"Neuköln" is an instrumental piece written by David Bowie and Brian Eno in 1977 for the album "Heroes".
[1] The music has been interpreted as reflecting in part the rootlessness of the Turkish immigrants who made up a large proportion of the area's population.
Froese's album Epsilon in Malaysian Pale, mostly played with Mellotron (just like Neuköln), was according to Bowie a big influence and a "soundtrack to his life in Berlin".
[3][4][5] NME journalists Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray described "Neuköln" as "a mood piece: the Cold War viewed through a bubble of blood or Harry Lime's last thoughts as he dies in the sewer in The Third Man.
[1] The final section features Bowie's plaintive saxophone "booming out across a harbour of solitude, as if lost in fog".