Life on Mars?

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"Life on Mars?"
"Life on Mars?" cover
Single by David Bowie
from the album Hunky Dory
B-side(s) The Man Who Sold the World
Released 22 June 1973
Format 7" single
Recorded Trident Studios, London, April 1971
Genre Glam Rock
Length 3:48
Label RCA
2316
Producer(s) Ken Scott
Chart positions
  • #3 (UK)
David Bowie singles chronology
"Let's Spend the Night Together"
1973
"Life on Mars?"
1973
"Sorrow"
1973

"Life on Mars?" was a single by David Bowie first released in 1971 on the album Hunky Dory. The song featured guest piano work by keyboardist Rick Wakeman, subsequently of Yes.

The song has its origins from an occurrence when Bowie was asked to write English lyrics to a French song ("Comme d'habitude"), the song he came up with was "Even a Fool Learns to Love". The Canadian songwriter Paul Anka bought the rights to the original French version, and rewrote it into an English song called "My Way," later made famous by Frank Sinatra. Bowie's version was never released. "Life on Mars?" was Bowie's riposte to losing out on a fortune; it has a similar chord progression to "My Way," and as Bowie explained in an interview with the BBC, it is a "modernistic take" on the Anka/Sinatra song.

The song was belatedly issued as a single in June 1973, having long been cited as a standout song and receiving radio airplay. The single reached UK #3 and stayed in the UK chart for 13 weeks.

In February 1999, Q Magazine listed the single as one of the 100 greatest singles of all time, as voted by the readers. It has continued to chart in the Q magazine best of polls, featuring most recently in the 2006 poll at number 45. A Radio Two poll in 1986 crowned it as the best David Bowie song of all time.

This song had its own multiple-minute 'solo' in Wes Anderson's film "The Life Aquatic", a film which, besides this song, features cover versions of many of Bowie's older singles.

Contents

[edit] The Song

There are many different interpretations of this song, but it is most likely filled with social observations of the time, like The Clash’s Straight to Hell. It begins by telling the story of a young girl escaping an argument between her parents by going to the cinema, only to find the film a disappointment as she feels it echoes her life.

The chorus explains this further by telling the listener she is being asked to focus on real world events such as violence in dance halls and police brutality.

The song’s second verse is made up totally of social observations, with Bowie discussing the faults with American cultural imperialism and the state of Britain, before Bowie agrees that the film is a saddening bore and returns to the chorus. It has been suggested that Bowie plays a character of the film-maker in the second verse even though the whole song is sung in the third person.

[edit] Music video

To promote the single release, Mick Rock made a simple but striking promotional video, featuring Bowie in a turquoise suit performing the song solo against a white backdrop.


[edit] Track listing

  1. "Life on Mars?" (Bowie) – 3:48
  2. "The Man Who Sold the World" (Bowie) – 3:55

The Portuguese release of the single had "Black Country Rock" as the B-Side.

[edit] Production credits

[edit] Other releases

[edit] Live versions

  • October 1st, 1972 Bowie played this song at The Music Hall, Boston. This was released in 2003 on the bonus disc of the Aladdin Sane - 30th Anniversary Edition.
  • A live version recorded at Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, October 20th, 1972 was released on Santa Monica '72.

[edit] Cover versions

Bowie's guitarist/arranger Mick Ronson also wrote a song called "Life on Mars?" (released on a 1997 reissue of his 1975 album Play Don't Worry) but the two tracks shared only their title. [1]

The song was referenced by the Bush song "Everything Zen," which also featured the line "Mickey Mouse has grown up a cow".

The BBC time travel television series Life on Mars is named after the song, which is playing on the iPod in lead character Sam Tyler's car when his accident happens in 2006, and still playing on an 8-track tape when he awakes in 1973.

The American singer/songwriter Happy Rhodes recorded a song early in her career called "Life on Mars" in tribute to Bowie, and released it on the compilation album The Keep, but the song itself has no relation to Bowie's version.

[edit] References