconti said that no additional verses were recorded nor is he aware of any other versions of the song existing.[72]

Following Bowie's death in January 2016, Rolling Stone named "Ashes to Ashes" one of the 30 most essential songs of the artist's catalogue. The magazine wrote: "As offbeat as the song was, it's a testament to Bowie's art-pop genius that 'Ashes to Ashes' became a huge international hit."[73] The song has appeared on lists of Bowie's greatest songs by The Telegraph,[74] The Guardian (No. 2), behind "Sound and Vision" (1977),[58] Digital Spy (No. 3),[75] Far Out and Uncut (No. 6),[76][77] Smooth Radio (No. 7),[78] NME (No. 9),[79] Mojo (No. 10) and Consequence of Sound (No. 30).[56][80] In 2016, Ultimate Classic Rock placed the single at number 10 in a list ranking every Bowie single from worst to best in 2016.[81] Two years later, NME readers voted it Bowie's third best track, behind "All the Young Dudes" (1972) and "Life on Mars?" (1971).[82]

Personnel

According to Chris O'Leary:[3]

Technical

  • David Bowie – producer
  • Tony Visconti – producer, engineer
  • Larry Alexander – engineer
  • Jeff Hendrickson – engineer

Charts

Weekly charts

1980–1981 chart performance for "Ashes to Ashes"
Chart (1980–1981) Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[83][22] 3
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[25] 6
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[31] 15
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[33] 35
Ireland (IRMA)[24] 4
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[29] 11
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[32] 15
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)[26] 6
Norway (VG-lista)[23] 3
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[27] 6
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[30] 11
UK Singles (OCC)[84] 1
US Bubbling Under Hot 100 (Billboard)[21] 101
US Disco Top 100 (Billboard)[85] 21
US Cash Box Top 100 Singles[21] 79
West Germany (Official German Charts)[28] 9
2016 chart performance for "Ashes to Ashes"
Chart (2016) Peak
position
France (SNEP)[34] 14

Year-end charts

Year-end chart performance for "Ashes to Ashes"
Chart (1980) Position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[83] 25

Notes

  1. ^ King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp, who contributed guitar to the rest of Scary Monsters, does not appear on "Ashes to Ashes".
  2. ^ The line about an axe breaking ice was a paraphrased manifesto from a letter by Franz Kafka that read: "A book must be an ice-axe to break the frozen seas inside us."[11]
  3. ^ Attributed to multiple references:[3][5][11][1][18]
  4. ^ In The Complete David Bowie, Pegg lists the cost as £25,000.[5]
  5. ^ Mallet recalled the "norm" for a video at the time was one day.[43]
  6. ^ According to Buckley, the Pierrot figure was based on a commedia dell'arte Renaissance costume.[44]
  7. ^ The three others, including Judith Garland and Darla Jane Gilroy,[43][45] were handpicked by Strange. Blitz regular Marilyn and Bowie fan George O'Dowd, later famous as Boy George, were passed over for appearances.
  8. ^ Bowie liked the move and incorporated it into the videos for his next single, "Fashion", "Loving the Alien" (1984) and "Dancing in the Street" (1985).[5]
  9. ^ The elderly woman some interpreted as a response to the 1975 NME interview with Bowie's mother, Peggy Jones, which revealed embarrassing personal details between her and the artist; Bowie had repaired his relationship with his mother in the years following the article's publication and before recording "Ashes to Ashes".

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Buckley 2005, pp. 316–317.
  2. ^ a b c d Pegg 2016, pp. 397–401.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x O'Leary 2019, chap. 4.
  4. ^ a b c d e Trynka 2011, pp. 354–355.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao Pegg 2016, pp. 27–30.
  6. ^ a b c Welch 1999, p. 136.
  7. ^ Lindsay, Matthew (7 September 2021). "Making David Bowie: Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps)". Classic Pop. from the original on 20 December 2022. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
  8. ^ Buckley 2005, pp. 314–316.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Heller, Jason (6 October 2017). "How 'Ashes To Ashes' Put The First Act of David Bowie's Career to Rest". NPR. from the original on 14 November 2022. Retrieved 14 November 2022.
  10. ^ a b c d e MacKinnon, Angus (13 September 1980). "The Future Isn't What It Used to Be". NME. pp. 31–37. from the original on 21 June 2022. Retrieved 18 November 2022 – via bowiegoldenyears.com.
  11. ^ a b c d e Doggett 2012, pp. 372–374.
