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David Bowie > Albums & Lyrics

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Aladdin Sane Album
  1. Aladdin Sane
  2. Cracked Actor
  3. Drive In Saturday
  4. Lady Grinning Soul
  5. Panic In Detroit
  6. The Jean Genie
  7. The Prettiest Star
  8. Time
  9. Watching That Man
David Bowie Album
  1. Come And Buy My Toys
  2. Join The Gang
  3. Little Bombardier
  4. Love You Till Tuesday
  5. Maid Of Bond Street
  6. Please Mr. Gravedigger
  7. Rubber Band
  8. Sell Me A Coat
  9. Silly Boy Blue
  10. There Is A Happy Land
  11. Uncle Arthur
  12. We Are Hungry Men
  13. When I Live My Dream
David Bowie (1998) Album
  1. Come And Buy My Toys
  2. Join The Gang
  3. Love You Till Tuesday
  4. Maid Of Bond Street
  5. Please Mr. Gravedigger
  6. Rubber Band
  7. Sell Me A Coat
  8. There Is A Happy Land
  9. Uncle Arthur
  10. We Are Hungry Men
  11. When I Live My Dream
Deram Anthology 1966-68 Album
  1. Ching-A-Ling Song
  2. Come And Buy My Toys
  3. Did You Ever Have A Dream
  4. In The Heat Of The Morning
  5. Join The Gang
  6. Karma Man
  7. Let Me Sleep Beside You
  8. Little Bombardier
  9. Love You Till Tuesday
  10. Maid Of Bond Street
  11. Please Mr. Gravedigger
  12. Rubber Band
  13. Sell Me A Coat
  14. Silly Boy Blue
  15. Space Oddity
  16. There Is A Happy Land
  17. The Gospel According To Tony Day
  18. The Laughing Gnome
  19. The London Boys
  20. Uncle Arthur
  21. We Are Hungry Men
  22. When I Live My Dream
Diamond Dogs Album
  1. 1984
  2. Big Brother
  3. Candidate
  4. Chant Of Ever Circling Skeletal Family
  5. Diamond Dogs
  6. Future Legend
  7. Rebel Rebel
  8. Sweet Thing
  9. Sweet Thing [Reprise]
  10. We Are The Dead
Early On (1964-66) Album
  1. And I Say To Myself
  2. Baby Loves That Way
  3. Bars Of The County Jail
  4. Do Anything You Say
  5. Good Morning Girl
  6. I Dig Everything
  7. I Pity The Fool
  8. I Want My Baby Back
  9. Liza Jane
  10. Louie Louie, Go Home
  11. Take Me Tip
Earthling Album
  1. Battle For Britain (The Letter)
  2. Dead Man Walking
  3. Law [Earthing On Fire]
  4. Little Wonder
  5. Looking For Satellites
  6. Seven Years In Tibet
  7. Telling Lies
  8. The Last Thing You Should Do
Heathen Album
  1. Sunday
  2. Cactus
  3. Slip Away
  4. Slow Burn
  5. Afraid
  6. I Would Be Your Slave
  7. I Took A Trip On A Gemini Spacecraft
  8. 5:15 The Angels Have Gone
  9. A Better Future
  10. Heathen (The Rays)
Heroes Album
  1. "Heroes" (English)
  2. Beauty And The Beast
  3. Blackout
  4. Joe The Lion
  5. Moss Garden
  6. Neukoln
  7. Sense Of Doubt
  8. Sons Of The Silent Age
  9. The Secret Life Of Arabia
  10. V-2 Schneider
Hours Album
  1. Brilliant Adevnture
  2. New Angels Of Promise
  3. Seven
  4. Something In The Air
  5. Survive
  6. The Dreamers
  7. The Pretty Things Are Going To Hell
Hunky Dory Album
  1. Andy Warhol
  2. Changes
  3. Eight Line Poem
  4. Fill Your Heart
  5. Kooks
  6. Life On Mars?
  7. Oh You Pretty Things
  8. Queen Bitch
  9. Quicksand
  10. Song For Bob Dylan
  11. The Bewlay Brothers
I Dig Everything-1966 Pye Sing Album
  1. And I Say To Myself
  2. Do Anything You Say
  3. Good Morning Girl
  4. I Dig Everything
Lodger Album
  1. African Night Flight
  2. Boys Keep Swinging
  3. D.J.
  4. Fantastic Voyage
  5. Look Back In Anger
  6. Move On
  7. Red Money
  8. Red Sails
  9. Repetition
  10. Yassassin [Turkish For Long Live]
Low Album
