fbpx
Wikipedia

"Heroes" (David Bowie song)

"'Heroes'"[a] is a song by the English musician David Bowie from his 12th studio album of the same name. Co-written by Bowie and Brian Eno and co-produced by Bowie and Tony Visconti, the song was recorded in mid-1977 at Hansa Studio 2 in West Berlin. Using a GD chord progression, the backing track was recorded fully before lyrics were written; Bowie and Eno added synthesiser overdubs while Robert Fripp contributed guitar. To record the vocal, Visconti devised a "multi-latch" system, wherein three microphones were placed at different distances from Bowie and would open when he sang loud enough. Like other album tracks, he improvised lyrics while standing at the microphone.

"'Heroes'"
One of the A-side labels for the UK vinyl single
Single by David Bowie
from the album "Heroes"
B-side"V-2 Schneider"
Released23 September 1977 (1977-09-23)
RecordedJuly–August 1977
StudioHansa (West Berlin)
GenreArt rock
Length
  • 6:07 (album)
  • 3:32 (single)
LabelRCA
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
David Bowie singles chronology
"Be My Wife"
(1977)
"'Heroes'"
(1977)
"Beauty and the Beast"
(1978)
Music video
"'Heroes'" on YouTube

An art rock song that builds throughout its run time, "'Heroes'" concerns two lovers, one from East Berlin and the other from the West. Under constant fear of death, they dream they are free, swimming with dolphins. Bowie placed the title in quotation marks as an expression of irony on the otherwise romantic or triumphant words and music. Directly inspired by Bowie witnessing a kiss between Visconti and singer Antonia Maass next to the Berlin Wall, other inspirations included a painting by Otto Mueller and a short story by Alberto Denti di Pirajno.

Released in edited form by RCA Records on 23 September 1977 as the album's lead single, initial reviews for the song were mostly positive, with some welcoming it as a classic addition to the artist's catalogue. Bowie heavily promoted the song with a music video and sang it on numerous television programmes, including Marc Bolan's Marc and Bing Crosby's Christmas special. Bowie also released German and French-language versions of "'Heroes'", titled "'Helden'" and "'Héros'", respectively. Despite its large promotion, the song only peaked at number 24 on the UK Singles Chart and failed to chart at all on the US Billboard Hot 100, but reached the top 20 in multiple European countries and Australia.

Over time, the song has grown substantially in reputation and been seen as one of Bowie's best songs, with some considering it one of the greatest songs of all time. His biographers pan the single edit for diminishing the song's power. Following Bowie's death in 2016, the song reached a new peak of number 12 in the UK. The song remained a staple throughout his concert tours and live performances. Bowie's second-most covered song after 1974's "Rebel Rebel", a version of "'Heroes'" by the Wallflowers was positively received and charted in the US and Canada in 1998. Another version by the finalists of The X Factor was a UK number one in 2010. The song has also been used predominantly in advertising over the years and has appeared in several television series and films.

Writing and recording Edit

Backing track Edit

 
Bowie composed the song with multi-instrumentalist Brian Eno (pictured in 2008), who had the word heroes in mind for the initial chord sequence.

After completing his work co-producing Iggy Pop's Lust for Life (1977) and various promotional events, David Bowie spent a few weeks devising ideas and concepts with multi-instrumentalist Brian Eno for his next studio album.[1] One idea was using the same GD chord sequence he had used for Pop's "Success".[2][3] Eno wanted to call it "Heroes", as the sequence "sounded grand and heroic", and "I had that very word – heroes – in my mind."[4][5] According to biographer Chris O'Leary, the word also paid reference to German krautrock band Neu!'s "Hero" (1975).[4] Recording for the album took place entirely in West Berlin between July and August 1977 at Hansa Studio 2, a former concert hall converted into a recording studio that had been used by Gestapo officers during World War II as a ballroom and was located about 500 yards from the Berlin Wall. The song was co-produced by Bowie and Tony Visconti, with contributions from Eno.[1][6][7]

The backing track began with Bowie on piano and, returning from Station to Station (1976), the core band of Carlos Alomar on rhythm guitar, George Murray on bass and Dennis Davis on drums.[8] The band used the initial chord progression, creating a groove that built into a crescendo, lasting eight minutes. Alomar devised the underlying riff while Murray and Davis provided the "hypnotic pulse".[9][8] Although he had fed Davis's drums through his Eventide H910 Harmonizer on Low (1977), Visconti used it sparingly on "Heroes", only during the mixing stage, and as such, the drum sound is mostly atmospheric to the room. He ran Murray's bass through a flanger.[4]

According to Visconti, the recording sat for a week before overdubs commenced. Eno brought in his EMS Synthi AKS, a synthesiser built in a briefcase, using its joystick, oscillator knobs and noise filter to create a "shuddering, chattering effect [that] slowly builds up and gets more and more obvious towards the end".[8] Bowie also added Chamberlin and high-pitched lines on his ARP Solina synthesiser.[4] The final addition was former King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp, who was recruited at Eno's suggestion.[7] Receiving little guidance from Bowie, he cut three takes all based on feedback loops.[4][9] For each take, Fripp marked different spots on the studio floor with tape and played a different note in each spot, such as A at four feet from his amp and G at three feet, all while his guitar was fed through Eno's EMS Synthi.[4][8]

When mixing the backing track, Visconti merged Fripp's takes onto one track, creating what he called "a dreamy, wailing quality".[4] He buried Davis's kick drum, finding it "seemed to plod" the track and becoming "more energetic without it", and elevated Murray's bassline, which Alomar augmented on guitar in a higher register.[4][8][10] An intended horn section was replaced with a synthesised brass line by the Chamberlin, while the bassline replaced the originally planned string section. With percussion, Visconti added tambourine and struck an empty tape canister with a drumstick as a placement for a cowbell.[4][10]

Vocals Edit

 
Co-producer Tony Visconti (pictured in 2007) devised the "multi-latch" system used to record the lead vocal and sang backing vocals.

Similar to Low, Bowie neglected to write lyrics until all but he and Visconti had departed.[6] As such, the backing track for "'Heroes'" sat untouched for many weeks and for a time was rumoured it would remain an instrumental.[5][9] On one day, Bowie requested Visconti leave him alone in the studio to focus on writing lyrics.[10] As he stared outside the studio window, he witnessed Visconti and singer Antonia Maass kiss in close proximity to the Berlin Wall, which he used as the basis for the lyric.[11][7] Bowie initially claimed that the lyric was based on an anonymous young couple, but Visconti, who was married to Mary Hopkin at the time, contended that Bowie was protecting him and his affair with Maass. Bowie later confirmed the story in 2003, over two decades after Visconti and Hopkin's eventual divorce: "Tony was married at the time, and I could never say who it was. I think possibly the marriage was in the last few months, and it was very touching because I could see that Tony was very much in love with this girl, and it was that relationship which sort of motivated the song."[5] Additionally, he improvised lyrics while standing at the microphone after witnessing Pop use the same method during the making of The Idiot (1977) and Lust for Life.[2][12]

To record the lead vocal, Visconti devised a "multi-latch" system that would utilise the ambience of Hansa to full effect.[2][13] Three Neumann microphones were used to capture the vocal: the first, a valve U47, was set up nine inches from Bowie; the second, a U87, was set up 20 feet away; and the third, another U87, about 50 feet away. The two farther mics were routed through a noise gate, a volume controlling device that would turn them on as Bowie's voice reached them.[4][5][8][2] Visconti explained: "If he sang a little louder, the next microphone would open up with the gate, and that would make sort of this big splash of reverb, and then if he really sang loud, the back microphone would open up, and it would just open up this enormous sound."[5] Bowie recorded three takes, the last of which mostly appears in the final song, and was completed in about two hours. Bowie and Visconti immediately recorded the backing vocals afterwards, harmonising in thirds and fifths below the lead vocal.[5][4] The final mix was done at Mountain Studios in Montreux, Switzerland, a studio that would become one of Bowie's mainstays. An engineer at Mountain, David Richards, would also become one of his regulars.[6]

Composition Edit

Music Edit

 
The song features soaring guitar lines from Robert Fripp (pictured in 2007).

"'Heroes'" was based on a G–D chord progression and contains five verses, some longer than others, and an outro.[2][3][4] Primarily in D major, the verses move from D to G major, along with C major on "nothing will keep us together" and a foray into A minor and E minor on "beat them" and "forever". The song is mainly in the D mixolydian mode, wherein the A major dominant chord is replaced with A minor, swapping from the parallel minor D minor back to the tonic D major.[4]

Richard Buskin of Sound on Sound described the song as a "highly experimental piece of art rock".[8] Biographer David Buckley likens it to a Wall of Sound production, a forceful and noisy arrangement of guitars, percussion and synthesisers.[14] Meanwhile, author James E. Perone finds the song a "great example of contemporary pop music", balancing early-1970s progressive rock on the synthesisers to the "avant-garde tone color manipulations" from Eno.[15] According to Bowie, the track was "a combination of Brian's piano technique and [mine] which are both dastardly", turning into a reworking of the Velvet Underground's "I'm Waiting for the Man" (1967), a song long admired by the artist.[4]

Lyrics Edit

"'Heroes'" tells the story of two lovers, one from East Berlin and one from West Berlin. Under constant risk of death, they dream of freedom, swimming with dolphins.[11] Like fellow album tracks "Beauty and the Beast" and "Joe the Lion", the song, at its core, represents two opposing forces: the couple's love for each other, and a sense that the Berlin Wall will separate them.[15] Blurt magazine's Robert Dean Lurie analyses it as a "clear nod" to the divided city of Berlin Bowie lived in at the time.[16] The first verse is from the point of view of the man who stresses unity, while the second describes the couple's explicit love and affection for each other. Perone contends that the instrumental passages separating the third verse, wherein the narrator wishes his lover could "swim like the dolphins", represents a transition in the story.[15] The fourth verse is a reiteration of the first, albeit Bowie sings an octave higher and in a near-scream. In the fifth and final verse, the narrator recalls standing and kissing by the Wall while guards fired bullets above their heads. Perone states that this moment captures the sense the narrator's love can "overcome anything" and, as dolphins can freely swim as they wish, the proclamation that "we can be heroes" "gets well beyond anything the listener might have anticipated at the start of the piece".[15]

Nicholas Pegg and Thomas Jerome Seabrook argue that "'Heroes'" is not the "feelgood anthem" it is often interpreted as.[5][10] According to Bowie, the quotation marks in the title were intended to express "a dimension of irony" on the otherwise romantic or triumphant words and music.[5][17][18] Describing the song, he stated it is about "facing reality and standing up to it", about achieving "a sense of compassion" and "deriving some joy from the very simple pleasure of being alive".[5] Likewise, Pegg contests the song contains underlying dark themes that juxtapose its uplifting chord sequence and delirious vocal, such as "you can be mean, and I'll drink all the time", which is "hardly the most promisingly heroic statement", while the repeated announcement of "nothing will keep us together" asserts that time is short. Additionally, the pronouncement that the narrator wants the relationship to last "just for one day" harkens back to the dark lyrics of "The Bewlay Brothers" (1971) and represents a shift from the Nietzschean "supermen" themes of Bowie's earlier works into the realm of heroism.[5][10] Regarding the themes, Lurie stated:[16]

"'Heroes'" is more akin to alchemy: We may be average and regular in the present moment, but we have the potential, at any time, for heroic thought and action – even if only for one day. The transformation can be brought about by an external event or through an internal change in perspective.