  12. ^ Lynch, Joe (11 January 2016). "10 Brilliantly Bizarre David Bowie Videos". Billboard. from the original on 3 August 2016. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  13. ^ a b Edwards, Luke (11 November 2022). "Best 80s Music Videos: 20 Essential Clips From MTV's Golden Era". Dig!. from the original on 13 November 2022. Retrieved 14 November 2022.
  14. ^ Comer, M. Tye (15 May 2000). "Pop Artificielle – LB". CMJ New Music Report. CMJ. 62 (666): 20. from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  15. ^ a b c d e Beviglia, Jim (2020). "Behind the Song: David Bowie, 'Ashes to Ashes'". American Songwriter. from the original on 14 November 2022. Retrieved 14 November 2022.
  16. ^ a b c d e Perone 2007, pp. 81–82.
  17. ^ a b Carr & Murray 1981, pp. 109–116.
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Sources

ashes, ashes, david, bowie, song, ashes, ashes, song, english, singer, songwriter, david, bowie, from, 14th, studio, album, scary, monsters, super, creeps, 1980, produced, bowie, tony, visconti, recorded, from, february, april, 1980, york, london, features, gu. Ashes to Ashes is a song by English singer songwriter David Bowie from his 14th studio album Scary Monsters and Super Creeps 1980 Co produced by Bowie and Tony Visconti it was recorded from February to April 1980 in New York and London and features guitar synthesiser played by Chuck Hammer An art rock art pop and new wave song led by a flanged piano riff the lyrics act as a sequel to Bowie s 1969 hit Space Oddity the astronaut Major Tom has succumbed to drug addiction and floats isolated in space Bowie partially based the lyrics on his own experiences with drug addiction throughout the 1970s Ashes to Ashes One of the UK artwork variantsSingle by David Bowiefrom the album Scary Monsters and Super Creeps B side Move On Released1 August 1980 1980 08 01 RecordedFebruary April 1980StudioPower Station New York City Good Earth London GenreArt rock art pop new waveLength3 35 single 4 23 album LabelRCASongwriter s David BowieProducer s David Bowie Tony ViscontiDavid Bowie singles chronology Crystal Japan 1980 Ashes to Ashes 1980 Fashion 1980 Released as the album s lead single on 1 August 1980 Ashes to Ashes became Bowie s second No 1 UK single and his fastest selling single The song s music video co directed by Bowie and David Mallet was at the time the most expensive music video ever made 1 The solarised video features Bowie as a clown an astronaut and an asylum inmate each representing variations on the song s theme and four members of London s Blitz club including Steve Strange Influential on the then rising New Romantic movement commentators have considered it one of Bowie s best videos and of all time Bowie performed the song only once during 1980 but frequently during his later concert tours Initially viewed with mixed critical reactions later reviewers and biographers have considered it one of Bowie s finest songs particularly praising the unique musical structure In subsequent decades the song has appeared on compilation albums and other artists have covered sampled or used its musical elements for their own songs The song s namesake was also used for the 2008 BBC series of the same name Contents 1 Writing and recording 1 1 Backing tracks 1 2 Vocals and overdubs 2 Composition 2 1 Music 2 2 Lyrics 2 3 Analysis 3 Release 3 1 Commercial performance 3 2 Critical reception 4 Music video 5 Live performances 6 Influence and legacy 7 Personnel 8 Charts 8 1 Weekly charts 8 2 Year end charts 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 SourcesWriting and recording EditBacking tracks Edit Co producer Tony Visconti in 2007 He created the piano sound using a flanger The sessions for David Bowie s Scary Monsters and Super Creeps commenced at the Power Station in New York City in February 1980 with production handled by Bowie and longtime collaborator Tony Visconti The backing tracks for Ashes to Ashes were recorded under the working title People Are Turning to Gold 2 3 4 The band as for Bowie s previous four albums consisted of Carlos Alomar on guitar George Murray on bass and Dennis Davis on drums Roy Bittan a member of Bruce Springsteen s E Street Band who were recording The River 1980 in the adjacent studio contributed piano while session musician Chuck Hammer played guitar synthesiser a 2 3 Hammer who dubbed his work guitarchitecture 4 formerly toured for Lou Reed and was hired by Bowie after he sent tapes of his work to him Visconti stated that Hammer would pick a note and out of his amplifier would come a symphonic string section 5 For their parts Alomar played opaque reggae and Murray played a funk bassline using a mixture of fingerstyle and slapping 3 6 7 Davis initially struggled with the ska drumbeat Bowie played the beat he envisioned for the drummer on a chair and cardboard box which Davis studied and learned recording the final take the next day 5 3 Although