Golden Years (song)

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"Golden Years"
"Golden Years" cover
Single by David Bowie
from the album Station to Station
B-side "Can You Hear Me"
Released 17 November 1975
Format 7" single
Recorded Cherokee Studios, Hollywood, October 1975
Genre Funk, Soul
Length 3:22 (Single edit)
4:00 (Full-length album version)
Label RCA Records
2640
Producer David Bowie, Harry Maslin
David Bowie singles chronology
"Fame"
1975
"Golden Years"
1975
"TVC 15"
1976
Station to Station track listing
"Station to Station"
(1)
"Golden Years"
(2)
"Word on a Wing"
(3)

For other uses and meanings of "The Golden Years" see the disambiguation page.

"Golden Years" is a song written by David Bowie in 1975. It was originally released as a shortened single in November 1975, and in its full-length version in January the following year on the Station to Station album. It was the first track completed during the Station to Station sessions, a period when Bowie's cocaine addiction was at its peak.[1] At one stage it was going to be the album's title track.[2]

Contents

When it first appeared as a single in 1975, "Golden Years" presented a somewhat skewed view of the forthcoming album, being more similar in style to the Young Americans funk/soul material from earlier in 1975 than the rest of Station to Station, which forshadowed the Kraftwerk-influenced Euro-centric and electronic music that Bowie would move into with his late-1970s 'Berlin Trilogy'.[2]

Bowie was looking to emulate something of the glitzy nostalgia of "On Broadway", which he was playing on piano in the studio, when he came up with "Golden Years".[1] He has said that he offered it to Elvis Presley to perform, but that Presley declined it.[3] Both Angela Bowie and Ava Cherry also claim to have been the inspiration for the song.[3]

Bowie allegedly got drunk to perform the song for the American TV show Soul Train; at the time he was one of the few white artists to appear on the programme.[4] The resultant video clip was used to promote the single and continued Bowie's commercial success in the United States, where it reached #10 and charted for 16 weeks. It achieved #8 in the UK.

"Golden Years" was played sporadically by Bowie on the 1976 tour,[2] and regularly on the 1983, 1990 and 2000 tours. It was used as the theme song of Stephen King's Golden Years.

  1. "Golden Years" (Bowie) – 3:22
  2. "Can You Hear Me?" (Bowie) – 5:04

  • Nina Hagen – Live recording from Fearless/Angstlos tour
  • Loose EndsSo Where Are You? (1985)
  • Marilyn MansonDead Man on Campus soundtrack (1998)
  • Amberjack Rice, Walter Traggert and Breakfastime – Only Bowie (1995)
  • Swell - Crash Course for the Ravers – A Tribute to the Songs of David Bowie (1996)
  • Track One A.B.Reverie (1999)
  • Walk DMC – Ashes to Ashes: A Tribute to David Bowie (1998)
  • Essra Mohawk - Spiders from Venus: Indie Women Artists and Female-Fronted Bands Cover David Bowie (2003)
  • Count Zero - .2 Contamination: A Tribute to David Bowie (2006)

  1. ^ a b David Buckley (1999). Strange Fascination - David Bowie: The Definitive Story: pp.258-280
  2. ^ a b c Nicholas Pegg (2000). The Complete David Bowie: pp.82-83
  3. ^ a b Christopher Sandford (1998). Bowie: Loving the Alien: p.146.
  4. ^ Roy Carr & Charles Shaar Murray (1981). Bowie: An Illustrated Record: pp.75-80

  • Pegg, Nicholas, The Complete David Bowie, Reynolds & Hearn Ltd, 2000, ISBN 1-903111-14-5
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