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'''''Let's Dance''''' is an album by [[David Bowie]], released in 1983, with co-production by [[Chic (band)|Chic]]'s [[Nile Rodgers]]. The [[Let's Dance (David Bowie song)|title track]] of the album became one of Bowie's biggest hit singles, reaching number 1 in the UK, the US and various other countries. Further singles included "[[Modern Love (song)|Modern Love]]" and "[[China Girl (song)|China Girl]]", which both reached number 2 in the UK. "China Girl" was actually a new version of a song which Bowie had co-written with [[Iggy Pop]] for the latter's 1977 album ''[[The Idiot (album)|The Idiot]]''. The album also contains a rerecorded version of the song "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)" which had been a minor hit for Bowie a year earlier. ''Let's Dance'' is also notable as a stepping stone for the career of the late [[Texas blues]] guitar virtuoso [[Stevie Ray Vaughan]], who played on the album.<ref name=MMag83 /> The album was also released as a limited edition [[picture disc]] in 1983. ''Let's Dance'' has sold 6 million copies worldwide, making it Bowie's best-selling album.<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com.pe/books?ei=EuVLT63lEcGoiAKjkYXbDQ&id=7To5AQAAIAAJ&dq=%22David+Bowie%22+%22Let%27s+Dance%22+sold+million+singles&q=%22Six+million+copies+were+sold+as+the+album+spawned+two+more+hit+singles+and+trailed+the+massive+Serious+Moonlight%22#search_anchor|title=The Complete David Bowie, p. 323|last=Pegg|first=Nicholas|publisher=Reynolds & Hearn|date=2006-10-01|accessdate=2012-02-27}}</ref>
'''''Let's Dance''''' is an album by [[David Bowie]], released in 1983, with co-production by [[Chic (band)|Chic]]'s [[Nile Rodgers]]. The [[Let's Dance (David Bowie song)|title track]] of the album became one of Bowie's biggest hit singles, reaching number 1 in the UK, the US and various other countries. Further singles included "[[Modern Love (song)|Modern Love]]" and "[[China Girl (song)|China Girl]]", which both reached number 2 in the UK. "China Girl" was actually a new version of a song which Bowie had co-written with [[Iggy Pop]] for the latter's 1977 album ''[[The Idiot (album)|The Idiot]]''. The album also contains a rerecorded version of the song "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)" which had been a minor hit for Bowie a year earlier. ''Let's Dance'' is also notable as a stepping stone for the career of the late [[Texas blues]] guitar virtuoso [[Stevie Ray Vaughan]], who played on the album.<ref name=MMag83 /> The album was also released as a limited edition [[picture disc]] in 1983. ''Let's Dance'' has sold 6 million copies worldwide, making it Bowie's best-selling album.<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com.pe/books?ei=EuVLT63lEcGoiAKjkYXbDQ&id=7To5AQAAIAAJ&dq=%22David+Bowie%22+%22Let%27s+Dance%22+sold+million+singles&q=%22Six+million+copies+were+sold+as+the+album+spawned+two+more+hit+singles+and+trailed+the+massive+Serious+Moonlight%22#search_anchor|title=The Complete David Bowie, p. 323|last=Pegg|first=Nicholas|publisher=Reynolds & Hearn|date=2006-10-01|accessdate=2012-02-27}}</ref>


==Song and album development==
==Songs and album development==
Bowie, having just signed with [[EMI records]] for a reported $17.5m (in 1983 currency), worked with Nile Rodgers to release a "commercially buoyant" new album that was described as "original party-funk cum big bass drum sound greater than the sum of its influences."<ref name=MMag83>{{Citation | last=Timothy | first=White | title=David Bowie Interview | journal=[[Musician (magazine)|Musician magazine]] | issue=55 | year=1983 | month=May | pages=52–66, 122}}</ref> The album's influences were described as Louis Jordan, the Asbury Jukes horn section, Bill Doggett, Earl Bostic and James Brown.<ref name=MMag83 /> Bowie spent a mere three days making demos for the album in New York before cutting the album, a rarity for Bowie who, for the previous few albums, usually showed up with little more than "a few ideas."<ref name=MM74 /> Despite this, the album "was recorded, start to finish, including mixing, in 17 days" according to Rodgers.<ref>[http://twentyfirstcenturymusic.blogspot.com/2011/11/nile-rodgers-interviewed-by-peter.html "Nile Rodgers interviewed by Peter Paphides"]. Twentyfirstcenturymusic.blogspot.com. November 10, 2011. Retrieved November 13, 2011.</ref>
Bowie, having just signed with [[EMI records]] for a reported $17.5m (in 1983 currency), worked with Nile Rodgers to release a "commercially buoyant" new album that was described as "original party-funk cum big bass drum sound greater than the sum of its influences."<ref name=MMag83>{{Citation | last=Timothy | first=White | title=David Bowie Interview | journal=[[Musician (magazine)|Musician magazine]] | issue=55 | year=1983 | month=May | pages=52–66, 122}}</ref> The album's influences were described as Louis Jordan, the Asbury Jukes horn section, Bill Doggett, Earl Bostic and James Brown.<ref name=MMag83 /> Bowie spent a mere three days making demos for the album in New York before cutting the album, a rarity for Bowie who, for the previous few albums, usually showed up with little more than "a few ideas."<ref name=MM74 /> Despite this, the album "was recorded, start to finish, including mixing, in 17 days" according to Rodgers.<ref>[http://twentyfirstcenturymusic.blogspot.com/2011/11/nile-rodgers-interviewed-by-peter.html "Nile Rodgers interviewed by Peter Paphides"]. Twentyfirstcenturymusic.blogspot.com. November 10, 2011. Retrieved November 13, 2011.</ref>