desiring a Wurlitzer electronic piano to tape Bittan s piano part Visconti ran a grand piano through an Eventide Instant Flanger to imitate the sound of one upon learning the real Wurlitzer would take too long to deliver 5 3 For his parts Hammer layered four multi track guitar textures each given different treatments through the Eventide Harmonizer which were recorded in the studio s back stairwell to add extra reverb According to biographer Chris O Leary he played various chord inversions for each chorus section although Visconti said that it s the warm string choir you hear on the part that goes I ve never done good things I ve never done bad things 5 3 Vocals and overdubs Edit The backing tracks were recorded without lyrics or melodies pre written Unlike his recent Berlin Trilogy wherein Bowie wrote lyrics almost immediately after the backing tracks were finished he wanted to take time writing melodies and lyrics for the Scary Monsters songs 8 Feeling nostalgic he had the idea of writing a sequel to his first hit Space Oddity 1969 a tale about a fictional astronaut named Major Tom after re recording the song in 1979 for The Will Kenny Everett Make It to 1980 Show 3 9 Bowie stated in 1980 10 When I originally wrote about Major Tom I was a very pragmatic and self opinionated lad that thought he knew all about the great American dream and where it started and where it should stop Here we had the great blast of American technological know how shoving this guy up into space but once he gets there he s not quite sure why he s there And that s where I left him Reconvening in April 1980 at Visconti s own Good Earth Studios in London Bowie and Visconti recorded the vocal tracks and additional overdubs for the now titled Ashes to Ashes 2 3 Author Peter Doggett states that Bowie originally sang ashes to ashes as ashes to ash and funk to funky as fun to funky before settling on the final lines 11 For overdubs Visconti added additional percussion and contributions from session keyboardist Andy Clark who had been introduced to Visconti by Kenny Everett Show Space Oddity drummer Andy Duncan According to biographer Nicholas Pegg Clark provided the symphonic sounds that end the track 5 while O Leary says his parts are a high pitch in the chorus 3 Upon finishing the track Visconti recalled We love d it immensely and knew it was one of the major tracks 4 Composition EditMusic Edit Ashes to Ashes features guitar synthesiser by Chuck Hammer pictured in 2018 Characterised by commentators as art rock art pop and new wave 12 13 14 Pegg describes Ashes to Ashes a culmination of Bowie s late 1970s experimental period 5 With a funk rhythm a guitar synth led sound and complex vocal layering 15 6 author James E Perone considers it the most musically accessible song on Scary Monsters and on any Bowie album in several years The author likens Murray s funky bass playing to the plastic soul of Young Americans 1975 and Station to Station 1976 16 The song s musical structure is unique and unusual which Perone argues made it stand out in pop music at the time 16 As an arpeggio figure the piano riff appears to have a missing bar rather than repeating every three bars creating a feeling of being in 3 4 time in a 4 4 setting The vocal melody also matches the piano riff through its use of contrasting beats such as funk on the downbeat and fun ky on the off beat 3 Visconti called the beat a mind bender 9 Additionally the vocal melody features contrasting phrasing meaning the verses consist of unrelated sections singing through bars Major To om s key changes large vocal register changes and contrasting singing styles 3 16 O Leary comments It s as if the conductor of an orchestra is also the lead tenor 3 Ashes to Ashes takes melodic inspiration from Inchworm by Danny Kaye who was one of Bowie s earliest influences Originating from the 1952 musical film Hans Christian Andersen Bowie stated in 2003 that the song s chords were some of the first he learned on guitar calling them remarkable and melancholic Ashes to Ashes is influenced by that It s childlike and melancholic in that children s story way 5 Like Inchworm Ashes to Ashes contains moves from F to E flat to close out verses The song itself is in the key of A flat major with the intro and outro featuring intrusions of B flat minor O Leary refers to the two bridges as a series of arcs as Bowie starts low in his register rising to high and descending back to low in the same breath The second verse features dead pan backing vocals delay echoing the lead vocal 3 6 Lyrics Edit It really is an ode to childhood if you like a popular nursery rhyme It s about space men becoming junkies 10 David Bowie NME 1980 Melancholic and introspective 17 the song s lyrics act as a sequel to Space Oddity which ends with Major Tom alone floating out in space 9 Eleven years after liftoff 5 Ground Control receives a message from Major Tom who has succumbed to drug