Although Bowie confirmed that the kiss between Visconti and Maass directly inspired the lyric, another source of inspiration included Otto Mueller's 1916 painting Lovers Between Garden Walls, which Bowie and Pop saw at Berlin's Brücke Museum. The painting depicts an embracing couple between two walls representing the brutality of World War I.[5] Bowie also revealed in the foreword of his wife Iman's 2001 book I Am Iman that Alberto Denti di Pirajno's 1956 short story A Grave for a Dolphin, which concerns a doomed love affair between an Italian soldier and a Somalian girl during World War II, provided inspiration.[5][10] According to Pegg, the destiny of the story's female protagonist is linked with that of a dolphin she swims with, and when she dies, so does the dolphin. Bowie further explained: "I thought it a magical and beautiful love story and in part it had inspired my song 'Heroes'."[5][10]

Bowie is also recounted to have used events in his own life for the lyrics, such as his then-marital issues, alcoholism and his inability to swim ("I wish I could swim").[b][5][10] Furthermore, O'Leary notes that the phrase "I will be king, you will be queen" is taken directly from the traditional English folk song "Lavender's Blue".[c][4] In the late 2010s, a story on the Italian Bowie website Blackstar revealed that artist Clare Shenstone, who Bowie met in 1969, had visited him during the summer he recorded "'Heroes'". The two spent a day walking along the Wall, which started, in her words, "with David asking me if I dreamed about him because he dreamed about me. I told him I had just had a beautiful dream about swimming with dolphins."[4]

Promotion and release Edit

 
 
To promote "'Heroes'", Bowie appeared on television programmes hosted by Marc Bolan (left, in 1973) and Bing Crosby (right, in 1951)

After undertaking zero promotional events for Low, Bowie promoted "Heroes" extensively.[6] In early September 1977, he agreed to perform the title track on Marc Bolan's Granada Television series Marc, which was recorded on 9 September and broadcast on 28 September,[19][20] following Bolan's death from a car accident on 16 September.[19] This particular version, released as a 7" picture disc on 22 September 2017,[20] has an alternative backing track that was recorded with Bolan playing lead guitar and the T. Rex line up of Dino Dines on keyboards, and the rhythm section of Herbie Flowers on bass and Tony Newman on drums,[21] both of whom had played with Bowie on his 1974 album Diamond Dogs and its accompanying tour.[22] Two days after filming the Marc appearance, Bowie appeared on Bing Crosby's Christmas television special Bing Crosby's Merrie Olde Christmas, performing "'Heroes'" and a new duet with Crosby titled "Peace on Earth/Little Drummer Boy". Crosby died on 14 October before the special's broadcast on Christmas Eve 1977.[23] Bowie later quipped: "I was getting seriously worried about whether I should appear on TV because everyone I was going on with was kicking it the following week."[23] On 19 October, Bowie appeared on BBC's Top of the Pops for the first time since 1973,[14] performing "'Heroes'" using a new backing track featuring Visconti on bass and Sean Mayes on keyboards. Bowie sang live over the backing track with none of the band present.[24] He sang the song again on the Dutch programme TopPop and the Italian programmes Odeon and L'altra domenica later the same month.[5]

RCA issued "'Heroes'" in edited form as the lead single from the album on 23 September 1977, with the catalogue PB 11121 and backed by album track "V-2 Schneider".[4] Its shortened 3:32 edit was made in the hopes of more airplay.[5] A 12" promotional single, containing both the single and album versions, was released in the US by RCA (as JD-11151) the same year.[25][26] On the "Heroes" album, issued on 14 October,[4] the song was sequenced as the third track, between "Joe the Lion" and "Sons of the Silent Age".[27]

The song's promotional music video was directed by Stanley Dorfman.[28][29][30][31] Shot in Paris, it features numerous shots of Bowie in a dark room against a backdrop of white light and wearing the same bomber-jacket he wore on the "Heroes" cover artwork. Pegg believes the final result is similar to Liza Minnelli's performance of "Maybe This Time" in the Berlin-based 1972 film Cabaret.[5]

In a stunt Pegg describes as confirming the artist's "newfound European allegiances", Bowie recorded special vocals for the track in both German and French,[5] with lyrics translated by Maass for the German release.[32] These singles, titled "'Helden'" and "'Héros'", respectively, were issued in their respective countries in September.[25] Additionally, for the album releases in Germany and France, the special vocals were grafted onto the full-length tracks, following the opening English verses.[33] The single's release in a variety of languages and lengths achieved what NME editors Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray called "a collector's wet dream".[17] Despite a large promotional push, "'Heroes'" only reached number 24 on the UK Singles Chart, remaining on the chart for eight weeks, and failing to chart at all on the US Billboard Hot 100,[2][32] albeit reaching a low number 126 on Record World's Singles Chart 101–150.[34] Elsewhere, it charted in Australia (11),[35] Austria (19),[36] Belgium Flanders (17),[37] Ireland (8),[38] the Netherlands (9) and New Zealand (34).[39][40]

"'Heroes'" has subsequently appeared, almost invariably as the single edit, on numerous compilation albums, including The Best of Bowie (1980),[41] Changesbowie (1990),[42] The Singles Collection (1993),[43] The Best of David Bowie 1974/1979 (1998),[44] Best of Bowie (2002),[45] The Platinum Collection (2006),[46] Nothing Has Changed (2014), and Bowie Legacy (2016).[47][48] The full album track was remastered with its parent album for inclusion on the 2017 box set A New Career in a New Town (1977–1982). The single edit was included on Re:Call 3, part of that box set, while the German single, French single, English-German full-length, and English-French full-length versions were included on an EP in the same set.[49] Additionally, the English-German version of the song appeared on the soundtrack to the film Christiane F. (1981) and on the Rare album in 1982,[5] while the German single version appeared on Sound + Vision (1989).[50]

Critical reception Edit

Initial reviews for "'Heroes'" were mostly positive. Like Low's "Sound and Vision", some viewed it as the album's most commercial track.[51][52] Several welcomed the song as a classic addition to Bowie's catalogue.[51][53] Record Mirror's Tim Lott deemed it "regal" and a "shocking dream[ingly] powerful" song that stands out as the album's best. He found the lyrics are "in a sense throwaway" but display "simple heroism": "Brick by synthesised brick it builds into a leviathan, a monster track that sucks you in and spews you out grinning ..."[51] Kris Needs of ZigZag magazine also considered the song a "monster" track with its end result being "magic".[52] Ira Robbins went further in Crawdaddy magazine, hailing the song as Bowie's best commitment to plastic in three years, praising the instrumentation and vocal performance, and highlighted Eno's contributions among the track's best features.[53]

In the Los Angeles Times, Robert Hilburn wrote that despite the dreariness of "Heroes" as a whole, the title track contains "compassion and some fleeting hope".[54] A reviewer for Billboard deemed the song one of the album's best tracks.[55] Writing in Hit Parader, American musician and author Patti Smith praised "'Heroes'" as a "pure" and "wonderful" track that "exposes us to our most precious and private dilemma". She predicted that it would become the "theme song for every great movie" and would be "made remade or yet to come".[56] Charlie Gillett gave the single a mixed review in the NME, saying: "Well he had a pretty good run for our money, for a guy who was no singer. But I think his time has been and gone, and this just sounds weary. Then again, maybe the ponderous heavy riff will be absorbed on the radio, and the monotonous feel may just be hypnotic enough to drag people into buying it. I hope not."[57] The magazine placed it at number six in their list of the year's best singles.[58]

Retrospective appraisal Edit

This is a strange phenomenon that happens with my songs Stateside. Many of the crowd favourites were never radio or chart hits, and "'Heroes'" tops them all.[5]

—David Bowie on the song's later success, 2003

"'Heroes'" has greatly grown in stature in the decades following its release.[59] Pegg and O'Leary note that it was not until Bowie's performance of the song at Live Aid in 1985 did it become recognised as a classic.[4][5] Buckley describes this rendition as "the best version of 'Heroes' [Bowie] had ever sung".[60] Reviewing the song for AllMusic, Ned Raggett described it as arguably Bowie's finest song and a "true classic", writing that with Eno, Fripp and Visconti, Bowie crafted an anthem embellished with German influences while still using the "dramatic power" of rock and roll. Analysing his vocal, he wrote: "Starting with an almost conversational tone, by the end of the song he's turning in a performance that could almost be called operatic, yet still achingly, passionately human."[61]

Pitchfork's Ryan Dombal described "'Heroes'" as "an immortal track all about fleeting wonders",[62] while Ultimate Classic Rock's Allison Rapp found that over time, the track become "one of rock's most-loved anthems of hope".[63] In a list ranking every Bowie single from worst to best, the same publication placed it at number one.[64] In Consequence of Sound, Lior Phillips stated that the track "expertly captures the hopeless reality that nothing lasts and that we all must die — and also the inherent beauty in the fact that we all live and love in our time despite that fact".[65] Moby has said that "'Heroes'" is one of his favourite songs ever written, finding it "inevitable" that his music would be influenced by the song,[66] while Depeche Mode's lead singer Dave Gahan was hired into the band when founder Vince Clarke heard him singing it at a jam session.[67]

Like critics, Bowie's biographers praise "'Heroes'" as a classic and one of Bowie's best tracks,[d] with author Paul Trynka calling it "his simplest, most affecting and most memorable song".[68] Buckley acknowledges it as Bowie's "most universally admired song" and in 2015,[7] wrote that the song "is perhaps pop's definitive statement of the potential triumph of the human spirit over adversity".[69] O'Leary states that the song is "Bowie at his most empathic and desperate; a wish-chant that offers a tiny regency for the spirit".[4] Despite this, biographers mostly pan the shortened single edit for diminishing the song's power.[e] O'Leary argues that the edit weakens the song as the buildup to the final verses is shortened, noting that Bowie's "heroic" vocal starts roughly two minutes earlier than the full album version.[4] Perone agrees that the edit, which starts at the "dolphins" lyric, destroys the song's pacing, tension and impact, making it "not make as much sense". He expresses further criticism to shortening the single, as other highly successful singles of the rock era, such as the Beatles' "Hey Jude" (1968), were longer than the full-length version of "'Heroes'".[15]

Following Bowie's death in January 2016, Rolling Stone named "'Heroes'" one of the 30 most essential songs of Bowie's catalogue.[70] Likewise, numerous publications have considered the song one of Bowie's finest,[16][71] with NME, Uncut and Smooth Radio labelling it his greatest.[72][73][74] Others including Consequence of Sound, Digital Spy and Mojo, named it his second best, behind "Life on Mars?" (1971).[65][75][76] In 2018, the readers of NME voted the song Bowie's fourth best track.[77] Meanwhile, The Guardian's Alexis Petridis placed it at number five in a list ranking Bowie's 50 greatest songs in 2020. He recognised the track as a "weird, ambiguous song" with an "uplifting-sporting-montage-soundtrack ubiquity" that turns six minutes of "pulsing electronic noise, howling guitars and screamed vocals" into "an all-purpose air-punching anthem".[78]

Accolades Edit

In ensuing decades, "'Heroes'" has appeared on lists of the greatest songs of all time. In a list of the 100 greatest singles of all time, NME placed at number five.[79] In a similar list, Uncut found it the 16th best single from the post-punk era.[80] In 2004, Rolling Stone rated "'Heroes'" number 46 in its list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time,[81] and later moving the song up to number 23 on the 2021 list.[82] NME placed it at number 15 in their similar 2015 list.[83] Included by Time in their 2011 list of the "All-Time 100 Songs",[84] Pitchfork also included the song in The Pitchfork 500, a 2008 guide to the 500 greatest songs from punk to the present.[85] In lists ranking the best songs of the 1970s, NME and Pitchfork listed the song at numbers four and six, respectively.[86][87] The UK's Radio X also ranked it the 12th best song of all time in 2010, and the seventh best British song in 2016.[88][89] In another list, John J. Miller of National Review rated it number 21 on a list of "the 50 greatest conservative rock songs".[90]

Later chart success Edit

Shortly after Bowie's death, the song charted in numerous countries around the world and was also streamed on Spotify more than any other Bowie song.[91] In the UK, it reached a new peak of number 12.[92] The song spent two weeks on Billboard's Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart in the US, peaking at number 11.[93] Its highest positions were number three on Billboard's Euro Digital Song Sales chart, number eight in Scotland and number nine in France.[94][95][96] Elsewhere, "'Heroes'" charted in Austria (14),[97] Italy (17),[98] Switzerland (17),[99] Japan (18),[100] Germany (19),[101] Ireland (29),[102] Portugal (32),[103] New Zealand (34),[104] Australia (36),[105] Sweden (37),[106] the Netherlands (47) and Spain (59).[107][108] In Italy, the song was certified gold by the Federation of the Italian Music Industry.[109] "'Héros'" also peaked at number 37 in France in 2015.[110]

Live performances Edit

"'Heroes'" remained a staple throughout Bowie's concert tours.[5] He later acknowledged the song's impact on live audiences: "In Europe, it is one of the ones that seemed to have special resonance."[2] During the 1978 Isolar II and 1983 Serious Moonlight tours, the song was usually the second number performed rather than among the shows' encores.[5] Performances from the former have seen release on Stage (1978) and Welcome to the Blackout (2018),[111][112] while some from the latter appeared on its 1984 concert video and later on Serious Moonlight (Live '83), released as part of the 2018 box set Loving the Alien (1983–1988),[113] and separately the following year.[114] Following Live Aid, Bowie revived "'Heroes'" for the 1987 Glass Spider Tour, as seen in its accompanying concert video (1988).[115] The performance on 6 June 1987 at the German Reichstag in West Berlin has been considered a catalyst to the later fall of the Berlin Wall.[116][117] The song made subsequent appearances during the 1990 Sound+Vision, 1996–97 Earthling, 2000, 2002 Heathen and 2003–04 A Reality tours.[5] A performance from the A Reality Tour saw release on the accompanying DVD and live album, released in 2004 and 2010, respectively.[118]

Outside his tours, "'Heroes'" was performed at The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert in 1992 by Bowie, his former guitarist Mick Ronson and the surviving members of Queen: Brian May, Roger Taylor, and John Deacon. Bowie played a semi-acoustic version at the 1996 Bridge School benefit concerts; the 20 October rendition later saw release on The Bridge School Concerts Vol. 1 album and The Bridge School Concerts 25th Anniversary Edition DVD.[5] The song was also sung at his 50th birthday concert in January 1997 and the Glastonbury Festival in 2000, which was released in 2018 on Glastonbury 2000.[119] The song was again performed in 2001 at the Tibet House Benefit concert and the Concert for New York City.[5]

Cover versions and tributes Edit

 
A cover version of "'Heroes'" by the Wallflowers (lead singer Jakob Dylan pictured in 2012) charted in the US and Canada in 1998.

