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David Bowie — Panic In Detroit
Album: Aladdin Sane
Avg rating:
7.3

Your rating:
Total ratings: 3259









Released: 1974
Length: 4:17
Plays (last 30 days): 2
Ooh

He looked a lot like Che Guevara, drove a diesel van
Kept his gun in quiet seclusion, such a humble man
The only survivor of the National People's Gang
Panic in Detroit, I asked for an autograph
He wanted to stay home, I wish someone would phone
Panic in Detroit

He laughed at accidental sirens that broke the evening gloom
The police had warned of repercussions, they followed none too soon
A trickle of strangers were all that were left alive
Panic in Detroit, I asked for an autograph
He wanted to stay home, I wish someone would phone
Panic in Detroit

Putting on some clothes, I made my way to school
I found my teacher crouching in his overalls
I screamed and ran to smash my favorite slot machine
And jumped the silent cars that slept at traffic lights

Having scored a trillion dollars, made a run back home
Found him slumped across the table, a gun and me alone
I ran to the window, looked for a plane or two
Panic in Detroit, he'd left me an autograph
"Let me collect dust," I wish someone would phone
Panic in Detroit
Panic in Detroit
Panic in Detroit

Ow
Comments (292)add comment
I went to a concert at the Fox Theater in Detroit to see this band several yrs back
The first title the band played was Panic in Detroit
The band really was warmed up when they came out and kicked it out of Detroit 
One my favorite concerts I had the opportunity to see
 On_The_Beach wrote:

  Mick!


Ziggy?
 lily34 wrote:


i love that, too. i wish i knew who they were. same who did backup for Gimme Shelter?

Juanita "Honey" Franklin and Linda Lewis. Merry Clayton sang on Gimme Shelter.

Yes Panic in Detroit yesterday and today ! Let'g go Niners !
Fantastic
And so was he..
What I picture in a song called "Panic In Detroit":
 
Panic in Detroit, hear the engines die
The sound of silence in the assembly line
Boardrooms filled with whispers, charts that tell decline
Once kings of an empire, now on borrowed time
 1wolfy wrote:

So awesome...the incredible screaming of the background singers !



i love that, too. i wish i knew who they were. same who did backup for Gimme Shelter?
just loved this superstar....
 idiot_wind wrote:

Go Mick Ronson. Go!




Yes!  And also a great bass line too!
 On_The_Beach wrote:

  Mick!


oh yes!  

love this one!
Go Mick Ronson. Go!
My favorite early David Bowie tune!   Thanx RP!   
So awesome...the incredible screaming of the background singers !
 Montreal_Mort wrote:

Alain : still sitting in Schwartz’s …. Where Are you?


Don't know where he is but,
Sitting in Tampa......jealous!

That gawddamned Kevin Bacon is evrywhar...
Alain : still sitting in Schwartz’s …. Where Are you?
 Easyrider wrote:

Solid 10✌️



Permanent 10.    
OMG - love this version!! And love Schwartz’s!! RP event in Montreal in August? (When I’m going)
Alain - I grew up in Westmount. Schwarz’s? For best in the world smoked meat and bagels? Aaah- Schwarz’s smoked meat, full on (don’t give me the medium or heaven forbid lean (blecch) with fries, a half-sour, and a Cotts black Cherry. Best artery clogging meal on God’s great earth.





Mick Ronson on guitar!!!!

Excellent!
 deniseperry wrote:

Prophetic or what?




Prophetic or what?
Solid 10✌️
 Montreal_Mort wrote:

Alain - I grew up in Westmount. Schwarz’s? For best in the world smoked meat and bagels?



True Dat!
Alain - find me on LI - Only Morton in Portland who graduated from Queen’s
Alain - I grew up in Westmount. Schwarz’s? For best in the world smoked meat and bagels?
Nice segue from Cars ‘Moving in Stereo’ BillG !!!
 Montreal_Mort wrote:
Can you believe David died 5 years ago today? Wish we had 11 ...
 
Why do I read your name and think  'bagels'....  
Now that is an intro........
Can you believe David died 5 years ago today? Wish we had 11 ...
Any song that opens with "Ooh" and ends with "Ow" is a potential banger and this one obviously delivers
10 !
46 years ago recorded about today....  how prophetic!!!
still not my favorite bowie.
 meatmike wrote:
I hereby discount all negative comments regarding this amazing song. You should hear it live.
 
