Pin Ups: A David Bowie Baker's Dozen Compilation | Page 27 of 36 | The Quietus

Baker's Dozen

Artists discuss the 13 records that shaped their lives

26. Gaz CoombesThe Man Who Sold The World

Who hasn’t had the discussion of favourite Bowie albums? And I always go for this one. There’s so much behind it in terms of knowing that just weeks or months before it, Bowie had met Mick Ronson and you know that this is a very new relationship and what Bowie had just come from. And it’s kind of like the birth of the Spiders From Mars.

It’s quite complex in a way and I feel everything around it and the importance of that record. I guess that at the time this must have been quite a mental album for people to hear; it must have been quite insane. You know, like: "What the fuck has Bowie done?" It’s this really dark, fucked-up record and that plays a massive part in how I feel about it.

I feel the same way about 2001: A Space Odyssey, which I saw again the other day for the first time in about 15 years. And I wonder how it must’ve been for people when they saw it first time around. Sci-fi back then was kind of cheesy, low-budget B-movie shit and suddenly this movie comes out that’s a complete change in direction with this seriousness, and gravitas, and coldness and it’s not very inviting. And that’s how I feel about The Man Who Sold The World. It was Bowie’s 2001 at a time when people weren’t used to that or ready for that. There’s the darkness and the depth and, of course, there’s the beauty. ‘After All’ is a beautiful song and very tender. It’s like the birth of so much really.

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