"'Heroes'" is cited by Pegg as Bowie's most covered song after "Rebel Rebel" (1974).[5] Artists who have covered the song on stage or in the studio include Oasis,[120] the Smashing Pumpkins, Travis, Arcade Fire and Blondie, whose 1980 live version featured Fripp on guitar.[5] American rock band the Wallflowers recorded a version for the soundtrack to the 1998 monster film Godzilla. This version, released as a single on 21 April 1998,[121] peaked at number 10 on the US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart in 1998, as well as number 27 on the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart and number 23 on the Billboard Mainstream Top 40 chart. In Canada, the single topped the RPM Alternative 30 for six weeks and reached number 13 on the RPM Top Singles chart. British duo Dom and Nic directed the song's music video.[122] The Wallflowers' cover was positively received,[123] with Billboard editor Larry Flick writing that it "beautifully illuminates the heart-tugging quality of the lyrics" but noting the lead singer Jakob Dylan failed to replicate the "irony and edge" of Bowie's version.[124] Artists who have covered "'Helden'" include Apocalyptica and Letzte Instanz.[5] In 1997, American composer Philip Glass adapted the "Heroes" album into a classical music symphony, titled "Heroes" Symphony, utilising the title track as the root for the first movement. The same year, Aphex Twin remixed Bowie's original vocal onto Glass's adaptation for release on a Japanese 3-inch CD single.[5]

At Bowie's own request, TV on the Radio covered "'Heroes'" in 2009 for the charity album War Child Heroes.[5] A year later, Peter Gabriel released a stripped-down version for his covers album Scratch My Back (2010).[5] The same year, the finalists of The X Factor released a version for the Help for Heroes charity, which reached number one on the Irish, Scottish and UK Singles Chart.[125][126][127] Regarding this version, Pegg writes that it introduced "a new generation to David Bowie by subjecting one of his greatest songs to the anodyne arrangements, Eurovision key-changes and sub-Mariah Carey karaoke yodeling which are the core ingredients of The X Factor's ongoing mission to eradicate real music from planet earth".[5]

Following Bowie's death, "'Heroes'" became a favourite at tribute events and was covered by artists such as Coldplay,[128] Blondie, Lady Gaga and Prince, who performed the track regularly shortly before his own death in 2016.[5] On Twitter, the German Foreign Office paid homage to Bowie for "helping to bring down the Wall".[129][130] Depeche Mode subsequently released a cover to commemorate the song's 40th anniversary, with Gahan stating, "Bowie is the one artist who I've stuck with since I was in my early teens. His albums are always my go-to on tour and covering 'Heroes' is paying homage to Bowie."[131] King Crimson, who had added the song to their live set in 2000 when the band boasted former Bowie players Fripp and Adrian Belew,[5] recorded a version for their five-track EP Heroes: Live in Europe 2016.[132] Motörhead also released a version on their 2017 album Under Cöver, which was recorded in 2015 during the recording sessions for Bad Magic, and one of the last songs recorded before Lemmy's death that same year. Guitarist Phil Campbell stated, "It's such a great Bowie song, one of his best, and I could only see great things coming out of it from us, and so it proved to be."[133]

Usage in media Edit

Bowie allowed "'Heroes'" to be used in advertising campaigns throughout his lifetime,[5] from ads for cell phones, cars and softwares, to HBO Latin American programming, musical video games and sporting events.[4] One such event was the opening ceremony of the 2012 Summer Olympics, where it was played as the British team entered the Olympic Stadium.[134] In 2001, the song appeared in three prominent feature films: Antitrust, Moulin Rouge! and The Parole Officer.[5] On television, the song has made appearances in Glee (2012), the US version of The Tomorrow People (2014) and Regular Show (2017),[135] and on soundtrack albums for Heroes and Ninja Assassin (2009).[5] Meanwhile, Gabriel's version was used in two episodes of the Netflix series Stranger Things in 2016 and 2019.[136] Bowie's original was also featured in the film The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012),[137][138] and in the premiere trailer for the Brazilian film Praia do Futuro (2014).[139] Five years later, "'Helden'" was played at the end of Jojo Rabbit.[140]

Personnel Edit

According to biographer Chris O'Leary:[4]

Technical

  • David Bowie – producer
  • Tony Visconti – producer, mixer
  • Colin Thurston – mixer

Charts and certifications Edit

David Bowie version Edit

Weekly charts Edit

Certifications Edit

Sales certifications for "'Heroes'"
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[145]
digital sales since 2011
Gold 45,000
Italy (FIMI)[146]
digital sales since 2009
Gold 25,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[147]
digital sales since 2004
Platinum 600,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