If only I still could!
I hereby discount all negative comments regarding this amazing song. You should hear it live.
 chinaski wrote:
Yes! When freeform FM radio ruled the airwaves! Yes to WGTB-FM! Thank you Bill!
 
Good ol GTB.  Another icon of the DC music.  When it ROCKED.
 idiot_wind wrote:
Ooooh, Mick Ronson on guitar? 

He never got much acclaim. 

 

Apparently he never got much money from Bowie either.    Lowest paid guitarist outside of the Holiday Inn lounge.
View post on imgur.com
Alladin Sane was my high school shop class instructor's name...
Drove past Detroit during that time. Tanks were rolling on the Interstate!
How appropriate for today!
Hitting the right groove nerve as we deal with the pandemic. Up to 10 from a 9
Freakin A! 

Mick Ronson on guitar!
Don't panic...Keep calm...... & toilet paper has nothing to do with Covid 19...Relax .
 johnalexford wrote:
...this is the third time in a week I have hard this song. 
 
The horror.  The horror.
 johnalexford wrote:
I'm a BIG Bowie fan, but come on, RP...this is the third time in a week I have hard this song. 
 

Most UK rock stations would play tracks three times a day; it may depend on which RP Mix you listen to - only been listening for three months (mostly on Main Mix) and have only heard two repeated songs in the time. 
 nicknt wrote:
One of the worst Bowie songs.
 
One of my FAVORITE Bowie songs.  

Reminds me of a college girlfriend who was in love with Aladdin Sane, and tolerated the irresponsible young man I was at that time. 

(Boy, am I glad she rejected my marriage proposal!   I would have derailed her life so badly ...)
What an opening line! Gotta love Bowie!!!
 nicknt wrote:
One of the worst Bowie songs.
 

There are a couple "worse" songs than this.
Just doesn't sound thought through. Like the first draft of an album filler.
 nicknt wrote:
One of the worst Bowie songs.
 

I guess it proves the point, "beauty is in the eye of the beholder". I can think of a lot of worse Bowie songs than this. I lost interest in Bowie in the latter stages of his career but always respected his talent and influence in music.
Prescient. And '5 Years' is more apropos now then when it was written.
This song just cooks. Always has, always will. 
 nicknt wrote:
One of the best Bowie songs.
 
Fixed.  Thanks friend.
One of the worst Bowie songs.
 chinaski wrote:
Yes! When freeform FM radio ruled the airwaves! Yes to WGTB-FM! Thank you Bill!
 

WGTB. 41 years ago I ran into Ken Sleaman(sp?) in the Maryland Food Coop cooler.  How odd was that!
I'm a BIG Bowie fan, but come on, RP...this is the third time in a week I have hard this song. 
Yes! When freeform FM radio ruled the airwaves! Yes to WGTB-FM! Thank you Bill!
 westslope wrote:
So what exactly is Bowie saying about the '67 riot in Detroit?
 
I'd always heard these lyrics were based on descriptions Iggy Pop (who is from the Detroit area) had told Bowie about the '67 riots.
Ooooh, Mick Ronson on guitar? 

He never got much acclaim. 

Love the rythm and percussion behind. Still on 10 cause 11 is not possible ;)
Thanks for playing this right after The Orb, what a relief! {#Sunny}
Love the song, but a bit overplayed lately? There are other great Bowie tunes too.
So what exactly is Bowie saying about the '67 riot in Detroit?
Hearing these mad raucous guitar slashes made me think of Blue Oyster Cult's fab masterpiece "Astronomy;" same time period, too... 
So, picture it.  Me, friends, in a really nice space.  Downtown to Detroit to Olympia to hear David - waiting for Panic in Detroit, I mean, in Detroit.  Waited, waited, never came.  He decided that night to be a crooner and ditch Ziggy.  Rats.  Still giving the tune an 8.  Dressed like this on Halloween 1974. 
{#Dancingbanana_2}As a young man, this songs intro ranked very high with me....still enjoy it !
meh
"Panic in Detroit" is a song written by English singer David Bowie for the album Aladdin Sane in 1973. Bowie based it on friend Iggy Pop's descriptions of revolutionaries he had known in Michigan. It is also interpreted as being written about the 1967 Detroit riots. Rolling Stone magazine called the track "a paranoid descendant of the Motor City's earlier masterpiece, Martha and the Vandellas' "Nowhere to Run"".
 hayduke2 wrote:
Excellent Artist in so many ways



 
Looks a lot like Che Guevara.
Bill didn't let us Sat niters down!!
 treatment_bound wrote:

 You've arrived on a rather special night. It's one of the master's affairs.

