“Helden”

| September 23, 2017

The late David Bowie was a musical icon.  He wrote some of the most creative and lasting popular music of the last several decades.

This is about one of his works – one that I believe resonates particularly strongly with veterans of a certain part of the Cold War.  I know it certainly does with me.

And I think I may have finally figured out why.

Yep, you’re right – this is yet another verbal “walkabout” off the normal TAH “res”.   Better hit yer browser’s back button before it’s too late to escape yet another trip down the proverbial rabbit hole.  (smile)

. . .

The four years from 1972 to 1976 were hugely commercially and artistically successful period for Bowie.  But the personal cost was substantial.

As a young man, Bowie had been advised to stay away from drugs – he was later to call this the best advice he’d ever received.  Yet like many of that era in the music business he ignored the advice.

Ignoring that advice nearly killed him.

Reputedly, his longtime assistant convinced him to leave the LA music and cocaine scene in the mid-1970s and get clean.  He did so – first moving to Paris, then to Switzerland, and finally settling in a small, shabby apartment in a working-class (and at the time, mostly Turkish) neighborhood near the Berlin Wall.  Doing this probably saved his life – though not his marriage.  He and his first wife divorced a few years later, in 1980.

Here, Bowie regained control of his life and recovered.  And working with some of the musical luminaries of the day (e.g., Tom Visconti, Brian Eno, David Fripp, and others) he recorded three of his most critically acclaimed albums – Low, “Heroes”, and Lodger, collectively termed his “Berlin Trilogy”.  The album “Heroes” was the only one of these that was written and recorded entirely in Berlin.

This background is IMO significant, because it affected the music Bowie produced during the period.  And that ties directly into why I think one of those songs resonates with those who served during that part of the Cold War.

. . .

OK, that’s the background about Bowie.  Now, some about the tune.

The song in question is “Heroes” (the quotes are part of the title).  The music seems upbeat, with perhaps a bit of wistfulness added.  Though initially not particularly well-received, it’s become recognized as one of Bowie’s signature works – perhaps his finest.

Live, it’s anthemic and stirring.  It appears to be a triumphant and joyful song – a musical reminder that one can “be all that you can be” if one seizes the day.

That interpretation is IMO absolutely wrong.  The song isn’t about improving oneself or one’s state in life.  Rather, it’s about being caught in a no-win situation.

And that – plus the timing – is why I believe the song resonates with those who served during and for a few years after the period in which the song was written.

. . .

On the surface, the song is about 2 lovers, told from the man’s perspective.  That much is obvious.  But the reality of the circumstances inspiring the song is hardly triumphant or inspiring.

In truth, the surface impression is fairly on the mark.  An illicit love affair was the inspiration for the song.  Bowie wrote it after seeing, from his apartment’s window, the album’s producer embrace his mistress near the Berlin Wall.  (Bowie for years claimed it was an anonymous couple, until the man involved – Tom Visconti – publicly acknowledged the truth years later.  Bowie then confirmed Visconti’s account in 2003.)

Bowie had been around the block enough by then to know how unlikely such a relationship was to last – he’d gone through many himself by that point.  So the song’s inspiration was something Bowie knew was almost certainly doomed to fail.

Those two factors influence the original song’s lyrics, flow, and tone.  They’re also essential in understanding it.

Bluntly put, IMO the song is about being in a relationship that’s doomed to fail.  And it captures that feeling, both musically and lyrically, exquisitely well.

The original English-language version of the tune can be found here; an English-German version, released a few weeks afterwards, can be found here .  (The historical images accompanying the latter version are worth the time it takes to watch, though a few misguided Photoshopped images also appear in the mix.  Be forewarned:  the images will likely provoke various emotional reactions – among them nostalgia, sadness, anger, disgust, euphoria, and pride.)  Many live versions of the tune are also excellent (here is a representative sample).

But for those who served in the US military during the mid/late 1970s and early 1980s, I believe there’s another reason behind the tune’s appeal.

. . .

IMO, in “Heroes” Bowie unintentionally captured something bigger than the song’s obvious storyline.  By accident or design Bowie captured the  mood of a short period of time – a time where Western civilization as we know it today could well have ended.

The song was recorded at the depth of the Cold War.  It was recorded at the West’s Cold War nadir:  during the post-Vietnam period.

That was a time, frankly, when it seemed the West might lose the Cold War.

It was written and recorded in West Berlin – an enclave of the West 100 miles inside Communist East Germany.  A city that knew it was lost if the organic fertilizer ever indeed hit the rotary air movement device.  (smile)

It was written while the Berlin Wall still existed as a de facto international border.