The Wallflowers version Edit

References Edit

Notes

  1. ^ The quotation marks are part of the title. On some single releases, the title does not include the quotes.
  2. ^ Bowie revealed in 1987 that he "can do a couple of lengths of the pool", but in 2000, stated that "I've never swum again. I swam once, it was quite enough for me."[5]
  3. ^ Bowie later incorporated "Lavender's Blue" into performances of "'Heroes'" during the 1983 Serious Moonlight Tour.[5]
  4. ^ Attributed to multiple references:[4][5][10][11][15][32]
  5. ^ Attributed to multiple references:[4][5][10][15][32]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Seabrook 2008, pp. 159–161.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Trynka 2011, pp. 332–334.
  3. ^ a b Doggett 2012, pp. 332–334.
  4. ^ 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 O'Leary 2019, chap. 2.
  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 ap Pegg 2016, pp. 109–113.
  6. ^ a b c d Pegg 2016, pp. 390–391.
  7. ^ a b c d Buckley 2005, pp. 277–280.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Buskin, Richard (October 2004). "Classic Tracks: 'Heroes'". Sound on Sound. from the original on 26 May 2016. Retrieved 17 November 2018.
  9. ^ a b c DeMain, Bill (4 February 2019). "The story behind the song: 'Heroes' by David Bowie". Louder. from the original on 23 April 2022. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Seabrook 2008, pp. 176–179.
  11. ^ a b c Spitz 2009, pp. 286–287.
  12. ^ Seabrook 2008, pp. 81–81.
  13. ^ Hodgson 2010, pp. 88–89.
  14. ^ a b Buckley 1999, pp. 323–326.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Perone 2007, pp. 67–68.
  16. ^ a b c Lurie, Robert Dean (11 July 2018). "Through the (Stained) Looking Glass: David Bowie & the Berlin Trilogy". Blurt. Retrieved 1 May 2022 – via Rock's Backpages (subscription required).
  17. ^ a b Carr & Murray 1981, pp. 90–92.
  18. ^ Matthew-Walker, Robert (1985). David Bowie, theatre of music. Toronto, Ont.: Sound and Vision. p. 46. ISBN 0-920151-08-6. OCLC 15102709. The use of quotation marks possibly implies that the 'Heroes' are not to be taken too seriously.
  19. ^ a b Pegg 2016, pp. 245–246.
  20. ^ a b . David Bowie Official Website. 23 September 2017. Archived from the original on 29 September 2017. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
  21. ^ Campbell 2007, p. 179.
  22. ^ Pegg 2016, pp. 561–562.
  23. ^ a b Pegg 2016, pp. 208–209.
  24. ^ Petridis, Alexis (8 January 2013). "David Bowie: still the man of mystique". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
  25. ^ a b Pegg 2016, p. 781.
  26. ^ Kamp 1985, p. 75.
  27. ^ O'Leary 2019, Partial Discography.
  28. ^ "Thurston Moore To Present Bowie Retrospective At Moma". davidbowie.com. 18 October 2008. from the original on 29 June 2023. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  29. ^ "Breaking down David Bowie's "Heroes" – track by track". BBC. 27 January 2016. from the original on 25 January 2016. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  30. ^ "Thurston Moore to Present Bowie Videos at MOMA". David Bowie Official Website. 18 October 2018. from the original on 25 June 2023. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  31. ^ Riefe, Jordan (11 February 2016). "Music Video Pioneer Stanley Dorfman Recalls Bowie, Sinatra and Lennon". The Hollywood Reporter. from the original on 2 June 2023. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  32. ^ a b c d Buckley 2005, pp. 280–282.
  33. ^ Pegg 2016, p. 111.
  34. ^ a b Whitburn, Joel (2015). The Comparison Book. Menonomee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research Inc. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-89820-213-7.
  35. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. St Ives, NSW: Australian Chart Book. pp. 43–44. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  36. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes" (in German). Ö3 Austria Top 40. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  37. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes" (in Dutch). Ultratop 50. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
  38. ^ a b "The Irish Charts – Search Results – Heroes". Irish Singles Chart. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  39. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes" (in Dutch). Single Top 100. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  40. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes". Top 40 Singles. Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  41. ^ David Bowie (1981). The Best of Bowie (LP record sleeve). Europe: K-tel. BLP 81.001.
  42. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Changesbowie – David Bowie". AllMusic. from the original on 28 July 2019. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
  43. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. . AllMusic. Archived from the original on 1 May 2021. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  44. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "The Best of David Bowie 1974/1979 – David Bowie". AllMusic. Retrieved 18 June 2022.
  45. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Best of Bowie – David Bowie". AllMusic. from the original on 1 April 2019. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
  46. ^ Monger, James Christopher. . AllMusic. Archived from the original on 8 May 2019. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  47. ^ Sawdey, Evan (10 November 2017). "David Bowie: Nothing Has Changed". PopMatters. from the original on 14 July 2017. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
  48. ^ Monroe, Jazz (28 September 2016). . Pitchfork. Archived from the original on 26 September 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  49. ^ . David Bowie Official Website. 22 July 2016. Archived from the original on 28 July 2017. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  50. ^ . David Bowie Official Website. 26 July 2014. Archived from the original on 29 April 2021. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
  51. ^ a b c Lott, Tim (8 October 1977). "David Bowie: Heroes (RCA PL 12622)". Record Mirror. from the original on 10 April 2021. Retrieved 16 March 2021 – via Rock's Backpages (subscription required).
  52. ^ a b Needs, Kris (October 1977). "David Bowie: Heroes". ZigZag. from the original on 21 April 2021. Retrieved 16 March 2021 – via Rock's Backpages (subscription required).
  53. ^ a b Robbins, Ira (January 1978). "David Bowie: Heroes (RCA)". Crawdaddy. Retrieved 1 May 2022 – via Rock's Backpages (subscription required).
  54. ^ Hilburn, Robert (8 November 1977). "Which Way for David Bowie?". Los Angeles Times. p. 70. from the original on 17 August 2021. Retrieved 18 March 2021 – via Newspapers.com (subscription required).
  55. ^ "Top Album Picks" (PDF). Billboard. 29 October 1977. p. 82. (PDF) from the original on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 18 March 2021 – via worldradiohistory.com.
  56. ^ Smith, Patti (April 1978). . Hit Parader. Archived from the original on 16 February 2021. Retrieved 18 March 2021 – via up-to-date.com.
  57. ^ Gillett, Charlie (15 October 1977). "Singles reviews". NME. pp. 12–13.
  58. ^ "NME's best albums and tracks of 1977". NME. 10 October 2016. Retrieved 18 June 2022.
  59. ^ "Was David Bowie's "Heroes" really based on a true story?". Radio X. 18 April 2022. Retrieved 8 May 2022.
  60. ^ Buckley 1999, p. 424.
  61. ^ Raggett, Ned. "'Heroes' – David Bowie". AllMusic. from the original on 4 July 2019. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  62. ^ Dombal, Ryan (22 January 2015). "David Bowie: "Heroes" Album Review". Pitchfork. from the original on 24 January 2016. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
  63. ^ Rapp, Allison (14 October 2021). "David Bowie's 'Heroes': A Track-by-Track Guide". Ultimate Classic Rock. from the original on 23 April 2022. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  64. ^ "Every David Bowie Single Ranked". Ultimate Classic Rock. 14 January 2016. from the original on 24 July 2021. Retrieved 19 September 2021.
  65. ^ a b "David Bowie's Top 70 Songs". Consequence of Sound. 8 January 2017. from the original on 20 September 2021. Retrieved 19 September 2021.
  66. ^ Gordinier, Jeff (31 May 2002). "Loving the Aliens". Entertainment Weekly. No. 656. pp. 26–34.
  67. ^ Shaw, William (April 1993). "In The Mode". Details: 90–95, 168.
  68. ^ Trynka 2011, p. 488.
  69. ^ Buckley 2015, p. 63.
  70. ^ "David Bowie: 30 Essential Songs". Rolling Stone. 11 January 2016. from the original on 23 April 2022. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  71. ^ . The Telegraph. 10 January 2021. Archived from the original on 3 February 2021. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  72. ^ Barker, Emily (8 January 2018). . NME. Archived from the original on 3 November 2019. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  73. ^ "David Bowie's 30 best songs". Uncut. March 2008. from the original on 24 February 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  74. ^ Eames, Tom (26 June 2020). . Smooth Radio. Archived from the original on 22 January 2021. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  75. ^ Nissim, Mayer (11 January 2016). "David Bowie 1947–2016: 'Life on Mars' is named Bowie's greatest ever song in reader poll". Digital Spy. from the original on 15 January 2016. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  76. ^ Paytress, Mark (February 2015). "David Bowie – The 100 Greatest Songs". Mojo (255): 81.
  77. ^ Anderson, Sarah (8 January 2018). . NME. Archived from the original on 30 October 2020. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  78. ^ Petridis, Alexis (19 March 2020). "David Bowie's 50 greatest songs – ranked!". The Guardian. from the original on 22 March 2020. Retrieved 23 March 2020.
  79. ^ . NME. Archived from the original on 27 April 2006. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  80. ^ "The 100 Greatest Singles Of The Post-Punk Era". Uncut. No. 45. February 2001.
  81. ^ . Rolling Stone. 26 December 2005. Archived from the original on 26 December 2005. Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  82. ^ "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time: David Bowie, 'Heroes'". Rolling Stone. 15 September 2021. from the original on 8 November 2021. Retrieved 16 September 2021.
  83. ^ "NME The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, 2014". NME. from the original on 18 February 2016. Retrieved 15 February 2016.
  84. ^ "All-Time 100 Songs". Time. from the original on 2 February 2016. Retrieved 15 February 2016.
  85. ^ "The Pitchfork 500: Our Guide to the Greatest Songs from Punk to the Present". Pitchfork. from the original on 8 January 2016. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  86. ^ Schiller, Rebecca (4 June 2018). "100 Best Songs of the 1970s". NME. Retrieved 1 May 2022.
  87. ^ "The 200 Best Songs of the 1970s". Pitchfork. 22 August 2016. from the original on 1 July 2017. Retrieved 20 December 2016.
  88. ^ "The Top 1,000 Songs of All Time". Radio X. from the original on 3 November 2015. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  89. ^ . Radio X. Archived from the original on 31 March 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  90. ^ Miller, John J. (26 May 2006). . National Review. Archived from the original on 30 June 2015. Retrieved 20 February 2007.
  91. ^ Bui, Quoctrung; Katz, Josh; Lee, Jasmine C. (12 January 2016). "The David Bowie Song That Fans Are Listening to Most: 'Heroes'". The New York Times. from the original on 27 February 2017. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  92. ^ "How the loss of David Bowie impacted the UK charts". Official Charts Company. from the original on 18 January 2016. Retrieved 19 January 2016.
  93. ^ a b "David Bowie Chart History (Hot Rock & Alternative Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  94. ^ a b "David Bowie Chart History (Euro Digital Song Sales)". Billboard. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  95. ^ a b "Official Scottish Singles Sales Chart Top 100". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  96. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes" (in French). Les classement single. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
  97. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes" (in German). Ö3 Austria Top 40. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  98. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes". Top Digital Download. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
  99. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes". Swiss Singles Chart. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
  100. ^ a b "Billboard Japan Hot Overseas". Billboard Japan (in Japanese). 18 January 2016. from the original on 19 February 2017. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  101. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes" (in German). GfK Entertainment charts. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
  102. ^ a b "The Irish Charts – Search Results – Heroes (Re-entry)". Irish Singles Chart. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  103. ^ a b "Portuguesecharts – David Bowie – Heroes". portuguesecharts.com. from the original on 12 April 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  104. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes". Top 40 Singles. Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  105. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes". ARIA Top 50 Singles. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
  106. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes". Singles Top 100. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
  107. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes" (in Dutch). Single Top 100. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  108. ^ a b "David Bowie – Heroes" Canciones Top 50. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  109. ^ "Certificazione Singoli Digitali dalla settimana 1 del 2009 alla settimana 2 del 2014" (PDF) (in Italian). Federation of the Italian Music Industry. (PDF) from the original on 1 February 2014. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
  110. ^ "David Bowie – Heroes (Chanté en Français)". Lescharts.com. from the original on 23 September 2020. Retrieved 12 September 2020.
  111. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Stage – David Bowie". AllMusic. from the original on 5 August 2019. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
  112. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Welcome to the Blackout (Live London '78) – David Bowie". AllMusic. from the original on 17 November 2019. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
  113. ^ David Bowie (2018). Loving the Alien (1983–1988) (Box set booklet). UK, Europe & US: Parlophone. 0190295693534.
  114. ^ David Bowie (2019). Serious Moonlight (Live '83) (CD liner notes). Europe: Parlophone. 0190295511180.
  115. ^ Pegg 2016, p. 643.
  116. ^ Ford, Matt (11 January 2016). "Remembering David Bowie". The Atlantic. from the original on 12 January 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  117. ^ Fisher, Max (11 January 2016). "David Bowie at the Berlin Wall: the incredible story of a concert and its role in history". Vox. from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  118. ^ Pegg 2016, pp. 460, 647.
  119. ^ Collins, Sean T. (5 December 2018). "David Bowie: Glastonbury 2000 Album Review". Pitchfork. from the original on 11 July 2019. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  120. ^ Whatley, Jack (21 December 2019). "Listen back to Oasis' incredible cover of David Bowie's iconic hit 'Heroes'". Far Out Magazine. from the original on 1 March 2021. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  121. ^ "New Releases". Radio & Records. No. 1244. 17 April 1998. p. 38.
  122. ^ Hay, Carla (18 April 1998). "MVPA Rewards Clips That Stray from the Mainstream" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 110, no. 16. p. 74. (PDF) from the original on 8 February 2022. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  123. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Original Soundtrack – Godzilla: The Album". AllMusic. from the original on 21 April 2021. Retrieved 19 March 2021.
  124. ^ Flick, Larry, ed. (2 May 1998). "Reviews & Previews – Singles" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 110, no. 18. p. 22. (PDF) from the original on 8 February 2022. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  125. ^ . Chart-Track. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
  126. ^ "Official Scottish Singles Sales Chart Top 100 28 November 2010 – 04 December 2010". Official Charts Company. from the original on 10 October 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
  127. ^ "Official Singles Chart Top 100 28 November 2010 – 04 December 2010". Official Charts Company. from the original on 3 February 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
  128. ^ "Coldplay Launches A Head Full of Dreams Tour With Vivid Colors, Multiple Stages, David Bowie Tribute & More". Billboard. 17 July 2016. from the original on 18 June 2018. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
  129. ^ "Germany to David Bowie: Thank You for Helping to Bring Down the Berlin Wall". Foreign Policy. 11 January 2016. from the original on 4 October 2016. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  130. ^ Kollmeyer, Barbara. "David Bowie death triggers tributes from Iggy Pop, Madonna – even the Vatican and the German government". MarketWatch. from the original on 19 October 2017. Retrieved 19 January 2016.
  131. ^ Trendell, Andrew (22 September 2017). "Depeche Mode share official cover of David Bowie's 'Heroes' to mark track's 40th anniversary". NME. from the original on 29 July 2014. Retrieved 22 September 2017.
  132. ^ "King Crimson to release EP featuring David Bowie's Heroes". teamrock.com. 28 April 2017. from the original on 26 September 2017. Retrieved 25 September 2017.
  133. ^ Hartmann, Graham (24 July 2017). "Motorhead to Issue 'Under Cover' Album Featuring Never-Before-Heard David Bowie Cover". Loudwire. from the original on 28 February 2022. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  134. ^ Lyall, Sarah (27 July 2012). "A Five-Ring Opening Circus, Weirdly and Unabashedly British". The New York Times. from the original on 28 July 2012. Retrieved 28 July 2012.
  135. ^ Thurm, Eric (16 January 2017). "The epic, emotional Regular Show finale is anything but". The A.V. Club. from the original on 11 February 2017. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  136. ^ Stevens, Ashlie D. (5 July 2019). "That cover song at the end of Stranger Things season 3 has its own back story". Salon.com. from the original on 16 March 2021. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  137. ^ "'Perks Of Being A Wallflower' Soundtrack Tracklist Revealed (EXCLUSIVE)". Huffington Post. 17 August 2012. from the original on 13 April 2017. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  138. ^ Handy, Bruce. "Q&A: Perks of Being a Wallflower's Stephen Chbosky on Emma Watson's Casting, High School Yearning, and "Heroes"". Vanity Fair. from the original on 6 July 2017. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  139. ^ "Berlin Film Review: 'Praia do Futuro'". Variety. 12 February 2014. from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  140. ^ Kermode, Mark (5 January 2020). "Jojo Rabbit review – down the rabbit hole with Hitler". The Guardian. from the original on 16 April 2022. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  141. ^ "3XY Top 40 - 27 January, 1978".
  142. ^ "Nederlandse Top 40 – David Bowie" (in Dutch). Dutch Top 40. Retrieved October 7, 2023.
  143. ^ "Official Singles Chart Top 100". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  144. ^ "Official Singles Chart Top 100". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  145. ^ "Danish single certifications – David Bowie – Heroes". IFPI Danmark. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  146. ^ "Italian single certifications – David Bowie – Heroes" (in Italian). Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana. Retrieved 13 August 2020. Select "2016" in the "Anno" drop-down menu. Select "Heroes" in the "Filtra" field. Select "Singoli" under "Sezione".
  147. ^ "British single certifications – David Bowie – Heroes". British Phonographic Industry. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  148. ^ "The Wallflowers – Heroes". ARIA Top 50 Singles. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  149. ^ "Top RPM Singles: Issue 3601." RPM. Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  150. ^ "Top RPM Adult Contemporary: Issue 3610." RPM. Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  151. ^ "Top RPM Rock/Alternative Tracks: Issue 3574." RPM. Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  152. ^ "The Wallflowers – Heroes" (in German). GfK Entertainment charts. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  153. ^ "Íslenski Listinn Topp 40 (21.5. – 28.5. 1998)". Dagblaðið Vísir (in Icelandic). 22 May 1998. p. 42. from the original on 21 June 2020. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  154. ^ "The Wallflowers Chart History (Radio Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  155. ^ "The Wallflowers Chart History (Adult Alternative Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  156. ^ "The Wallflowers Chart History (Adult Pop Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  157. ^ "The Wallflowers Chart History (Alternative Airplay)". Billboard. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  158. ^ "The Wallflowers Chart History (Mainstream Rock)". Billboard. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  159. ^ "The Wallflowers Chart History (Pop Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  160. ^ "RPM's Top 100 Hits of '98" (PDF). RPM. Vol. 68, no. 12. 14 December 1998. p. 20. (PDF) from the original on 14 June 2021. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  161. ^ "RPM's Top 50 Alternative Tracks of '98". RPM. Library and Archives Canada. from the original on 22 June 2020. Retrieved 20 June 2020.

