Subterraneans

Subterraneans

Lambert M. Surhone, Miriam T. Timpledon, Susan F. Marseken

     

бумажная книга



Издательство: Книга по требованию
Дата выхода: июль 2011
ISBN: 978-6-1304-1596-9
Объём: 104 страниц
Масса: 178 г
Размеры(В x Ш x Т), см: 23 x 16 x 1

High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! "Subterraneans" is a song by David Bowie for his album Low (1977). "Subterraneans" is mostly instrumental, with brief, obscure lyrics sung near the song's end. The final song of Low, "Subterraneans" was meant to invoke the misery of those in East Berlin during the Cold War. According to Bowie, people who "got caught in East Berlin after the separation - hence the faint jazz saxophones representing the memory of what it was." Together with "Ian Fish, U.K. Heir" and "The Mysteries" from The Buddha of Suburbia, this song is among Bowie's most subdued and ambient. "Subterraneans" was ultimately the most heavily edited song on Low, with the reversed instrument sounds, saxophone, and multilayered synthesizers from Brian Eno which float underneath a moaned vocal that is worldless until about the final ninety seconds. The synthesiser melody is identical to a motif from Edward Elgar's "Nimrod", the 9th Enigma Variation.

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