The Heart's Filthy Lesson by David Bowie
Genre: Rock
Year: 1995
Year: 1995
"The Hearts Filthy Lesson" is a song by David Bowie, from his 1995 album Outside, and issued as a single ahead of the album. It showcased Bowies new, industrial-influenced sound. The lack of an apostrophe in the title is deliberate. Lyrically, the single connects with the rest of the album, with Bowie offering a lament to "tyrannical futurist" Ramona A. Stone, a theme continued in subsequent songs. The song is also meant to confront Bowies own perceptions about the ritual creation and degradation of art.
Critical reception to the song was generally tepid, though it would be re-evaluated by many critics when heard in the context of the Outside soon afterwards. Considering its defiantly noncommercial sound , the song did well to reach UK #35, also breaking Bowies US chart drought (which Read full article at wikipedia.org
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More songs by David Bowie: Watch That Man, Let's Spend the Night Together, Jump They Say, All The Young Dudes, Where Have All the Good Times Gone.
Best of Rock: Stairway To Heaven, Beat It, Give In To Me, Hotel California, They Don't Care About Us.
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