After the
hard rock sound of
The Man Who Sold the World,
Hunky Dory features a stylistic shift towards
art pop and melodic
pop rock. The songs are mostly piano-led rather than guitar-led. The biographer
Marc Spitz believes the piano incites a warmer feel on this record compared to its two predecessors.
Christopher Sandford states that "the songs [are] characterised by the lush ambience established by Bowie's vocal and the piano" and, along with
Elton John and
Phil Collins, helped create music on the "easy-listening continuum". Lior Phillips of
Consequence of Sound wrote that the songs are accessible, both musically and lyrically, allowing the listener to dissect them again and again. The music journalist
Peter Doggett concurs, regarding
Hunky Dory as "a collective of attractively accessible pop songs, through which Bowie tested out his feelings about the nature of stardom and power". Rick Quinn described the songs in
PopMatters as a fusion of "British pop, orchestral works,
art-rock, folk and ballads" that emerge to form
glam rock. Robert Dimery, in his book
1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die, calls it "a toybox of acoustic oddities, tributes to heroes and surrealism".
Stephen Thomas Erlewine of
AllMusic describes it as "a kaleidoscopic array of pop styles, tied together only by Bowie's sense of vision: a sweeping, cinematic mélange of high and low art, ambiguous sexuality, kitsch, and class".
Side one {{Listen The opening track, "
Changes", is built around a distinctive piano riff. The lyrics focus on the compulsive nature of artistic reinvention and distancing oneself from the rock mainstream. The biographer David Buckley writes that "strange fascination" is a phrase that "embodies a continued quest for the new and the bizarre". Pegg summarises the lyrics as Bowie "holding a mirror to his face" just as he is about to achieve stardom. Doggett notes that "Changes" is a "statement of purpose": as the opening track, the song provided a stark contrast to the hard rock sound found on its predecessor. The song was also unlike "Space Oddity" and its 1969 parent album, but rather "pure, unashamedly melodic, gleefully commercial, gorgeously mellifluous pop". "Oh! You Pretty Things" was the first track written for the album. The piano style has been compared to the Beatles' "
Martha My Dear". The lyrics reference the teachings of the occultist
Aleister Crowley and his
Golden Dawn and the philosopher
Friedrich Nietzsche, particularly with the lines "the homo superior", "the golden ones" and "homo sapiens have outgrown their use". "Homo Superior" refers to Nietzsche's theory of
Übermensch, or "Superman". The music itself provides a contrast to the darker themes. Doggett describes Bowie's vocal performance as "quite unadorned, presented so starkly ... that it [is] almost unsettling". Designed to sound like a "continuation" of the previous track, "Eight Line Poem" is described by Pegg as the album's most "overlooked" song. It features Bowie on a gentle, sporadic piano while he sings and a
country-influenced guitar line from Ronson. Exactly eight lines long, the lyrics describe a room where a cat just knocked over a spinning mobile and a cactus sits in a window. Doggett believes there is a metaphor between the cactus and a prairie. At the time of the album's release, Bowie described the song as the city that is "a kind of high-life wart on the backside of the prairie". "
Life on Mars?" is described by Buckley as a "soaring, cinematic ballad". Although Bowie was fixated on becoming
Ziggy Stardust at the time of its recording, the song has no connection to
Mars itself; the title was a reference to the recent media frenzy of the US and
Soviet Union racing to get to the red planet. The song is a parody of singer
Frank Sinatra's "
My Way", an English-language translation of the French song "
Comme d'habitude", and uses the same chord sequence for its opening bars. The handwritten notes on the back cover say "Inspired by Frankie". Like most songs on the album, "Life on Mars?" is mostly piano-led, but features a string arrangement from Ronson – his first – that is described by Doggett as "gargantuan". Bowie's vocals – recorded in one take – are delivered passionately during the chorus and almost nasally in the verses. He mentions "the girl with the mousy hair", whose identity commentators have debated, and who according to Greene "goes to the movies as an escape from life". The chorus sings about Bowie mincing his "satin and tat" as a reference to the dancer
Lindsay Kemp. Pegg states: "Part of the genius of 'Queen Bitch' is that it filters the archness of
Marc Bolan and Kemp through the streetwise attitude of Reed: this is a song that succeeds in making the phrase 'bipperty-bopperty hat' sound raunchy and cool." Daryl Easlea of
BBC Music writes that the song's glam rock sound foreshadowed the direction Bowie took on
Ziggy Stardust. The album closer, "The Bewlay Brothers", was a late addition and the only track that was not demoed. The instrumentation echoes the music of
The Man Who Sold the World, featuring "sinister" sound effects and Bowie's vocal accompanied by Ronson's acoustic guitar. The song's obscure lyrics have caused confusion among Bowie biographers and fans. Pegg describes it as "probably the most cryptic, mysterious, unfathomable and downright frightening Bowie recording in existence", and Buckley considers it "one of Bowie's most disquieting moments on tape, an encapsulation of some distant, indefinable quality of expressionistic terror". Many reviewers have perceived the track to have homoerotic undertones; others believed it to be about Bowie's relationship with his
schizophrenic half-brother Terry Burns, which Bowie confirmed in 1977. Buckley is unsure whether this account is fictionalised or real. Some of the lyrics refer to other tracks on
Hunky Dory, including "Song for Bob Dylan", "Oh! You Pretty Things" and "Changes". Bowie also uses the word "chameleon" in the song, which became an oft-used term to describe him. == Title and artwork ==