  1. Always Crashing In The Same Car
  2. Art Decade
  3. A New Career In A New Town
  4. Be My Wife
  5. Breaking Glass
  6. Sound And Vision
  7. Speed Of Life
  8. Subterraneans
  9. Warszawa
  10. Weeping Wall
  11. What In The World
Man Who Sold The World Album
  1. After All
  2. All The Madmen
  3. Black Country Rock
  4. Running Gun Blues
  5. Saviour Machine
  6. She Shook Me Cold
  7. The Man Who Sold The World
  8. The Supermen
  9. The Width Of A Circle
Never Let Me Down Album
  1. Bang Bang
  2. Beat Of Your Drum
  3. Day In Day Out
  4. Glass Spider
  5. Never Let Me Down
  6. Time Will Crawl
  7. Zeroes
Outside Album
  1. A Small Plot Of Land
  2. Hallo Spaceboy
  3. I Have Not Been To Oxford Town
  4. Leon Takes Us Outside
  5. No Control
  6. Outside
  7. Segue - Algeria Touchshriek
  8. Segue - Baby Grace [ A Horrid Cassette]
  9. Segue - Nathan Adler
  10. Segue - Nathan Adler 2
  11. Segue - Ramona A. Stone
  12. Strangers When We Meet
  13. The Hearts Filthy Lesson
  14. The Motel
  15. Voyeur Of Utter Destruction (As Beauty)
  16. We Prick You
  17. Wishful Beginings
Pin Ups Album
  1. Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere
  2. Friday On My Mind
  3. Here Comes The Night
  4. I Wish You Would
  5. Rosal YN
  6. See Emily Play
  7. Shapes Of Things
  8. Sorrow
  9. Where Have All The Good Times Gone
Pin Ups (1990) Album
  1. Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere
  2. Friday On My Mind
  3. Here Comes The Night
  4. I Wish You Would
  5. Port Of Amsterdam
  6. Rosal YN
  7. See Emily Play
  8. Shapes Of Things
  9. Sorrow
  10. Where Have All The Good Times Gone
Reality Album
  1. New Killer Star
  2. Pablo Picasso
  3. Never Get Old
  4. The Loneliest Guy
  5. Looking For Water
  6. Days
  7. Fall Dog Bombs The Moon
  8. Try Some, Buy Some
  9. Reality
  10. Bring Me The Disco King
Rise & Fall Of Ziggy Stardust Album
  1. Five Years
  2. Hang On To Yourself
  3. Lady Stardust
  4. Moonage Daydream
  5. Soul Love
  6. Star
  7. Starman
  8. Suffragette City
  9. Ziggy Stardust
Scary Monsters Album
  1. Asher To Asher
  2. Fashion
  3. Kingdom Come
  4. Scary Monsters
  5. Scream Like A Baby
  6. Teenage Wildlife
  7. Up The Hill Backwards
Space Oddity Album
  1. An Occasional Dream
  2. Cygnet Committee
  3. Janine
  4. Letter To Hermoine
  5. Space Oddity
  6. The Memory Of A Free Festival
  7. The Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud
  8. Unwashed And Somewhat Slightly Dazed
Station To Station Album
  1. Golden Years
  2. Station To Station
  3. Stay
  4. TVC 15
  5. Wild Is The Wind
  6. Word On A Wing
Tonight Album
  1. Blue Jean
  2. Dancing With The Big Boys
  3. God Only Knows
  4. I Keep Forgetting
  5. Loving The Alien
  6. Neighborhood Threat
  7. Tonight
  8. Tumble And Twirl
Young Americans Album
  1. Across The Universe
  2. Can You Hear Me
  3. Fame
  4. Fascination
  5. Right
  6. Somebody Up There Likes Me
  7. Win
  8. Young Americans
A consummate musical chameleon, David Bowie created a career in the Sixties and Seventies that featured his many guises: folksinger, androgyne, alien, decadent, blue-eyed soul man, modern rock star-each one spawning a league of imitators. His late-Seventies collaborations with Brian Eno made Bowie one of the few older stars to be taken seriously by the new wave. In the Eighties, Let's Dance (#1, 1983), his entree into the mainstream, was followed by attempts to keep up with current trends.

David Jones took up the saxophone at age 13, and when he left Bromley Technical High School (where a friend permanently paralyzed Jones' left pupil in a fight) to work as a commercial artist three years later, he had started playing in bands (the Konrads, the King Bees, David Jones and the Buzz). Three of Jones' early bands -- the King Bees, the Manish Boys (featuring session guitarist Jimmy Page), and Davey Jones and the Lower Third -- each recorded a single.

In 1966, after changing his name to David Bowie (after the knife) to avoid confusion with the Monkees' Davy Jones, he recorded three singles for Pye Records, then signed in 1967 with Deram, issuing several singles and The World of David Bowie (most of the songs from that album, and others from that time, are collected on Images).

On these early records, Bowie appears in the singer/songwriter mold; rock star seemed to be just another role for him. In 1967 he spent a few weeks at a Buddhist monastery in Scotland, then apprenticed in Lindsay Kemp's mime troupe. He started his own troupe, Feathers, in 1968. American-born Angela Barnett met Bowie in London's Speakeasy and married him on March 20, 1970.

Son Zowie (now Joey) was born in June 1971; the couple divorced acrimoniously in 1980. After Feathers broke up, Bowie helped start the experimental Beckenham Arts Lab in 1969. To finance the project, he signed with Mercury. Man of Words, Man of Music included "Space Oddity," its release timed for the U.S. moon landing. It became a European hit that year but did not make the U.S. charts until its rerelease in 1973, when it reached #15.

Marc Bolan, an old friend, was beginning his rise as a glitter-rocker in T. Rex and introduced Bowie to his producer, Tony Visconti. Bowie mimed at some T. Rex concerts, and Bolan played guitar on Bowie's "Karma Man" and "The Prettiest Star." Bowie, Visconti, guitarist Mick Ronson, and drummer John Cambridge toured briefly as Hype.

Ronson eventually recruited drummer Michael "Woody" Woodmansey, and with Visconti on bass they recorded The Man Who Sold the World, which included "All the Madmen," inspired by Bowie's institutionalized brother, Terry. Hunky Dory (#93, 1972), Bowie's tribute to the New York City of Andy Warhol, the Velvet Underground, and Bob Dylan, included his ostensible theme song, "Changes" (#66, 1972, rereleased 1974, #41).

Bowie started changing his image in late 1971. He told Melody Maker he was gay in January 1972 and started work on a new, theatrical production. Enter Ziggy Stardust, Bowie's projection of a doomed messianic rock star. Bowie became Ziggy; Ronson, Woodmansey, and bassist Trevor Bolder became Ziggy's band, the Spiders from Mars.

The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (#75, 1972) and the rerelease of Man of Words as Space Oddity (#16, 1972) made Bowie the star he was portraying. The live show, with Bowie wearing futuristic costumes, makeup, and bright orange hair (at a time when the rock-star uniform was jeans), was a sensation in London and New York. It took Aladdin Sane (#17, 1973) to break Bowie in the U.S. Bolan and other British glitter-rock performers barely made the Atlantic crossing, but Bowie emerged a star. He produced albums for Lou Reed (Transformer and its hit "Walk on the Wild Side") and Iggy and the Stooges (Raw Power) and wrote and produced Mott the Hoople's glitter anthem "All the Young Dudes."