Sources Edit

heroes, david, bowie, song, heroes, song, redirects, here, other, songs, same, name, heroes, heroes, song, english, musician, david, bowie, from, 12th, studio, album, same, name, written, bowie, brian, produced, bowie, tony, visconti, song, recorded, 1977, han. Heroes song redirects here For other songs of the same name see Heroes Heroes a is a song by the English musician David Bowie from his 12th studio album of the same name Co written by Bowie and Brian Eno and co produced by Bowie and Tony Visconti the song was recorded in mid 1977 at Hansa Studio 2 in West Berlin Using a G D chord progression the backing track was recorded fully before lyrics were written Bowie and Eno added synthesiser overdubs while Robert Fripp contributed guitar To record the vocal Visconti devised a multi latch system wherein three microphones were placed at different distances from Bowie and would open when he sang loud enough Like other album tracks he improvised lyrics while standing at the microphone Heroes One of the A side labels for the UK vinyl singleSingle by David Bowiefrom the album Heroes B side V 2 Schneider Released23 September 1977 1977 09 23 RecordedJuly August 1977StudioHansa West Berlin GenreArt rockLength6 07 album 3 32 single LabelRCASongwriter s David Bowie Brian EnoProducer s David Bowie Tony ViscontiDavid Bowie singles chronology Be My Wife 1977 Heroes 1977 Beauty and the Beast 1978 Music video Heroes on YouTubeAn art rock song that builds throughout its run time Heroes concerns two lovers one from East Berlin and the other from the West Under constant fear of death they dream they are free swimming with dolphins Bowie placed the title in quotation marks as an expression of irony on the otherwise romantic or triumphant words and music Directly inspired by Bowie witnessing a kiss between Visconti and singer Antonia Maass next to the Berlin Wall other inspirations included a painting by Otto Mueller and a short story by Alberto Denti di Pirajno Released in edited form by RCA Records on 23 September 1977 as the album s lead single initial reviews for the song were mostly positive with some welcoming it as a classic addition to the artist s catalogue Bowie heavily promoted the song with a music video and sang it on numerous television programmes including Marc Bolan s Marc and Bing Crosby s Christmas special Bowie also released German and French language versions of Heroes titled Helden and Heros respectively Despite its large promotion the song only peaked at number 24 on the UK Singles Chart and failed to chart at all on the US Billboard Hot 100 but reached the top 20 in multiple European countries and Australia Over time the song has grown substantially in reputation and been seen as one of Bowie s best songs with some considering it one of the greatest songs of all time His biographers pan the single edit for diminishing the song s power Following Bowie s death in 2016 the song reached a new peak of number 12 in the UK The song remained a staple throughout his concert tours and live performances Bowie s second most covered song after 1974 s Rebel Rebel a version of Heroes by the Wallflowers was positively received and charted in the US and Canada in 1998 Another version by the finalists of The X Factor was a UK number one in 2010 The song has also been used predominantly in advertising over the years and has appeared in several television series and films Contents 1 Writing and recording 1 1 Backing track 1 2 Vocals 2 Composition 2 1 Music 2 2 Lyrics 3 Promotion and release 4 Critical reception 5 Retrospective appraisal 5 1 Accolades 5 2 Later chart success 6 Live performances 7 Cover versions and tributes 8 Usage in media 9 Personnel 10 Charts and certifications 10 1 David Bowie version 10 1 1 Weekly charts 10 1 2 Certifications 10 2 The Wallflowers version 10 2 1 Weekly charts 10 2 2 Year end charts 11 References 11 1 SourcesWriting and recording EditBacking track Edit nbsp Bowie composed the song with multi instrumentalist Brian Eno pictured in 2008 who had the word heroes in mind for the initial chord sequence After completing his work co producing Iggy Pop s Lust for Life 1977 and various promotional events David Bowie spent a few weeks devising ideas and concepts with multi instrumentalist Brian Eno for his next studio album 1 One idea was using the same G D chord sequence he had used for Pop s Success 2 3 Eno wanted to call it Heroes as the sequence sounded grand and heroic and I had that very word heroes in my mind 4 5 According to biographer Chris O Leary the word also paid reference to German krautrock band Neu s Hero 1975 4 Recording for the album took place entirely in West Berlin between July and August 1977 at Hansa Studio 2 a former concert hall converted into a recording studio that had been used by Gestapo officers during World War II as a ballroom and was located about 500 yards from the Berlin Wall The song was co produced by Bowie and Tony Visconti with contributions from Eno 1 6 7 The backing track began with Bowie on piano and returning from Station to Station 1976 the core band of Carlos Alomar on rhythm guitar George Murray on bass and Dennis Davis on drums 8 The band used the initial chord progression creating a groove that built into a crescendo lasting eight minutes Alomar devised the underlying riff while Murray and Davis provided the hypnotic pulse 9 8 Although he had fed Davis s drums through his Eventide H910 Harmonizer on Low 1977 Visconti used it sparingly on Heroes only during the mixing stage and as such the drum sound is mostly atmospheric to the room He ran Murray s bass through a flanger 4 According to Visconti the recording sat for a week before overdubs commenced Eno brought in his EMS Synthi AKS a synthesiser built in a briefcase using its joystick oscillator knobs and noise filter to create a shuddering chattering effect that slowly builds up and gets more and more obvious towards the end 8 Bowie also added Chamberlin and high pitched lines on his ARP Solina synthesiser 4 The final addition was former King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp who was recruited at Eno s suggestion 7 Receiving little guidance from Bowie he cut three takes all based on feedback loops 4 9 For each take Fripp marked different spots on the studio floor with tape and played a different note in each spot such as A at four feet from his amp and G at three feet all while his guitar was fed through Eno s EMS Synthi 4 8 When mixing the backing track Visconti merged Fripp s takes onto one track creating what he called a dreamy wailing quality 4 He buried Davis s kick drum finding it seemed to plod the track and becoming more energetic without it and elevated Murray s bassline which Alomar augmented on guitar in a higher register 4 8 10 An intended horn section was replaced with a synthesised brass line by the Chamberlin while the bassline replaced the originally planned string section With percussion Visconti added tambourine and struck an empty tape canister with a drumstick as a placement for a cowbell 4 10 Vocals Edit nbsp Co producer Tony Visconti pictured in 2007 devised the multi latch system used to record the lead vocal and sang backing vocals Similar to Low Bowie neglected to write lyrics until all but he and Visconti had departed 6 As such the backing track for Heroes sat untouched for many weeks and for a time was rumoured it would remain an instrumental 5 9 On one day Bowie requested Visconti leave him alone in the studio to focus on writing lyrics 10 As he stared outside the studio window he witnessed Visconti and singer Antonia Maass kiss in close proximity to the Berlin Wall which he used as the basis for the lyric 11 7 Bowie initially claimed that the lyric was based on an anonymous young couple but Visconti who was married to Mary Hopkin at the time contended that Bowie was protecting him and his affair with Maass Bowie later confirmed the story in 2003 over two decades after Visconti and Hopkin s eventual divorce Tony was married at the time and I could never say who it was I think possibly the marriage was in the last few months and it was very touching because I could see that Tony was very much in love with this girl and it was that relationship which sort of motivated the song 5 Additionally he improvised lyrics while standing at the microphone after witnessing Pop use the same method during the making of The Idiot 1977 and Lust for Life 2 12 To record the lead vocal Visconti devised a multi latch system that would utilise the ambience of Hansa to full effect 2 13 Three Neumann microphones were used to capture the vocal the first a valve U47 was set up nine inches from Bowie the second a U87 was set up 20 feet away and the third another U87 about 50 feet away The two farther mics were routed through a noise gate a volume controlling device that would turn them on as Bowie s voice reached them 4 5 8 2 Visconti explained If he sang a little louder the next microphone would open up with the gate and that would make sort of this big splash of reverb and then if he really sang loud the back microphone would open up and it would just open up this enormous sound 5 Bowie recorded three takes the last of which mostly appears in the final song and was completed in about two hours Bowie and Visconti immediately recorded the backing vocals afterwards harmonising in thirds and fifths below the lead vocal 5 4 The final mix was done at Mountain Studios in Montreux Switzerland a studio that would become one of Bowie s mainstays An engineer at Mountain David Richards would also become one of his regulars 6 Composition EditMusic Edit nbsp The song features soaring guitar lines from Robert Fripp pictured in 2007 Heroes was based on a G D chord progression and contains five verses some longer than others and an outro 2 3 4 Primarily in D major the verses move from D to G major along with C major on nothing will keep us together and a foray into A minor and E minor on beat them and forever The song is mainly in the D mixolydian mode wherein the A major dominant chord is replaced with A minor swapping from the parallel minor D minor back to the tonic D major 4 Richard Buskin of Sound on Sound described the song as a highly experimental piece of art rock 8 Biographer David Buckley likens it to a Wall of Sound production a forceful and noisy arrangement of guitars percussion and synthesisers 14 Meanwhile author James E Perone finds the song a great example of contemporary pop music balancing early 1970s progressive rock on the synthesisers to the avant garde tone color manipulations from Eno 15 According to Bowie the track was a combination of Brian s piano technique and mine which are both dastardly turning into a reworking of the Velvet Underground s I m Waiting for the Man 1967 a song long admired by the artist 4 Lyrics Edit Heroes tells the story of two lovers one from East Berlin and one from West Berlin Under constant risk of death they dream of freedom swimming with dolphins 11 Like fellow album tracks Beauty and the Beast and Joe the Lion the song at its core represents two opposing forces the couple s love for each other and a sense that the Berlin Wall will separate them 15 Blurt magazine s Robert Dean Lurie analyses it as a clear nod to the divided city of Berlin Bowie lived in at the time 16 The first verse is from the point of view of the man who stresses unity while the second describes the couple s explicit love and affection for each other Perone contends that the instrumental passages separating the third verse wherein the narrator wishes his lover could swim like the dolphins represents a transition in the story 15 The fourth verse is a reiteration of the first albeit Bowie sings an octave higher and in a near scream In the fifth and final verse the narrator recalls standing and kissing by the Wall while guards fired bullets above their heads Perone states that this moment captures the sense the narrator s love can overcome anything and as dolphins can freely swim as they wish the proclamation that we can be heroes gets well beyond anything the listener might have anticipated at the start of the piece 15 Nicholas Pegg and Thomas Jerome Seabrook argue that Heroes is not the feelgood anthem it is often interpreted as 5 10 According to Bowie the quotation marks in the title were intended to express a dimension of irony on the otherwise romantic or triumphant words and music 5 17 18 Describing the song he stated it is about facing reality and standing up to it about achieving a sense of compassion and deriving some joy from the very simple pleasure of being alive 5 Likewise Pegg contests the song contains underlying dark themes that juxtapose its uplifting chord sequence and delirious vocal such as you can be mean and I ll drink all the time which is hardly the most promisingly heroic statement while the repeated announcement of nothing will keep us together asserts that time is short Additionally the pronouncement that the narrator wants the relationship to last just for one day harkens back to the dark lyrics of The Bewlay Brothers 1971 and represents a shift from the Nietzschean supermen themes of Bowie s earlier works into the realm of heroism 5 10 Regarding the themes Lurie stated 16 Heroes is more akin to alchemy We may be average and regular in the present moment but we have the potential at any time for heroic thought and action even if only for one day The transformation can be brought about by an external event or through an internal change in perspective Although Bowie confirmed that the kiss between Visconti and Maass directly inspired the lyric another source of inspiration included Otto Mueller s 1916 painting Lovers Between Garden Walls which Bowie and Pop saw at Berlin s Brucke Museum The painting depicts an embracing couple between two walls representing the brutality of World War I 5 Bowie also revealed in the foreword of his wife Iman s 2001 book I Am Iman that