David Bowie’s ‘Brilliant Adventure’ Boxed Set Finds His 1990s Music Aging Much Better Than Expected: Album Review

For the most part, David Bowie’s career can be divided into eras by decade — the ‘60s, when he tried almost anything to make it (Mod-pop, Buddhism, folksinging) and mostly failed; the ‘70s, when he released some of the most exciting and innovative albums in music history; the ‘80s, when he got a taste of platinum success with “Let’s Dance” and lost his muse; and the period encapsulated in the latest career-spanning boxed set, “Brilliant Adventure: 1992-2001” — when he got at least some of it back.

It’s likely that even Bowie would agree that he spent the latter half of the ‘80s flailing in search of inspiration, bounding from the garish pop excess of “Never Let Me Down” to his bizarre, Pixies-inspired take on an indie-rock band, the much-lambasted Tin Machine (whose albums his estate seems to have left for a later retrospective). And although many of his moves in the period covered here seemed just as cynical at the time — a series of seemingly random image changes and musical bandwagon-jumping onto to whatever musical trend was hot, from industrial rock to drum n’ bass — the songs on these albums have aged much better than it seemed they would.

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And although you won’t find an overlooked “Life on Mars?” or “The Man Who Sold the World” here, it’s still Bowie, challenging himself again after those years in the wilderness, with the familiar haunting refrains, the unusual chord changes, the verses in Cockney accent, the Syd Barrett and Ray Davies-esque melodies, and most of all his still-stunning voice. Nearly all of the albums here have at least glimpses of that greatness and a couple of killer songs or moments. Perhaps not coincidentally, he married Iman Abdulmajid at the beginning of this era; she would be his partner for the rest of his life and presumably played no small role in reviving his creativity as well.

. - Credit: Courtesy ISO-Parlophone
. - Credit: Courtesy ISO-Parlophone

Courtesy ISO-Parlophone

This set begins with 1992’s “Black Tie White Noise,” Bowie’s last stab at another “Let’s Dance”-sized hit. He reunited with that album’s producer, Chic maestro Nile Rodgers, but didn’t approach its success and it’s not hard to see why: It sounds badly dated, with lots of big drum sounds and little songwriting inspiration. It actually belongs more to the previous era than Bowie’s ’90s, which really begin with…

His next act, where the man made the most welcome musical move longtime fans could have hoped for: reuniting with Brian Eno, with whom he made some of his most visionary work during the late 1970s. While the ensuing album, “Outside,” was far too high on concept and low on melody, it did bring him back into an adventurous place (although “Thru’ These Architects Eyes” is a thinly veiled rewrite of Jane’s Addiction’s “Obvious”).

The songwriting muse returned with “Earthling,” and shines through the of-the-moment industrial and drum n’ bass sounds. It includes some of the best and most Bowie-esque songs he wrote during this era, including “Little Wonder,” “Battle for Britain,” “Telling Lies” and even the Nine Inch Nails knockoff “I’m Afraid of Americans.” The following album, 1999’s relatively straightforward “hours…,” finds him dropping the trend-hopping and not trying to be quite so edgy — he’d just turned 50, after all. It has a dream theme and features nearly as many inspired songs as its predecessor, particularly “Thursday’s Child,” the rocking “Pretty Things Are Going to Hell” and especially “Seven.”

And with that, Bowie closed out the century, although the bonus material here continues up to 2001. The rest of the set includes relatively inessential albums like his 1993 soundtrack to the film version of Hanif Kureishi’s “Buddha of Suburbia,” a sprawling 20-song live BBC set from 2000, an outtakes collection — and, by far most interesting, the long-lost “Toy” album, which consists of newly recorded versions of songs from very early in his career, mostly from that first era, the mid-1960s.

Recorded live in the studio in 2000 and 2001, “Toy” is simultaneously fascinating and at times ridiculous, and it’s not hard to understand why he didn’t release it at the time: He’s a 53-year-old singing songs he wrote as a very young man like “Karma Man” and “Silly Boy Blue” (the latter of which sounds even more like Dionne Warwick’s “Walk on By” here than it did on the original).

In fact, he and his ace band make many of the songs sound better than they actually are, stripped of the basic or fussy arrangements of the originals and his more-naïve vocal delivery of the time. That can be a double-edged sword: “The London Boys,” a mod-era anthem that is one of Bowie’s best early songs, loses its air of menace and disillusionment in his relatively straightforward vocal here; likewise, “Shadow Man,” a “Ziggy Stardust”-era outtake, gets a lush ballad treatment that clouds up the original’s charming lilt. The highlight of the set is a romp through his second-ever single, “Can’t Help Thinking About Me.” Originally recorded when he was just 17, he and the band blaze through the song joyfully, driven by a chiming electric 12-string and powerhouse drumming; it was a highlight of his concerts at the time.

It should be noted that most of the material here was recorded with one of the best bands of Bowie’s career, which featured a core of bassist-singer Gail Ann Dorsey, keyboardist Mike Garson, guitarists Reeves Gabrels and Mark Plati and drummers Sterling Campbell or Zachary Alford.

