Just nine months after David Bowie released his groundbreaking Low album in January of 1977, he then released the second in the Berlin trilogy of albums, “Heroes”. Keeping the same personnel but adding Robert Fripp on guitar, Bowie continued to work with Brian Eno and producer Tony Visconti. The album follows a similar strategy to Low in that side one is composed of songs with vocals and side two is mostly instrumental.
The songs on side one veer from fairly regular structures to Avant Garde/experimental sounds, often within the same track. Second single “Beauty and the Beast” has dissonant sounds at times but that also obscures the funky dance beat underneath. Distorted, scratchy guitars appear on “Joe the Lion” on a track where Bowie switches to talk singing for parts of the track. “Blackout” could be about a New York blackout or about Bowie passing out in the studio but he also sings the romantic line, “kiss you in the rain” several times over.
Side two starts with “V-2 Schneider” named in tribute to Kraftwerk member Florian Schneider on the rather catchy track before the darker and foreboding sounds of “Sense of Doubt” appears. Two more instrumentals including the Japanese influenced “Moss Garden” appear before Bowie starts singing again on “The Secret Life of Arabia”, complete with handclaps in the desert.
The album is most notable for its legendary title track, the first single taken from the album that was not a hit upon release but has gone onto be one of the great anthems of all time. Originally said to be based on Bowie seeing a Berlin couple kiss by the Berlin Wall, another story is that Visconti was seen stealing a kiss from a back up singer while he was still married. The lyrics are stuff of legend – “I will be king… and you, you will be queen”, the dreamlike image of “I wish you could swim, like the dolphins, like dolphins can swim” and of course, “we can be heroes just for one day”. The album itself is challenging, filled with startling imagery including its iconic cover art, all which make it one of the most intriguing and celebrated albums of the 1970s.
9/10
