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HAPPY DIAMOND DOGS

Diamond Dogs turned 46 today. It was Bowie's first composition to not feature his backing band the Spiders from Mars.
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Today, 46 years ago, David Bowie released Diamond Dogs, his 8th studio album.

The cover art features Bowie as a striking half-man, half-dog grotesque painted by Belgian artist Guy Peellaert. It was controversial as the full painting clearly showed the hybrid’s genitalia.

Released on 24 May 1974 by RCA Records and produced by Bowie himself, it was his first album to not feature his backing band the Spiders from Mars (Mick Ronson on guitar, Trevor Bolder on bass and Mick Woodmansey on drums).

Diamond Dogs was also Bowie’s final album in the glam rock genre; he would explore R&B and soul music on his next album Young Americans.

Diamond Dogs was a commercial success, peaking at No. 1 on the UK Albums Chart and No. 5 on the US Billboard 200. It was ranked number 995 on All Time Top 1000 Albums and number 447 in NME’s The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.


The song/music video here, “Rebel Rebel”, is the lead single of Diamond Dogs and received critical acclaim for its central guitar riff and strength as a glam anthem. Rock journalist Kris Needs described it: “A classic stick-in-the-head like the Stones’ ‘Satisfaction'”. While NME called it: “A rocking dirty noise that owed as much to Keith Richards as it did to the departed Mick Ronson.” Several publications consider “Rebel Rebel” to be one of Bowie’s greatest tunes.

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Featured image via Pleasures of Past Times.

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Rudolf Dethu

Rudolf Dethu

Music journalist, writer, radio DJ, socio-political activist, creative industry leader, and a qualified librarian, Rudolf Dethu is heavily under the influence of the punk rock philosophy. Often tagged as this country’s version of Malcolm McLaren—or as Rolling Stone Indonesia put it ‘the grand master of music propaganda’—a name based on his successes when managing Bali’s two favourite bands, Superman Is Dead and Navicula, both who have become two of the nation’s biggest rock bands.
Rudolf Dethu

Rudolf Dethu

Music journalist, writer, radio DJ, socio-political activist, creative industry leader, and a qualified librarian, Rudolf Dethu is heavily under the influence of the punk rock philosophy. Often tagged as this country’s version of Malcolm McLaren—or as Rolling Stone Indonesia put it ‘the grand master of music propaganda’—a name based on his successes when managing Bali’s two favourite bands, Superman Is Dead and Navicula, both who have become two of the nation’s biggest rock bands.

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