In 1972, Lou Reed's second solo album Transformer elevated him from a minor cult figure to one of the best known and most talked about artists in rock & roll, with its incisive portrait of the demimonde and the distinctive hit single "Walk on the Wild Side." Classic Albums: Lou Reed -- Transformer offers a look at the making of this landmark album, with Lou Reed and engineer Ken Scott offering an in-depth perspective on the recording sessions, and Herbie Flowers revealing how he came up with his memorable bass line for "Walk on the Wild Side."
Directed by Bob Smeaton
guitar player
singer-songwriter
art rock
lou reed
american musician
transformer
'walk on the wild side'
IMDB
N/A
Letterboxd
3.6 / 5
Where to Watch
Cast
Lou Reed
Self
David Bowie
Self
Crew
Bob Smeaton
Director
Popular Reviews
1 review
Robert Peres
7.5★ · 06/11/25
Listening to some of individual trackings on this is just fantastic and it does a really nice job just explaining interesting things within the album and its production I wish Bowie was actually there because I think it would have let out a different side of Lou reed but without it’s just the regularly spectacular Lou reed who can’t except the fact of being either a genius or famous but he’s undeniably both so he’s just wrong
Listening to some of individual trackings on this is just fantastic and it does a really nice job just explaining interesting things within the album and its production I wish Bowie was actually there because I think it would have let out a different side of Lou reed but without it’s just the regularly spectacular Lou reed who can’t except the fact of being either a genius or famous but he’s undeniably both so he’s just wrong