addiction and increased paranoia following his abandonment to space Strung out in heaven s high hitting an all time low 9 Ground Control are not keen on the astronaut s reappearance Oh no don t say it s true and pretend that he is fine in Doggett s words mimicking government agencies everywhere 15 11 The astronaut reflects on his life and hopes for the future and wishes he could break free from his caged psyche b 9 His pleas are disregarded by the public leading him to proclaim that he has never done good things has never done bad things and never did anything out of the blue 15 The song ends with the nursery rhyme lines My mother said to get things done you d better not mess with Major Tom 9 15 Described by the artist as a story of corruption 10 Bowie wanted to see where Major Tom ended up in the 1970s 3 We come to him 10 years later and find the whole thing has soured because there was no reason for putting him up there So the most disastrous thing I could think of is that he finds solace in some kind of heroin type drug actually cosmic space feeding him an addiction He wants to return to the womb from whence he came Regarding the song s drug references Bowie joked about getting the word junkie past the BBC s censors in an interview with NME in September 1980 10 Comparing Space Oddity with Ashes to Ashes NPR s Jason Heller evaluated the latter s technological undertones compared to the psychedelically spacious former 9 Writer Tom Ewing wrote that it was as if Major Tom thought he was starring in an Arthur C Clarke story and found himself in a Philip K Dick one by mistake and the result is oddly magnificent 3 Analysis Edit Reviewers have interpreted Ashes to Ashes as commentary on Bowie s own personal struggles with drug addiction throughout the 1970s c Several said the song represents Bowie s reflection and acknowledgement of the past at the same time offering hopes for the future 11 16 18 Bowie himself said the Scary Monsters album was an attempt to accommodate his pasts as you have to understand why you went through them 5 The lyrics describe Major Tom as a junkie who has hit an all time low NME editors Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray interpreted the line as a play on the title of Bowie s 1977 album Low which charted his withdrawal inwards following his drug excesses in the US a short time before another reversal of Major Tom s original withdrawal outwards or towards space 17 Biographer David Buckley argues that Bowie offered a comment on his entire career using a rather sarcastic piece of self deprecation with the line I ve never done good things I ve never done bad things I never did anything out of the blue 1 Bowie himself said that these three lines represent a continuing returning feeling of inadequacy over what I ve done 10 On the artist s future Buckley interprets the axe line as his desire to move into less experimental territory and more normalised ground 1 Years later Bowie said I was wrapping up the seventies really for myself and that seemed a good enough epitaph for it that we ve lost him he s out there somewhere we ll leave him be 5 Heller agreed arguing that it provided closure for the artist s most momentous decade 9 Release Edit Ashes to Ashes was released in edited form as the lead single from Scary Monsters on 1 August 1980 3 19 with the catalogue number RCA BOW 6 and the Lodger track Move On as the B side 20 RCA emphasised the relationship of Space Oddity and Ashes to Ashes by releasing a nine minute promo on 12 vinyl in the US titled The Continuing Story of Major Tom which segued the former into the latter 9 5 19 The British single came in three different picture sleeves each packaged with four different sheets of adhesive stamps all featuring Bowie in his Pierrot costume from the music video Pegg says this was RCA adopting the craze for limited edition collectables that pervaded the 7 single market at the time 5 On Scary Monsters released on 12 September 3 Ashes to Ashes was sequenced in its full length form as the fourth track on side one of the original LP between the title track and Fashion 2 Commercial performance Edit After years of dwindling commercial fortunes Ashes to Ashes was a return to commercial form for Bowie 3 Debuting at No 4 on the UK Singles Chart the single secured the top spot from ABBA s The Winner Takes It All a week later following the music video s broadcast on Top of the Pops It became Bowie s fastest selling single up to that point and his second number one single following the 1975 reissue of Space Oddity 5 3 1 19 Compared to the single s strong UK performance the US release fared worse With It s No Game No 1 as the B side the US single reached No 79 on the Cash Box Top 100 chart and No 101 on the Billboard Bubbling Under the Hot 100 chart 21 Elsewhere Ashes to Ashes charted at No 3 in Australia and Norway 22 23 4 in Ireland 24 6 in Austria New Zealand and Sweden 25 26 27 9 in West