David Bowie (born David Robert Jones on January 8th, 1947) is an influential multi-instrumentalist and has remained an active musician since the 1960s. He has traversed through many genres and styles, and oftentimes has influenced, worked with, and coincided with Nine Inch Nails.
In support of his 1995 Outside album, he co-headlined the Dissonance tour with NIN, and both bands would collaborate on each other's repertoire in between sets. He also appears briefly in Closure, chatting backstage as well as performing "Hurt" with NIN.
Contents
Inspiration and samples
Trent Reznor said in interviews that he played Low constantly during the recording of The Downward Spiral for inspiration. Incidentally, Reznor has been accused of using the main melody from Bowie's 1980 instrumental single "Crystal Japan" in Nine Inch Nails' 1994 track "A Warm Place." The two bear a striking resemblance.
The line "falls wanking to the floor" from Bowie's 1973 song "Time" was featured in several remixes of "Mr. Self Destruct" from Further Down the Spiral.
A reversed sample from the end of Bowie's "It's No Game" runs through the backround of "Pinion".[1]
Nine Inch Nails Remixes
- Reznor remixed Bowie's 1995 single "The Heart's Filthy Lesson" (Alt. Mix).
- Nine Inch Nails (Reznor, Charlie Clouser, Keith Hillebrandt, Dave Ogilvie, Danny Lohner) made 5 remixes for Bowie's 1997 single I'm Afraid of Americans (V1, V2, V3, V4, V6). Reznor starred in the music video as a psychopathic stalker, taking the role of "Johnny" from the song.
Body Of Work
Studio Albums
- David Bowie (1967)
- Space Oddity (1969)
- The Man Who Sold the World (1970)
- Hunky Dory (1971)
- The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars (1972)
- Aladdin Sane (1973)
- Pinups (1973)
- Diamond Dogs (1974)
- Young Americans (1975)
- Station to Station (1976)
- Low (1977)
- Heroes (1977)
- Lodger (1979)
- Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) (1980)
- Let's Dance (1983)
- Tonight (1984)
- Never Let Me Down (1987)
- Black Tie, White Noise (1993)
- The Buddha of Suburbia (1993)
- 1.Outside (1995)
- Earthling (1997)
- ...Hours (1999)
- Heathen (2002)
- Reality (2003)
- The Next Day (2013)
Live Records
- David Live (1974)
- Stage (1978)
- Ziggy Stardust: the Motion Picture (1983)
- Santa Monica '72 (1994)
- LiveAndWell.com (1999)
- Bowie at the Beeb (2000)
- VH1 Storytellers (2009)
- A Reality Tour (2010)
Tin Machine
Tin Machine is an offshoot rock n' roll band featuring Bowie as lead vocalist and longtime collaborators Reeves Gabrels and Tony & Hunt Sales.
- Tin Machine (1989)
- Tin Machine II (1991)
- Tin Machine Live: Oy Vey Baby (1992)
Filmography
- The Image (1967) … The Boy
- Theatre 625 (1968) … "The Pistol Shot"
- The Virgin Soldiers (1969) … Soldier
- The Man Who Fell To Earth (1976) … Thomas Jerome Newton
- Just A Gigolo (1979) … Paul von Pryzgodski
- Baal (1982) … Baal
- The Snowman (1982) … Narrator (Reissue edition)
- The Hunger (1983) … John
- Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence (1983) … Maj. Jack "Strafer" Celliers
- Yellowbeard (1983) … The Shark
- Jazzin' For Blue Jean (1984) … Screamin' Lord Byron/Vic
- Into The Night (1985) … Colin Morris
- Absolute Beginners (1986) … Vendice Partners
- Labyrinth (1986) … Jareth the Goblin King
- The Last Temptation Of Christ (1988) … Pontius Pilate
- Dream On (1991) … Sir Roland Moorecock ("The Second Greatest Story Ever Told")
- The Linguini Incident (1991) … Monte
- Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (1992) … Phillip Jeffries
- Basquiat (1996) … Andy Warhol
- Gunslinger's Revenge (1998) … Jack Sikora
- Omikron: The Nomad Soul (1999) … Boz
- B.U.S.T.E.D. (1999) … Bernie
- Saturday Night Live (1991, 1997, 1999) … Musical guest
- Mr. Rice's Secret (2000) … Mr. Rice
- The Hunger (1999–2000) … Julian Priest
- The Prestige (2006) … Nicola Tesla
- Arthur And The Invisibles (2006) … Maltazard
- SpongeBob SquarePants (2007) … Lord Royal Highness ("Atlantis SquarePantis")
- August (2008) … Ogilvie
Press
In 2005, Bowie wrote about NIN in "The Immortals" for Rolling Stone, a list of the 100 greatest rock & roll artists of all time (NIN was #94):
- "… In making The Downward Spiral, {Reznor} encouraged the computer to misconstrue input, willed it to spew out bloated, misshapen shards of sound that pierced and lacerated the listener…" [2]