This section contains 230 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
[With Young Americans] Bowie's thrown in the towel on rock and concept music, preferring to boogie down to prosperity instead. Okay, Dave … shortchange us perfervid dupes who put stock in ya….
I personally feel gypped. By stifling his contemptuous tone, skirting scorn for things pathetic and mundane that haunted his prior work, Bowie is neglecting statement. By devoting himself to disco-soul, playing a purely commercial idiom in lieu of making new strides, Bowie is shunning art….
I'm unconvinced Young Americans is anything but commercial, unless it's another Bowie transition. The words trite, unenthralling, and masturbatory come to mind. Young Americans ain't got the visceral verve connected with most Bowie material; it's the epitome of every shoddy, self-indulgent delusion Dave could muster, have pressed into vinyl, and try to sell. (p. 62)
[Even] though I stuck with Bowie during his last stylistic change—wouldn't listen when Diamond Dogs was vilified...
This section contains 230 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |