David Bowie - The Next Day: All 14 Tracks Reviewed And Analysed

By Benjamin Taylor /

11. Where Does The Grass Grow?

Bowie samples the melody from The Shadows' 1960 hit Apache on track eleven but transposes it onto an indie-electro soundscape within which he again references war: "Remember the dead/ They were so great/ Some of them". RATING: 3.75/5

12. (You Will) Set The World On Fire

Another raucous rocker with an opening riff that€™s frighteningly reminiscent of The White Stripes and that makes you sad to think that Bowie said he will not tour this album; it would be a live stormer. The song name-checks several of Bowie€™s influences from the 60s: Phil Ochs, Joan Baez, Dave Van Ronk and Bob Dylan, celebrating them with the praise €œKennedy would kill for the lines that you€™ve written€€ It€™s the safest song on an album that is characterised by many unusual turns. RATING: 3.75/5

13. You Feel So Lonely You Could Die

A highlight on a record boasting some colossal tracks, this is the song showcasing Bowie€™s finest vocal that should silence those who doubted that his voice had not survived the years. Epic sweeping strings and a stirring piano arrangement support Bowie€™s anguished croon in a track that could one day be counted amongst his best. Bowie€™s voice appears to nudge a spy or assassin towards an ominous fate amidst some of the album€™s most impassioned imagery: €œBuildings crammed with people, landscape filled with wrath/ Grey concrete city, rain has wet the street/ I want to see you clearly before you close the door/ A room of bloody history, you made sure of that€€ RATING: 5/5

14. Heat

Bowie has never hid his love for Scott Walker, citing him as idol since his formative years (Bowie produced Walker documentary Scott Walker: 30 Century Man). That love is apparent on album closer Heat. It€™s a haunting hymn that references the ravages of a doomed father-son relationship that you can imagine Paul Thomas Anderson using on a future movie. €œI can only love you by hating him more/ That€™s not the truth- it€™s too big a word€€ It recalls the the dystopian gloom of Diamond Dogs€™ We are the Dead and serves as a fantastic, if unsettling, swansong for the album. RATING: 4.75/5 The Next Day is a stylish, bold, fiercely intelligent record that not only recalls and references the glories of Bowie's expansive musical past but also matches them (something cleverly conveyed by the album artwork). It's also a record that yields the mysteries of its lyrical artistry further with repeated listening. We should thank god-or perhaps the devil- that The Thin White Duke is back...