It looks less like a piece of high art and more like a recovered from a crash site—which fits the album's chaotic energy perfectly. 🕰️ The Legacy: A Collector's Ghost Today, a 1979 Lodger 8-Track is a "ghost" in the machine.
Bowie was finishing his "Berlin Trilogy" with Tony Visconti and Brian Eno. The Sound: Experimental, world-influenced, and frantic. 🏎️ The Experience: The "Lodger" on the Road
Because so few were made compared to the LP, it is a prized item for Bowie completists.
On the 8-Track cartridge, this image is shrunk down to a small, rectangular sticker.
The cover art for Lodger features Bowie as a "victim" or a falling man, photographed from above, looking broken and distorted.
The 8-Track tape (Stereo 8) release of David Bowie’s Lodger in 1979 is a fascinating relic of a music industry in transition. It represents the final gasp of a dying format carrying the sounds of a man who was already living in the future. 🎛️ The Setting: 1979
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