According to co-producer Ken Scott, the album was intended to be "a complete opposite of his other albums" and "he wanted to do songs that weren't known as well in the States as they were in England". The woman on the cover with Bowie is 1960s supermodel Twiggy. On the back of the album sleeve Bowie writes of Pin-Ups: "These songs are among my favourites from the '64–67' period of London. Most of the groups were playing the Ricky-Tick (was it a 'y' or an 'i'?) Scene club circuit (Marquee, eel pie island la-la). Some are still with us. Pretty Things, Them, Yardbirds, Syd's Pink Floyd, Mojos, Who, Easybeats, Merseys, The Kinks. Love-on ya!"
Pin Ups
(Click each track to hear it)
Side one | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length | |||||||
1. | 'Rosalyn' (Originally recorded by The Pretty Things) | Jimmy Duncan, Bill Farley | 2:27 | |||||||
2. | 'Here Comes the Night' (Notably recorded by Them) | Bert Berns | 3:09 | |||||||
3. | 'I Wish You Would' (Notably recorded by The Yardbirds) | Billy Boy Arnold | 2:40 | |||||||
4. | 'See Emily Play' (Originally recorded by Pink Floyd) | Syd Barrett | 4:03 | |||||||
5. | 'Everything's Alright' (Originally recorded by The Mojos) | Nicky Crouch, John Konrad, Simon Stavely, Stuart James, Keith Karlson | 2:26 | |||||||
6. | 'I Can't Explain' (Originally recorded by The Who) | Pete Townshend | 2:07 |
Side two | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length | |||||||
7. | 'Friday on My Mind' (Originally recorded by The Easybeats) | George Young, Harry Vanda | 3:18 | |||||||
8. | 'Sorrow' (Notably recorded by The Merseys) | Bob Feldman, Jerry Goldstein, Richard Gottehrer | 2:48 | |||||||
9. | 'Don't Bring Me Down' (Originally recorded by The Pretty Things) | Johnnie Dee | 2:01 | |||||||
10. | 'Shapes of Things' (Originally recorded by The Yardbirds) | Paul Samwell-Smith, Jim McCarty, Keith Relf | 2:47 | |||||||
11. | 'Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere' (Originally recorded by The Who) | Roger Daltrey, Pete Townshend | 3:04 | |||||||
12. | 'Where Have All the Good Times Gone' (Originally recorded by The Kinks) | Ray Davies | 2:35 |
In October 1973 David Bowie recorded a one-off show for NBC in America called 'The 1980 Floor Show'. A bizarre combination of songs and acting the highlight has to be Bowie singing a duet of 'I Got You Babe' with Marianne Faithful dressed as some sort of perverted nun and apparently doing an impression of Velvet Underground singer Nico. Watch it here. Another highlight from 'The 1980 Floor Show' is one where Bowie tries out an early version of '1984' before, or possibly just after, he had given up on the idea of a musical adaptation of George Orwell's book (his widow, Sonia, refused permission on the grounds that she thought it sounded 'bizarre'). In this version the song is mixed with 'Dodo', a song that wasn't on the album that 1984 became, and which was only released in 1990 on the CD version of that album. See it here. Incidentally, the female backing singer in these videos is Ava Cherry, Bowie's then-girlfriend. Finally here is an interesting performance of Space Oddity, which was originally recorded in 1969 (skip to 3:48).
By the end of 1973 Bowie had decided he wanted to try a funky, more American vibe to his music. At a recording session for his next album, where they tried recording 1984/Dodo/1984 (reprise), it soon became clear that Mick Ronson and the rest of the band were not able to give Bowie what he wanted, or at least not immediately as he demanded. It was the end of the Bowie/Ronson partnership*. Around this time Bowie, Angie and Zowie moved to Chelsea while Defries, Bowie's manager, confidant and father figure moved to America. Without this crutch, Bowie became a mess and shortly after he started doing cocaine, the first time he had ever regularly taken drugs, to 'calm him down'. It was around this time too that Bowie became fascinated by Mick Jagger. Soon he would have the same relationship with Jagger he had had with Marc Bolan. He saw him as a friend but also a rival. Bolan had not made much of a mark in America so perhaps this was the source of Bowie's interest. As a result Bowie started making music that sounded very much like the Stones. One of the songs Bowie was working on in the studio sounded uncannily like the Rolling Stones. It was released as a single in February 1974. Here is the 'salsa' version that was released in America.
Post Script
* "It was the end of the Bowie/Ronson partnership" as far as Bowie's career was concerned but Bowie gifted Mick Ronson three songs for his solo album 'Slaughter on 10th Avenue', which was released in 1974, including 'Growing Up and I’m Fine'.
Shortly before he started working on his next album in early 1974, Bowie recorded a bunch of tracks with a group called the Astronettes, including singer Ava Cherry, who would sing with him for the next four years. The sessions weren’t officially released until the mid-1990s, but “I Am a Laser” is notable for a few reasons – not least that Bowie later reworked it as “Scream Like a Baby.”
Next time: cocaine, milk and pentagrams.
No comments:
Post a Comment