Given a pioneering digital release on 21 September 1999, and following in stores on 4 October, David Bowie’s ‘hours…’ album capped off a fearlessly creative decade in which Bowie sidestepped the rising tide of bands who looked to his game-changing 70s work for inspiration, and instead aligned himself with the electronica artists who were then charting new courses for music. By the end of the decade, however, and with the 21st century fast approaching, Bowie, for the first time in his life, seemed prepared to look back. Merging personal history with what he termed “a kind of universal angst felt by many people of my age”, he wrote a collection of songs that were reflective in nature yet which refused to give into nostalgia. ‘hours…’ may, in some instances, have acknowledged time’s passing, but, as shown by this guide to every track on the album, its ten songs find Bowie determined to outrun the clock.
Listen to ‘hours…’ here.
‘hours…’: A Track-By-Track Guide To Every Song On The Album
Thursday’s Child
An archetypal 90s rock ballad taken at a stately pace, Thursday’s Child sets the tone for an album that often finds Bowie reflecting on the push and pull between hope and disappointment that can characterise middle age. The Thursday’s Child of the 19th-century nursery rhyme with which the song shares its name has “far to go” – and, indeed, though Bowie’s narrator laments a life in which “nothing much happened all the same”, he believes in better things to come. “Throw me tomorrow,” Bowie sings, in tandem with guest vocalist Holly Palmer – recruited after Bowie, who initially considered asking R&B trio TLC to duet with him, auditioned the singer via speakerphone – “Now that I’ve really got a chance.”