In 1973 Bowie announced his retirement from live performing, disbanded the Spiders, and sailed to Paris to record Pin Ups (#23, 1973), a collection of covers of mid-Sixties British rock. That same year, the 1980 Floor Show, an invitation-only concert with Bowie and guests Marianne Faithfull and the Troggs, was taped for broadcast on the TV program The Midnight Special.

Meanwhile, Bowie worked on a musical adaptation of George Orwell's 1984, but was denied the rights by Orwell's widow. He rewrote the material as Diamond Dogs (#5, 1974) and returned to the stage with an extravagant American tour. Midway though the tour, Bowie entered Philadelphia's Sigma Sound Studios (the then-current capital of black music) and recorded the tracks that would become Young Americans (#9, 1975). The session had a major effect on Bowie, as his sound and show were revised.

Bowie scrapped the dancers, sets, and costumes for a spare stage and baggy Oxford trousers; he cut his hair and colored it a more natural blond. His new band, led by former James Brown sideman Carlos Alomar, added soul standards (e.g., Eddie Floyd's "Knock on Wood") to his repertoire. David Live (#8, 1974), also recorded in Philadelphia, chronicles this incarnation.

"Fame," cowritten by Bowie, John Lennon, and Alomar, was Bowie's first American #1 (1975). Bowie moved to Los Angeles and became a fixture of American pop culture. He also played the title role in Nicolas Roeg's The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976). Station to Station (#3, 1976), another album of "plastic soul" recorded with the Young Americans band, portrayed Bowie as the Thin White Duke (also the title of his unpublished autobiography). His highest charting album, it contained his second Top Ten Single, "Golden Years" (#10, 1975).

Bowie complained life had become predictable and left Los Angeles. He returned to the U.K. for the first time in three years before settling in Berlin. He lived there in semi-seclusion, painting, studying art, and recording with Brian Eno. His work with Eno -- Low (#11, 1977), "Heroes" (#35, 1977), Lodger (#20, 1979) -- was distinguished by its appropriation of avant-garde electronic music and the "cut-up" technique made famous by William Burroughs. Composer Philip Glass wrote a symphony incorporating music from Low in 1993.

Bowie revitalized Iggy Pop's career by producing The Idiot and Lust for Life (both 1977) and toured Europe and America unannounced as Pop's pianist. He narrated Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra's recording of Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf and spent the rest of 1977 acting with Marlene Dietrich and Kim Novak in Just a Gigolo. The next year, he embarked on a massive world tour. A second live album, Stage (#44, 1978), was recorded on the U.S. leg of the tour. Work on Lodger was begun in New York, continued in Switzerland, and completed in Berlin.

Bowie settled in New York to record the paranoiac Scary Monsters (#12, 1980), updating "Space Oddity" in "Ashes to Ashes." One of the first stars to understand the potential of video, he produced some innovative clips for songs from Lodger and Scary Monsters.

After Scary Monsters, Bowie turned his attention away from his recording career. In 1980 he played the title role in The Elephant Man, appearing in Denver, in Chicago, and on Broadway. He collaborated with Queen in 1981's "Under Pressure" and provided lyrics and vocals for "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)" (#67, 1982), Giorgio Moroder's title tune for the soundtrack of Paul Schrader's remake of Cat People. His music was used on the soundtrack of Christiane F (1982) (he also appeared in the film). Also that year, Bowie starred in the BBC-TV production of Brecht's Baal, and as a 150-year-old vampire in the movie The Hunger.

In 1983 Bowie signed one of the most lucrative contracts in history, and moved from RCA to EMI. Let's Dance (#4, 1983), his first album in three years, returned him to the top of the charts. Produced by Nile Rodgers with Stevie Ray Vaughan on guitar, the album was a slick revision of Bowie's soul-man posture. It contained three Top Twenty singles -- "Let's Dance" (#1, 1983), "China Girl" (#10, 1983), and "Modern Love" (#14, 1983) -- which were supported with another set of innovative videos; the sold-out Serious Moonlight Tour followed. Bowie's career seemed to be revitalized.