Germany 28 11 in the Netherlands Dutch Top 40 and in Switzerland 29 30 15 in Belgium Flanders and the Netherlands Dutch Single Top 100 31 32 and 35 in Canada 33 The song also reached No 14 in France in 2016 34 Critical reception Edit Ashes to Ashes initially received mixed reviews from music critics Amongst positive reviews a writer for Billboard magazine said the song combines rock and dance beats with tight rock rhythms lay ing the groundwork for the nuance rich melody 35 In their reviews of the Scary Monsters album Billboard and The Spokesman Review s Tom Sowa highlighted Ashes to Ashes as one of its best tracks 36 37 On the other hand Deanne Pearson called the song a strange choice for a single in Smash Hits one that was ultimately not a hit and should have been left as an album track 38 Rolling Stone s Debra Rae Cohen described the song as Bowie s most explicit self indictment and one that mirrors the malaise of the times Although Cohen found the track s imagery chilling she ultimately felt it was hard to see it as anything but perverse self aggrandizement 39 Ronnie Gurr of Record Mirror was negative finding the song not in truth a great effort 40 The magazine ranked it the second best single of 1980 behind Going Underground by the Jam 41 while NME ranked the song the fifth best single of the year 42 Music video Edit The music video was partly filmed at Beachy Head pictured in 2011 The music video for Ashes to Ashes was co directed by Bowie and David Mallet 43 who had previously directed the videos for Lodger 1979 44 Filmed at a cost of 250 000 d 45 it was the most expensive music video ever made at the time and has remained one of the most expensive of all time 1 Shot in May 1980 over a period of three days e Bowie storyboarded the video himself planning every shot and dictating the editing process 5 46 Mallet used the new Paintbox computer programme to alter the colour palette rendering the sky black and the ocean pink 5 9 Writer Michael Shore described Mallet s direction as deliberately overloaded demented horror movie camera angles heavy solarisations neurotic cuts from supersaturated colour to black and white 44 The video utilised multiple locations including at Beachy Head and Hastings 5 Shooting at the beach was Mallet s idea he later said It is one of the very rare places you can get right down to the water and there s a cliff towering over you 46 The crew found an abandoned bulldozer on the beach and were able to contact its owners and employ the vehicle for the shoot 46 Meanwhile the padded cell and exploded kitchen sets were developed from the Kenny Everett Show performance of Space Oddity also shot by Mallet the year prior 5 47 Similar to Bowie s other music videos Ashes to Ashes does not tell a story instead being filled with strange images that Buckley compares to a dreamlike mental state 44 Discussing the connections between the different locations Shore states the stunningly elegant self referential video within video motif wherein each new sequence is introduced by Bowie holding a postcard sized video screen displaying the first shot of the next scene 44 In the video Bowie portrays three different characters a clown astronaut and asylum inmate all of whom represent variations of the song s outsider theme f His four followers donning black clerical robes 46 were members of London s Blitz a Bowie worshipping nightclub that housed several up and coming artists of the New Romantic era including Steve Strange a future member of Visage g 5 44 Strange later told biographer Marc Spitz that his robe kept getting caught in the bulldozer That s why I kept doing that move where I pull my arm down So I wouldn t be crushed h 46 Strange s friend Richard Sharah did Bowie s make up for both the video and the Scary Monsters photo shoot the previous month while his Italian Pierrot costume was designed by Natasha Korniloff whose affiliation with the singer dated back to his days as a mime with Lindsay Kemp in 1968 5 4 The elderly woman who appears at the video s end acting as Bowie s mother was not according to popular belief his actual mother i 5 44 It conveyed some feeling of nostalgia for a future I ve always been hung up on that it creeps into everything I do however far away I try to get from it The idea of having seen the future of somewhere we ve already been keeps coming back to me 5 David Bowie on the video as a whole In his book Strange Fascination Buckley states that the video conveys an Edwardian queasiness depicting a world of nostalgia childhood reminiscence and distant memories 44 Pegg and Buckley interpret that Bowie s three characters archetypes that had permeated his songwriting for a decade act as an exorcism of his past 5 44 Bowie himself described the shot of him and his followers walking up the shoreline while the bulldozer trails behind them as symbolising oncoming violence 46 48 He also said the followers have religious undertones an