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==Live versions==
==Live versions==
* Before the studio recording of the song was made, it was recorded for the [[BBC]] ''In Concert'' radio show with [[John Peel]], on 3 June 1971 (broadcast on 20 June 1971). In 2000 this recording was released on the ''[[Bowie at the Beeb]]'' album.
* Before the studio recording of the song was made, it was recorded for the [[BBC]] ''In Concert'' radio show with [[John Peel]], on 3 June 1971 (broadcast on 20 June 1971). In 2000 this recording was released on the ''[[Bowie at the Beeb]]'' album.
* The song was recorded again for the BBC "Sounds of the Seventies" radio show with Bob Harris on 21 September 1971 (broadcast on 4 October 1971).
* The song was recorded again for the BBC "[[Sounds of the 70s]]" radio show with Bob Harris on 21 September 1971 (broadcast on 4 October 1971).


==Personnel==
==Personnel==

Revision as of 23:26, 25 January 2022

"Kooks"
Song by David Bowie
from the album Hunky Dory
Released17 December 1971
RecordedSummer 1971
StudioTrident, London
GenrePop rock, folk rock
Length2:53
LabelRCA
Songwriter(s)David Bowie
Producer(s)Ken Scott, David Bowie
Official audio
"Kooks (2015 Remaster)" on YouTube

"Kooks" is a song written by English singer-songwriter David Bowie, which appears on his 1971 album Hunky Dory. Bowie wrote this song to his newborn son Duncan Jones. The song was a pastiche of early 1970s Neil Young because Bowie was listening to a Neil Young record at home on 30 May 1971 when he got the news of the arrival of his son.[1]

Live versions

  • Before the studio recording of the song was made, it was recorded for the BBC In Concert radio show with John Peel, on 3 June 1971 (broadcast on 20 June 1971). In 2000 this recording was released on the Bowie at the Beeb album.
  • The song was recorded again for the BBC "Sounds of the 70s" radio show with Bob Harris on 21 September 1971 (broadcast on 4 October 1971).

Personnel

Notable cover versions

  • The first three lines of the song ("Will you stay in our lovers' story / If you stay, you won't be sorry / 'Cause we believe in you") are used as a repeated motif in Miranda July's 2015 novel The First Bad Man
  • The British indie band The Kooks named themselves after the song.

References

  1. ^ Kevin Cann (2010). Any Day Now - David Bowie: The London Years: 1947-1974: p.218
  • Pegg, Nicholas, The Complete David Bowie, Reynolds & Hearn Ltd, 2000, ISBN 1-903111-14-5