Neuköln
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“Neuköln” | |||||
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Song by David Bowie | |||||
Album | "Heroes" | ||||
Released | October 14, 1977 | ||||
Recorded | Hansa Studio by the Wall, West Berlin July-August 1977 |
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Genre | Electronic, Ambient | ||||
Length | 4:34 | ||||
Label | RCA Records | ||||
Writer | David Bowie, Brian Eno | ||||
Producer | David Bowie, Tony Visconti | ||||
"Heroes" track listing | |||||
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"Neuköln" is an instrumental piece written by David Bowie and Brian Eno in 1977 for the album "Heroes". It was the last of three consecutive instrumentals on side two of the original vinyl album, following "Sense of Doubt" and "Moss Garden".
Neukölln is a district of Berlin where Bowie lived for a time in 1977.[1] The music has been interpreted as reflecting in part the rootlessness of the Turkish immigrants who made up a large proportion of the area's population.[2] NME journalists Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray described "Neuköln" as "a mood piece: the Cold War viewed through a bubble of blood or Harry Lime's last thoughts as he dies in the sewer in The Third Man.[1] The final section features Bowie's plaintive saxophone "booming out across a harbour of solitude, as if lost in fog".[2]
[edit] Cover versions
- Philip Glass - "Heroes" Symphony (1996)