Alberto Denti di Pirajno s 1956 short story A Grave for a Dolphin which concerns a doomed love affair between an Italian soldier and a Somalian girl during World War II provided inspiration 5 10 According to Pegg the destiny of the story s female protagonist is linked with that of a dolphin she swims with and when she dies so does the dolphin Bowie further explained I thought it a magical and beautiful love story and in part it had inspired my song Heroes 5 10 Bowie is also recounted to have used events in his own life for the lyrics such as his then marital issues alcoholism and his inability to swim I wish I could swim b 5 10 Furthermore O Leary notes that the phrase I will be king you will be queen is taken directly from the traditional English folk song Lavender s Blue c 4 In the late 2010s a story on the Italian Bowie website Blackstar revealed that artist Clare Shenstone who Bowie met in 1969 had visited him during the summer he recorded Heroes The two spent a day walking along the Wall which started in her words with David asking me if I dreamed about him because he dreamed about me I told him I had just had a beautiful dream about swimming with dolphins 4 Promotion and release Edit nbsp nbsp To promote Heroes Bowie appeared on television programmes hosted by Marc Bolan left in 1973 and Bing Crosby right in 1951 After undertaking zero promotional events for Low Bowie promoted Heroes extensively 6 In early September 1977 he agreed to perform the title track on Marc Bolan s Granada Television series Marc which was recorded on 9 September and broadcast on 28 September 19 20 following Bolan s death from a car accident on 16 September 19 This particular version released as a 7 picture disc on 22 September 2017 20 has an alternative backing track that was recorded with Bolan playing lead guitar and the T Rex line up of Dino Dines on keyboards and the rhythm section of Herbie Flowers on bass and Tony Newman on drums 21 both of whom had played with Bowie on his 1974 album Diamond Dogs and its accompanying tour 22 Two days after filming the Marc appearance Bowie appeared on Bing Crosby s Christmas television special Bing Crosby s Merrie Olde Christmas performing Heroes and a new duet with Crosby titled Peace on Earth Little Drummer Boy Crosby died on 14 October before the special s broadcast on Christmas Eve 1977 23 Bowie later quipped I was getting seriously worried about whether I should appear on TV because everyone I was going on with was kicking it the following week 23 On 19 October Bowie appeared on BBC s Top of the Pops for the first time since 1973 14 performing Heroes using a new backing track featuring Visconti on bass and Sean Mayes on keyboards Bowie sang live over the backing track with none of the band present 24 He sang the song again on the Dutch programme TopPop and the Italian programmes Odeon and L altra domenica later the same month 5 RCA issued Heroes in edited form as the lead single from the album on 23 September 1977 with the catalogue PB 11121 and backed by album track V 2 Schneider 4 Its shortened 3 32 edit was made in the hopes of more airplay 5 A 12 promotional single containing both the single and album versions was released in the US by RCA as JD 11151 the same year 25 26 On the Heroes album issued on 14 October 4 the song was sequenced as the third track between Joe the Lion and Sons of the Silent Age 27 The song s promotional music video was directed by Stanley Dorfman 28 29 30 31 Shot in Paris it features numerous shots of Bowie in a dark room against a backdrop of white light and wearing the same bomber jacket he wore on the Heroes cover artwork Pegg believes the final result is similar to Liza Minnelli s performance of Maybe This Time in the Berlin based 1972 film Cabaret 5 In a stunt Pegg describes as confirming the artist s newfound European allegiances Bowie recorded special vocals for the track in both German and French 5 with lyrics translated by Maass for the German release 32 These singles titled Helden and Heros respectively were issued in their respective countries in September 25 Additionally for the album releases in Germany and France the special vocals were grafted onto the full length tracks following the opening English verses 33 The single s release in a variety of languages and lengths achieved what NME editors Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray called a collector s wet dream 17 Despite a large promotional push Heroes only reached number 24 on the UK Singles Chart remaining on the chart for eight weeks and failing to chart at all on the US Billboard Hot 100 2 32 albeit reaching a low number 126 on Record World s Singles Chart 101 150 34 Elsewhere it charted in Australia 11 35 Austria 19 36 Belgium Flanders 17 37 Ireland 8 38 the Netherlands 9 and New Zealand 34 39 40 Heroes has subsequently appeared almost invariably as the single edit on numerous compilation albums including The Best of Bowie 1980 41 Changesbowie 1990 42 The Singles Collection 1993 43 The Best of David Bowie 1974 1979 1998 44 Best of Bowie 2002 45 The Platinum Collection 2006 46 Nothing Has Changed 2014 and Bowie Legacy 2016 47 48 The full album track was remastered with its parent album for inclusion on the 2017 box set A New Career in a New Town 1977 1982 The single edit was included on Re Call 3 part of that box set while the German single French single English German full length and English French full length versions were included on an EP in the same set 49 Additionally the English German version of the song appeared on the soundtrack to the film Christiane F 1981 and on the Rare album in 1982 5 while the German single version appeared on Sound Vision 1989 50 Critical reception EditInitial reviews for Heroes were mostly positive Like Low s Sound and Vision some viewed it as the album s most commercial track 51 52 Several welcomed the song as a classic addition to Bowie s catalogue 51 53 Record Mirror s Tim Lott deemed it regal and a shocking dream ingly powerful song that stands out as the album s best He found the lyrics are in a sense throwaway but display simple heroism Brick by synthesised brick it builds into a leviathan a monster track that sucks you in and spews you out grinning 51 Kris Needs of ZigZag magazine also considered the song a monster track with its end result being magic 52 Ira Robbins went further in Crawdaddy magazine hailing the song as Bowie s best commitment to plastic in three years praising the instrumentation and vocal performance and highlighted Eno s contributions among the track s best features 53 In the Los Angeles Times Robert Hilburn wrote that despite the dreariness of Heroes as a whole the title track contains compassion and some fleeting hope 54 A reviewer for Billboard deemed the song one of the album s best tracks 55 Writing in Hit Parader American musician and author Patti Smith praised Heroes as a pure and wonderful track that exposes us to our most precious and private dilemma She predicted that it would become the theme song for every great movie and would be made remade or yet to come 56 Charlie Gillett gave the single a mixed review in the NME saying Well he had a pretty good run for our money for a guy who was no singer But I think his time has been and gone and this just sounds weary Then again maybe the ponderous heavy riff will be absorbed on the radio and the monotonous feel may just be hypnotic enough to drag people into buying it I hope not 57 The magazine placed it at number six in their list of the year s best singles 58 Retrospective appraisal EditThis is a strange phenomenon that happens with my songs Stateside Many of the crowd favourites were never radio or chart hits and Heroes tops them all 5 David Bowie on the song s later success 2003 Heroes has greatly grown in stature in the decades following its release 59 Pegg and O Leary note that it was not until Bowie s performance of the song at Live Aid in 1985 did it become recognised as a classic 4 5 Buckley describes this rendition as the best version of Heroes Bowie had ever sung 60 Reviewing the song for AllMusic Ned Raggett described it as arguably Bowie s finest song and a true classic writing that with Eno Fripp and Visconti Bowie crafted an anthem embellished with German influences while still using the dramatic power of rock and roll Analysing his vocal he wrote Starting with an almost conversational tone by the end of the song he s turning in a performance that could almost be called operatic yet still achingly passionately human 61 Pitchfork s Ryan Dombal described Heroes as an immortal track all about fleeting wonders 62 while Ultimate Classic Rock s Allison Rapp found that over time the track become one of rock s most loved anthems of hope 63 In a list ranking every Bowie single from worst to best the same publication placed it at number one 64 In Consequence of Sound Lior Phillips stated that the track expertly captures the hopeless reality that nothing lasts and that we all must die and also the inherent beauty in the fact that we all live and love in our time despite that fact 65 Moby has said that Heroes is one of his favourite songs ever written finding it inevitable that his music would be influenced by the song 66 while Depeche Mode s lead singer Dave Gahan was hired into the band when founder Vince Clarke heard him singing it at a jam session 67 Like critics Bowie s biographers praise Heroes as a classic and one of Bowie s best tracks d with author Paul Trynka calling it his simplest most affecting and most memorable song 68 Buckley acknowledges it as Bowie s most universally admired song and in 2015 7 wrote that the song is perhaps pop s definitive statement of the potential triumph of the human spirit over adversity 69 O Leary states that the song is Bowie at his most empathic and desperate a wish chant that offers a tiny regency for the spirit 4 Despite this biographers mostly pan the shortened single edit for diminishing the song s power e O Leary argues that the edit weakens the song as the buildup to the final verses is shortened noting that Bowie s heroic vocal starts roughly two minutes earlier than the full album version 4 Perone agrees that the edit which starts at the dolphins lyric destroys the song s pacing tension and impact making it not make as much sense He expresses further criticism to shortening the single as other highly successful singles of the rock era such as the Beatles Hey Jude 1968 were longer than the full length version of Heroes 15 Following Bowie s death in January 2016 Rolling Stone named Heroes one of the 30 most essential songs of Bowie s catalogue 70 Likewise numerous publications have considered the song one of Bowie s finest 16 71 with NME Uncut and Smooth Radio labelling it his greatest 72 73 74 Others including Consequence of Sound Digital Spy and Mojo named it his second best behind Life on Mars 1971 65 75 76 In 2018 the readers of NME voted the song Bowie s fourth best track 77 Meanwhile The Guardian s Alexis Petridis placed it at number five in a list ranking Bowie s 50 greatest songs in 2020 He recognised the track as a weird ambiguous song with an uplifting sporting montage soundtrack ubiquity that turns six minutes of pulsing electronic noise howling guitars and screamed vocals into an all purpose air punching anthem 78 Accolades Edit In ensuing decades Heroes has appeared on lists of the greatest songs of all time In a list of the 100 greatest singles of all time NME placed at number five 79 In a similar list Uncut found it the 16th best single from the post punk era 80 In 2004 Rolling Stone rated Heroes number 46 in its list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time 81 and later moving the song up to number 23 on the 2021 list 82 NME placed it at number 15 in their similar 2015 list 83 Included by Time in their 2011 list of the All Time 100 Songs 84 Pitchfork also included the song in The Pitchfork 500 a 2008 guide to the 500 greatest songs from punk to the present 85 In lists ranking the best songs of the 1970s NME and Pitchfork listed the song at numbers four and six respectively 86 87 The UK s Radio X also ranked it the 12th best song of all time in 2010 and the seventh best British song in 2016 88 89 In another list John J Miller of National Review rated it number 21 on a list of the 50 greatest conservative rock songs 90 Later chart success Edit Shortly after Bowie s death the song charted in numerous countries around the world and was also streamed on Spotify more than any other Bowie song 91 In the UK it reached a new peak of number 12 92 The song spent two weeks on Billboard s Hot Rock amp Alternative Songs chart in the US peaking at number 11 93 Its highest positions were number three on Billboard s Euro Digital Song Sales chart number eight in Scotland and number nine in France 94 95 96 Elsewhere Heroes charted in Austria 14 97 Italy 17 98 Switzerland 17 99 Japan 18 100 Germany 19 101 Ireland 29 102 Portugal 32 103 New Zealand 34 104 Australia 36 105 Sweden 37 106 the Netherlands 47 and Spain 59 107 108 In Italy the song was certified gold by the Federation of the Italian Music Industry 109 Heros also peaked at number 37 in France in 2015 110 Live performances Edit Heroes remained a staple throughout Bowie s concert tours 5 He later acknowledged the song s impact on live audiences In Europe it is one of the ones that seemed to have special resonance 2 During the 1978 Isolar II and 1983 Serious Moonlight tours the song was usually the second number performed rather than among the shows encores 5 Performances from the former have seen release on Stage 1978 and Welcome to the Blackout 2018 111 112 while some from the latter appeared on its 1984 concert video and later on Serious Moonlight Live 83 released as part of the 2018 box set Loving the Alien 1983 1988 113 and separately the following year 114 Following Live Aid Bowie revived Heroes for the 1987 Glass Spider Tour as seen in its accompanying