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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/david_bowie_diamond_dogs.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:''"This ain't rock 'n' roll: This is genocide!"'']]
3
4->''"And in the death, as the last few corpses lay\
5Rotting on the slimy thoroughfare\
6The shutters lifted in inches\
7In temperance building high on poacher's hill\
8And red mutant eyes gaze down on Hunger City\
9No more big wheels\
10\
11Fleas the size of rats sucked on rats the size of cats\
12And ten thousand peoploids split into small tribes\
13Coveting the highest of the sterile skyscrapers\
14Like packs of dogs assaulting the glass fronts of love-me avenue\
15Ripping and re-wrapping mink and shiny silver fox, now leg-warmers\
16Family badge of sapphire and cracked emerald, any day now\
17The year of the diamond dogs"''
18-->-- "Future Legend"
19
20''Diamond Dogs'' is the eighth studio album by Music/DavidBowie, released in 1974 through Creator/RCARecords. The last album of his that can be classified as GlamRock, it is a ConceptAlbum born from the ashes of proposed musical adaptations of ''Music/TheRiseAndFallOfZiggyStardustAndTheSpidersFromMars'' and ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour''; Bowie could not get the rights to the latter.
21
22The album is set in a post-apocalyptic environment called "Hunger City", based on the works of Creator/WilliamSBurroughs, where the remnants of humanity scrounge their way into as much decadence that can be enjoyed in the dying days of mankind. Keeping in line with its starting point, the album makes frequent references to Creator/GeorgeOrwell's novel, orienting its themes and plot points around [[TheApunkalypse Apunkalypse]] settings and characters. Fitting this darker direction, the album reunited Bowie with collaborator Tony Visconti, who he had last worked with on the similarly gothic ''Music/TheManWhoSoldTheWorld'' four years prior; Visconti provided string arrangements and mixing work here. Barring the Harry Maslin-produced ''Music/StationToStation'', Bowie and Visconti would continue to collaborate until 1982, when they fell out again over Bowie's decision to have ''Music/LetsDance'' produced by Nile Rodgers without informing Visconti.
23
24Sound-wise, the album continues the theatrical glam rock style of Bowie's prior records, but incorporates a greater amount of {{funk}} and RhythmAndBlues elements, influenced by a longtime affinity for black musical styles that extended to Bowie's childhood. As such, this album was the prelude to Bowie's abandonment of glam rock and the beginning of his "plastic soul" period, which would galvanize on ''Music/YoungAmericans'' and ''Music/StationToStation'' and have a lasting impact on the remainder of his career. Though that's not to say Bowie completely left his bombastic and theatrical glam era to rot in the gutter; he would still maintain an air of theatricality in live performances, and would use the ''Diamond Dogs'' tour as the basis for his similarly elaborate ''[[Music/NeverLetMeDown Glass Spider]]'' tour in 1987.
25
26The album cover was created by Belgian artist Guy Peellaert, who also did the album art for Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}}' ''Music/ItsOnlyRockNRoll'' the same year and would later design the film poster for ''Film/TaxiDriver''.
27
28''Diamond Dogs'' topped the charts in the UK and Canada and peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard 200, going on to become the sixth best-selling album of 1974 in the UK and being certified gold in the UK, the US, France, and Sweden. The album's performance in America was particularly notable given the more modest sales of its predecessors, and would pave the way for Bowie's American breakthrough with ''Music/YoungAmericans'' the following year.
29
30The album was supported by three singles: "Rebel Rebel", the TitleTrack, and "1984" (the latter exclusive to the US and Japan).
31----
32!! Tracklist:
33
34[[AC: Side One]]
35
36# "Future Legend" (1:05)
37# "Diamond Dogs" (5:56)
38# "Sweet Thing" (3:39)
39# "Candidate" (2:40)
40# "Sweet Thing (Reprise)" (2:31)
41# "Rebel Rebel" (4:30)
42
43[[AC: Side Two]]
44
45# "Rock 'n' Roll with Me" (4:00)
46# "We Are the Dead" (4:58)
47# "1984" (3:27)
48# "Big Brother" (3:21)
49# "Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family" (2:00)
50
51----
52!! Tracklist (2004 Bonus Disc):
53
54# "1984/Dodo"
55# "Rebel Rebel (US Single Version)"
56# "Dodo"
57# "Growin' Up"
58# "Candidate (Demo)"
59# "Diamond Dogs (Alternate Version)"
60# "Candidate (Remix)"
61# "Rebel Rebel (Remix)"
62
63----
64!! ''They call them the Diamond Tropes'':
65
66* AfterTheEnd: The album is a post-apocalyptic ConceptAlbum.
