Hallo Spaceboy

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

"Hallo Spaceboy (Pet Shop Boys Remix)"
A solarised image of a man with goggles and a hoodie
Single by David Bowie featuring Pet Shop Boys
from the album Outside
B-side
Released19 February 1996 (1996-02-19)
Recorded1994, January 1995
Studio
Genre
Length
  • 5:14 (album)
  • 4:25 (Pet Shop Boys mix)
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
  • David Bowie
  • Brian Eno
David Bowie singles chronology
"Strangers When We Meet"
(1995)
"Hallo Spaceboy (Pet Shop Boys Remix)"
(1996)
"Telling Lies"
(1996)
Music video
"Hallo Spaceboy" on
YouTube

"Hallo Spaceboy" is a song by the English musician David Bowie from his 20th studio album, Outside (1995). It originated as an instrumental by Reeves Gabrels called "Moondust", which Bowie and Brian Eno stripped down and used to form the final track. An industrial rock and electronica number influenced by the Pixies and Nine Inch Nails, the song contains a hypnotic sound, with synthesisers, loops and distorted guitar lines. Lyrically influenced by Brion Gysin, the song contains images of apocalypse and continues the androgynous conundrums of former Bowie songs such as "Rebel Rebel".

For its release as the third and final

live albums
.

Writing and recording

Written by David Bowie and Brian Eno,[1] "Hallo Spaceboy" developed from an ambient instrumental piece written by guitarist Reeves Gabrels called "Moondust".[2][3] Initial work on the track began during a recording session at Mountain Studios in Montreux in 1994, shortly after the main sessions for the Leon project concluded.[4] Bowie biographers Nicholas Pegg and Chris O'Leary point to the influence of poet and artist Brion Gysin, who developed a cut-up technique with William S. Burroughs that Bowie had, on several occasions, utilised for song lyrics. During the recording, Bowie spoke the "If I fall, moondust will cover me", reportedly Gysin's final words before his death in 1986.[1][4] Work halted on the track following the session, as Bowie believed "there wasn't anything special going on with that piece".[1]

The track resurfaced on 17 January 1995 during the

metal Doors.' It's an extraordinary sound."[5] Gabrels later expressed disappointment in not receiving a co-writing credit for the song.[1]

Composition

Characterised by commentators as

Pornography-era Cure to Nine Inch Nails and the Smashing Pumpkins;[4][8] Bowie himself reportedly stated he was aiming for a Nine Inch Nails-type sound.[5] Featuring synthesisers, loops and distorted guitar lines,[1] a few reviewers compared the song's sound to Bowie's 1974 album Diamond Dogs and his work with the rock band Tin Machine.[4][3][7] Author Dave Thompson argued that the song would not have felt out of place as a bonus track on that album.[9] Lyrically, Pegg states that "Hallo Spaceboy" captures the "millennial angst" of the Outside album and continues the androgynous conundrums of songs such as 1974's "Rebel Rebel" and 1979's "Boys Keep Swinging" with the line "Do you like girls or boys? / It's confusing these days".[4][8][10] Some of the words and ideals, such as "chaos", "dust" and "hallo", and visions of a science fiction apocalypse were recycled from Tin Machine's "Baby Universal" (1991).[11]

Release and promotion

"Hallo Spaceboy" was released as the sixth track on Outside on 25 September 1995.[12] Bowie featured the song prominently on the 1995 Outside Tour, often together with Nine Inch Nails on the US leg and after as the closing number.[4][8] Bowie intended "Hallo Spaceboy" to be his next single after "Strangers When We Meet", performing the song twice in Birmingham and again on Jools Holland's Later... in late December the same year.[13] Both Birmingham performances were later released on the live album No Trendy Réchauffé (Live Birmingham 95) in 2020.[14]

Pet Shop Boys remix

Two older men, one bald and one wearing a silver hat and sunglasses
For its release as a single, "Hallo Spaceboy" was issued in remixed form featuring English duo Pet Shop Boys (pictured in 2013).

Believing that in its original state, "Hallo Spaceboy" was uncommercial as a potential hit single in 1996, Bowie commissioned Neil Tennant of the Pet Shop Boys to remix the song for release as the third single from Outside.[15] Tennant, a lifelong Bowie fan, stripped the song's anger with electronics and added Pet Shop Boys' signature backing vocals to the mix. Combined with the original only containing a single verse, and a lyric including feelings of alienation, Tennant and bandmate Chris Lowe added lyrical fragments from Bowie's 1969 song "Space Oddity", using a Gysin-style cut-up technique, to create a second verse: "Ground to Major, bye bye Tom / dead the circuit, countdown's wrong / Planet Earth is control on?"[1][15][16] O'Leary states the additions turned the song's cry of "this chaos is killing me" into a plea from an astronaut "strung out in heaven".[1]

Bowie himself initially expressed reservation about the additions when Tennant told him during a telephone conversation, but later agreed that they worked well.[4][17] Tennant told NME in a 1997 interview that he and Lowe, working alongside Bowie, had completed what Tennant called the "Major Tom trilogy", in reference to the fictional astronaut who first appeared in "Space Oddity" and later appeared in 1980's "Ashes to Ashes". Tennant explained, "I said to [Bowie], 'It's like Major Tom is in one of those Russian spaceships they can't afford to bring down,' and he said, 'Oh wow, is that where he is?'"[16] Compared to the original version, the remix features a disco edge.[18][19]