The historical accounts do not exaggerate.  The Berlin Wall (and the rest of the IGB) was indeed monitored by  Grenztruppen der DDR (East German Border Troops, often inaccurately called “Volkspolezei” or “VoPo”) guards with orders to shoot those attempting escape.  Nearly 140 individuals died at the Berlin Wall between 1961 and 1989.

So those “shots above our heads” Bowie was talking about . . . weren’t just figures of speech.  They were all too real.

Korea along the DMZ wasn’t much different.  The APF there was damned high, too.  And there were periodic incidents there as well.

Bottom line:  during the mid/late 1970s and early 1980s, that Soviet bear and its allies at the time seemed 10 feet tall.

. . . 

So here’s my theory about why the song affects me, and I’d guess many who served during the late 1970s and early 1980s.   Anyone who served in Europe then, or in Korea – or, well, pretty much anywhere  during the same period – at times felt much ­­like the song’s hypothetical “hero”.

Why?  Simple.  Those of us anywhere near the IGB or Korean DMZ knew that if the balloon went up . . . we probably weren’t coming home.  We knew that many, and probably most if not all, of us were going to die in place doing what we could to stop the enemy.

And we weren’t sure we could.

So, yeah:  we understood what Bowie was saying, albeit maybe subconsciously.  Like the song’s protagonist we were putting on a brave face – most of the time.  We were whistling as we walked past the graveyard.

But we knew the score, even if we didn’t often speak the truth plainly. We couldn’t deceive ourselves all of the time.

We knew, deep down, if push came to shove . . . we were toast.  We just hoped we could buy enough time to preserve something worth saving before we bought the farm.

None of us really wanted to end up in a position to be “heroes” – not even just for one day.  (smile)  We knew that often those in such a situation often didn’t come home.  But we also knew full well exactly that might happen.

And as strange as it might seem . . . for the most part, we were OK with that.

Thank God those days are past.

. . .

David Bowie passed away over a year ago.  And it’s a bit ironic to me that he was the one to so nearly perfectly capture the US military’s mood of that time frame.   His public persona was anything but military.

Still  . . . he IMO he did capture that era and that feeling damn near perfectly.  So, wherever you are today, Mr. B:  an old Cold Warrior sends his thanks.

IMO you certainly “got it right” with that one.

Category: Pointless blather, Who knows

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MCPO NYC USN Ret.

Good read.

Signed,

Ziggy’s Biggest Fan

AW1 Tim

Square in the black.

Ex-344MP

” Those of us anywhere near the IGB or Korean DMZ knew that if the balloon went up . . . we probably weren’t coming home.  We knew that many, and probably most if not all, of us were going to die in place doing what we could to stop the enemy.”

So true, I think this applies to those of us who knew we were to try and stop the juggernaut from the east at the Fulda gap. I was a 13N at the time, Lance Crewmember, with the 3/32nd FA out of Wiesbaden and our orders were to shut the gap down using tactical nukes.

I’m going to miss Bowies music.

David

I remember being told that folks in my unit and similar had an expected lifespan when the balloon went up of two to two and a half minutes…apparently that was the flight time of the missiles we were due to get.

Ex-PH2

Thanks, Hondo. It brings back some other memories, too.

Sparks

Thank you Hondo. I miss his music and still listen. I was a DJ in lean times. As often as I could find a station that needed an engineer/DJ on nights and weekends. When I worked that genre, I was limited to Bowie’s radio play cuts but sat for hours reading LP covers and books like the Rock and Roll Encyclopedia. On the audition turntable I would headphone cuts like this that didn’t get the air play they deserved.

chooee lee

My favorite Bowie song.

https://youtu.be/B2HWuR2mq5M

MustangCryppie

For me, the song was “Turn the Page” by Bob Seger.

Doesn’t have shit to do with the Cold War, nothing even close.

Just the phrase “On the Road Again…”

From about 1982 to 1990, I spent what seems sometimes 3/4 of my life “on the road.”

Surface ship, sub, recce aircraft, airport getting to them. Remember listening to the song during a lonely, middle of the night TransPac and it just resonated.

Yup. “Turn the Page.”

Grumpy Old Vet

Until you spent your 30 days of Border Duty at Coburg, you didn’t experience the Cold War. (or Berlin, that place sucked rocks)

Jonn Lilyea

I went to Coburg for two augmentation rotations and another one at Hof.

DefendUSA

Martin would have loved this one, Hondo.