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29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The half-folk music, half glam rock album.
Bowie's previous album "David Bowie" (1967) was his last folk music album. Bowie's next album "The Man Who Sold The World" (1971) was his first glam rock album. Right in between the two was "Space Oddity" (1969). Bowie managed to get the best of both worlds into this 10-song masterpiece. "Space Oddity," the title track, was...
Published on October 9, 1999 by Marc-David Jacobs

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Man of Words and Music
The first of his "rock" albums is rather unique in the Bowie canon, featuring, as it does, mainly narrative lyrics accompanied by acoustic instruments. For anyone who reckons Bowie is all artifice or that he can only write abstract lyrics, listen to this and re-evaluate.

The songs are, on the whole, rather fine. Apart from the title track, standouts include...
Published on July 15, 2005 by Sun Dog


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29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The half-folk music, half glam rock album., October 9, 1999
By 
Marc-David Jacobs (Portland, Oregon, United States of America) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Space Oddity (Audio CD)
Bowie's previous album "David Bowie" (1967) was his last folk music album. Bowie's next album "The Man Who Sold The World" (1971) was his first glam rock album. Right in between the two was "Space Oddity" (1969). Bowie managed to get the best of both worlds into this 10-song masterpiece. "Space Oddity," the title track, was his first commercial success (much due to the fact that it tied into the moon landing), and a nice yarn at that. Not one of his greatest, but it paved the way for songs like "Changes." "Unwashed And Somewhat Slightly Dazed" is just about as close to glam as he gets on this one, with about 3 minutes of guitar solo at the end. "(Don't Sit Down)" is the little insert which, like "Her Majesty" from The Beatles' "Abbey Road," seems almost as an afterthought. However, unlike "Her Majesty," this is quite good for all its 40 seconds. It's main flaw is that it could ONLY exist at 40 seconds. Any more, and it wouldn't be as nice. "Letter To Hermione" is his bitter plea to his recently departed (left, not dead) girlfriend Hermione Farthingale. Not much of a song, but the end ("He treats you well"/"He brings you out in style"..."And when you kiss it's something new"/"But did you ever call my name just by mistake?") is good enough to make just about any girl come back (don't you think she wishes she did, now?). "Cygnet Committee" is the grand gem of this album. 9 and a half minutes long, and great for every second of it. It weaves a talk good enough for a novel and the end brings to mind every great plea of human history, from Patrick Henry to Martin Luther King, Jr. "Janine" is a nice little steel guitar rockabilly number, which would probably go over with the Garth Brooks crowd even today. As a footnote, it's also one of those multi-decade numbers...as song from the '60s, with a sound like the '70s, in a film about the '80s, made in the '90s ("Whatever" (1998). "An Occasional Dream" is another about the failed dreams about his relationship with Hermione...much better then "Letter To Hermione." It's one that takes a while before you like it, though. "Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud" sounds like something from a Disney movie in more ways then one. But, the thing that strikes you most about it is the grand sound, which sounds like a national philharmonic orchestra. The song is great too, another nice bit about freedom. "God Knows I'm Good" is to his folk music days what "Unwashed And Somewhat Slightly Dazed" was to his glam rock days. Sounds so folky, it sounds like a leftover from the '60s. But, if you listen to the plot, it really does typify what folk music was all about...plot...social commentary. A nice simple story good enough for a short story. The title does a nice little twist at the end, good stuff. "Memory Of A Free Festival" is one of his earliest hippie songs, which were later perfected on "Hunky Dory" (1971). With an end refrain borrowed from "Hey Jude" and "Give Peace A Chance," this is the perfect song to end this album, sticking in your mind and making you want to listen to the album all over again. And, believe me, if you're a real Bowie fan, you'll want to. However, and there is a however, if this is going to be your first Bowie album, your making a big mistake. Go over and pick up "The Best Of David Bowie 1969/1974," then "The Best Of David Bowie 1974/1979." If you like those, you'll LOVE this.

