Quicksand (David Bowie song) explained

Quicksand
Cover:Quicksand by David Bowie UK vinyl single.png
Caption:Cover of the UK vinyl single
Artist:David Bowie
Album:Hunky Dory
Released:17 December 1971
Recorded:14 July 1971
Studio:Trident, London
Length:5:03
Label:RCA
Producer:Ken Scott, David Bowie

"Quicksand" is a song written by the English singer-songwriter David Bowie and released on his 1971 album Hunky Dory.

Background

"Quicksand" was recorded on 14 July 1971 at Trident Studios in London.[1] This ballad features multi-tracked acoustic guitars and a string arrangement by Mick Ronson. Producer Ken Scott, having recently engineered George Harrison's album All Things Must Pass, attempted to create a similarly powerful acoustic sound with this track.[2]

Bowie said of the song, "The chain reaction of moving around throughout the bliss and then the calamity of America produced this epic of confusion. Anyway with my esoteric problems I could have written it in Plainview or Dulwich" and that it was a mixture of "narrative and surrealism".

Lyrically the song, like much of Bowie's work at this time, was influenced by Buddhism ("You can tell me all about it on the next Bardo"), occultism, and Friedrich Nietzsche's concept of the Superman. It refers to the magical society Golden Dawn and name-checks one of its most famous members, Aleister Crowley, as well as Heinrich Himmler, Winston Churchill and Juan Pujol (codename: Garbo).[3]

Reception

NME editors Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray have described it as "Bowie in his darkest and most metaphysical mood",[4] while a contemporary review in Rolling Stone remarked on its "superb singing" and "beautiful guitar motif from Mick Ronson".[5]

Live performances

Bowie performed the song during his 1997 Earthling Tour. A live recording from one show on 20 July 1997, recorded at Long Marston, England during the Phoenix Festival, was released in a live album entitled Look at the Moon! in February 2021.[6] Bowie performed the song occasionally during his 2003-04 A Reality Tour.

Bowie performed the song at his 50th birthday concert in 1997 along with Robert Smith of The Cure.[7]

Other releases

The song was released as the B-side of the single "Rock 'n' Roll Suicide" in April 1974. RCA included the song in the picture disc set Life Time. A studio demo version of the song was released as a bonus track on the Rykodisc release of Hunky Dory in 1990. A November 1996 tour rehearsal recording of the song, which originally aired on a BBC radio broadcast in 1997, was released in 2020 on the album ChangesNowBowie.[8]

Personnel

References

Pegg, Nicholas, The Complete David Bowie, Reynolds & Hearn Ltd, 2000,

Notes and References

  1. Kevin Cann (2010). Any Day Now - David Bowie: The London Years: 1947-1974: pp.223-224
  2. David Buckley (1999). Strange Fascination - David Bowie: The Definitive Story: p.115
  3. David Sheppard (2007). "Wishful Beginnings", MOJO 60 Years of Bowie: p.24
  4. [Roy Carr]
  5. John Mendelsohn . Hunky Dory . Rolling Stone . 6 January 1972 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070127202049/http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/davidbowie/albums/album/237402/review/6067648/hunky_dory . 27 January 2007 .
  6. David Bowie's 'Brilliant Live Adventures' Series Continues With 1997 Festival Gig . 29 January 2021 . 29 January 2021 . Daniel . Kreps. .
  7. Book: Pegg, Nicholas . The Complete David Bowie . 181.
  8. News: Erlewine . Stephen Thomas . Stephen Thomas Erlewine . 25 April 2020 . ChangesNowBowie – David Bowie . . 1 December 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200429154613/https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/david-bowie-changesnowbowie/ . 29 April 2020 . live .