Label: EMI Records (Japan), TOCP-95041
Style: Glam Rock, Rock
Country: London, England (8 January 1947)
Time: 46:13
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 284 Mb
"Space Oddity" tells the story of an astronaut named Major Tom, who
is informed by Ground Control that a malfunction has occurred in his
spacecraft but Major Tom does not get the message because he either
misses it or is in such awe of outer space he does not hear it. He
remains in space "sitting in a tin can, far above the world", preparing
for his lonely death. In 1969, Bowie compared Major Tom's fate to the
ending of 2001: A Space Odyssey, saying: "At the end of the song Major
Tom is completely emotionless and expresses no view at all about where
he's at. He's fragmenting ... at the end of the song his mind is
completely blown – he's everything then." Authors David Buckley and
Peter Doggett comment on the unusual vocabulary in the lyrics, such as
"Ground Control" rather than "Mission Control", "space ship" rather than
"rocket", "engines on" rather than "ignition", and the "unmilitary
combination" of rank and first name for the character.
Bowie's biographers have provided different interpretations of the lyrics. According to Doggett, the lyrics authentically reflect Bowie's mind and thoughts at the time. He writes that Bowie shone a light on the way advertisers and the media seek to own a stake in a lonely man in space while he himself is exiled from Earth. Chris O'Leary said the song is a "moonshot-year prophecy" that humans are not fit for space evolution and the sky is the limit. Similarly, James Perone views Major Tom acting as a "literal character" and a "metaphor" for individuals who are unaware of, or do not make an effort to learn, what the world is. In 2004, American feminist critic Camille Paglia identified the lyrics as representing the counterculture of the 1960s, stating, "As his psychedelic astronaut, Major Tom, floats helplessly into outer space, we sense that the '60s counterculture has transmuted into a hopelessness about political reform ('Planet earth is blue / And there's nothing I can do')".
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Oddity)
Bowie's biographers have provided different interpretations of the lyrics. According to Doggett, the lyrics authentically reflect Bowie's mind and thoughts at the time. He writes that Bowie shone a light on the way advertisers and the media seek to own a stake in a lonely man in space while he himself is exiled from Earth. Chris O'Leary said the song is a "moonshot-year prophecy" that humans are not fit for space evolution and the sky is the limit. Similarly, James Perone views Major Tom acting as a "literal character" and a "metaphor" for individuals who are unaware of, or do not make an effort to learn, what the world is. In 2004, American feminist critic Camille Paglia identified the lyrics as representing the counterculture of the 1960s, stating, "As his psychedelic astronaut, Major Tom, floats helplessly into outer space, we sense that the '60s counterculture has transmuted into a hopelessness about political reform ('Planet earth is blue / And there's nothing I can do')".
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Oddity)
01. Space Oddity (05:16)
02. Unwashed and Somewhat Slightly Dazed (06:11)
03. (Don't Sit Down) (00:43)
04. Letter to Hermione (02:36)
05. Cygnet Committee (09:36)
06. Janine (03:25)
07. An Occasional Dream (03:01)
08. Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud (04:51)
09. God Knows I'm Good (03:21)
10. Memory Of A Free Festival (07:09)
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