Like Major Tom in the song, David Bowie has been lost in his own space for the past few years, but with his new album, Earthling, the Thin White Duke is trying to make his way back to solid ground, using drum 'n' bass as his landing vehicle. He's got a lot to prove, but at the Olympia on Friday he made a very compulsive case for the rehabilitation of Ziggy Stardust.
Bowie chose his own song, Changes, as the intro music, and he reacquainted the audience with the old Bowie by taking out an acoustic guitar and doing a straight-strumming version of Quicksand. Bowie wore sandals and white shirt, looking as he did on the Let's Dance video, but sounding much less anodyne. The stage was backed by a cloth screen on which video images were projected in triplicate - a kind of miniature, avant-garde version of the PopMart screen.
"Have you got a few minutes?" asked Bowie with a mischievous grin. "I'd like to spend some time with you." A drum 'n' bass version of The Man Who Sold The World started off a 2 1/2-hour set and Queen Bitch reassured everybody that Bowie wasn't going to ignore his back catalogue.
Having sweetened the audience with a little gold-dust, Bowie and band launched into two of Earthling's better tunes, I'm Afraid Of Americans and Battle For Britain (The Letter), and the big surprise was how good these new songs sounded live. Fashion fell perfectly into step with the new, while 7 Years In Tibet trundled along on a clear creative path. It seems that Bowie has finally resolved the dichotomy between his early, classic songs and his more recent, less commercial fare, finding a balance somewhere in that machinegun jungle rhythm. Fame and Stay brought us back to Bowie's black soul period, but the clinical guitar playing of Reeves Gabrels and the mechanical rhythm erased much of the passion. During Looking For Satellites, the disembodied faces of Bowie, Gabrels and bassist Gail Ann Dorsey were projected on to three egg-shaped balloons, creating an extra-terrestrial visual effect.
When Bowie returned to the stage he stayed firmly in the future tense with The Last Thing You Should Do, Dead Man Walking and Telling Lies. There was an incendiary encore, topped off by a drum 'n' bass take on Laurie Anderson's O Superman, with vocals by Dorsey. Bowie whipped out the sax for an equally radical V-2 Schneider, then alleviated the shock of the new with a raucous finale of All The Young Dudes.