67* AlbumIntroTrack: Has an OpeningNarration on the first track, "Future Legend", which establishes the CrapsackWorld setting of the album.
68* AlbumTitleDrop:
69--> ''Young girl, they call them the Diamond Dogs''.
70* AlliterativeTitle: "'''D'''iamond '''D'''ogs", "'''R'''ebel '''R'''ebel", "'''B'''ig '''B'''rother" and "'''C'''hant of the Ever '''C'''ircling '''S'''keletal Family".
71* AlterEgoActing: "Halloween Jack", who is only mentioned in the title track, isn't generally regarded as a true Bowie alter ego in the vein of [[Music/TheRiseAndFallOFZiggyStardustAndTheSpidersFromMars Ziggy Stardust]] or [[Music/StationToStation The Thin White Duke]], but is frequently interpreted as being the character he played on the North American tour done to support the album.
72* AmbiguousGender: "Rebel Rebel"
73--> ''You got your mother in a whirl''\
74''She's not sure if you're a boy or a girl''
75* {{Animorphism}}: In "Future Legend" Bowie describes "fleas the size of rats" and "rats the size of cats", and compares the humanoid inhabitants to "packs of dogs".
76* TheApunkalypse: Hunger City is a veritable post-apocalyptic CrapsackWorld littered with flashy ne'er-do-'ells.
77* BeastMan: The Diamond Dogs are man-dog hybrids.
78* BigBrotherIsWatchingYou: The album is inspired by ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour'', with "We Are the Dead", "1984", and "Big Brother" directly referencing it.
79* TheBigRottenApple: A post-apocalyptic UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity is described. Halloween Jack, according to the title track, "lives on top of Manhattan Chase".
80* BoleroEffect: "Candidate" grows increasingly loud, fast-paced, and frantic throughout its runtime.
81* {{Bowdlerise}}: The Bowie-dog's penis on the album cover was airbrushed from the original printings.
82* BrokenRecord: The end of "Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family", which closes out the album. It was a technical gaffe that Bowie liked enough to [[invoked]] [[ThrowItIn leave in]], and the effect was replicated in later live performances.
83* ConceptAlbum: The album tells the story of a dystopian future influenced by the works of Creator/GeorgeOrwell and Creator/WilliamSBurroughs.
84* DesignStudentsOrgasm: The [[AlbumCoverDesigners album cover was designed by]] Belgian painter Guy Peellaert, who also did the cover of ''Music/ItsOnlyRockNRoll'' by Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}} around the same time.
85* DigitalDestruction: The original European CD release by Creator/RCARecords is unusually and noticeably bass-boosted compared to all other versions of the album, resulting in a sound often described as dark and muddy. Of note is that this is the only instance where a European RCA Bowie CD has more issues than its American counterpart; other Bowie albums in the series either have more issues on American discs, have more issues with one manufacturer than another in the same region, or are negligible in difference.
86* DrivenToSuicide: Mentioned in "Candidate". Overlaps with SuicidePact.
87--> ''We'll buy some drugs and watch a band''\
88''And jump in the river holding hands''
89* EitherOrTitle: Various releases by Creator/RCARecords (mostly in the UK) add the subtitle "Bewitched" to "Future Legend", referring to the droning backing track that underscores Bowie's monologue. The Creator/{{Rykodisc}} reissue would standardize the version of the title without "Bewitched" appended to it.
90* EpicRocking:
91** The TitleTrack is the longest song on the album at six minutes long.
92** The "Sweet Thing"/"Candidate"/"Sweet Thing (reprise)" trifecta are often considered a single 8:50 song, and were usually performed that way live. The European RCA CD and the 2008 compilation album ''[=iSelect=]'' even sequenced the three as one track.
93* FaceOnTheCover: Bowie drawn as a hybrid man-dog on the album's cover art.
94* FadingIntoTheNextSong: The "Sweet Thing"/"Candidate"/"Sweet Thing" (reprise) sequence, which also hard-cuts into "Rebel Rebel", plus "Future Legend" into "Diamond Dogs" and "Big Brother" into "Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family".
