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Neuköln

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"Neuköln"
Instrumental by David Bowie
from the album "Heroes"
Released14 October 1977
RecordedJuly–August 1977
StudioHansa Studio by the Wall, West Berlin
GenreAmbient
Length4:34
LabelRCA
Songwriter(s)David Bowie, Brian Eno
Producer(s)David Bowie, Tony Visconti

"Neuköln" is an instrumental piece written by David Bowie and Brian Eno in 1977 for the album "Heroes". It was the last of three consecutive instrumentals on side two of the original vinyl album, following "Sense of Doubt" and "Moss Garden".

Neukölln (correctly spelled with a double "L") is both a borough and quarter of Berlin. Bowie's and Eno's music has been interpreted as reflecting in part the rootlessness of the Turkish immigrants who made up a large proportion of the area's population.[1] Edgar Froese, founder of Tangerine Dream, in whose Schöneberg apartment Bowie lived in between 1976 and 1978,[2][3] had been a big influence on Bowie, and one of the driving factors that enticed him to move to Berlin. Bowie called Froese's 1975 album Epsilon in Malaysian Pale, which (like Neuköln) mostly played with Mellotron, a "soundtrack to his life in Berlin".[4][5][6]

NME journalists Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray described "Neuköln" as "a mood piece: the Cold War viewed through a bubble of blood or Harry Lime's last thoughts as he dies in the sewer in The Third Man.[2] The final section features Bowie's plaintive saxophone "booming out across a harbour of solitude, as if lost in fog".[1]

The main character Christiane from the film Christiane F. – We Children from Bahnhof Zoo, starring David Bowie as himself, is also from southern Neukölln. Bowie produced the Christiane F. soundtrack which gave the film a commercial boost.

Dylan Howe covered the piece for his album Subterranean – New Designs on Bowie's Berlin in 2014, in two parts, part one is called "Neukölln - Night" and part two "Neukölln - Day".

Cover versions

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b David Buckley (1999). Strange Fascination – David Bowie: The Definitive Story: p.325
  2. ^ a b Roy Carr & Charles Shaar Murray (1981). Bowie: An Illustrated Record: p.92
  3. ^ Pascale Hugues & Markus Hesselmann, "", Tagesspiegel, 20 January 2021.
  4. ^ "CLASSIC TRACKS: David Bowie 'Heroes' |". www.soundonsound.com. Retrieved 2018-09-24.
  5. ^ "Bowie's Berlin: the city that shaped a 1970s masterpiece". History Extra. Retrieved 2018-09-24.
  6. ^ "ZEITGESCHICHTEN Tangerine Dream - Groove". Groove (in German). 2015-01-26. Retrieved 2018-09-24.
  7. ^ Dorris, Jesse (23 October 2018). "A Surprising Tribute to David Bowie's Berlin Trilogy, Played in a Manhattan Mall". Pitchfork.com. Retrieved 2022-11-26.