Subsequent events in 1978. Upon completion of his promotional appearances for
"Heroes", Bowie recorded narration for an adaptation of
Sergei Prokofiev's classical composition
Peter and the Wolf, released
as an album in May 1978. Bowie later said that it was a Christmas present for his son,
Duncan Jones, then seven years old. He then played the lead role in the
David Hemmings-directed film
Just a Gigolo. Released in February 1979,
Just a Gigolo was panned by both critics and audiences. Bowie himself was critical of the film, calling it "my 32
Elvis Presley movies rolled into one" in an interview with
NME. After filming his scenes for
Just a Gigolo in February 1978, Bowie began rehearsals for an upcoming tour. The
Isolar II World Tour, also known as the Stage Tour, lasted from March to the end of the year. Songs from both
Low and
"Heroes" made up the majority of the shows, while
Ziggy Stardust-era songs and other hits from 1973 to 1976 were played. By now Bowie had broken his drug addiction; Buckley writes that the tour was "Bowie's first tour for five years in which he had probably not anaesthetised himself with copious quantities of cocaine before taking the stage. ... Without the oblivion that drugs had brought, he was now in a healthy enough mental condition to want to make friends". Performances from the tour were released on the live album
Stage in September the same year, and again from a different venue in 2018 on
Welcome to the Blackout.
Critical legacy Although
"Heroes" was the best-received work of the Berlin Trilogy on release, in subsequent decades critical and public opinion has typically fallen in favour of
Low as the more ground-breaking record owing to its daring experimental achievements. Pegg writes that the album is rather seen as an extension or refinement of its predecessor's achievements rather than a "definitive new work". Seabrook notes that
Low had the advantage of being released first and seen as "the greatest and canniest musical move" of Bowie's entire career. However, compared to other records released in 1977, he writes that
"Heroes" still "sounds like a blast from the future". Perone finds that the mix of songs and instrumentals makes
"Heroes" feel more "integrated"; having "Sense of Doubt", "Moss Garden" and "Neuköln" flow from one to the next "give[s] the listener the feeling that [the album] was...meant to be experienced as a unified whole".
"Heroes" has nonetheless been regarded as one of Bowie's best and most influential works. Retrospective reviews praise Bowie's growth as an artist and Fripp's contributions.
Stephen Thomas Erlewine of
AllMusic praised the album, noting the growing artistic maturity compared to its predecessor. He further praised the addition of Fripp, stating that his guitar adds a greater "musical foundation" to the electronic sound. He ultimately writes: "The difference between
Low and ''Heroes' '' [essentially] lies in the details, but the record is equally challenging and groundbreaking." In a 2013 readers' poll for
Rolling Stone,
"Heroes" was voted Bowie's eighth best album. Five years later, the writers of
Consequence of Sound ranked
"Heroes" as Bowie's fifth-greatest album, stating that "The weary 'optimism' of
"Heroes" is mesmerizing. Even on its gloomiest tracks, there's this upbeat, impassioned impression that everything's okay, even just for one day." In 2013,
NME ranked the album 329th in their list of
the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. The album was also included in the 2018 edition of Robert Dimery's book
1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.
Influence An early instance of the album's influence was
John Lennon's comment in 1980 that, when making his album
Double Fantasy, his ambition was to "do something as good as
Heroes." The Irish rock band
U2 chose to record their Eno-produced
Achtung Baby (1991) at Hansa by the Wall in Berlin in honour of
"Heroes" being recorded there. Other artists inspired by
"Heroes" include
Andy McCluskey of
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, who referred to the "unconscious influence" of Bowie on his singing style,
Vince Clarke, who called it a "rebellion inspiration",
Ian Astbury of
the Cult and
Robyn Hitchcock.
Scott Walker used
"Heroes" as "the reference album" when making
the Walker Brothers'
Nite Flights (1978), according to engineer Steve Parker. (pictured in 1993) adapted
"Heroes" into a classical music
symphony in 1997. In 1997, American composer
Philip Glass adapted the album into a
classical piece entitled
"Heroes" Symphony. A follow-up to his earlier 1992 adaptation of
Low, titled
"Low" Symphony, the piece is separated into six movements, each named after tracks on
"Heroes". Like its predecessor, Glass acknowledged Eno's contributions as equal to Bowie's on the original album and credited the movements to the two equally. Unlike the
"Low" Symphony, the
"Heroes" Symphony was developed into a
ballet by American choreographer
Twyla Tharp. Both the ballet and
Symphony were greeted with acclaim. Bowie and Glass remained in contact with each other until 2003 and discussed making a third symphony, which never came to fruition. After Bowie's death in 2016, Glass stated the two had talked about adapting
Lodger for the third symphony, which adapted as his
12th symphony in 2019. Glass described
Low and
"Heroes" as "part of the new classics of our time". The cover of Bowie's 2013 album,
The Next Day, is an altered and obscured version of the
"Heroes" cover. This version has the word Heroes crossed out and Bowie's face obscured by an opaque white box reading "The Next Day". Designer
Jonathan Barnbrook explained that Bowie had a feeling of isolation when making
"Heroes" and he wanted to recapture that feeling for
The Next Day. He further emphasised: "We tried out every single Bowie cover there's been, but it ended up as
"Heroes" because it's such an iconic album, and the image on the front has the right kind of distance...
The Next Day, in combination with the
"Heroes" image, and what the album is saying about somebody who's looking back at his age...it just felt appropriate." ==Reissues==