ominous quality that s rooted quite deeply 5 Scenes of the singer in a space suit which suggested a hospital life support system and others showing him locked in what appeared to be a padded room referred to both Major Tom and to Bowie s new rueful interpretation of him 5 44 The former scenes were intentionally derived from H R Giger s designs for the 1979 film Alien 5 Live performances EditBowie only performed Ashes to Ashes once in 1980 on 3 September for an appearance on NBC s The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson In subsequent decades Bowie performed the song on the 1983 Serious Moonlight 1990 Sound Vision 1999 Hours 2002 Heathen and 2003 2004 A Reality tours 5 A Serious Moonlight performance recorded on 12 September 1983 was included on the live album Serious Moonlight Live 83 released as part of the Loving the Alien 1983 1988 box set in 2018 and separately the following year 49 The filmed performance also appears on the concert video Serious Moonlight 1984 50 Bowie s 25 June 2000 performance of the song at the Glastonbury Festival was released in 2018 on Glastonbury 2000 51 while a recording from a special performance at the BBC Radio Theatre London on 27 June 2000 was released on the bonus disc of Bowie at the Beeb 52 53 Another live recording from the A Reality Tour recorded in Dublin in November 2003 is included on the accompanying DVD and live album 54 55 Although O Leary believes no live performances ever came close to matching the studio recording in quality 3 Pegg believes Ashes to Ashes made successful transitions to the stage 5 Influence and legacy EditIt s certainly one of the better songs that I ve ever written 5 David Bowie 1999 In later decades reviewers and biographers consider Ashes to Ashes one of Bowie s best songs 5 Praise is given to its musicality and unique structure 1 16 56 Biographer Paul Trynka in particular attributes the song s success to its melodic inventiveness 4 Regarding its structure O Leary says the track seems built by a surrealist watchmaker due to the details present in the mix deeming it one of Bowie s finest studio recordings 3 Writing for Consequence of Sound Nina Corcoran stated the song makes the most of Bowie s musical creativity and overall represents an ode to the 70s 56 American Songwriter s Jim Beviglia called the song a dark masterpiece 15 Rhino Entertainment argued the song predicted the subsequent decade with its ominous clash of synthesized guitars hard funk bassline and dissonant guitars 57 Some critics analysed the song against Bowie s entire career O Leary opines that while his career was far from over when the song was released Ashes to Ashes is his last song or the closing chapter that comes midway through the book He concludes Bowie sings himself onstage with a children s rhyme eternally falling eternally young 3 The Guardian s Alexis Petridis said the song represents a moment in his catalogue where the correct response is to stand back and boggle in awe because everything about it its lingering oddness of its sound its constantly shifting melody and emotional tenor its alternately self mythologising and self doubting lyrics is perfect 58 Chris Gerard of PopMatters even considered the track one of Bowie s signature songs 59 Artists who have covered Ashes to Ashes live or in studio include Tears for Fears for the 1992 Ruby Trax charity album Uwe Schmidt Northern Kings the Shins the Mike Flowers Pops and John Wesley Harding 5 Songs that used musical elements or lyrics from Ashes to Ashes include Marilyn Manson s Apple of Sodom 1997 Landscape s Einstein a Go Go 1981 and Keane s Better Than This 2008 5 Songs that directly sampled Ashes to Ashes include Samantha Mumba s UK top five hit Body II Body 2000 and James Murphy s remix of Bowie s 2013 single Love Is Lost 60 5 The song s namesake was also used for the 2008 BBC sequel series of their popular time travelling crime drama Life on Mars 5 61 which itself took its name from another Bowie song 62 The music video has also received praise and recognition as a major influence on the then rising New Romantic movement 5 Initially voted by Record Mirror s readers as the best music video of 1980 together with Fashion 41 Rolling Stone placed it at number 44 in their list of the 100 best music videos of all time in 2021 Discussing the video s influence upon its release Andy Greene wrote MTV came onto the airwaves exactly one year later and it would give rise to a whole new generation of Bowie imitators but none of them could compete with the real deal 45 Dig website also included the visual in their list of 20 essential clips of the 1980s Luke Edwards argued that the video truly captured the spirit of the MTV age before the channel s golden era 13 Commentators hail the video as not only one of Bowie s finest but one of the medium s high points 1 46 Considered the defining early music video by Buckley and one of the most significant and