concert video 1988 115 The performance on 6 June 1987 at the German Reichstag in West Berlin has been considered a catalyst to the later fall of the Berlin Wall 116 117 The song made subsequent appearances during the 1990 Sound Vision 1996 97 Earthling 2000 2002 Heathen and 2003 04 A Reality tours 5 A performance from the A Reality Tour saw release on the accompanying DVD and live album released in 2004 and 2010 respectively 118 Outside his tours Heroes was performed at The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert in 1992 by Bowie his former guitarist Mick Ronson and the surviving members of Queen Brian May Roger Taylor and John Deacon Bowie played a semi acoustic version at the 1996 Bridge School benefit concerts the 20 October rendition later saw release on The Bridge School Concerts Vol 1 album and The Bridge School Concerts 25th Anniversary Edition DVD 5 The song was also sung at his 50th birthday concert in January 1997 and the Glastonbury Festival in 2000 which was released in 2018 on Glastonbury 2000 119 The song was again performed in 2001 at the Tibet House Benefit concert and the Concert for New York City 5 Cover versions and tributes Edit nbsp A cover version of Heroes by the Wallflowers lead singer Jakob Dylan pictured in 2012 charted in the US and Canada in 1998 Heroes is cited by Pegg as Bowie s most covered song after Rebel Rebel 1974 5 Artists who have covered the song on stage or in the studio include Oasis 120 the Smashing Pumpkins Travis Arcade Fire and Blondie whose 1980 live version featured Fripp on guitar 5 American rock band the Wallflowers recorded a version for the soundtrack to the 1998 monster film Godzilla This version released as a single on 21 April 1998 121 peaked at number 10 on the US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart in 1998 as well as number 27 on the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart and number 23 on the Billboard Mainstream Top 40 chart In Canada the single topped the RPM Alternative 30 for six weeks and reached number 13 on the RPM Top Singles chart British duo Dom and Nic directed the song s music video 122 The Wallflowers cover was positively received 123 with Billboard editor Larry Flick writing that it beautifully illuminates the heart tugging quality of the lyrics but noting the lead singer Jakob Dylan failed to replicate the irony and edge of Bowie s version 124 Artists who have covered Helden include Apocalyptica and Letzte Instanz 5 In 1997 American composer Philip Glass adapted the Heroes album into a classical music symphony titled Heroes Symphony utilising the title track as the root for the first movement The same year Aphex Twin remixed Bowie s original vocal onto Glass s adaptation for release on a Japanese 3 inch CD single 5 At Bowie s own request TV on the Radio covered Heroes in 2009 for the charity album War Child Heroes 5 A year later Peter Gabriel released a stripped down version for his covers album Scratch My Back 2010 5 The same year the finalists of The X Factor released a version for the Help for Heroes charity which reached number one on the Irish Scottish and UK Singles Chart 125 126 127 Regarding this version Pegg writes that it introduced a new generation to David Bowie by subjecting one of his greatest songs to the anodyne arrangements Eurovision key changes and sub Mariah Carey karaoke yodeling which are the core ingredients of The X Factor s ongoing mission to eradicate real music from planet earth 5 Following Bowie s death Heroes became a favourite at tribute events and was covered by artists such as Coldplay 128 Blondie Lady Gaga and Prince who performed the track regularly shortly before his own death in 2016 5 On Twitter the German Foreign Office paid homage to Bowie for helping to bring down the Wall 129 130 Depeche Mode subsequently released a cover to commemorate the song s 40th anniversary with Gahan stating Bowie is the one artist who I ve stuck with since I was in my early teens His albums are always my go to on tour and covering Heroes is paying homage to Bowie 131 King Crimson who had added the song to their live set in 2000 when the band boasted former Bowie players Fripp and Adrian Belew 5 recorded a version for their five track EP Heroes Live in Europe 2016 132 Motorhead also released a version on their 2017 album Under Cover which was recorded in 2015 during the recording sessions for Bad Magic and one of the last songs recorded before Lemmy s death that same year Guitarist Phil Campbell stated It s such a great Bowie song one of his best and I could only see great things coming out of it from us and so it proved to be 133 Usage in media EditBowie allowed Heroes to be used in advertising campaigns throughout his lifetime 5 from ads for cell phones cars and softwares to HBO Latin American programming musical video games and sporting events 4 One such event was the opening ceremony of the 2012 Summer Olympics where it was played as the British team entered the Olympic Stadium 134 In 2001 the song appeared in three prominent feature films Antitrust Moulin Rouge and The Parole Officer 5 On television the song has made appearances in Glee 2012 the US version of The Tomorrow People 2014 and Regular Show 2017 135 and on soundtrack albums for Heroes and Ninja Assassin 2009 5 Meanwhile Gabriel s version was used in two episodes of the Netflix series Stranger Things in 2016 and 2019 136 Bowie s original was also featured in the film The Perks of Being a Wallflower 2012 137 138 and in the premiere trailer for the Brazilian film Praia do Futuro 2014 139 Five years later Helden was played at the end of Jojo Rabbit 140 Personnel EditAccording to biographer Chris O Leary 4 David Bowie lead and backing vocals piano ARP Solina String Ensemble Chamberlin Robert Fripp lead guitar Carlos Alomar rhythm guitar George Murray bass Dennis Davis drums Brian Eno EMS VCS 3 synthesiser guitar treatments Tony Visconti metal canister backing vocals tambourineTechnical David Bowie producer Tony Visconti producer mixer Colin Thurston mixerCharts and certifications EditDavid Bowie version Edit Weekly charts Edit 1977 78 weekly chart performance for Heroes Chart 1977 78 PeakpositionAustralia Kent Music Report 141 5Austria O3 Austria Top 40 36 19Belgium Ultratop 50 Flanders 37 17Ireland IRMA 38 8Netherlands Dutch Top 40 142 8Netherlands Single Top 100 39 9New Zealand Recorded Music NZ 40 34UK Singles OCC 143 24US Record World Singles Chart 101 150 34 126 2016 weekly chart performance for Heroes Chart 2016 PeakpositionAustralia ARIA 105 36Austria O3 Austria Top 40 97 14Euro Digital Song Sales Billboard 94 3France SNEP 96 9Germany Official German Charts 101 19Ireland IRMA 102 29Italy FIMI 98 17Japan Hot Overseas Billboard 100 18Netherlands Single Top 100 107 47New Zealand Recorded Music NZ 104 34Portugal AFP 103 32Scotland OCC 95 8Spain PROMUSICAE 108 59Sweden Sverigetopplistan 106 37Switzerland Schweizer Hitparade 99 17UK Singles OCC 144 12US Hot Rock amp Alternative Songs Billboard 93 11 Certifications Edit Sales certifications for Heroes Region Certification Certified units salesDenmark IFPI Danmark 145 digital sales since 2011 Gold 45 000 Italy FIMI 146 digital sales since 2009 Gold 25 000 United Kingdom BPI 147 digital sales since 2004 Platinum 600 000 Sales streaming figures based on certification alone The Wallflowers version Edit Weekly charts Edit Weekly chart performance for Heroes Chart 1998 PeakpositionAustralia ARIA 148 38Canada Top Singles RPM 149 13Canada Adult Contemporary RPM 150 28Canada Rock Alternative RPM 151 1Germany Official German Charts 152 85Iceland Islenski Listinn Topp 40 153 21US Radio Songs Billboard 154 27US Adult Alternative Songs Billboard 155 3US Adult Top 40 Billboard 156 20US Alternative Airplay Billboard 157 9US Mainstream Rock Billboard 158 4US Mainstream Top 40 Billboard 159 23 Year end charts Edit Year end chart performance for Heroes Chart 1998 PositionCanada Top Singles RPM 160 62Canada Rock Alternative RPM 161 5References EditNotes The quotation marks are part of the title On some single releases the title does not include the quotes Bowie revealed in 1987 that he can do a couple of lengths of the pool but in 2000 stated that I ve never swum again I swam once it was quite enough for me 5 Bowie later incorporated Lavender s Blue into performances of Heroes during the 1983 Serious Moonlight Tour 5 Attributed to multiple references 4 5 10 11 15 32 Attributed to multiple references 4 5 10 15 32 Citations a b Seabrook 2008 pp 159 161 a b c d e f g Trynka 2011 pp 332 334 a b Doggett 2012 pp 332 334 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 O Leary 2019 chap 2 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 ap Pegg 2016 pp 109 113 a b c d Pegg 2016 pp 390 391 a b c d Buckley 2005 pp 277 280 a b c d e f g Buskin Richard October 2004 Classic Tracks Heroes Sound on Sound Archived from the original on 26 May 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2018 a b c DeMain Bill 4 February 2019 The story behind the song Heroes by David Bowie Louder Archived from the original on 23 April 2022 Retrieved 23 April 2022 a b c d e f g h i j Seabrook 2008 pp 176 179 a b c Spitz 2009 pp 286 287 Seabrook 2008 pp 81 81 Hodgson 2010 pp 88 89 a b Buckley 1999 pp 323 326 a b c d e f g Perone 2007 pp 67 68 a b c Lurie Robert Dean 11 July 2018 Through the Stained Looking Glass David Bowie amp the Berlin Trilogy Blurt Retrieved 1 May 2022 via Rock s Backpages subscription required a b Carr amp Murray 1981 pp 90 92 Matthew Walker Robert 1985 David Bowie theatre of music Toronto Ont Sound and Vision p 46 ISBN 0 920151 08 6 OCLC 15102709 The use of quotation marks possibly implies that the Heroes are not to be taken too seriously a b Pegg 2016 pp 245 246 a b Heroes single is forty years old today David Bowie Official Website 23 September 2017 Archived from the original on 29 September 2017 Retrieved 23 September 2017 Campbell 2007 p 179 Pegg 2016 pp 561 562 a b Pegg 2016 pp 208 209 Petridis Alexis 8 January 2013 David Bowie still the man of mystique The Guardian Retrieved 24 July 2023 a b Pegg 2016 p 781 Kamp 1985 p 75 O Leary 2019 Partial Discography Thurston Moore To Present Bowie Retrospective At Moma davidbowie com 18 October 2008 Archived from the original on 29 June 2023 Retrieved 2 July 2023 Breaking down David Bowie s Heroes track by track BBC 27 January 2016 Archived from the original on 25 January 2016 Retrieved 19 June 2023 Thurston Moore to Present Bowie Videos at MOMA David Bowie Official Website 18 October 2018 Archived from the original on 25 June 2023 Retrieved 25 June 2023 Riefe Jordan 11 February 2016 Music Video Pioneer Stanley Dorfman Recalls Bowie Sinatra and Lennon The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on 2 June 2023 Retrieved 25 June 2023 a b c d Buckley 2005 pp 280 282 Pegg 2016 p 111 a b Whitburn Joel 2015 The Comparison Book Menonomee Falls Wisconsin Record Research Inc p 57 ISBN 978 0 89820 213 7 Kent David 1993 Australian Chart Book 1970 1992 St Ives NSW Australian Chart Book pp 43 44 ISBN 0 646 11917 6 a b David Bowie Heroes in German O3 Austria Top 40 Retrieved 15 January 2016 a b David Bowie Heroes in Dutch Ultratop 50 Retrieved 17 January 2016 a b The Irish Charts Search Results Heroes Irish Singles Chart Retrieved 19 January 2020 a b David Bowie Heroes in Dutch Single Top 100 Retrieved 15 January 2016 a b David Bowie Heroes Top 40 Singles Retrieved 21 January 2016 David Bowie 1981 The Best of Bowie LP record sleeve Europe K tel BLP 81 001 Erlewine Stephen Thomas Changesbowie David Bowie AllMusic Archived from the original on 28 July 2019 Retrieved 15 March 2020 Erlewine Stephen Thomas The Singles 1969 1993 David Bowie AllMusic Archived from the original on 1 May 2021 Retrieved 7 May 2021 Erlewine Stephen Thomas The Best of David Bowie 1974 1979 David Bowie AllMusic Retrieved 18 June 2022 Erlewine Stephen Thomas Best of Bowie David Bowie AllMusic Archived from the original on 1 April 2019 Retrieved 15 March 2020 Monger James Christopher The Platinum Collection David Bowie AllMusic Archived from the original on 8 May 2019 Retrieved 28 August 2018 Sawdey Evan 10 November 2017 David Bowie Nothing Has Changed PopMatters Archived from the original on 14 July 2017 Retrieved 11 August 2017 Monroe Jazz 28 September 2016 David Bowie Singles Collection Bowie Legacy Announced Pitchfork Archived from the original on 26 September 2019 Retrieved 29 September 2016 A New Career in a New Town 1977 1982 David Bowie Latest News David Bowie Official Website 22 July 2016 Archived from the original on 28 July 2017 Retrieved 29 September 2017 Sound Vision boxset repack press release David Bowie Official Website 26 July 2014 Archived from the original on 29 April 2021 Retrieved 29 April 2021 a b c Lott Tim 8 October 1977 David Bowie Heroes RCA PL 12622 Record Mirror Archived from the original on 10 April 2021 Retrieved 16 March 2021 via Rock s Backpages subscription required a b Needs Kris October 1977 David Bowie Heroes ZigZag Archived from the original on 21 April 2021 Retrieved 16 March 2021 via Rock s Backpages subscription required a b Robbins Ira January 1978 David Bowie Heroes RCA Crawdaddy Retrieved 1 May 2022 via Rock s Backpages subscription required Hilburn Robert 8 November 1977 Which Way for David Bowie Los Angeles Times p 70 Archived from the original on 17 August 2021 Retrieved 18 March 2021 via Newspapers com subscription required Top Album Picks PDF Billboard 29 October 1977 p 82 Archived PDF from the original on 8 March 2021 Retrieved 18 March 2021 via worldradiohistory com Smith Patti April 1978 Heroes A Communique Hit Parader Archived from the original on 16 February 2021 Retrieved 18 March 2021 via up to date com Gillett Charlie 15 October 1977 Singles reviews NME pp 12 13 NME s best albums and tracks of 1977 NME 10 October 2016 Retrieved 18 June 2022 Was David Bowie s Heroes really based on a true story Radio X 18 April 2022 Retrieved 8 May 2022 