Warszawa (song) explained

Warszawa
Artist:David Bowie
Album:Low
Recorded:September–November 1976
Studio:Château d'Hérouville (Hérouville)[1]
Genre:Ambient, dark ambient, electronic
Length:6:23
Label:RCA
Producer:David Bowie and Tony Visconti

"Warszawa" is a mostly instrumental song by David Bowie and Brian Eno originally released in 1977 on the album Low. The band Joy Division was initially called Warsaw as a reference to this song.

Composition and recording

The piece is intended to evoke the "very bleak atmosphere" Bowie said he experienced from his visit to Warsaw the previous year. He had to leave the recording sessions to travel to Paris where he was dealing with some legal issues. He instructed Eno to create "a really slow piece of music with a very emotive, almost religious feel to it".[2] The melody Bowie sings in the middle part of the song are based on a recording of "Helokanie" by Polish folk choir Śląsk,[3] although Bowie's lyrics are invented words, not words in Polish.[4] Bowie had purchased a recording of Śląsk performing the piece during a stopover in Warsaw.[3]

The piece is in four sections. The first section features drones in octaves played on piano and synthesisers. A fanfare motif states the chord of A major which is answered by a phrase: A, B, C, transforming it to A minor. It is these notes that Eno says he heard being played repeatedly by Tony Visconti's son at the studio piano. Transposed up a semitone, they later form the opening of the main melody at 1:17 in the key of F# major. This is played on a Chamberlin, a keyboard instrument that utilises tape loops of orchestral instruments, with Eno using the voices of cellos and flutes. After the melody is heard twice, at 3':47" the key drops a tone to E major, the texture thins out and Bowie's vocal enters. At 5':24" the final section starts which is reprise of the first half of the melody heard at 1':17".

Live versions

It was used as a live opener on Bowie's Isolar II and Heathen tours. Rather than quickly delving deeply into loud rock music, the song was used to intentionally provoke the audience into a calm, holding them initially in deep suspense. Bowie's choice to maintain a low profile during 1978 was expressed through his entrance to the stage during this song, not singing, but simply sinking into the band and playing the Chamberlin until his cue to sing the lyrics. These versions had Bowie on Chamberlin, Simon House on electric violin (and a violin solo to replace the higher notes sung by Bowie on original recording), Roger Powell on synthesizers, Sean Mayes on grand piano and ARP Solina String Synthesizer, George Murray on bass guitar, Dennis Davis on cymbals and percussion with Carlos Alomar conducting the band and Adrian Belew looking on with his electric guitar turned down (waiting for his cue to begin "Heroes" the song that was played afterwards).

Personnel

Vocals

Mini-Moog, Piano, Chamberlin, EMS Synthi

Other releases

Cover versions

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Seabrook . Thomas Jerome . Bowie in Berlin, A New Career in a New Town . 2008 . Jawbone Press . London UK . 978-1-906002-08-4 . 128.
  2. Book: Pegg . Nicholas . The Complete David Bowie . 249.
  3. Web site: Warszawa . Pushing Ahead of the Dame . 15 March 2011 . August 10, 2017.
  4. Web site: How David Bowie Created Warszawa . Wojciech . Oleksiak . August 10, 2017.
  5. Web site: Prom 19: David Bowie Prom. BBC iPlayer Radio. 23 August 2016.
  6. Web site: Dorris. Jesse. A Surprising Tribute to David Bowie's Berlin Trilogy, Played in a Manhattan Mall. 2022-11-26. Pitchfork.com. 23 October 2018 . en.