
My earliest experience of Bowie – and, I guess, one of my formative musical experiences – was listening to a compilation album called ‘Changesbowie’. This record began with ‘Space Oddity’, and continued with ‘Changes’, the track which opens ‘Hunky Dory’, Bowie’s first great album. I remember loving the track then, and I still love it now. It’s a perfect blend of ingredients. Bowie’s vocals croon through the verses then soar through the chorus, that classic bass-and-guitar riff between chorus and verse hits you every time, and Rick Wakeman’s reverb-y piano is an unalloyed delight. And so it continues. ‘Oh! You Pretty Things’ works in a similar vein. ‘Eight Line Poem’ is too brief and simple to be a favourite, but it’s a sweet addition. ‘Life On Mars’ is exceptional – genuinely, I don’t have the words to describe how good it is: the voice, the strings, the piano, the guitar solo – it couldn’t be improved. ‘Kooks’ is the ideal gentle and slightly daft contrast.
‘Quicksand’ is a growing beast of a track. ‘Fill Your Heart’ is arguably filler, but it’s a lot of fun. ‘Andy Warhol’ and ‘Song For Bob Dylan’ are well crafted tributes from an artist who, even at this stage, was willing to acknowledge his influences. ‘Queen Bitch’ is the only real indication of Bowie’s next step – ‘Ziggy Stardust’ would be another massive stylistic departure, and ‘The Bewlay Brothers’ is a complex and wordy way to finish, but no less impressive because of this.
‘Hunky Dory’ is great for a number of reasons. First of all, it was something of a one off. ‘The Man Who Sold The World’, his previous album, had been nothing like this. ‘Ziggy Stardust’, his next, would be nothing like this either. This made ‘Hunky Dory’ unique – special. It didn’t do ever so well at the time, but it’s now rightly seen as an absolute classic. Second of all, Bowie’s choice of fellow artists is pitched perfectly here. This was the first album to be recorded with the complete ‘Spiders From Mars’ line up, and Mick Ronson’s arrangements are a particularly fine feature. Alongside them, Rick Wakeman plays piano throughout. Many would cite Mike Garson as Bowie’s quintessential piano player, and with good reason, but Wakeman’s flourishing style is perfect here, and the album wouldn’t be the same without him.
I’d argue a strong case that this might be Bowie’s best album. I’d argue a similar case for three or four other albums, but there we are. Here endeth the letter ‘H’. The letter ‘I’ will feature less albums, but will feature considerably more solo albums by Brian Wilson, so that’ll be fun.