Buckley 1999 p 424 Raggett Ned Heroes David Bowie AllMusic Archived from the original on 4 July 2019 Retrieved 23 April 2022 Dombal Ryan 22 January 2015 David Bowie Heroes Album Review Pitchfork Archived from the original on 24 January 2016 Retrieved 22 January 2015 Rapp Allison 14 October 2021 David Bowie s Heroes A Track by Track Guide Ultimate Classic Rock Archived from the original on 23 April 2022 Retrieved 23 April 2022 Every David Bowie Single Ranked Ultimate Classic Rock 14 January 2016 Archived from the original on 24 July 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 a b David Bowie s Top 70 Songs Consequence of Sound 8 January 2017 Archived from the original on 20 September 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Gordinier Jeff 31 May 2002 Loving the Aliens Entertainment Weekly No 656 pp 26 34 Shaw William April 1993 In The Mode Details 90 95 168 Trynka 2011 p 488 Buckley 2015 p 63 David Bowie 30 Essential Songs Rolling Stone 11 January 2016 Archived from the original on 23 April 2022 Retrieved 23 April 2022 David Bowie s 20 greatest songs The Telegraph 10 January 2021 Archived from the original on 3 February 2021 Retrieved 15 April 2021 Barker Emily 8 January 2018 David Bowie s 40 greatest songs as decided by NME and friends NME Archived from the original on 3 November 2019 Retrieved 16 February 2020 David Bowie s 30 best songs Uncut March 2008 Archived from the original on 24 February 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2016 Eames Tom 26 June 2020 David Bowie s 20 greatest ever songs ranked Smooth Radio Archived from the original on 22 January 2021 Retrieved 15 April 2021 Nissim Mayer 11 January 2016 David Bowie 1947 2016 Life on Mars is named Bowie s greatest ever song in reader poll Digital Spy Archived from the original on 15 January 2016 Retrieved 23 January 2016 Paytress Mark February 2015 David Bowie The 100 Greatest Songs Mojo 255 81 Anderson Sarah 8 January 2018 20 best David Bowie tracks as voted by you NME Archived from the original on 30 October 2020 Retrieved 15 April 2021 Petridis Alexis 19 March 2020 David Bowie s 50 greatest songs ranked The Guardian Archived from the original on 22 March 2020 Retrieved 23 March 2020 100 Greatest Singles of All Time NME Archived from the original on 27 April 2006 Retrieved 16 February 2016 The 100 Greatest Singles Of The Post Punk Era Uncut No 45 February 2001 The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time David Bowie Heroes Rolling Stone 26 December 2005 Archived from the original on 26 December 2005 Retrieved 7 August 2018 The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time David Bowie Heroes Rolling Stone 15 September 2021 Archived from the original on 8 November 2021 Retrieved 16 September 2021 NME The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time 2014 NME Archived from the original on 18 February 2016 Retrieved 15 February 2016 All Time 100 Songs Time Archived from the original on 2 February 2016 Retrieved 15 February 2016 The Pitchfork 500 Our Guide to the Greatest Songs from Punk to the Present Pitchfork Archived from the original on 8 January 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2016 Schiller Rebecca 4 June 2018 100 Best Songs of the 1970s NME Retrieved 1 May 2022 The 200 Best Songs of the 1970s Pitchfork 22 August 2016 Archived from the original on 1 July 2017 Retrieved 20 December 2016 The Top 1 000 Songs of All Time Radio X Archived from the original on 3 November 2015 Retrieved 15 January 2016 Best of British Radio X Archived from the original on 31 March 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2016 Miller John J 26 May 2006 Rockin the Right National Review Archived from the original on 30 June 2015 Retrieved 20 February 2007 Bui Quoctrung Katz Josh Lee Jasmine C 12 January 2016 The David Bowie Song That Fans Are Listening to Most Heroes The New York Times Archived from the original on 27 February 2017 Retrieved 26 February 2017 How the loss of David Bowie impacted the UK charts Official Charts Company Archived from the original on 18 January 2016 Retrieved 19 January 2016 a b David Bowie Chart History Hot Rock amp Alternative Songs Billboard Retrieved 21 January 2016 a b David Bowie Chart History Euro Digital Song Sales Billboard Retrieved 28 April 2022 a b Official Scottish Singles Sales Chart Top 100 Official Charts Company Retrieved 28 April 2022 a b David Bowie Heroes in French Les classement single Retrieved 17 January 2016 a b David Bowie Heroes in German O3 Austria Top 40 Retrieved 15 January 2016 a b David Bowie Heroes Top Digital Download Retrieved 16 January 2016 a b David Bowie Heroes Swiss Singles Chart Retrieved 17 January 2016 a b Billboard Japan Hot Overseas Billboard Japan in Japanese 18 January 2016 Archived from the original on 19 February 2017 Retrieved 18 February 2017 a b David Bowie Heroes in German GfK Entertainment charts Retrieved 17 January 2016 a b The Irish Charts Search Results Heroes Re entry Irish Singles Chart Retrieved 19 January 2020 a b Portuguesecharts David Bowie Heroes portuguesecharts com Archived from the original on 12 April 2016 Retrieved 18 February 2017 a b David Bowie Heroes Top 40 Singles Retrieved 21 January 2016 a b David Bowie Heroes ARIA Top 50 Singles Retrieved 17 January 2016 a b David Bowie Heroes Singles Top 100 Retrieved 17 January 2016 a b David Bowie Heroes in Dutch Single Top 100 Retrieved 15 January 2016 a b David Bowie Heroes Canciones Top 50 Retrieved 28 April 2022 Certificazione Singoli Digitali dalla settimana 1 del 2009 alla settimana 2 del 2014 PDF in Italian Federation of the Italian Music Industry Archived PDF from the original on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 19 January 2014 David Bowie Heroes Chante en Francais Lescharts com Archived from the original on 23 September 2020 Retrieved 12 September 2020 Erlewine Stephen Thomas Stage David Bowie AllMusic Archived from the original on 5 August 2019 Retrieved 12 March 2020 Erlewine Stephen Thomas Welcome to the Blackout Live London 78 David Bowie AllMusic Archived from the original on 17 November 2019 Retrieved 12 March 2020 David Bowie 2018 Loving the Alien 1983 1988 Box set booklet UK Europe amp US Parlophone 0190295693534 David Bowie 2019 Serious Moonlight Live 83 CD liner notes Europe Parlophone 0190295511180 Pegg 2016 p 643 Ford Matt 11 January 2016 Remembering David Bowie The Atlantic Archived from the original on 12 January 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2016 Fisher Max 11 January 2016 David Bowie at the Berlin Wall the incredible story of a concert and its role in history Vox Archived from the original on 13 January 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2016 Pegg 2016 pp 460 647 Collins Sean T 5 December 2018 David Bowie Glastonbury 2000 Album Review Pitchfork Archived from the original on 11 July 2019 Retrieved 14 March 2020 Whatley Jack 21 December 2019 Listen back to Oasis incredible cover of David Bowie s iconic hit Heroes Far Out Magazine Archived from the original on 1 March 2021 Retrieved 28 September 2021 New Releases Radio amp Records No 1244 17 April 1998 p 38 Hay Carla 18 April 1998 MVPA Rewards Clips That Stray from the Mainstream PDF Billboard Vol 110 no 16 p 74 Archived PDF from the original on 8 February 2022 Retrieved 2 April 2022 Erlewine Stephen Thomas Original Soundtrack Godzilla The Album AllMusic Archived from the original on 21 April 2021 Retrieved 19 March 2021 Flick Larry ed 2 May 1998 Reviews amp Previews Singles PDF Billboard Vol 110 no 18 p 22 Archived PDF from the original on 8 February 2022 Retrieved 2 April 2022 Top 100 Singles Week Ending 25 November 2010 Chart Track Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 7 December 2018 Official Scottish Singles Sales Chart Top 100 28 November 2010 04 December 2010 Official Charts Company Archived from the original on 10 October 2016 Retrieved 11 July 2018 Official Singles Chart Top 100 28 November 2010 04 December 2010 Official Charts Company Archived from the original on 3 February 2016 Retrieved 11 July 2018 Coldplay Launches A Head Full of Dreams Tour With Vivid Colors Multiple Stages David Bowie Tribute amp More Billboard 17 July 2016 Archived from the original on 18 June 2018 Retrieved 18 June 2018 Germany to David Bowie Thank You for Helping to Bring Down the Berlin Wall Foreign Policy 11 January 2016 Archived from the original on 4 October 2016 Retrieved 12 October 2016 Kollmeyer Barbara David Bowie death triggers tributes from Iggy Pop Madonna even the Vatican and the German government MarketWatch Archived from the original on 19 October 2017 Retrieved 19 January 2016 Trendell Andrew 22 September 2017 Depeche Mode share official cover of David Bowie s Heroes to mark track s 40th anniversary NME Archived from the original on 29 July 2014 Retrieved 22 September 2017 King Crimson to release EP featuring David Bowie s Heroes teamrock com 28 April 2017 Archived from the original on 26 September 2017 Retrieved 25 September 2017 Hartmann Graham 24 July 2017 Motorhead to Issue Under Cover Album Featuring Never Before Heard David Bowie Cover Loudwire Archived from the original on 28 February 2022 Retrieved 29 April 2022 Lyall Sarah 27 July 2012 A Five Ring Opening Circus Weirdly and Unabashedly British The New York Times Archived from the original on 28 July 2012 Retrieved 28 July 2012 Thurm Eric 16 January 2017 The epic emotional Regular Show finale is anything but The A V Club Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Stevens Ashlie D 5 July 2019 That cover song at the end of Stranger Things season 3 has its own back story Salon com Archived from the original on 16 March 2021 Retrieved 17 March 2021 Perks Of Being A Wallflower Soundtrack Tracklist Revealed EXCLUSIVE Huffington Post 17 August 2012 Archived from the original on 13 April 2017 Retrieved 3 December 2017 Handy Bruce Q amp A Perks of Being a Wallflower s Stephen Chbosky on Emma Watson s Casting High School Yearning and Heroes Vanity Fair Archived from the original on 6 July 2017 Retrieved 3 December 2017 Berlin Film Review Praia do Futuro Variety 12 February 2014 Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 Retrieved 13 April 2014 Kermode Mark 5 January 2020 Jojo Rabbit review down the rabbit hole with Hitler The Guardian Archived from the original on 16 April 2022 Retrieved 28 April 2022 3XY Top 40 27 January 1978 Nederlandse Top 40 David Bowie in Dutch Dutch Top 40 Retrieved October 7 2023 Official Singles Chart Top 100 Official Charts Company Retrieved 15 January 2016 Official Singles Chart Top 100 Official Charts Company Retrieved 15 January 2016 Danish single certifications David Bowie Heroes IFPI Danmark Retrieved 13 August 2020 Italian single certifications David Bowie Heroes in Italian Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana Retrieved 13 August 2020 Select 2016 in the Anno drop down menu Select Heroes in the Filtra field Select Singoli under Sezione British single certifications David Bowie Heroes British Phonographic Industry Retrieved 13 August 2020 The Wallflowers Heroes ARIA Top 50 Singles Retrieved 20 June 2020 Top RPM Singles Issue 3601 RPM Library and Archives Canada Retrieved 20 June 2020 Top RPM Adult Contemporary Issue 3610 RPM Library and Archives Canada Retrieved 20 June 2020 Top RPM Rock Alternative Tracks Issue 3574 RPM Library and Archives Canada Retrieved 20 June 2020 The Wallflowers Heroes in German GfK Entertainment charts Retrieved 20 June 2020 Islenski Listinn Topp 40 21 5 28 5 1998 Dagbladid Visir in Icelandic 22 May 1998 p 42 Archived from the original on 21 June 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2020 The Wallflowers Chart History Radio Songs Billboard Retrieved 20 June 2020 The Wallflowers Chart History Adult Alternative Songs Billboard Retrieved 20 June 2020 The Wallflowers Chart History Adult Pop Songs Billboard Retrieved 20 June 2020 The Wallflowers Chart History Alternative Airplay Billboard Retrieved 20 June 2020 The Wallflowers Chart History Mainstream Rock Billboard Retrieved 20 June 2020 The Wallflowers Chart History Pop Songs Billboard Retrieved 20 June 2020 RPM s Top 100 Hits of 98 PDF RPM Vol 68 no 12 14 December 1998 p 20 Archived PDF from the original on 14 June 2021 Retrieved 20 June 2020 RPM s Top 50 Alternative Tracks of 98 RPM Library and Archives Canada Archived from the original on 22 June 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Sources Edit Buckley David 1999 Strange Fascination David Bowie The Definitive Story London Virgin Books ISBN 978 1 85227 784 0 Buckley David 2005 1999 Strange Fascination David Bowie The Definitive Story London Virgin Books ISBN 978 0 75351 002 5 Buckley David 2015 David Bowie The Music and The Changes London Omnibus Press ISBN 978 1 78323 617 6 Campbell Irving 2007 A Guide to the Outtakes of Marc Bolan 1st ed Wellington New Zealand Great Horse ISBN 978 0 473 12076 4 Carr Roy Murray Charles Shaar 1981 Bowie An Illustrated Record Eel Pie Publishing ISBN 978 0 38077 966 6 Doggett Peter 2012 The Man Who Sold the World David Bowie and the 1970s HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 978 0 06 202466 4 Hodgson Jay 2010 Understanding Records A Field Guide to Recording Practice London Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 4411 5607 5 Kamp Thomas 1985 David Bowie the wild eyed boy 1964 1984 a comprehensive reference and world wide discography guide Phoenix Arizona O Sullivan Woodside ISBN 0 89019 086 0 O Leary Chris 2019 Ashes to Ashes The Songs of David Bowie 1976 2016 London Repeater ISBN 978 1912248308 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 Seabrook Thomas Jerome 2008 Bowie in Berlin A New Career in a New Town London Jawbone Press ISBN 978 1 90600 208 4 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 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 22Heroes 22 David Bowie song amp oldid 1179862156, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.