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==Reissues==
==Reissues==


In 1995 [[Virgin Records]] re-released the album on CD with "[[Under Pressure]]" as a bonus track. [[EMI]] did the second re-release in 1999 (featuring 24-bit digitally remastered sound and no bonus tracks).
In 1995 [[Virgin Records]] re-released the album on CD with "[[Under Pressure]]" as a bonus track. EMI did the second re-release in 1999 (featuring 24-bit digitally remastered sound and no bonus tracks).


In 1998 there was a reissue in the UK which was similar to the 1995 re-release but did not include the bonus track.
In 1998 there was a reissue in the UK which was similar to the 1995 re-release but did not include the bonus track.
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The Canadian version of the 1999 EMI release includes a data track, so that when the CD is loaded on a Windows PC, the user is presented with a promotion of internet access services and other premium content from the davidbowie.com website. This marks one of the earliest attempts by a mainstream artist to combine internet and normal promotion and distribution methods.
The Canadian version of the 1999 EMI release includes a data track, so that when the CD is loaded on a Windows PC, the user is presented with a promotion of internet access services and other premium content from the davidbowie.com website. This marks one of the earliest attempts by a mainstream artist to combine internet and normal promotion and distribution methods.


There was a further reissue in 2003 when [[EMI]] released the album as a hybrid stereo [[Super Audio CD|SACD]]/[[PCM]] CD.
There was a further reissue in 2003 when EMI released the album as a hybrid stereo [[Super Audio CD|SACD]]/[[PCM]] CD.


==Personnel==
==Personnel==

Revision as of 15:47, 19 May 2012

Untitled

Let's Dance is an album by David Bowie, released in 1983, with co-production by Chic's Nile Rodgers. The title track of the album became one of Bowie's biggest hit singles, reaching number 1 in the UK, the US and various other countries. Further singles included "Modern Love" and "China Girl", which both reached number 2 in the UK. "China Girl" was actually a new version of a song which Bowie had co-written with Iggy Pop for the latter's 1977 album The Idiot. The album also contains a rerecorded version of the song "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)" which had been a minor hit for Bowie a year earlier. Let's Dance is also notable as a stepping stone for the career of the late Texas blues guitar virtuoso Stevie Ray Vaughan, who played on the album.[1] The album was also released as a limited edition picture disc in 1983. Let's Dance has sold 6 million copies worldwide, making it Bowie's best-selling album.[2]

Songs and album development

Bowie, having just signed with EMI records for a reported $17.5m (in 1983 currency), worked with Nile Rodgers to release a "commercially buoyant" new album that was described as "original party-funk cum big bass drum sound greater than the sum of its influences."[1] The album's influences were described as Louis Jordan, the Asbury Jukes horn section, Bill Doggett, Earl Bostic and James Brown.[1] Bowie spent a mere three days making demos for the album in New York before cutting the album, a rarity for Bowie who, for the previous few albums, usually showed up with little more than "a few ideas."[3] Despite this, the album "was recorded, start to finish, including mixing, in 17 days" according to Rodgers.[4]

Stevie Ray Vaughan, who met Bowie at the 1982 Montreux Jazz Festival, when discussing the album, said "to tell you the truth, I was not very familiar with David's music when he asked me to play on the sessions. ... David and I talked for hours and hours about our music, about funky Texas blues and its roots - I was amazed at how interested he was. At Montreux, he said something about being in touch and then tracked me down in California, months and months later."[1]

Unusually, Bowie played no instruments on the album. "I don't play a damned thing. This was a singer's album."[1]

A few years later, Bowie discussed his feelings on the track "Ricochet" (which Musician magazine called an "incendiary ballroom raveup")[1] from this album:

I thought it was a great song, and the beat wasn't quite right. It didn't roll the way it should have, the syncopation was wrong. It had an ungainly gait; it should have flowed. ... Nile [Rodgers] did his own thing to it, but it wasn't quite what I'd had in mind when I wrote the thing.[5]

— David Bowie, 1987

Long-time collaborator Carlos Alomar, who had worked with Bowie since the mid-'70s and would continue to work with Bowie into the mid-'90s, was offered an "embarrassing" fee to play on the album, and refused to do so,[6] although a year later (when working on Bowie's follow-up album, Tonight), he claimed that he didn't play on the album because Bowie only gave him two weeks' notice, and he was already booked with other work.[3] Alomar did however play on the accompanying tour.

Bowie's studio follow-up to this album was 1984's Tonight.