 
Hey mom what's for dinner?  Oh no, not meatloaf again!
 kingart wrote:

Frank n Furter before the change. 

 
 You've arrived on a rather special night. It's one of the master's affairs.
 On_The_Beach wrote:

https://assets.rollingstone.com/assets/images/list_item/mick-ronson-20101202/mick-ronson.jpg  Mick!

 
Frank n Furter before the change. 
10 for sure,,,,,,
It is hard to understand how one man could make so much great music.
 kcar wrote:

Beg to differ. To each his own. Just pushed it from 9 to 10 after seeing your comment.  {#Bananajam} {#Bounce}

 
Ditto here
10
I keep clicking the 10 button but the overall rating does not go up.   It still says 7.2.  Shome mishtake, shurley?
 whomhow wrote:
It's just awful... 3->2.

 
Beg to differ. To each his own. Just pushed it from 9 to 10 after seeing your comment.  {#Bananajam} {#Bounce}
My folks moved to Detroit when I was in college, and this was on the radio constantly, it really rocks. you always want to turn up early Bowie loud and clear.
Bill's dealing again
this set is rockin'
Hard to understand the rating on this one. Such strong arrangement and production and such powerful performances. And unique! Unlike any other track I can think of. Special appreciation for the ultra-dense percussion and riveting guitar work. IMO, this one stands out in the amazing Bowie catalog, at least among the hard edged tracks.
 sirdroseph wrote:
Bowie at his best and yes that guitarist kicks arse!

 
  Mick!
So much love for Bowie and his legacy
Bowie at his best and yes that guitarist kicks arse!
It's time to celebrate Bowies life and all the good stuff and great spirit he left behind. Your imagination is the limit.
 Grammarcop wrote:
Sorrow in Detroit.

 
And all over the world.
RIP indeed.The world is no longer the same.No more Bowie music.
R.I.P. David.  Your creative genius will always be appreciated and hugely missed.  Thanks for the memories.
Excellent Artist in so many ways


One of a kind. We were lucky to have him on earth while we did.
Sorrow in Detroit.

I used to work in the late 70's with this meathead ex-Marine at GE designing nuclear power plant components. At the time there was some pointless riot somewhere in the US - can't remember the incident- and I said to my scurrilous jinker pal 'Deadboy', "I bet there's a panic in Detroit too!" Just a little joke, to pass the time.  Mr. Meathead overheard my remark and wheeled around, totally sincerely saying something like "No kidding! THIS COUNTRY IS COMING APART AT. THE. SEEEEMS!" How correct he was, but never knew it. There were so many people high on so many kinds of drugs then; I can't remember them all, but Bowie was the soundtrack, drongos!


 Grammarcop wrote:

Sloggy:

I like the way you do business. 

 
Absolutely! Speaking as a lawyer and Doctor of Divinity, there's a right way to handle matters like that and Slogggy choose the RIGHT WAY!
It's just awful... 3->2.
This still rawks.
Great song, great album.
 Sloggydog wrote:
No need to panic in Detroit (even when you find yourself drunk out of your skull with a girl you just met being presented with an $800 bill because the rest of your group, whom you only know 1 of,  bailed when the birthday girl threw up at the bar).  Just dodge the bouncers, hide in the Limo and call the girl who's birthday it is to round everyone else up.  Thanks for the free night out in the end MGM Grand. 

 
Sloggy:

I like the way you do business. 
 GTT wrote:
Can someone please explain to me how David Bowie's music can possibly be so good?  I guess what I mean is that all of the greatest R&R music seems to be made by bands, not by one person with backing musicians.  Did he write all of this wonderful music by himself?

 
Simple answer, IMHO, Bowie is a musical omnivore and a brilliant composer and singer who also happens to have been smart enough and/or lucky enough to have brought into his orbit an incredible array of wonderful musicians over the years to support him on his records and tours.