influential of the age by Dave Thompson 44 19 its techniques and effects influenced videos of artists including Adam Ant Duran Duran and the Cure 5 Pegg argues the visual define d rock video for the early 1980s 5 while Heller contended it proved music videos were viable promotional investments 9 Videos that later mimicked or took appropriation from the Ashes to Ashes video included Peter Gabriel s Shock the Monkey 1982 Erasure s Chorus 1991 and Marilyn Manson s The Dope Show 1998 5 Ashes to Ashes in both its single edit and full length forms has made appearances on compilation albums The single edit is included on Changestwobowie 1981 63 Best of Bowie 2002 64 The Platinum Collection 2006 65 Nothing Has Changed 2014 and Legacy The Very Best of David Bowie 2016 66 67 while the album version is included on the Sound Vision box set 1989 68 Changesbowie 1990 and The Singles Collection 1993 69 70 The single edit was also included on Re Call 3 part of the A New Career in a New Town 1977 1982 compilation in 2017 71 An unreleased extended version allegedly 13 minutes long and featuring additional verses a longer fade out and a synthesiser solo is rumoured to exist although a 12 minute version that appeared on bootlegs was fake simply repeating and splicing the verses 5 19 In 2020 Visconti said that no additional verses were recorded nor is he aware of any other versions of the song existing 72 Following Bowie s death in January 2016 Rolling Stone named Ashes to Ashes one of the 30 most essential songs of the artist s catalogue The magazine wrote As offbeat as the song was it s a testament to Bowie s art pop genius that Ashes to Ashes became a huge international hit 73 The song has appeared on lists of Bowie s greatest songs by The Telegraph 74 The Guardian No 2 behind Sound and Vision 1977 58 Digital Spy No 3 75 Far Out and Uncut No 6 76 77 Smooth Radio No 7 78 NME No 9 79 Mojo No 10 and Consequence of Sound No 30 56 80 In 2016 Ultimate Classic Rock placed the single at number 10 in a list ranking every Bowie single from worst to best in 2016 81 Two years later NME readers voted it Bowie s third best track behind All the Young Dudes 1972 and Life on Mars 1971 82 Personnel EditAccording to Chris O Leary 3 David Bowie lead and backing vocal Chuck Hammer Roland GR 500 guitar synthesiser Carlos Alomar rhythm guitar Andy Clark Minimoog Yamaha CS 80 synthesiser Roy Bittan flanged piano George Murray bass Dennis Davis drums Tony Visconti shaker other percussionTechnical David Bowie producer Tony Visconti producer engineer Larry Alexander engineer Jeff Hendrickson engineerCharts EditWeekly charts Edit 1980 1981 chart performance for Ashes to Ashes Chart 1980 1981 PeakpositionAustralia Kent Music Report 83 22 3Austria O3 Austria Top 40 25 6Belgium Ultratop 50 Flanders 31 15Canada Top Singles RPM 33 35Ireland IRMA 24 4Netherlands Dutch Top 40 29 11Netherlands Single Top 100 32 15New Zealand Recorded Music NZ 26 6Norway VG lista 23 3Sweden Sverigetopplistan 27 6Switzerland Schweizer Hitparade 30 11UK Singles OCC 84 1US Bubbling Under Hot 100 Billboard 21 101US Disco Top 100 Billboard 85 21US Cash Box Top 100 Singles 21 79West Germany Official German Charts 28 92016 chart performance for Ashes to Ashes Chart 2016 PeakpositionFrance SNEP 34 14Year end charts Edit Year end chart performance for Ashes to Ashes Chart 1980 PositionAustralia Kent Music Report 83 25Notes Edit King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp who contributed guitar to the rest of Scary Monsters does not appear on Ashes to Ashes The line about an axe breaking ice was a paraphrased manifesto from a letter by Franz Kafka that read A book must be an ice axe to break the frozen seas inside us 11 Attributed to multiple references 3 5 11 1 18 In The Complete David Bowie Pegg lists the cost as 25 000 5 Mallet recalled the norm for a video at the time was one day 43 According to Buckley the Pierrot figure was based on a commedia dell arte Renaissance costume 44 The three others including Judith Garland and Darla Jane Gilroy 43 45 were handpicked by Strange Blitz regular Marilyn and Bowie fan George O Dowd later famous as Boy George were passed over for appearances Bowie liked the move and incorporated it into the videos for his next single Fashion Loving the Alien 1984 and Dancing in the Street 1985 5 The elderly woman some interpreted as a response to the 1975 NME interview with Bowie s mother Peggy Jones which revealed embarrassing personal details between her and the artist Bowie had repaired his relationship with his mother in the years following the article s publication and before recording Ashes to Ashes References Edit a b c d e f g h Buckley 2005 pp 316 317 a b c d Pegg 2016 pp 397 401 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x O Leary 2019 chap 4 a b c d e Trynka 2011 pp 354 355 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao Pegg 2016 pp 27 30 a b c Welch 1999 p 136 Lindsay Matthew 