The music on
David Bowie has been described as
folk rock and
psychedelic rock, with elements of
country and
progressive rock. According to the biographer David Buckley, Bowie based the music on the dominant styles of the times "rather than developing a distinct music of his own". Kevin Cann finds the music encompasses "a fusion of acoustic folk leanings with a growing interest in electric rock". Cann continues that
David Bowie marked a turning point for the artist, in that lyrically he began "drawing on life" rather than writing "winsome stories".
Marc Spitz considers the album one of Bowie's darkest, due to the death of his father. He writes that it reflects the artist's "darkening vision" and depicts "a man coming of age in a world that is increasingly depraved and barren". Susie Goldring of
BBC Music calls
David Bowie a "
kaleidoscopic album [that] is an amalgamation of [Bowie's] obsessions – directors, musicians, poets and spirituality of a distinctly late-60s hue".
Songs "Space Oddity" is a largely
acoustic number augmented by the eerie tones of the composer's
stylophone, a pocket
electronic organ. Some commentators have also seen the song as a
metaphor for heroin use, citing the opening countdown as analogous to the drug's passage down the needle prior to the euphoric "hit", while noting Bowie's admission of a "silly flirtation with smack" in 1968. "Unwashed and Somewhat Slightly Dazed" reflects a strong
Bob Dylan influence, with its
harmonica, edgy guitar sound and snarling vocal. Spitz describes the song as an "extensive
hard rock jam", while Buckley calls it a "country-meets-prog-rock collision of ideas". A
hidden track, subsequently titled "Don't Sit Down", featured at the end of the song on the original UK LP, but was excluded from the US Mercury release and RCA reissue of the album. "Letter to Hermione" was a farewell
ballad to Bowie's former girlfriend Hermione Farthingale, who is also the subject of "An Occasional Dream", a gentle
folk tune reminiscent of the singer's 1967 debut album. "God Knows I'm Good", Bowie's observational tale of a
shoplifter's plight, also recalls his earlier style. "Cygnet Committee" has been called Bowie's "first true masterpiece" by Pegg. Commonly regarded as the track on
David Bowie most indicative of the composer's future direction, its lead character is a messianic figure "who breaks down barriers for his younger followers, but finds that he has only provided them with the means to reject and destroy him". Bowie himself described the song at the time as a put down of hippies who seemed ready to follow any charismatic leader. "Janine" was written about a girlfriend of Bowie's childhood friend
George Underwood. It has been cited as another track that foreshadowed themes to which Bowie would return in the 1970s, in this case the fracturing of personality, featuring the words "But if you took an axe to me, you'd kill another man not me at all". The
Buddhism-influenced "Wild Eyed Boy from Freecloud" is presented in a heavily expanded form compared to the original guitar-and-cello version on the B-side of the "Space Oddity" single; the album cut features a 50-piece orchestra. "Memory of a Free Festival" is Bowie's reminiscence of an arts festival he had organised in August 1969. Its drawn-out fade/chorus ("The Sun Machine is coming down / And we're gonna have a party") was compared to the Beatles' "
Hey Jude"; the song has also been interpreted as a derisive comment on the
counterculture it ostensibly celebrates. The background vocals for the crowd finale features
Bob Harris, his wife Sue, Tony Woollcott and
Marc Bolan. The
outtake "Conversation Piece" has been described as featuring "a lovely melody and an emotive lyric addressing familiar Bowie topics of
alienation and social exclusion". == Title and packaging ==