| "Diamond Dogs" | ||||||||||
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| Single by David Bowie | ||||||||||
| from the album Diamond Dogs | ||||||||||
| B-side | "Holy Holy" | |||||||||
| Released | 14 June 1974 | |||||||||
| Format | 7" single | |||||||||
| Recorded | Ludolf Studios, Hilversum January 1974 | |||||||||
| Genre | Rock | |||||||||
| Length | 5:56 | |||||||||
| Label | RCA Records APBO 0293 |
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| Writer(s) | David Bowie | |||||||||
| Producer | David Bowie | |||||||||
| David Bowie singles chronology | ||||||||||
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"Diamond Dogs" is a 1974 single by David Bowie, and the title track of the album of the same name.
The lyric introduces the listener to Bowie’s latest persona and his environment; Halloween Jack dwells on top of tenement buildings in a post-apocalyptic Manhattan. The guitar sound is heavily influenced by The Rolling Stones, and signalled Bowie moving away from glam rock and closer to a proto-punk Stooges-influenced sound.[1]
The track was considered by many commentators to be an unconventional single, and only reached UK #21. According to NME critics Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray, "As a potential hit single, the title track from Diamond Dogs was something of a non-event. Too long, too bleak in vision, too tough to dance to... you know the drill."[2]
While it failed to make the US charts, the song became a central part of Bowie’s North American tour in 1974.
The B-side was a version of Bowie’s 1971 single "Holy Holy", re-recorded during the Ziggy Stardust sessions the same year.
Contents |
| Chart (1974) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| UK Singles Chart | 22 |
| Irish Singles Chart | 27 |
Pegg, Nicholas, The Complete David Bowie, Reynolds & Hearn Ltd, 2000, ISBN 1-903111-14-5
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