Best wishes, Marc-David Jacobs (AgentMarcFBI@hotmail.com)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "I'm the cream of the great utopia dream...", April 4, 2002
By 
P. Nicholas Keppler "rorscach12" (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Space Oddity (Audio CD)
The zoned-out photo of David Bowie on the cover of his 1969 album, Space Oddity, is a good implication of the product inside. Space Oddity is bizarre music. Take "Cygnet Committee" with its stark, cryptic, metaphysical language and dramatic cries of "I want to live/Live!" for example or "Unwashed and Someone Slightly Dazed," the story of an aristocrat's daughter who encounters a dirt-encrusted sooth-sayer, described as a "phallus in pigtails" or "Memory of a Free Festival" with its chant of "The sun machine is coming down/And we're gonna have a party!" The hit title track, the dreamlike story of doomed astronaut, Major Tom, may actually be the most upbeat and conventional track on this remarkably creepy album.

Like its stunning follow-up, The Man Who Sold the World, Space Oddity is an early Bowie album that, despite not gathering the acclaim of latter efforts, such as Ziggy Stardust and Station to Station, simply blows me away. Mr. Bowie has never been renowned for the melodic, Syd Barrett-ish space-folk employed on this album but he surely knows how to compose such psychedelic-flavored folk very well. Space Oddity is wonderfully ambiguous, creepy and compelling.

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Spy spy pretty girl. . .", November 23, 2002
By 
Ludmila (Tallahassee, FL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Space Oddity (Audio CD)
There are truly some outstanding lyrics and songs here. Allow me to begin with my personal favorites: "Unwashed and Somewhat Slightly Dazed," (hence my review title), "Janine," "Cygnet Committee," and "Memories of a Free Cloud Festival." Yes, we all know the title track (even non-Bowie fans know it well), but I don't think that it's the best track on this album. Perhaps I would think otherwise it I hadn't heard the song, oh, about ten thousand times. Do I exaggerate? Perhaps. But I do know that my non-Bowie fan friends (and I'm one of those truly obsessive Bowie fans out there, as in "Oh I adore this musician I must absolutely own everything he has ever released and not only listen to all his albums day in and day out-- an offhand allusion there to his album "Never Let Me Down"-- but I must also make everyone in my circle listen to Bowie with the hope that they will, if not at least love his music as I do, then they should certainly appreciate him as a musician!"), recognize "Space Oddity," and will at least humor me when it is played, by singing along. :)
There is so much more to this album. It is a breakthrough, yes; somewhere between the adorable likes of his early early stuff (such as "Love You Till Tuesday," "Little Bombadier," and his exquisite cover of "Penny Lane") and, say, "Hunky Dory," or "Alladin Sane," etc, etc., but it is a stupendous breakthrough, nevertheless. Critics may say that he was "finding his voice" with this album, that with this album he was becoming the David Bowie persona that would change and change again for his audience, and I must agree, but I'm not certain that it is necessary to listen to this album while comparing it to the rest of his oeuvre. Genius, yes. Way before his time, naturally. His lyrics appeal to my most poetic side while still compelling me to sing (or at least hum) along to his melodies. And "Space Oddity" does this; the songs grasp you, make you want to sing along, spaced out as you change lanes, but you cannot help but to ponder the metaphorical/metaphysical/ philosophical aspects of his lyrics: "And I want to Believe/ In the madness that calls "Now."/ That's a light's shining through,/ Somehow. . . And I Want to Believe. . . I Want to Live. . ." Even so, there are some lyrics that are maddingly simplistic and unforgettable: "So take your glasses off and don't act so sincere. . ." The best of all possible worlds, perhaps? That is to say, the profound and philosophical realm merging with the simplistic and beatific realm of happiness and well-being. . ."It was God's land/ It was ragged and naive/ It was Heaven. . ." It may sound exhaustingly cliched, but this album definitely captures the transition between the peachy blissed-out state of the sixties and the new awareness/consciousness of the seventies. . . I had yet to be born, but, on listening to this album, I get this feeling of transition. Not only historically, considering the events of that era which would influence my generation, but also in listening to the lyrics which would eventually evolve (?) into those of "The Thin White Duke." A peculiar transition, and a welcome one. This album is a must for any Bowie fan.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Depression, April 27, 2002
By 
John Hill (Lancaster, California United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Space Oddity (Audio CD)
This is a great album for those times when your in a depressed mood and want to just be left alone.
Put your helmet on and fly away.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great album, July 26, 2005
This review is from: Space Oddity (Audio CD)
"Space oddity"was david bowie's second album,but really his first,Because it was the first to forshadow his later sound. Today, it still remains one of his best. The first half is 70's glam rock,while the second is somewhat folk. This album is one you must own if your a fan.Thanks.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Man of Words and Music, July 15, 2005
By 
Sun Dog (Dublin, Ire) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Space Oddity (Audio CD)
The first of his "rock" albums is rather unique in the Bowie canon, featuring, as it does, mainly narrative lyrics accompanied by acoustic instruments. For anyone who reckons Bowie is all artifice or that he can only write abstract lyrics, listen to this and re-evaluate.