95* FunkRock: "1984" is funk-influenced, unusual given that the rest of the album is straight GlamRock; in hindsight, the song's embrace of the genre was more or less a premonition of the sound Bowie would embrace on ''Music/YoungAmericans'' and ''Music/StationToStation''.
96* GlamRock: ''Diamond Dogs'' was Bowie's last album in the genre, returning to the harder sound of ''Music/TheRiseAndFallOfZiggyStardustAndTheSpidersFromMars'' while incorporating {{soul}} and {{funk}} influences. Bowie would ditch glam rock altogether following this album's supporting tour, barring a one-off collaboration with Music/{{Queen|Band}} on [[Music/HotSpace "Under Pressure"]].
97* GratuitousFrench: "Candidate"
98--> ''Someone scrawled on the wall: "I smell the blood of les tricoteuses"''[[note]]"Les tricoteuses" ("The knitters") is a reference to the famous female revolutionaries who knitted at the base of a guillotine during UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution, immortalized in Creator/CharlesDickens' ''Literature/ATaleOfTwoCities''.[[/note]]
99* HalfHumanHybrid: Bowie is drawn as a half-dog, half-human on the album cover.
100* HeavyMeta: "Rock 'n' Roll with Me"
101--> ''When you rock 'n' roll with me''\
102''No one else I'd rather be''\
103''Nobody here can do it for me''\
104''I'm in tears again''\
105''When you rock 'n' roll with me''
106* {{Homage}}: The album was inspired by Creator/GeorgeOrwell's ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour''. Three tracks, "We Are the Dead", "1984", and "Big Brother", refer to it directly, while "Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family" is an auditory rendition of the Two Minute's Hate. Indeed, Bowie originally intended them and other songs for a musical based on the novel, but Orwell's estate wouldn't give him the rights.
107* LastNameBasis: The front cover just credits the album to BOWIE and the labels for the original vinyl release (and its accompanying singles) followed suit.
108* LastNoteNightmare: "Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family" ends with what sounds like a locked groove, though, even on the vinyl version, it wasn't.
109* LongestSongGoesFirst: An "intro + longest song" variant, following up the minute-long "Future Legend" with the nearly six-minute TitleTrack.
110* LoopedLyrics: "Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family" is simply the below lyrics repeated six times. A seventh time is attempted, but cuts instead to BrokenRecord.
111-->''Brother''\
112''Ooh-ooh''\
113''Shake it up, shake it up''\
114''Move it up, move it up''
115* LyricalColdOpen: "Future Legend" (and by extent, the album) opens with Bowie howling like a dog, after which the instruments kick in.
116* LyricalDissonance: "1984" is a catchy {{disco}} song about Creator/GeorgeOrwell's nightmarish vision of a totalitarian future.
117* MaleFrontalNudity: Bowie is posed naked on the cover, though with the body of a dog.
118* MoodWhiplash: "Rebel Rebel" is ''much'' more upbeat than the other songs here, serving as a BreatherEpisode of sorts.
119* MusicalPastiche: "1984" is inspired by the theme from ''Film/{{Shaft}}''.
120* NewSoundAlbum: The album as a whole is still in Bowie's GlamRock style, but "1984" and "Rock 'n' Roll with Me" provide a foretaste of the R&B and soul-influenced direction Bowie would take on ''Music/YoungAmericans''. There is also some audible ProgressiveRock influence on the "Sweet Thing"/"Candidate"/"Sweet Thing (reprise)" suite and the odd rhythms of the closing track, "Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family".
121* OneWordTitle: The title of "Candidate" consists of only a single word, with only the title of "1984" being shorter.
122* PostApocalypticDog: Invoked in a metaphorical sense with the titular Diamond Dogs. The TitleTrack heavily implies that they're a group of thugs who cause mayhem throughout Hunger City, scavenging for lonely, vulnerable people that they can attack like feral dogs.
123* PunBasedTitle: "Rebel Rebel" sounds as if the same word is repeated twice, but it's actually meant as an order addressed to a rebel. The first "rebel" is a noun in that regard and the second a verb.
