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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/1_outside.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:''"This chaos is killing me."'']]
3
4->''"There is only 1. David Bowie... or is there?"\
5"The mystery continues..."''
6-->--'''{{Tagline}}s''' from the album's advertising campaign.
7
8''Outside'' (also known as ''1. Outside'') is the twentieth studio album by Music/DavidBowie, released in 1995 through Creator/AristaRecords in the UK and Creator/VirginRecords in the US. This album also sees Bowie reunite with Music/BrianEno for the first time since ''Music/{{Lodger}}'' in 1979, and unlike the Berlin Trilogy, on which he served as a collaborator rather than a producer (as is commonly mis-believed), Eno actually ''did'' take over production duties this time around, marking the first and last time he ever outright produced a Bowie album. The album marks [[NewSoundAlbum yet another shift in sound and style]] for Bowie, this time switching over to a blend of {{industrial}} rock and art rock influenced heavily by Music/NineInchNails (to the extent where he toured with NIN and became personally acquainted with Trent Reznor while supporting the album).
9
10The album also marks cautious reconciliations with Creator/RCARecords and Creator/{{EMI}} for Bowie, who had left the former in 1982 after souring relations over the course of the late '70s and the latter in 1990 over their hesitation towards his stint in Tin Machine. RCA would become Bowie's UK distributor as part of a deal with BMG throughout the '90s, also distributing Bowie's 2010s albums ''Music/TheNextDay'' and ''Music/BlackstarAlbum'' in the territory (though he would remain properly signed onto various other labels). Meanwhile, after his previous US distributor, Savage Records, went belly-up while promoting ''Music/BlackTieWhiteNoise'', Bowie signed onto EMI subsidiary Creator/VirginRecords for US distribution of ''Outside'' under the promise of full creative control of his work (while its immediate predecessor, ''Music/TheBuddhaOfSuburbia'', was also released on Virgin in the US, that didn't come out in the States until one month ''after'' this album). Similarly to RCA, Bowie would stick with Virgin as his US distributor throughout the rest of the decade, permitting them and EMI to also handle the 1999 remastering campaign of his 1969-1989 back-catalog in all regions, eventually leaving the EMI group a second time in 2001 following the shelving of ''Toy''.
11
12Set TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture in 1999, a new art craze is sweeping the world: the [[Main/{{Gorn}} murdering and mutilation of human bodies]]. Known as "Art Crime", Detective Professor Nathan Adler has been tasked by the government to investigate the phenomenon and determine which actions within the movement are truly art and which are just glorified murder. When a 14-year old girl in Oxford Town, New Jersey, named Baby Grace is found murdered in too gratuitous of a way to count as art, Alder is sent to find and arrest the culprit-- which causes waves of conflict when everyman Leon Blank is accused and incarcerated, despite Blank's claims that he had never even set foot in the town where the murder took place. Thus, the album explores these events and their fallout in a (possibly) nonlinear fashion influenced by ''Series/TwinPeaks'', focusing not only on the storyline but also providing in-depth character studies-- from Nathan to the names on the suspects list to even the anonymous murderer and their victim-- and a thorough examination of what truly counts as art in a world where the meaning of the word "art" itself is coming under question more than ever before.
13
14The album spawned three singles: "The Hearts Filthy Lesson", "Strangers When We Meet" (itself a re-recording of a track from ''Music/TheBuddhaOfSuburbia''), and "Hallo Spaceboy", the latter of which was remixed by the Music/PetShopBoys and incorporated into the [[Characters/DavidBowie Major Tom]] saga. The album was also a commercial success, peaking at No. 8 on the UK Albums chart and No. 21 on the Billboard 200, and was certified silver by the BPI.