 DD gypsyman wrote:
After thorough Googling, I am more confused than ever. Apparently, Alomar played on the Isolar tour, in Springfield, in 1796, after getting canned by Bowie's managent just after the Young Americans tour, in 1975, which came out right before the Station to Station tour. Stevie Ray Vaughn was gonna take the reigns after that, but it never happened.

So, it looks like Alomar played the live tour, and Ronson played the studio version. Help! 

 
Stevie didn't come into Bowie's orbit until 1982, shortly before the recording of the Let's Dance record on which Stevie played and for which Nile Rodgers was musical director, taking the role previously held by Alomar and before him Ronson.

Things didn't work out for Stevie or Nile to tour with Bowie on the Serious Moonlight tour supporting Let's Dance, so Carlos was back again as rhythim guitar player and band leader, with the great Staten Islander Earl Slick taking over on lead guitar.
Can someone please explain to me how David Bowie's music can possibly be so good?  I guess what I mean is that all of the greatest R&R music seems to be made by bands, not by one person with backing musicians.  Did he write all of this wonderful music by himself?
 Sloggydog wrote:
No need to panic in Detroit (even when you find yourself drunk out of your skull with a girl you just met being presented with an $800 bill because the rest of your group, whom you only know 1 of,  bailed when the birthday girl threw up at the bar).  Just dodge the bouncers, hide in the Limo and call the girl who's birthday it is to round everyone else up.  Thanks for the free night out in the end MGM Grand. 

  wow
No need to panic in Detroit (even when you find yourself drunk out of your skull with a girl you just met being presented with an $800 bill because the rest of your group, whom you only know 1 of,  bailed when the birthday girl threw up at the bar).  Just dodge the bouncers, hide in the Limo and call the girl who's birthday it is to round everyone else up.  Thanks for the free night out in the end MGM Grand. 
 unclehud wrote:

Fabulously wry lyrics, done with literacy, compelling percussion, and rocking guitar work.  One of dozens of underrated Bowie tunes.





I find myself playing this over and over from my vinyl- it just defines an era somehow. Outstanding performance by Ronson! What a hook!!

{#Eek}  Detroit really is in a panic.

 

(it went bankrupt)

 


you'd think, since I built this bleeding amp, I'd have put in a special Bowie volume setting. Next time.
After thorough Googling, I am more confused than ever. Apparently, Alomar played on the Isolar tour, in Springfield, in 1796, after getting canned by Bowie's managent just after the Young Americans tour, in 1975, which came out right before the Station to Station tour. Stevie Ray Vaughn was gonna take the reigns after that, but it never happened.

So, it looks like Alomar played the live tour, and Ronson played the studio version. Help! 
Mick Ronson at his god-like best. Ranked # 64 by Rolling Stone as Top 100 guitaristas of all time. This was considered his seminal performance.

This was the set March 31st, Springfield Auditorium, Massachusetts, 1976:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 


Panic is back in Detroit. With the city government teetering on the brink of bankruptcy, there's real fear that the city will be forced to sell off some of the collection at the Detroit Institute of Arts to meet creditors' demands. 

Anybody want a Van Gogh? 

Fabulously wry lyrics, done with literacy, compelling percussion, and rocking guitar work.  One of dozens of underrated Bowie tunes.


Astonishing album.  Still stands up to it today.  Godlike artist.
 gypsyman wrote:

Carlos Alomar was the guitarist.

 
Sorry but it was the Spiders on this.... not bad for a boy from Hull!

Personnel David Bowie – guitarharmonicakeyboardssaxophonevocalsMick Ronson – guitar, piano, vocalsTrevor Bolder – bass guitarMick "Woody" Woodmansey – drumsAdditional personnel Mike Garson – pianoKen Fordham – saxophoneBrian "Bux" Wilshaw – saxophone, fluteLinda Lewis – backing vocalsJuanita "Honey" Franklin – backing vocalsG.A. MacCormack – backing vocals
Thought I was headed out on errands in the Honda but apparently stumbled into my time machine by mistake. They do look very similar. Oh well, like they say: when in Detroit...
 Shouc wrote:
Is this a reference to the current Panic in Detroit and the installation of the Technocrat who has usurped the power of city council?
 
No(I know you were kidding)
It is a reference to his time with Iggy Pop while in Detroit 
 lemmoth wrote:

Absolutely
 
Carlos Alomar was the guitarist.
Is this a reference to the current Panic in Detroit and the installation of the Technocrat who has usurped the power of city council?