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"Changes" is a song by the English musician David Bowie from his 1971 album Hunky Dory. RCA Records then released it as a single from the album on 7 January 1972. Written following his promotional tour of America in early 1971, "Changes" was recorded at Trident Studios in London between June and July that year.
Changesbowie is a compilation album by English rock musician David Bowie, released by Rykodisc in the US and by EMI in the UK in 1990. The compilation was part of Rykodisc's remastered Bowie reissue series, replacing the deleted RCA Records compilations Changesonebowie and Changestwobowie.
The art rock and jazz album was Bowie's intended swan song, featuring several lyrics that revolved around his impending death. [51] [52] [53] Three new songs from the Blackstar sessions were released on the EP No Plan in 2017. [54] Bowie's unreleased album Toy, recorded in 2000, was posthumously released in 2021. [55]
Nothing Has Changed was released on 18 November 2014 through Parlophone in the United Kingdom, and Columbia Records and Legacy Recordings in the United States. The album was released in four formats: a triple CD version (sequenced in reverse chronological order), a double CD version (sequenced in chronological order), a double LP version, [7] and a single CD version released exclusive to ...
Changesonebowie is a compilation album by English musician David Bowie, issued through RCA Records in 1976. It collected songs from the 1969–1976 period, including the first LP appearance of "John, I'm Only Dancing".
Folk musician encouraged her followers to ‘VOTE BLUE’ as she shared the pared-back recording
The lyrics reflected Bowie's preoccupations with Friedrich Nietzsche, Aleister Crowley, mythology and religion. Preceded by the single " Golden Years ", Station to Station was a commercial success, reaching the top five on the UK and US charts.
For Bowie himself, the Duke was "a nasty character indeed". [21] The lyrics themselves contain very cryptic messages and direct references, including to the 13th century Jewish mystical system known as the Kabbalah and gnosticism. [13] Bowie would later claim in 1997: "All the references within ["Station to Station"] have to do with the Kabbalah."