15
16Bowie planned for the album to be the first of a trio of [[ConceptAlbum concept albums]] (the second would have been called ''2. Contamination''), but Bowie ultimately [[WhatCouldHaveBeen scrapped the other two records]] [[StillbornFranchise and left the story unfinished]]. However, the themes of the album would continue to be explored on its follow-ups, ''Music/{{Earthling}}'' and ''[[Music/HoursDavidBowieAlbum 'hours...']]'', with a lingering influence that stretches all the way to ''Music/BlackstarAlbum''.
17
18----
19!! Tracklist:
20
21# "Leon Takes Us Outside" (1:25)[[note]]0:24 on ''Excerpts from Outside''[[/note]] - Sung by Leon Blank
22# "Outside" (4:04)
23# "The Hearts Filthy Lesson" (4:57) - Sung by Detective Nathan Alder
24# "A Small Plot of Land" (6:34) - Sung by the residents of Oxford Town, New Jersey
25# "Segue – Baby Grace (A Horrid Cassette)" (1:39) - Spoken by Baby Grace Blue
26# "Hallo Spaceboy" (5:14) - Sung by Paddy
27# "The Motel" (6:49)[[note]]5:03 on ''Excerpts from Outside''[[/note]] - Sung by Leon Blank
28# "I Have Not Been to Oxford Town" (3:47) - Sung by Leon Blank
29# "No Control" (4:33)* - Sung by Detective Nathan Alder
30# "Segue – Algeria Touchshriek" (2:03)* - Spoken by Algeria Touchshriek
31# "The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (as Beauty)" (4:21) - Sung by the Minotaur
32# "Segue – Ramona A. Stone/I Am with Name" (4:01) - Spoken/sung by Ramona A. Stone and her followers
33# "Wishful Beginnings" (5:08)* - Sung by the Minotaur
34# "We Prick You" (4:33) - Sung by the Court of Justice
35# "Segue – Nathan Adler" (1:00) - Spoken by Detective Nathan Alder
36# "I'm Deranged" (4:31) - Sung by the Minotaur
37# "Thru' These Architects' Eyes" (4:22)* - Sung by Leon Blank
38# "Segue – Nathan Adler" (0:28)* - Spoken by Detective Nathan Alder
39# "Strangers When We Meet" (5:07)* - Sung by Leon Blank
40
41[-*Absent from ''Excerpts from Outside''-]
42
43----
44!! "Paddy? What a fantastic tropes page. Tell the others!"
45* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture: The album takes place in 1999, just four years after the album's release.
46* AbortedArc: The album was intended as the first of a trilogy, but since it became an OrphanedSeries, the world shall never know what was to become of its characters.
47* AlbumIntroTrack: "Leon Takes Us Outside", an instrumental piece with cryptic spoken-word phrases on top of it.
48* AnachronicOrder: Applies to both the liner notes' short story and the arrangement of songs and spoken-word segues on the album itself.
49* CallBack: The PSB remix of "Hallo Spaceboy" not only references Major Tom, but also cuts up and mixes up the lyrics for "Space Oddity" in the second verse.
50** "The Hearts Filthy Lesson" has bits and pieces of droning background noises and whistles that sound very similar to the backing track on [[Music/IggyPop Iggy Pop's]] "Mass Production", a song that David Bowie composed for Iggy.
51* CelebrityParadox: [[PlayingWithATrope Played with]] in the short story that accompanies the album, which is written as the diary of Detective Nathan Adler. Briefly recounting the history of the shocking performance art that paved the way for the "art-crime" fad, he notes that in TheSeventies "Bowie the singer remarked on a coupla goons who frequented the Berlin bars wearing dull surgery regalia: caps, aprons, rubber gloves and masks." No first name is given.
52* DarkerAndEdgier: ''1. Outside'' follows the mostly lighthearted ''Music/BlackTieWhiteNoise'' and the introspective ''Music/TheBuddhaOfSuburbia'' with one of the darkest albums in Bowie's discography, telling a bleak and unsettling story about a world where murder and mutilation has become an accepted (if transgressive) art form. This is highlighted by the grisly video for "The Hearts Filthy Lesson", which vividly details the process of making sculptures from human corpses.
53* ClipShow: "Hallo Spaceboy" consists of Bowie and Pet Shop Boys interspersed with old-timey video clips.
54* EpicRocking: "The Motel" at 6:51, "A Small Plot of Land" at 6:34. The album itself is also notable for its length: at 74:36, it is the longest studio album Bowie ever put out. Bowie later regretted its length and suggested in interviews that it would've been more digestible as a double album (as in, keeping the tracklist identical but splitting it across two [=CDs=] even though it can fit snugly on just one).
55* EvilLaugh: A deep, gurgling one forms part of the music for "Wishful Beginnings".
56* TheExoticDetective: Detective Professor Nathan Adler of Art-Crime Inc.: It's his job to not only investigate grisly "art-crimes" to find out who done 'em, but also determine whether they actually qualify as works of art or not. ("Art's a farmyard. It's my job to pick thru the manure heap looking for peppercorns.") He has aspects of the HardboiledDetective -- he wears a trenchcoat and fedora, and has a world-weary, growling voice in his spoken-word segues -- but is far more erudite and intellectual.
57* {{Gorn}}:
58** The album's liner notes open with a sickeningly detailed description of Baby Grace's murder and mutilation, and feature an image of a mutilated "art crime" corpse midway through.
59** The music video for "The Hearts Filthy Lesson" centers around this trope, featuring a troupe of art-criminals dismembering human corpses, turning them into sculptures, and playing with severed body parts, among other things. The video was so violent that it had to be radically edited for airplay on Creator/{{MTV}}.
60* InTheStyleOf:
61** Bowie described the album version of "Hallo Spaceboy" as Music/TheDoors mixed with HeavyMetal.
62** The new version of "Strangers When We Meet" is based on the style of Music/{{U2}}, for whom producer Music/BrianEno was a regular collaborator. The song's approach specifically takes after ''Music/TheJoshuaTree'', which Eno co-produced.
63* MadnessMantra: "The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (As Beauty)" ends with one, with the Minotaur repeating the words "call it a day" ad-infinitum.
64* NewSoundAlbum: {{Industrial}} rock with AlternativeDance elements.
65* OfficiallyShortenedTitle: The full title as presented on the album cover and interior insert reads ''1. Outside: The Nathan Alder Diaries: A Hyper-Cycle''. It's typically referred to as just ''1. Outside'' or ''Outside'' in official material.
66* OrphanedSeries: The album was supposed to have two follow-ups continuing the story (hence the "1." in ''1. Outside''), but they were ultimately abandoned in favor of simply exploring the base themes further on ''Music/{{Earthling}}'' and ''[[Music/HoursDavidBowieAlbum 'hours...']]''.
67* OurMinotaursAreDifferent: One of the {{mad artist}}s pictured in the booklet is known only as "The Minotaur" and conceals his face beneath an elaborate bull head mask. Bowie wears a similar mask in the video for the album's first single, "The Hearts Filthy Lesson", in which a cabal of other bizarre artists create a minotaur of their own (as Bowie explained in an interview; he was also a painter in RealLife and created several works featuring minotaurs).
68* PietaPlagiarism: "The Hearts Filthy Lesson" where Bowie can be seen "cradled" by a mutilated mannequin in a few shots.
69* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: While her relationship to Baby Grace's murder is never confirmed, Ramona A. Stone is established as an antagonistic figure in "Segue - Baby Grace (A Horrid Cassette)". Her own part in "Segue - Ramona A. Stone/I Am With Name" features her both describing dreams about "ape men with metal parts" and complaining about "the funny colored English," with the juxtaposition of the two implying that she holds anti-black views.
70* RearrangeTheSong:
71** The single release of "Hallo Spaceboy" is a considerable remix of the song by Music/PetShopBoys, turning the {{industrial}} rock track into something closer to the duo's typical AlternativeDance material and giving Neil Tennant a guest verse based on the ending to "Music/SpaceOddity".
72** "Strangers When We Meet" originally appeared on ''Music/TheBuddhaOfSuburbia'' before being re-recorded and released as a single from this album.
73* RecordProducer: The album was co-produced by Bowie, Music/BrianEno, and David Richards; it would be Bowie's final work with Richards.
74* ReCut: The initial LP release of the album in 1995 was as a truncated single-disc version named ''Excerpts from Outside'', which cut out six tracks[[note]]"No Control", "Segue - Algeria Touchshriek ", "Wishful Beginnings", "Thru' These Architect's Eyes", the second "Segue - Nathan Alder", and "Strangers When We Meet"[[/note]] and shortened both "Leon Takes Us Outside" and "The Motel" considerably. Partly as a result of this, while side A on cassette copies ends with "No Control" (and CD copies don't have "sides" to begin with), side A on ''Excerpts'' ends at "Hallo Spaceboy". It wouldn't be until 2019 when the full album would be released on vinyl, as a double-LP, and even then the CD release is still treated as the definitive version (if only because it gets far more mileage out of the format than the cassette and LP releases do in regards to their respective formats).
75* RockOpera: Despite its highly nonlinear and enigmatic structure, this album is far more specific about its storyline and characters than his other concept albums, to the point of including an expository "diary" for the character Nathan Alder in the liner notes.
76* SanitySlippageSong: "I'm Deranged", natch.
77* ShoutOut: A sample from a Music/BrianMay concert is played near the end of "Segue - Ramona A. Stone/I Am With Name".
78* ShownTheirWork: The Bowie-penned short story that makes up the bulk of the liner notes for ''1. Outside'' not only establishes the album's storyline and characters, but also weaves in stories of the grisly "precursors" of the art-crime movement. These are mostly RealLife 20th century artists of the TrueArtIsIncomprehensible school, and often particularly grisly ones at that: Hermann Nitsch, Chris Burden, Damien Hirst, Ron Athey, and Guy Bourdin; Burden had previously inspired the ''[[Music/HeroesDavidBowieAlbum "Heroes"]]'' song "Joe the Lion".
79* SlasherSmile: Bowie pulls off a number of these in the video for "The Hearts Filthy Lesson", often juxtaposed with dismembered corpses for added eeriness.
80* SpokenWordInMusic: Aside from the intro and segues, this is used quite a bit in "The Hearts Filthy Lesson"
81-->"Paddy, who's been wearing Miranda's clothes?"
82* SurprisinglyHappyEnding: "Strangers When We Meet", the closing track, is considerably LighterAndSofter than the rest of the album, being a tranquil and regretless rumination on an old romance. One website describes it as "like a boarded-up window being pried open to let in the sunlight."
83* {{Title 1}}: The title was written as '''''1.''''' ''Outside'' because it was planned as the first part of a trilogy.
84* TitleTrack: Double subverted with the opening piece "Leon Takes Us Outside", which is then followed by "Outside"... but these only count if you treat ''Outside'' as the official album title.
85* TruckDriversGearChange: "The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (As Beauty)" shifts up just before the outro.
86* UpdatedRerelease: Creator/AristaRecords reissued the album a year later as ''1. Outside Version 2'', adding the single remix of "Hallo Spaceboy" to the end as a bonus track and, on initial copies, tossing in a second CD containing several remixes and live recordings.
87* VillainSong: "The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (As Beauty)", "Wishful Beginnings", and "I'm Deranged" are all sung from the Minotaur's point of view, and all three collectively offer insight into the character's mindset and intentions.
88* WordSaladLyrics: Bowie's cut-up technique from his Berlin days returns here, to similarly abstract and idiosyncratic results. This time, advancements in technology allowed him to execute it with a computer program rather than literal paper and scissors.

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