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| Glam-rock landmark. Suffragette City, Moonage Daydream, Rock 'N' Roll Suicide, Ziggy Stardust, Starman, Hang On To Yourself, etc. |
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| 1 Five Years |
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| 2 Soul Love |
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| 3 Moonage Daydream |
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| 4 Starman |
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| 5 It Ain't Easy |
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| 6 Lady Stardust |
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| 7 Star |
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| 8 Hang on to Yourself |
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| 9 Ziggy Stardust |
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| 10 Suffragette City |
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| 11 Rock & Roll Suicide |
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Album Review
Borrowing heavily from Marc Bolan's glam rock and the future shock of "A Clockwork Orange", David Bowie reached back to the heavy rock of "The Man Who Sold the World" for "The Rise & Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars". Constructed as a loose concept album about an androgynous alien rock star named Ziggy Stardust, the story falls apart quickly, yet Bowie's fractured, paranoid lyrics are evocative of a decadent, decaying future, and the music echoes an apocalyptic, nuclear dread. Fleshing out the off-kilter metallic mix with fatter guitars, genuine pop songs, string sections, keyboards, and a cinematic flourish, "Ziggy Stardust" is a glitzy array of riffs, hooks, melodrama, and style and the logical culmination of glam. Mick Ronson plays with a maverick flair that invigorates rockers like "Suffragette City," "Moonage Daydream," and "Hang Onto Yourself," while "Lady Stardust," "Five Years," and "Rock And Roll Suicide" have a grand sense of staged drama previously unheard of in rock & roll. And that self-conscious sense of theater is part of the reason why "Ziggy Stardust" sounds so foreign. Bowie succeeds not in spite of his pretensions but because of them, and "Ziggy Stardust" -- familiar in structure, but alien in performance -- is the first time his vision and execution met in such a grand, sweeping fashion. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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Biography


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Other albums by: David Bowie |
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