Blackstar (song)

"Blackstar" (stylised as "")[1] is a song by English rock musician David Bowie. It was released as the lead single from his twenty-sixth and final studio album of the same name on 19 November 2015. "Blackstar" peaked at number 61 on the UK Singles Chart, number 70 on the French Singles Chart and number 78 on the Billboard Hot 100. "Blackstar" received both the Grammy Award for Best Rock Song and the Grammy Award for Best Rock Performance at the 59th Grammy Awards.[2] At 9:57, it was the longest song to enter the Billboard Hot 100 charts, overtaking Harry Chapin's "A Better Place to Be", until Tool broke the record in 2019 with "Fear Inoculum".[3][4]

"Blackstar"
Single by David Bowie
from the album Blackstar
Released19 November 2015
Recorded2015
StudioThe Magic Shop and Human Worldwide (New York City)
Genre
Length9:57
Label
Songwriter(s)David Bowie
Producer(s)
David Bowie singles chronology
"Sue (Or in a Season of Crime)"
(2014)
"Blackstar"
(2015)
"Lazarus"
(2015)
Music video
"Blackstar" on YouTube

Production and composition

"Blackstar" is an art rock,[5] avant-garde jazz,[6] progressive rock, electronic,[7] and baroque[8] song. Also described as an "avant jazz sci-fi torch song," it features a "drum and bass rhythm, [a] two-note tonal melody with hints of Gregorian chant, [and] shifting time signatures."[9] In the bluesy slow middle section, the song shifts from an acid house-ish groove to a languid, R&B-flavored interlude.[10]

The song was originally over eleven minutes long, but after learning that iTunes would not post singles over ten minutes in length, Bowie and Visconti edited it down to 9:57, making it Bowie's second-longest track behind "Station to Station". Bowie did not want to confuse listeners by releasing different single and album versions.[11]

Release

"Blackstar" was released on 19 November 2015, as a digital download[12] and in 2017 as a 12" single in Japan only. In addition to its release on the album of the same name, the track was used as the opening music for the television series The Last Panthers.[13]

Music video

The music video for "Blackstar" is a surreal ten-minute short film directed by Johan Renck (the director of The Last Panthers, the show for which the song was composed). It depicts a woman with a tail, played by Elisa Lasowski,[14] discovering a dead astronaut and taking his jewel-encrusted skull to an ancient, otherworldly town. The astronaut's bones float toward a solar eclipse, while a circle of women perform a ritual with the skull in the town's centre.[15]

Bowie in the music video

The film was shot in September 2015 in a studio in Brooklyn.[16] The filmmaking process was highly collaborative, with Bowie making many suggestions and sending Renck sketches of ideas he wanted incorporated. While both men agreed to leave the video open to interpretation (Renck initially refused to confirm or deny that the astronaut in the video was Major Tom), Renck has offered several details regarding its meaning. Renck later said on a BBC documentary "to me, it was 100% Major Tom."[17] It was Bowie who requested that the woman have a tail, his only explanation being "it's kind of sexual". Renck has speculated that Bowie may have been contemplating his own mortality and relevance to history while developing the video, but said that the crucified scarecrows were not intended as a messianic symbol. Renck has also stated that Bowie portrays three distinct characters in the video: the introverted, tormented, blind "Button Eyes"; the "flamboyant trickster" in the song's middle section; and the "priest guy" holding the book embossed with the "★" symbol.[15] Saxophonist Donny McCaslin said that Bowie had told him the song was about ISIL, although an official spokesperson for Bowie denied that the song was inspired in any way by the Middle East situation.[18][19]

Similarities have been drawn between Bowie's song and Elvis Presley's song "Black Star" which contains the lyrics "When a man sees his black star, he knows his time...has come."[20]

The repeated line "at the centre of it all" is also present in Aleister Crowley's The Book of Lies.[21]

The choreography, notably that of the three dancers featured in an attic sequence, was drawn from other media, including Max Fleischer's Popeye the Sailor cartoons. "[Bowie] sent me this old Popeye clip on YouTube and said, 'Look at these guys.' When a character is not active, when they’re inactive in these cartoons, they’re sort of created by these two or three frames that are loops so it looks like they’re just standing there, wobbling. It’s typical in those days of animation and stop-motion, you would do that to create life in something that was inactive. So we wanted to see if we could do something like this in the form of dance, we had to do that."[22] The female dancer in the attic sequence also performs a signature movement from the "Fashion" music video.

