Future Legend
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"Future Legend" | ||
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Song by David Bowie | ||
from the album Diamond Dogs | ||
Released | April 24, 1974 | |
Recorded | Olympic and Island Studios, London Ludolf Studios, Hilversum, Netherlands October 1973 - February 1974 |
|
Genre | Glam rock | |
Length | 1:01 | |
Label | RCA Records | |
Writer(s) | David Bowie "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" by Richard Rodgers |
|
Producer(s) | David Bowie | |
Diamond Dogs track listing | ||
(start of album) | "Future Legend" (1) |
Diamond Dogs (2) |
"Future Legend" is the opening track of David Bowie's 1974 album Diamond Dogs.
Barely a minute in length, it begins with a distorted howl and features Bowie's spoken-word vision of a post-apocalyptic Manhattan, now renamed Hunger City. He describes "fleas the size of rats" and "rats the size of cats", and compares the humanoid inhabitants to "packs of dogs".
Halfway through the narration, the Richard Rodgers' tune "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" strikes up (the song and its composer appear on the track list of the original vinyl album but this credit is omitted on CD releases). "Future Legend" then morphs into the album's title track, with the cry "This Ain't Rock and Roll, This Is Genocide!".
The narrative has been compared to the writings of William Burroughs, particularly such phrases as "a baying pack of people" in Naked Lunch.[1]
A backing tape of the track was played as the lead-in to "Diamond Dogs" at some performances on Bowie's North American tour in 1974.[2]
[edit] Cover versions
- Rancid Vat - "Bowiecide" single
[edit] Notes
- ^ Buckley, David (1999). Strange Fascination: David Bowie - The Definitive Story. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-7535-0457-X.
- ^ Pegg, Nicholas (2000). The Complete David Bowie. Reynolds & Hearn Ltd. ISBN 1-903111-73-0.