Released on 19 February 1996,[20] the single was released through several formats, including a 7" single through BMG/RCA, a CD single through Arista/RCA[21] and a 12" promo in the US through Virgin.[22] The CD single was packaged with a reissue of "The Hearts Filthy Lesson" and live renditions of "Under Pressure" and "Moonage Daydream",[4][22] recorded on the Outside Tour on 13 December 1995 in Birmingham.[23] The single was a success across Europe,[8] reaching number 12 in the UK, becoming Bowie's highest charting single since 1993's "Jump They Say".[4] On top of a number 1 placement in Latvia,[4] the remixed "Hallo Spaceboy" charted in Australia (36),[24] Austria (37),[25] Belgium Flanders (48) and Wallonia (30),[26][27] Finland (8),[28] Germany (59),[29] Ireland (21),[30] the Netherlands Top 40 and Single Top 100 (24 and 33, respectively),[31][32] Scotland (10) and Sweden (12).[33][34]

The music video for "Hallo Spaceboy" was directed by longtime Bowie director David Mallet, mixing shots of both Bowie and Pet Shop Boys into a rapid-fire montage of Cold War era retro-footage of science fiction film clips, atomic bomb testing footage and television advertising clips.[4] Bowie performed the song with Pet Shop Boys at the 1996 Brit Awards on 19 February 1996,[35][36] and again on Top of the Pops on 1 March.[4] According to O'Leary, Bowie "thrashed around" during these performances while Tennant sang calmly.[1]

The Pet Shop Boys remix replaced "Wishful Beginnings" on the Outside – Version 2 album,[4] and is included on some editions of the compilation albums Best of Bowie (2002),[37] Nothing Has Changed (2014) and Legacy (The Very Best of David Bowie) (2016).[38][39] The remix was later included on Re:Call 5, released as part of the Brilliant Adventure (1992–2001) box set in 2022.[40] Four additional remixes, excluding the single one, were compiled on the 2004 two-disc edition of Outside.[4] An extended Pet Shop Boys remix is included on their 2007 remix album Disco 4.[41]

Critical reception

Both versions of "Hallo Spaceboy" have received positive reviews from music critics and biographers. Discussing the original, biographer

NME declared it as "a viscerally thrilling glassed-guitar'n'driller rhythm rocker".[45]

Reviewing the Pet Shop Boys remix, British magazine Music Week rated the song four out of five, writing that the song "has been transformed into a hi-NRG anthem with chart appeal to the max".[46] Mojo magazine writer Mark Paytress opined that adding Pet Shop Boys was a "masterstroke".[7] Huey called the remix a success, with "less uncompromising" drama and "less disturbing" results.[21]

"Hallo Spaceboy" has appeared on lists ranking Bowie's best songs by

Ultimate Classic Rock placed the single at number 79 (out of 119) in a list ranking every Bowie single from worst to best.[47]

Live performances

"Hallo Spaceboy" featured regularly on Bowie's setlists throughout 1996 and 1997, and made return appearances during his 2000 summer shows, 2002 Heathen and 2003–2004 A Reality tours.[4] A version recorded on 18 July 1996 at the Phoenix Festival in England appeared on the BBC compilation Phoenix: The Album in 1997.[4] A July 1997 recording from the Earthling Tour was also released on the live album Look at the Moon! in 2021,[48] and 2 November recording in Rio de Janeiro from the same tour appeared on the live album LiveAndWell.com in 2000 (re-released in 2021).[49][50] Pet Shop Boys also performed their own version of "Hallo Spaceboy" during their residency at London's Savoy Theatre in 1997.[4]

At Bowie's fiftieth birthday concert in New York in January 1997, the song was performed together with Foo Fighters.[51][52] Three years later, he performed it at the Glastonbury Festival on 25 June 2000,[53] released in 2018 as Glastonbury 2000.[54] Bowie performed the song live at BBC Radio Theatre, London, on 27 June 2000, and a recording of this performance was included on the bonus disc of Bowie at the Beeb in 2000;[4][55] the full concert later appeared on Brilliant Adventure (1992–2001).[56] A November 2003 performance from the A Reality Tour is included on the 2004 A Reality Tour DVD,[57] and the 2010 A Reality Tour album.[58]

Personnel

According to Chris O'Leary:[1]

Technical

  • David Bowie – producer
  • Brian Eno – producer
  • David Richards – engineer

Charts

Chart performance for "Hallo Spaceboy"
Chart (1996) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[24] 36
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[25] 37
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[26] 48
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Wallonia)[27] 30
Finland (
Suomen virallinen lista)[28]
8
Germany (Official German Charts)[29] 59
Ireland (IRMA)[30] 21
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[31] 24
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[32] 33
Scotland (OCC)[33] 10
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[34] 12
UK Singles (OCC)[59]
12
US Dance Club Songs (Billboard)[60] 40

References

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  2. ^ Trynka 2011, p. 440.
  3. ^ a b c d Thompson 2006, p. 134.
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Sources