The official video for "Blackstar" won the Best Art Direction award at the 2016 MTV Video Music Awards.[23]

Critical reception

Ryan Dombal of Pitchfork praised the song, labeling it as "Best New Track". Dombal also described the track as "wonderfully odd and expansive" and noted that it is "closer to the cocaine-fueled fantasias of 1976's Station to Station than almost anything he's [Bowie] done since".[5] Pitchfork Media named "Blackstar" the 11th best music video of 2015.[24] Simon Critchley commented on Bowie's connection to Elvis Presley, referring to the lyrics of Presley's song "Black Star" as a clue.[25][26] In the annual Village Voice's Pazz & Jop mass critics poll of the year's best in music in 2016, "Blackstar" was tied at number 9, with Rihanna's "Work".[27]

Track listing

Digital download
No.TitleLength
1."Blackstar"9:57

Japan 12" single

Side one
No.TitleLength
1."Blackstar"9:57
Side two
No.TitleLength
1."Lazarus" (radio edit)4:05
2."I Can't Give Everything Away" (radio edit)4:25

Personnel

Personnel adapted from Blackstar liner notes.[28]

Musicians

Technical

Charts

Chart (2015–16) Peak
position
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[29] 69
Belgium (Ultratop Flanders)[29] 84
Belgium (Ultratop Wallonia)[30] 37
Canada (Canadian Hot 100)[31] 53
France (SNEP)[32] 45
Germany (Official German Charts)[33] 97
Hungary (Single Top 40)[34] 16
Ireland (IRMA)[35] 62
Italy (FIMI)[36] 31
Japan (Japan Hot 100)[37] 55
Japan Hot Overseas (Billboard)[38] 8
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[29] 44
Portugal (AFP)[39] 5
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[40] 84
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[41] 50
Switzerland (Swiss Hitparade)[29] 20
UK Singles (OCC)[42] 61
US Billboard Hot 100[43] 78
US Hot Rock & Alternative Songs (Billboard)[44] 13

Release history

Region Date Format Label
United States[12] 19 November 2015 Digital download
Italy[45] Contemporary hit radio Columbia

References

  1. ★ Blackstar – CD, David Bowie & Artist Arena, archived from the original on 28 February 2016, ★ (pronounced "Blackstar")
  2. "Nominees And Winners – GRAMMY.com". National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. Archived from the original on 22 December 2016. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  3. "The Longest & Shortest Hot 100 Hits: From Kendrick Lamar, Beyonce & David Bowie to Piko-Taro". Billboard. Archived from the original on 29 May 2018. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  4. "Tool's New Single Makes Chart History; 'Ænima' Album Re-Enters Billboard 200 At No. 10". Blabbermouth.net. 12 August 2019. Archived from the original on 13 August 2019. Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  5. Dombal, Ryan (20 November 2015). "David Bowie - "Blackstar"". Pitchfork. Archived from the original on 22 November 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
  6. Young, Alex (19 November 2015). "David Bowie premieres new single "★" along with an epic short film — watch". Consequence of Sound. Archived from the original on 21 November 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
  7. Rolling Stone Staff (28 June 2018). "The 100 Greatest Songs of the Century – So Far". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 31 May 2023. What they accomplished was a sound unlike anything else in music history, a combination of jazz, electronics, progressive rock...
  8. Ahlgrim, Carrie (13 December 2019). "The 113 best songs of the past decade, ranked". Insider. Retrieved 30 December 2022. The titular lead single from his final album is a 10-minute Baroque masterpiece...
  9. McCormick, Neil (20 November 2015). "David Bowie's new song, Blackstar, review: 'Major Tom is dead. Bowie lives'". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 28 November 2015. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  10. Petridis, Alexis (20 November 2015). "David Bowie's Blackstar video: a gift of sound and vision or all-time low?". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 27 November 2015. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  11. Greene, Andy (23 November 2015). "The Inside Story of David Bowie's Stunning New Album, Blackstar". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 22 December 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
  12. "Blackstar". Archived from the original on 20 November 2020. Retrieved 13 January 2016 via Amazon.
  13. "David Bowie: 7 Things We Already Know About His 2016 Album 'Blackstar'". NME. 26 October 2015. Archived from the original on 27 October 2015. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  14. Elisa Lasowski, queen of ‘Versailles,’ talks about history, television and fashion Archived 23 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine; Los Angeles Times; Marcie Medina; 30 September 2016
  15. Joffe, Justin (19 November 2015). "BEHIND "BLACKSTAR": AN INTERVIEW WITH JOHAN RENCK, THE DIRECTOR OF DAVID BOWIE'S TEN-MINUTE SHORT FILM". Noisey. Archived from the original on 24 November 2015. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
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  18. McGeorge, Alistair (25 November 2015). "David Bowie denies claims his new song Blackstar was 'inspired by ISIS'". Mirror. Archived from the original on 28 December 2015. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  19. Petridis, Alexis (18 December 2015). "David Bowie's Blackstar album: 'An unexpected left turn that deepens the mystery' – first-listen review". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  20. Rogers, Jude (21 January 2016). "The final mysteries of David Bowie's Blackstar – Elvis, Crowley and 'the villa of Ormen'". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 14 February 2016. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
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