Reception and legacy

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [7]
Blender [8]
Robert Christgau(B) [9]
Rolling Stone [10]

The album was generally positively reviewed by critics,[7][8][9][10] and well received by fans, with at least one reviewer calling it "Bowie at his best."[3]

The success of the album surprised Bowie. In 1997, he said "at the time, Let's Dance was not mainstream. It was virtually a new kind of hybrid, using blues-rock guitar against a dance format. There wasn't anything else that really quite sounded like that at the time. So it only seems commercial in hindsight because it sold so many [copies]. It was great in its way, but it put me in a real corner in that it fucked with my integrity."[11]

In fact, Bowie would later state that the success of the album caused him to hit a creative low-point in his career which lasted the next few years.[11][12][13] "I remember looking out over these waves of people [who were coming to hear this record played live] and thinking, 'I wonder how many Velvet Underground albums these people have in their record collections?' I suddenly felt very apart from my audience. And it was depressing, because I didn't know what they wanted."[11]

Track listing

All songs written by David Bowie except as noted.

Side one
  1. "Modern Love" – 4:46
  2. "China Girl" (Bowie, Iggy Pop) – 5:32
  3. "Let's Dance" – 7:38
  4. "Without You" – 3:08
Side two
  1. "Ricochet" – 5:14
  2. "Criminal World" (Peter Godwin, Duncan Browne, Sean Lyons) – 4:25
  3. "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)"[14] (lyrics: Bowie, music: Giorgio Moroder) – 5:09
  4. "Shake It" – 3:49

Reissues

In 1995 Virgin Records re-released the album on CD with "Under Pressure" as a bonus track. EMI did the second re-release in 1999 (featuring 24-bit digitally remastered sound and no bonus tracks).

In 1998 there was a reissue in the UK which was similar to the 1995 re-release but did not include the bonus track.

The Canadian version of the 1999 EMI release includes a data track, so that when the CD is loaded on a Windows PC, the user is presented with a promotion of internet access services and other premium content from the davidbowie.com website. This marks one of the earliest attempts by a mainstream artist to combine internet and normal promotion and distribution methods.

There was a further reissue in 2003 when EMI released the album as a hybrid stereo SACD/PCM CD.

Personnel

Performance

Technical

  • David Bowie – producer
  • Nile Rodgers – producer
  • Bob Clearmountain, Nile Rodgers, David Bowie – engineering/mixing
  • Bob Ludwig – mastering

Charts

Album

Year Chart Peak
Position
1983 UK Albums Chart 1 [15]
1983 US Billboard Top LPs & Tapes 4 [16]
1983 Norway's album chart 1
1983 Australian Kent Music Report Albums Chart 1

Single

Year Single Chart Peak
Position
1982 "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)"[14] UK Singles Chart 26 [15]
1983 "Let's Dance" UK Singles Chart 1 [15]
1983 "China Girl" UK Singles Chart 2 [15]
1983 "Modern Love" UK Singles Chart 2 [15]
1983 "Let's Dance" US Billboard Hot 100 1
1982 "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)" Norway's single chart 1 (8)
1983 "Let's Dance" Norway's single chart 1 (5)
1983 "China Girl" Norway's single chart 7

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Timothy, White (1983), "David Bowie Interview", Musician magazine (55): 52–66, 122 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  2. ^ Pegg, Nicholas (1 October 2006). The Complete David Bowie, p. 323. Reynolds & Hearn. Retrieved 27 February 2012.
  3. ^ a b c Fricke, David (1984), "David Bowie Interview", Musician magazine (74): 46–56 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  4. ^ "Nile Rodgers interviewed by Peter Paphides". Twentyfirstcenturymusic.blogspot.com. November 10, 2011. Retrieved November 13, 2011.
  5. ^ Isler, Scott (1987), "David Bowie Opens Up - A Little", Musician magazine: 64
  6. ^ Edwards, Henry (1987), "The Return of the Put-Together Man", Spin magazine, 2 (12): 56–60
  7. ^ a b https://www.allmusic.com/album/r2510
  8. ^ a b "Let's Dance – Blender". Blender. Retrieved 16 June 2009. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  9. ^ a b http://www.robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?name=david+bowie
  10. ^ a b http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/lets-dance-19970617
  11. ^ a b c Pond, Steve (1997), "Beyond Bowie", Live! magazine: 38–41, 93 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  12. ^ Mary Campbell for the Associated Press, 6 August 1993
  13. ^ Cohen, Scott (1991), "David Bowie Interview", Details magazine: 86–97 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  14. ^ a b "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)", from the film Cat People, was a hit single a year earlier. The album version is a rerecording.
  15. ^ a b c d e "UK Top 40 Hit Database". Retrieved 9 July 2008.
  16. ^ "allmusic (((Let's Dance > Charts & Awards > Billboard Albums)))". Retrieved 9 July 2008.
Preceded by UK Albums Chart number one album
23 April 1983 – 13 May 1983
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Go for It by Various artists
Australian Kent Music Report number-one album
25 April 1983 – 1 May 1983
Succeeded by