124* RearrangeTheSong:
125** The album version of "Rebel Rebel" was remixed from the earlier single release. In turn, Bowie remixed it further for the American edition of the single, radically changing it into a fast-paced and campy PsychedelicRock song. Creator/RCARecords quickly recalled this version, exporting the UK single version in its place, but it would become the basis for live performances on the album's supporting tour, as captured on ''David Live''.
126** In 2003, a re-recording of "Rebel Rebel" was mashed up with "Never Get Old" from ''Music/{{Reality}}'', with the result being released as a single as "Rebel Never Gets Old".
127* ReCut:
128** 8-track releases of the album change the running order to conform to a four-program format:
129*** On the UK release, the running order is changed to "Future Legend", "Diamond Dogs", "We Are the Dead", "Rock 'n' Roll With Me", "Big Brother"/"Chant of the Ever-Circling Skeletal Family", "1984", "Sweet Thing"/"Candidate"/"Sweet Thing (Reprise)", and "Rebel Rebel". "We Are the Dead", "Big Brother", and "Candidate" are also split into two parts each thanks to them overlapping with the changeover between programs.
130*** On the US release, "Rebel Rebel" swaps places with "Big Brother"/"Chant of the Ever-Circling Skeletal Family", and "1984" is moved to before "Rock 'n' Roll With Me". Likewise, "Sweet Thing" and "Big Brother" are split into two parts.
131** Initial cassette releases alter the running order to even out the lengths of the two sides. On the UK release, "Sweet Thing"/"Candidate"/"Sweet Thing (Reprise)" and "Rebel Rebel" are moved to the end of side two, with the tracks after them accordingly being pushed up. The US release, meanwhile, simply swaps "Rebel Rebel" and "1984". The Creator/{{Rykodisc}} and Creator/{{EMI}} cassette releases restore the original running order.
132* SanitySlippageSong: "Candidate" could be considered this as it starts with the "candidate" propositioning the client and finishes with the same person claiming they can commit suicide together. His voice even starts off quite smooth and suave, becoming more high-pitched and rushed as the song progresses.
133* SexyPackaging: The album cover shows a painting depicting a Bowie and two women, all of whom are depicted as dog/man hybrids. One provocative detail on the cover was a set of visible genitals on the dog half of Bowie, which was airbrushed out on most releases prior to the 1990 remaster.
134* ShoutOut:
135** Halfway through "Future Legend", [[Music/RodgersAndHammerstein Rodgers & Hart]]'s "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" can be heard. Accordingly, the track's instrumental backing is officially named "Bewitched".
136** "Diamond Dogs" references Creator/TodBrowning's ''Film/{{Freaks}}'' and Creator/SalvadorDali:
137---> ''With your silicone hump and your ten inch stump''\
138''Dressed like a priest you was''\
139''Tod Browning's freak you was''\
140''[...]''\
141''Her face is sans feature, but she wears a Dali brooch''
142** "We Are the Dead", "1984", and "Big Brother" refer to ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour''. ("We Are the Dead" is a direct quote from the novel, used when [[spoiler:the Thought Police capture Winston and Julia.]])
143** "Candidate" mentions Cassius Clay (aka UsefulNotes/MuhammadAli) and UsefulNotes/CharlesManson. The demo version has a reference to the Music/GratefulDead.
144** "1984" references Music/BobDylan's ''Music/TheTimesTheyAreAChangin'':
145---> ''The times they are a-telling''
146* SiameseTwinSongs:
147** "Sweet Thing", "Candidate", and "Sweet Thing (Reprise)" all flow into each other and were performed live as a single suite. The European RCA CD and the 2008 compilation ''[=iSelect=]'' further hammer in the unity of the three by sequencing them as one 8:47 track.
148** "1984", "Big Brother", and "Chant of the Ever-Circling Skeletal Family" are thematically related and directly follow one another on the album. The latter two also flow into one another, which the European RCA CD accentuates by sequencing them as one song.
149* StylisticSuck: The vocal part on the TitleTrack is intentionally manipulated to sound discomfortingly warbly, replicating the effect of a very flutter-heavy tape machine.
150* UncommonTime: "Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family" switches irregularly between 5/4 and 6/4 or between 2/4 and 3/4, depending upon you count it. (The pattern seems to be two bars of 5/4, one bar of 6/4, one bar of 5/4, and two bars of 6/4 before the whole cycle repeats, though it's very disorienting.)
151----
152-->''"[[TheStinger Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-Bruh-...]]"''

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