Noel Gallagher talks about his five favourite David Bowie songs

Noel Gallagher talks about his five favourite David Bowie songs



Noel Gallagher awoke to bad news on January 10th. “My wife burst into the bedroom crying, and I thought one of the children had died,” he says. “She said, ‘David Bowie’s dead.’ I was like, ‘Fuckin’ hell.'”

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The former Oasis songwriter-guitarist (and Bowie mega-fan), whose latest U.S. tour begins in July, called a few days after Bowie’s death to tell us about his five favorite songs by the Starman. “Let’s celebrate his life more than mourn his passing,” Gallagher says. “All things must pass, and all that.”
Gallagher took the opportunity to reflect on the way Bowie’s music has inspired over the years. “He was quite fearless, which is one of the things that I will remember him for – taking his art, always moving it forward,” he says. “For instance: You get up on the day that ‘Where Are We Now?’ hits the airwaves [in January 2013], and you’re like, ‘Oh, it’s another weird David Bowie song. I like it though, it’s great.’ Then the album [The Next Day] comes out, and it’s fucking stadium rock! And you’re like, ‘What the fuck? Wow, amazing.’ Then you hear he’s made another album [★], and you think ‘Well, are we gonna get two fucking accessible albums in a row?’ But we got a weird, dark album. And then of course he dies, and you go back and listen to it and think, ‘Wow. Fuckin’ hell, man. This is amazing.'”

In The Heat Of The Morning


This is very obscure. I don’t know anybody else that knows it, but it’s fucking amazing. The first person ever to play it for me was Steve Jones from the Sex Pistols, years and years ago. I was like, “What’s that?” And he says, “It’s fuckin’ David Bowie.” People talk about Bowie’s guises, or his looks, or his personas, but it’s little-known that he started off as a Scott Walker-type dude. This song is very mid-Sixties Brit-pop. Great organ sound, brilliantly produced. You should check it out.

I was listening to “In the Heat of the Morning” the other day, and I suddenly realized that I’ve used most of the lyrics in it for bits and bobs over the years! [Q: Which lyrics?] I’m not fuckin’ telling you!

Fashion

Bowie surrounded himself with the best musicians. The guitars on “Fashion” [played by Robert Fripp and Carlos Alomar] are fucking great. I love the discordant-ness of it all. It’s got a great stomp to it, and a great groove. Not blues, not jazz, not rock. It’s something else. It’s David Bowie.

When you listen to Bowie’s music, what are the songs about? “Life on Mars” is not about pondering whether there’s fucking life on Mars. Nobody knows what it’s about. I think that’s why Bowie was such a special artist. You’re forced into listening to it on your own terms – unlike other artists, like Roger Waters for instance, who’s very quick to fucking hit you over the head with what the song’s about, so much that you listen to it, and you think, “It doesn’t mean anything to me anymore, because you fucking told me what it’s about already.” With this song, “Fashion,” is it about fashion? I would fucking doubt it very much. Some of the lyrics – “We’re the goon squad, and we’re coming to town! Beep-beep!” You go, “What? What?” That’s not about fucking scarves and shoes, is it? It can’t be.

But “Fashion” is a great title for a song. It’s one of those Bowie songs that doesn’t really have a chorus, but it’s all a chorus, you know what I mean? It must have been awful to have been one of his contemporaries in the late Seventies going into the Eighties, thinking, “Wow, I’ve done something really great here,” and then every single Bowie put out would be fuckin’ better than the last one.

The Jean Genie

Why? Because Mick Ronson, really. The sound of it is amazing. It’s maybe the most un-British-sounding song Bowie ever did. It’s very American, kind of blues-rock-based. It paints pictures of someone running away to New York City. He was taking a lead from Lou Reed.
I didn’t know this until a couple of days ago, but this song was a take on some French fuckin’ political writer called Jean Genet. But again, is the song about the fuckin’ French Revolution? No, I don’t think so.

Let’s Dance

This is arguably my all-time fucking favorite song by David Bowie. When it came out in the Eighties, I liked it, and I liked him. But it was just a song that I listened to on the radio. How I really get inside a song is when I pick up a guitar and try to play it. A few years ago, I was on tour in a hotel room somewhere, and “Let’s Dance” came on. I jumped on the guitar and worked out the chords and I thought, “What a fucking great song to play on guitar!”

Who doesn’t like jumping out of bed first thing in the morning and singing, “Put on your red shoes and dance the blues”? Everyone should be made to do that every fucking Monday morning. And anyway, can you dance the blues in red shoes? Is it possible? I don’t think it is. Maybe it is if you’re David Bowie. It’s not about dancing, do you know what I mean?

I like the story that it started off as an acoustic song, but Nile Rodge and Stevie Ray Vaughn – who else would have those two on the same record?

Heroes

This is the first song that I ever heard by David Bowie. It was in 1981, I think, and I was sat in somebody’s flat late at night, and there used to be these things on British television called “Five-Minute Profile.” In between two crushingly boring programs about fucking farming and another one about politics would be a five-minute profile. This one happened to be on David Bowie, and it was a quick synopsis of his career. I’d never heard “Heroes” before, and there was the video of him, looking clearly coked out of his fucking mind, singing this song with the light behind him. It totally fucking blew me away. I went down to my local second-hand record shop a couple of days later and got Best of Bowie and never looked back.

And for all my talk of, “Well, what are his songs about? We don’t really know what they’re about,” I think “Heroes” is quite straightforward. The sentiment is amazing: We can be heroes, if only for one day. We all can’t make it in life, but we can feel like we make it, for one day at a time. That’s why it’s my favorite, today anyway.

Source: Rolling Stone