A discussion of David Bowie could fill a blog, making it hard to do justice to him in a few sentences. The lazy narrative is that he is a musical chameleon, shifting his style to capitalize on emerging trends in popular music. While there is some truth to this, we have always thought of Bowie (especially in the 1970s through Scary Monsters period) as more of a restless artist, indulging in whichever tickles his fancy. Although the results were inconsistent, there were more highs than lows.
"Ashes to Ashes" was the lead single off Scary Monsters, and plays like a requiem for the 1970s. The video was rumored to be the most expensive music video made to that point (at £250,000; this was still a year before MTV). Bowie wanders about in a Pierrot costume with strange color effects and odd characters (including many Blitz Kids). The video is iconic in Britain, and some critics believe that it accelerated the New Romantic movement that would dominate the British charts for most of the early 1980s.
The song would go on to become a #1 hit in the U.K., but it barely dented the U.S. charts at #101. Scary Monsters also did better in the U.K. (#1) though it did reach #12 on the U.S. album charts.
Bowie would of course go on to significant commercial success in the 1980s and would remain active in the industry until his untimely passing in January of 2016.
Cool trivia fact: Rolling Stone ranks Scary Monsters at 443 on its list of the 500 greatest albums ever.