Bowie would continue on this track for another three years, releasing two more albums and gigging regularly, until he suffered a minor heart attack onstage in June of 2004 toward the end of a 100-plus-date world tour and effectively retired. From then, he lived a low-profile life with his family in New York until his death from cancer in 2016, releasing just two more albums and making very rare onstage appearances. Apparently, he also spent no small amount of time curating his archive, judging by the “David Bowie Is” museum exhibit and the large number of archival releases that have been thoughtfully rolled out by his estate over the past few years. His final era will probably be the subject of the next boxed set — and as the 50th anniversaries of his stunning 1970s albums approaches, who knows what else is in store?


BLACK TIE WHITE NOISE
The Wedding
You’ve Been Around
I Feel Free
Black Tie White Noise (featuring Al B. Sure!)
Jump They Say
Nite Flights
Pallas Athena
Miracle Goodnight
Don’t Let Me Down & Down
Looking for Lester
I Know It’s Gonna Happen Someday
The Wedding Song

THE BUDDHA OF SUBURBIA
Buddha of Suburbia
Sex and the Church
South Horizon
The Mysteries
Bleed Like a Craze, Dad
Strangers When We Meet
Dead Against It
Untitled No. 1
Ian Fish, U.K. Heir
Buddha of Suburbia (featuring Lenny Kravitz on guitar)

1.OUTSIDE
Leon Takes Us Outside
Outside
The Hearts Filthy Lesson
A Small Plot of Land
Baby Grace (A Horrid Cassette)” (segue)
Hallo Spaceboy
The Motel
I Have Not Been to Oxford Town
No Control
Algeria Touchshriek (segue)
The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (as Beauty)
Ramona A. Stone/I Am with Name (segue)
Wishful Beginnings
We Prick You
Nathan Adler (segue)
I’m Deranged
Thru’ These Architects Eyes
Nathan Adler (segue)
Strangers When We Meet

EARTHLING
Little Wonder
Looking for Satellites
Battle for Britain (The Letter)
Seven Years in Tibet
Dead Man Walking
Telling Lies
The Last Thing You Should Do
I’m Afraid of Americans
Law (Earthlings on Fire)

‘hours…’
Thursday’s Child
Something in the Air
Survive
If I’m Dreaming My Life
Seven
What’s Really Happening?
The Pretty Things Are Going to Hell
New Angels of Promise
Brilliant Adventure
The Dreamers

BBC RADIO THEATRE, LONDON, JUNE 27, 2000 2xCD
CD1
Wild Is the Wind
Ashes to Ashes
Seven
This Is Not America
Absolute Beginners
Always Crashing in the Same Car
Survive
The London Boys
I Dig Everything
Little Wonder

CD2
The Man Who Sold the World
Fame
Stay
Hallo Spaceboy
Cracked Actor
I’m Afraid of Americans
All the Young Dudes
Starman
“Heroes”
Let’s Dance

TOY
I Dig Everything
You’ve Got A Habit Of Leaving
The London Boys
Karma Man
Conversation Piece
Shadow Man
Let Me Sleep Beside You
Hole In The Ground
Baby Loves That Way
Can’t Help Thinking About Me
Silly Boy Blue
Toy (Your Turn To Drive)

RE:CALL 5 3xCD
CD1
Real Cool World (Sounds From The Cool World Soundtrack Version)
Jump They Say (7” version)
Lucy Can’t Dance
Black Tie White Noise (feat Al B. Sure!) (Radio Edit)
Don’t Let Me Down & Down (Indonesian Vocal Version)
Buddha Of Suburbia (Single Version) (featuring Lenny Kravitz on guitar)
The Hearts Filthy Lesson (Radio Edit)
Nothing To Be Desired
Strangers When We Meet (edit)
Get Real
The Man Who Sold The World (Live Eno Mix)
I’m Afraid Of Americans (Showgirls Soundtrack Version)
Hallo Spaceboy (Remix)
I Am With Name (Alternative Version)
A Small Plot Of Land (Long Basquiat Soundtrack Version)

CD2
Little Wonder (Edit)
A Fleeting Moment (aka Severn Years In Tibet – Mandarin Version)
Dead Man Walking (Edit)
Seven Years In Tibet (Edit)
Planet Of Dreams – David Bowie and Gail Ann Dorsey
I’m Afraid Of Americans (V1 – Edit)
I Can’t Read (The Ice Storm Long Version)
A Foggy Day In London Town – David Bowie and Angelo Badalamenti
Fun (BowieNet Mix)
The Pretty Things Are Going To Hell (Stigmata Soundtrack Version)
Thursday’s Child (Radio Edit)
We All Go Through
No One Calls

CD3
We Shall Go To Town
1917
The Pretty Things Are Going To Hell (Edit)
Thursday’s Child (Omikron: The Nomad Soul Version)
New Angels Of Promise (Omikron: The Nomad Soul Version)
The Dreamers (Omikron: The Nomad Soul Version)
Seven (Demo)
Survive (Marius De Vries mix)
Something In The Air (American Psycho Remix)
Seven (Marius De Vries Mix)
Pictures Of Lily

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