What first seemed like a return to form actually ushered in a period of mediocrity. Without Nile Rodgers' production savvy, Bowie's material sounded increasingly forced and hollow; his attention alternated between albums and film roles. Tonight (#11, 1984) had only one hit, "Blue Jean" (#8, 1984). Bowie and Mick Jagger dueted on a cover of Martha and the Vandellas' "Dancing in the Street" (#7, 1985) for Live Aid. Although Never Let Me Down (#34, 1987), with Peter Frampton on guitar, was roundly criticized, it made the charts with "Day In, Day Out" (#21, 1987) and the title song (#27, 1987). Bowie hit the road with another stadium extravaganza, the Glass Spiders tour; it was recorded for an ABC-TV special.

Bowie had scarcely better luck in his acting career: Into the Night (1985), Absolute Beginners (1986) (a Julien Temple musical featuring some Bowie songs), Labyrinth (1986), The Linguini Incident (1992), and Twin Peaks -- Fire Walk with Me (1992) were neither critical nor commercial successes.

Bowie set about reissuing his earlier albums on CD. Sound + Vision (#97, 1989), a greatest-hits collection, revived interest in Bowie's career; the set list for the accompanying tour was partially based on fan response to special phone lines requesting favorite Bowie songs. Bowie claimed it would be the last time he performed those songs live. Later reissues, with previously unreleased bonus tracks, brought the Ziggy-era Bowie back onto the charts.

Bowie formed Tin Machine in 1989. The band included Bowie discovery Reeves Gabrels on guitar and Hunt and Tony Sales, who had worked with Bowie on Iggy Pop's Lust for Life album and tour in the Seventies. Although Bowie claimed that the band was a democracy, Tin Machine was perceived as Bowie's next project. The group debuted with a series of club dates in New York and Los Angeles. Their eponymous album (#28, 1989), a rougher, more guitar-oriented collection than Bowie's previous albums, received better reviews than Bowie's last few recordings. A second album, Tin Machine II (#126, 1991), lacked the novelty of the debut and was quickiy forgotten.

In 1992 Bowie married Somalian supermodel Iman. Black Tie White Noise (#39, 1993), which Bowie called his wedding present to his wife, received generally positive reviews, but failed to excite the public.

Born David Robert Jones, January 8, 1947, London, England


1967 -- The World of David Bowie (Deram, U.K.)
1970 -- Man of Words, Man of Music (Mercury); The Man Who Sold the World
1971 -- Hunky Dory (RCA)
1972 -- The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars
1973 -- Aladdin Sane; Pin Ups; Images 1966-67 (London)
1974 -- Diamond Dogs (RCA); David Live
1975 -- Young Americans
1976 -- Station to Station; ChangesOneBowie
1977 -- Low; "Heroes"
1978 -- Stage
1979 -- Lodger
1980 -- Scary Monsters
1981 -- ChangesTwoBowie; Christiane F soundtrack
1982 -- Cat People soundtrack; Baal
1983 -- Let's Dance (EMI); Golden Years (RCA); Ziggy Stardust/The Motion Picture
1984 -- Fame and Fashion; Tonight (EMI)
1987 -- Never Let Me Down
1989 -- Sound + Vision (Rykodisc)
1990 -- ChangesBowie
1993 -- Black Tie White Noise (Savage)
1994 -- Sound + Vision with CD-ROM (Rykodisc) Tin Machine: (Formed 1989, Switzerland: Bowie; Reeves Gabrels [b. June 4, 1956, Staten Island, N.Y.], gtr.; Hunt Sales [b. Mar. 2, 1954, Detroit, Mich.], drums; Tony Sales [b. Sep. 26, 1951, Cleveland, Ohio], bass)
1989 -- Tin Machine (EMI)
1991 -- Tin Machine II (Victory)



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