- 1984 (song)
Infobox Song
Name = 1984
Artist =David Bowie
Album =Diamond Dogs
Released =April 24 1974
track_no = 9
Recorded = Olympic and Island Studios,London
Ludolf Studios,Hilversum ,Netherlands
October 1973 – February 1974
Genre = Funk
Length = 3:27
Writer =David Bowie
Label =RCA Records
Producer = David Bowie
prev = "We Are the Dead "
prev_no = 8
next = "Big Brother"
next_no = 10"1984" is a song by
David Bowie , from his 1974 album "Diamond Dogs ". Written in late 1973, it was inspired byGeorge Orwell 's "Nineteen Eighty-Four " and, like much of its parent album, originally intended for a never-produced stage musical based on the novel.Roy Carr &Charles Shaar Murray (1981). "Bowie: An Illustrated Record": p.64]Music and lyrics
The centrepiece of Side Two of the original vinyl album, in the context of Bowie's adaptation of Orwell's story, "1984" has been interpreted as representing
Winston Smith 's imprisonment and interrogation by O'Brien. The lyrics also bear some similarities to Bowie's earlier song "All the Madmen ", from "The Man Who Sold the World " ("They'll split your pretty cranium and fill it full of air").Nicholas Pegg (2000). "The Complete David Bowie": p.153]"1984"'s
wah-wah guitar sound is often likened to the "Theme from "Shaft"" (1971) byIsaac Hayes .David Buckley (1999). "Strange Fascination - David Bowie: The Definitive Story": p.214] Played by Alan Parker, it was one of the few instances on the "Diamond Dogs" album where Bowie himself did not take the lead guitar part. The track's funk/soul influence has been cited as a clear indicator of where Bowie's style was headed on his next album, "Young Americans".Recording and release
"1984" was first recorded in a medley with "Dodo", known as "1984/Dodo", on
19 October 1973 for the U.S. TV special "The 1980 Floor Show" (later bootlegged on record as "Dollars in Drag"). A studio version of "1984/Dodo" was recorded within the month but went unreleased until it appeared on the "Sound and Vision" box set in 1989. This was Bowie's last recording withMick Ronson ,Trevor Bolder and producerKen Scott atTrident Studios ,London .In the later "Diamond Dogs" sessions, "1984" and "Dodo" were rerecorded separately, though only the former made it onto the album. The final version of "1984" was faster and funkier than the medley and, as described by Bowie encyclopedist
Nicholas Pegg ,"'an obvious single if there ever was one". However it was only released as such in America, where it failed to chart. The track generally opened the "Diamond Dogs" concerts in 1974 but has not been performed live since.Live versions
* A live version from the 1974 tour was released on "
David Live " and another recording from the 1974 tour was released on the semi-legal album "A Portrait in Flesh".
* A live in-studio performance of "1984" is included on the DVD set "The Dick Cavett Show : Rock Icons"Other releases
* It was released as a single in the U.S. in July 1974, backed with "
Queen Bitch " from Bowie's 1971 album "Hunky Dory ".
* It appeared on several compilations:
** "Chameleon" (Australia/New Zealand 1979)
** "ChangesTwoBowie " (1981)
** "Fame and Fashion " (1984)
** "The Best of 1974/1979 " (1998)
* The "1984/Dodo" version was released in the "Sound and Vision" box set in 1989, and in 2004 on the bonus disc of the "30th Anniversary Edition" of "Diamond Dogs ".Cover versions
*
Tina Turner - "Private Dancer " (1984)Appearances in popular culture
*The song has appeared in the
Flip Skateboards video "Sorry" inArto Saari 's part.Notes
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