Bowie saw the song in terms of the French
chanson tradition, while biographer David Buckley has described both "Rock 'n' Roll Suicide" and the album's opening track "
Five Years" as "more like
avant-garde show songs than actual rock songs". Critic
Stephen Thomas Erlewine similarly found it to have "a grand sense of staged drama previously unheard of in rock & roll". Although Bowie has suggested
Baudelaire as his source, the lyrics "Time takes a cigarette..." are somewhat similar to the poem "Chants Andalous" by
Manuel Machado: "Life is a cigarette / Cinder, ash and fire / Some smoke it in a hurry / Others savour it". The exhortation "Oh no, love, you're not alone" references the
Jacques Brel song "You're Not Alone" ("Jef") that appeared in the musical
Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris. Bowie performed Brel's "My Death" during some Ziggy Stardust live shows, and performed "Amsterdam" live on the BBC. In 2003 Bowie described the
James Brown songs "Try Me" and "Lost Someone" as "loose inspiration" for the song. Bowie's handwritten lyrics for the song were included in the
David Bowie Is travelling exhibit from 2013 to 2018, and were put up for auction by the owner, who had been gifted the lyrics by Bowie, in late 2023. ==Release and aftermath==