David Bowie - Station to Station
Vinyl 180g, Lp, Album, Remastered | Label: Plg Uk Catalog | Release Year 2017
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Vinyl 180g, Lp, Album, Remastered | Label: Plg Uk Catalog | Release Year: 2017 | Genre: Experimental Rock | 6 Tracks
ARTIST: David Bowie
ALBUM: Station to Station
LABEL: Plg Uk Catalog
FORMAT: Vinile 180g, Lp, Album, Remastered
RELEASE DATE: 10/02/2017
FIRST PUBLICATION DATE: 23/01/1976
GENRE: Rock Sperimentale
TRACKS:
A1. Station to Station – 10:08 (Bowie)
A2. Golden Years – 4:03 (Bowie)
A3. Word on a Wing – 6:00 (Bowie)
B1. TVC 15 – 5:29 (Bowie)
B2. Stay – 6:08 (Bowie)
B3. Wild Is the Wind – 5:58 (Ned Washington, Dimitri Tiomkin)
TRAINING
Musicians
David Bowie - voce, chitarra e sassofono
Carlos Alomar - chitarra
Earl Slick - chitarra
George Murray - basso
Dennis Davis - batteria
Roy Bittan - pianoforte
Warren Peace - voce
Production
David Bowie – produzione
Harry Maslin – produzione
Steve Shapiro – fotografia
"Recorded in the autumn of '75 at Cherokee Studios and L.A. Record Plant Studios in Hollywood, during the darkest period of David Bowie's Los Angeles sojourn, Station to Station is an anomalous, troubled, at times dark album. Bowie is at the peak of his commercial success in the States, but at the same time he finds himself at the blackest point of his cocaine addiction, lost in reveries that wander in an often incoherent and fragmented manner between occultism, Nazi symbolism, Kabbalah and a longing for religious faith. The artist's private disorder is reflected in the recording process of the album: among his 'golden' period albums, it is the one that took the longest to complete, and the sessions often took the form of veritable marathons of monstrous duration. Apparently, made frenzied by cocaine abuse, Bowie on more than one occasion reached the record of 24 continuous hours in the recording studio, to the despair of his collaborators. The whole thing was made even heavier by the artist's almost maniacal obsession with musical detail: the album was recorded in quadraphony on a 24-track desk, which allowed him to work on layers of tracks, which are so exquisitely processed and interwoven with each other."
Credit by Storiadellamusica.it