The songs are, on the whole, rather fine. Apart from the title track, standouts include Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud, Letter to Hermione and Memory Of A Free Festival (although there's a better, electric version doing the rounds). The rest of the songs are pretty nice too.

It's a gentle introduction to David Bowie and listening to this album, you'd never believe there was a glam rock monster waiting to be spawned.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars from humble beginnings..., May 17, 2005
This review is from: Space Oddity (Audio CD)
Contrary to popular conception, Space Oddity was not Bowie's first album. That honor (or indignity, depending on how you look at it) goes to an album called David Bowie.

Nevertheless, Space Oddity is Bowie's first serious excursion into rock (barring the few tracks recorded for Deram that pinch rock cliches).

The album is typically hippy, although Bowie has his tongue planted firmly in his cheek on some of the tracks, and he blatantly criticizes the hippy community on Cygnet Committee.

Nevertheless, the album sounds like the soundtrack to a love fest circa 1969. If you like that sort of thing, you'll like this album. If not, at least you can revel in the irony of Bowie doing a psychedelic rock ablum.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Charming!, August 16, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Space Oddity (Audio CD)
Having read the general bottom lines of the reviews I decided not to buy the album at first. However - as life plays - I got it as a birthday present from my beloved sister anyway. I must tell ya: the album is great!

Okay, I admit it: If you just want to have 45 minutes of other Space-Oddity-style songs the album will be disappointing. In fact the title "A Space Oddity" is fairly misleading since the rest of the tracks have nothing to do with the so-called "carrying song". But if you can accept this fact you will be able to enjoy some very interesting music. Sure, some of the stuff is still fairly amateurish, especially the recordings themselves (no fancy equipment yet I guess). But it gives the album this special kinda flair. These are some of the first works of Bowie, at least some of the first official recordings. Reading that he is still trying to define his style makes me laugh a little bit! Since when does Bowie have a style? He went to so many transformations, I dunno where there is a style? Unless that is you can only identify Bowie with "Ziggy Stardust" . If you do - you know your album (Pitty, pitty - you are missing a lot!). But Bowie ain't only Ziggy Stardust! That's the fun thing about him in my opinion. To see/hear how he has developed over the years...

The album consists out of a number of very charming, sometimes amusing, sometimes baffling numbers. My personal favourite is "Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud". Kinda creepy lyrics. In fact I usually skip the first song (Space Oddity) because it just somehow does not fit to the rest of the album.

I recommend you to give the album a try after all. Open up you mind, don't expect stuff ala "Space Oddity" and you should be able to enjoy this very charming record!

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars an early classic, July 5, 2000
This review is from: Space Oddity (Audio CD)
As an album, Space Oddity is often ignored because of the successful single, "Space Oddity". Believe me, there's other good stuff on it besides "Space Oddity". "The Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud" is one of my favorite songs ever. "Cygnet Committee" is a very long and emotionally intense song that will leave you speechless. I hope that this album leaves you speechless because that's exactly what it did to me.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What do we have here?, March 5, 2000
By 
Brian (Cleveland, OH) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Space Oddity (Audio CD)
Before Iman, "Changes," and Ziggy, David Bowie was "just trying to get by." He was struggling to keep his record deal and needed to prove to fans he was here to stay. Although, he did not officially prove is success until "The Man Who Sold The World," "Space Oddity" comes close. Here, Bowie tries to ditch his hippie fans and find a mainstream crowd within England. There is a sign of uncertainty in Bowie's vocals. He, himself, does not know for sure if he is here to stay. But he'll have fun until then! The idea of super stardom seemed so distant and far away. Today, Bowie stills seems foreign to the idea of actual super stardom. Songs like "Unwashed and Somewhat Slightly Dazed" and "Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud" show Bowie's talent before the character of Ziggy Stardust came into play. Bowie just wanted to write and perform music, and that is what he does so well.
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Space Oddity
Space Oddity by David Bowie (Audio CD - 1999)
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