According to O'Leary, the music Bowie made for
The Buddha of Suburbia consisted of short "
motifs – combinations of guitar,
synthesiser,
trumpet, percussion, [and]
sitar". In the extensive liner notes for the album, Bowie stated that the collection "bears little resemblance to the small instrumentation of the BBC play". He also presented a list of influences that he drew from when creating it, including
the Beach Boys'
Pet Sounds (1966),
Roxy Music,
T. Rex,
Neu!,
Kraftwerk and
Brian Eno. Reviewers have recognised numerous references to Bowie's 1970s works, with
AllMusic's William Ruhlmann naming
The Man Who Sold the World (1970),
Aladdin Sane (1973) and
Low (1977).
The Guardians Mark Hooper considered
Buddha "a gloriously experimental mish-mash of 70s influences", while Julian Marszalek of
The Quietus found a mix of "
glam,
jazz,
funk,
ambient soundscapes and
pop". Biographers have similarly observed the presence of pop, jazz, ambient,
experimental and
rock material. Aside from the three instrumental tracks, Pegg considers the album's lyrics "non-linear", which he believes suggests an adoption of the working methods of Eno, who Bowie listed as an influence in the liner notes. Bowie stated that he used "great dollops of pastiche and quasi-narrative" when crafting the lyrics as a way to reduce proper narrative form, which he considered "redundant".
Songs The
title track was written as a pastiche of Bowie's early 1970s sound. It contains musical and lyrical references to his past compositions "
Space Oddity" (1969), "
All the Madmen" (1970) and "
The Bewlay Brothers" (1971). Lyrically, it primarily follows Kureishi's novel and was the only track to actually appear in the BBC serial. "Sex and the Church" uses a beat similar to "Pallas Athena" from
Black Tie White Noise, which Buckley compares to the music of
Prince. Pegg states that the two themes present throughout Kureishi's novel—sexuality and spirituality—combine to form the theme of "Sex and the Church". Bowie's vocals are distorted using a
vocoder while the track ends with a sequence similar to
Aladdin Sane "
The Jean Genie". "South Horizon" is an
avant-garde jazz instrumental that Pegg believes foreshadows the experimental tracks found on Bowie's next album
Outside (1995). Bowie said that "all elements, from lead instrumentation to
texture, were played both forwards and backwards. The resulting extracts were then intercut arbitrarily". It was his favourite track on the album. The album's longest track, "The Mysteries", is an ambient instrumental piece evocative of Bowie's
Berlin Trilogy. Featuring various electronic sounds and synthesiser
loops, Bowie stated that "the original tape was slowed down, opening up the thick texture dramatically and then Erdal would play thematic information against it". "Bleed Like a Craze, Dad" features contributions from the trio 3D Echo (Rob Clydesdale, Gary Taylor, Isaac Daniel Prevost), who were recording an
EP at Mountain at the same time Bowie was. He almost
raps during one section, which Buckley compares to his vocal on
Lodger "African Night Flight" (1979); Pegg also mentions the presence of "
Lodger-style percussion" with
Robert Fripp-type guitar licks. "
Strangers When We Meet" uses a sound akin to the late-1970s works of
Roxy Music with a guitar riff from
the Spencer Davis Group's "
Gimme Some Lovin'" (1966). Pegg calls it one of the album's "more conventional" tracks, featuring impressionist lyrics about the beginning of a relationship. O'Leary describes it as "tense, compact and nerv[y]". Bowie rerecorded the track for
Outside. "Dead Against It" is evocative of various New York
new wave bands from the late 1970s. O'Leary finds the lyric "clotted with internal rhymes and consonance". Bowie considered rerecording the song during the sessions for
Outside and
Earthling (1997), but the idea was scrapped. "Untitled No. 1" contains a
dance beat influenced by
Indian music. Bowie's phased vocals are both discernable (such as the line "It's clear that some things never change") and incomprehensible, with various "Ooohs" throughout. "Ian Fish, U.K. Heir" is an ambient piece reminiscent of the electronic work on
"Heroes" (1977). It contains
gramophone static and a slowed and distorted version of the title track's melody. In the liner notes, Bowie wrote: "The real discipline is... to pare down all superfluous elements, in a reductive fashion, leaving as near as possible a deconstructed or so-called 'significant form', to use a 30's terminology." The title is an anagram of Hanif Kureishi. The album ends with an alternate version of the title track (labeled the "rock mix"), featuring
Lenny Kravitz on guitar. ==Release and reissues==