7 September 2021 Making David Bowie Scary Monsters And Super Creeps Classic Pop Archived from the original on 20 December 2022 Retrieved 20 December 2022 Buckley 2005 pp 314 316 a b c d e f g h i j k Heller Jason 6 October 2017 How Ashes To Ashes Put The First Act of David Bowie s Career to Rest NPR Archived from the original on 14 November 2022 Retrieved 14 November 2022 a b c d e MacKinnon Angus 13 September 1980 The Future Isn t What It Used to Be NME pp 31 37 Archived from the original on 21 June 2022 Retrieved 18 November 2022 via bowiegoldenyears com a b c d e Doggett 2012 pp 372 374 Lynch Joe 11 January 2016 10 Brilliantly Bizarre David Bowie Videos Billboard Archived from the original on 3 August 2016 Retrieved 6 August 2016 a b Edwards Luke 11 November 2022 Best 80s Music Videos 20 Essential Clips From MTV s Golden Era Dig Archived from the original on 13 November 2022 Retrieved 14 November 2022 Comer M Tye 15 May 2000 Pop Artificielle LB CMJ New Music Report CMJ 62 666 20 Archived from the original on 15 January 2023 Retrieved 24 October 2020 a b c d e Beviglia Jim 2020 Behind the Song David Bowie Ashes to Ashes American Songwriter Archived from the original on 14 November 2022 Retrieved 14 November 2022 a b c d e Perone 2007 pp 81 82 a b Carr amp Murray 1981 pp 109 116 a b Leas Ryan 11 September 2020 David Bowie s Scary Monsters at 40 The Hidden Classic of His Career Stereogum Archived from the original on 23 November 2020 Retrieved 12 December 2020 a b c d e Thompson Dave Ashes to Ashes David Bowie AllMusic Archived from the original on 29 September 2022 Retrieved 15 November 2022 O Leary 2019 Partial Discography a b c Whitburn 2015 p 57 a b Smith Danyel ed 1980 Billboard 25 october 1980 Billboard Nielsen Business Media Inc ISSN 0006 2510 Archived from the original on 15 January 2023 Retrieved 24 June 2013 a b David Bowie Ashes To Ashes VG lista Retrieved 13 May 2022 a b Ashes to ashes in Irish Chart IRMA Archived from the original on 9 June 2009 Retrieved 24 June 2013 3rd result when searching Ashes to ashes a b David Bowie Ashes To Ashes in German O3 Austria Top 40 Retrieved 13 May 2022 a b David Bowie Ashes To Ashes Top 40 Singles Retrieved 13 May 2022 a b David Bowie Ashes To Ashes Singles Top 100 Retrieved 13 May 2022 a b Offiziellecharts de David Bowie Ashes To Ashes GfK Entertainment charts Retrieved 13 February 2019 a b Nederlandse Top 40 David Bowie in Dutch Dutch Top 40 Retrieved 13 May 2022 a b David Bowie Ashes To Ashes Swiss Singles Chart Retrieved 13 May 2022 a b David Bowie Ashes To Ashes in Dutch Ultratop 50 Retrieved 13 May 2022 a b David Bowie Ashes To Ashes in Dutch Single Top 100 Retrieved 13 May 2022 a b Top RPM Singles Issue 0274 RPM Library and Archives Canada Retrieved 19 November 2022 a b David Bowie Ashes To Ashes in French Les classement single Retrieved 28 September 2020 Top Single Picks PDF Billboard 13 September 1980 p 70 Archived PDF from the original on 6 August 2020 Retrieved 8 July 2020 via worldradiohistory com Top Album Picks PDF Billboard 20 September 1980 p 70 Archived PDF from the original on 7 August 2020 Retrieved 12 December 2020 via worldradiohistory com Sowa Tom 31 October 1980 David Bowie Scary Monsters RCA AQLI 3647 The Spokesman Review p 53 Archived from the original on 16 November 2022 Retrieved 15 November 2022 via Newspapers com subscription required Pearson Deanne 7 August 1980 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978 0 75351 002 5 Carr Roy Murray Charles Shaar 1981 Bowie An Illustrated Record London Eel Pie Publishing ISBN 978 0 38077 966 6 Doggett Peter 2012 The Man Who Sold the World David Bowie and the 1970s New York City HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 978 0 06 202466 4 Jones Dylan 2017 David Bowie A Life New York City Random House ISBN 978 0 45149 783 3 O Leary Chris 2019 Ashes to Ashes The Songs of David Bowie 1976 2018 London Repeater ISBN 978 1 91224 830 8 Pegg Nicholas 2016 The Complete David Bowie Revised and Updated ed London Titan Books ISBN 978 1 78565 365 0 Perone James E 2007 The Words and Music of David Bowie Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 27599 245 3 Archived from the original on 15 January 2023 Retrieved 18 November 2022 Spitz Marc 2009 Bowie A Biography New York City Crown Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 307 71699 6 Trynka Paul 2011 David Bowie Starman The Definitive Biography New York City Little Brown and Company ISBN 978 0 31603 225 4 Welch Chris 1999 David Bowie We Could Be Heroes The Stories Behind Every David Bowie Song Boston Da Capo Press ISBN 978 1 56025 209 2 Whitburn Joel 2015 The Comparison Book Menonomee Falls Wisconsin Record Research Inc ISBN 978 0 89820 213 7 1980s portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ashes to Ashes David Bowie song amp oldid 1136983711, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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