Say this for
David Bowie: he has a flair for drama. This abiding love of the theatrical may not be as evident in the production of
The Next Day as it is in its presentation, how
Bowie sprung it upon the world early in 2013 following a decade of undeclared retirement. Reasons for
Bowie's absence were many and few, perhaps related to a health scare in 2004, perhaps due to a creative dry spell, perhaps he simply didn't have songs to sing, or perhaps he had a lingering suspicion that by the time the new millennium was getting into full swing he was starting to be taken for granted. He had settled into a productive purple patch in the late '90s, a development that was roundly ignored by all except the devoted and the press, who didn't just give
Hours,
Heathen, and
Reality a pass, they recognized them as a strong third act in a storied career. That same sentiment applies to
The Next Day, an album recorded with largely the same team as
Reality -- the same musicians and the same producer, his longtime lieutenant
Tony Visconti -- and, appropriately, shares much of the same moody, meditative sound as its predecessor
Heathen. What's different is the reception, which is appropriately breathless because
Bowie has been gone so long we all know what we've missed. And
The Next Day is designed to remind us all of why we've missed him, containing hints of the Thin White Duke and Ziggy Stardust within what is largely an elegant, considered evocation of the Berlin
Bowie so calculating it opens with a reworking of "Beauty & The Beast," and is housed in an artful desecration of the
Heroes LP cover. Unlike his Berlin trilogy of the late '70s,
The Next Day is rarely unsettling. Apart from the crawling closer "Heat" -- a quiet, shimmering, hallucination-channeling late-'70s
Scott Walker -- the album has been systematically stripped of eeriness, trading discomfort for pleasure at every turn. And pleasure it does deliver, as nobody knows how to do classic
Bowie like
Bowie and
Visconti, the two life-long collaborators sifting through their past, picking elements that relate to what
Bowie is now: an elder statesman who made a conscious decision to leave innovation behind long ago. This persistent, well-manicured nostalgia could account for the startling warmth that exudes from
The Next Day; even when a melody sighs with an air of resigned melancholia, as it does on "Where Are We Now?," it never delves into sadness, it stays afloat in a warm, soothing bath. That overwhelming familiarity is naturally quite appealing for anyone well-versed in
Bowie lore, but
The Next Day isn't a career capper; it lacks the ambition to be anything so grand.
The Next Day neither enhances nor diminishes anything that came before, it's merely a sweet coda to a towering career. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine