Looking back a decade after his passing, David Bowie is still used as a measuring stick for artistic reinvention in popular music. A recent feature highlights five albums that help explain why his catalog continues to matter. The focus is not on popularity or sales. It is on moments when his direction clearly shifted.
One of those shifts came with Young Americans in 1975, when Bowie moved into soul and funk and reached a wider US audience. A few years later, Heroes captured a different phase. Recorded during his Berlin period, the album leaned into mood, texture, and collaboration rather than conventional pop structure.
Earlier in his career, Hunky Dory from 1971 showed a growing confidence in songwriting and themes that would return throughout his work. That momentum carried into The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, where Bowie merged music and persona into a single concept. His final statement, Blackstar, released in 2016, turned toward jazz-influenced arrangements and abstract writing.


