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David Bowie
Black Tie White Noise
Release Date: 1993 04 06
Running Time: 65:35
Label: EMI Music Distribution

Black Tie White Noise was the beginning of David Bowie's return from the wilderness of post-Let's Dance, the first indication that he was regaining his creative spark. To say as much suggests that it's a bit of a lost classic, when it's rather a sporadically intriguing transitional album, finding Bowie balancing the commercial dance-rock of Let's Dance with artier inclinations from his Berlin period, all the while trying to draw on the past by working with former Spider from Mars guitarist Mick Ronson, collaborating with Let's Dance producer Nile Rodgers, and even covering inspiration Scott Walker's "Nite Flights." On top of that, the record was inspired by his recent marriage to supermodel Iman -- the record is bookended with "The Wedding" and "The Wedding Song" -- and then tied up and presented as a sophisticated modern urban soul record, one that draws from uptown soul (including, rather bafflingly, a duet with Al B. Sure!) and state-of-the-art dance-club techno, while adding splashy touches like solos from avant jazz trumpeter Lester Bowie and a nod to modern alt-rock via a nifty cover of Morrissey's "I Know It's Gonna Happen Someday." That's a lot of stuff for one record to handle, so it shouldn't come as a great surprise that the album doesn't always work, but its stylish restlessness comes as a great relief, particularly when compared to the hermetically sealed previous solo Bowie record, 1987's Never Let Me Down. Black Tie White Noise displays greater musical ambition than any record he'd made since Scary Monsters, and while much of the record feels like unrealized ideas, there are songs where it all gels, like on the paranoid jumble of "Jump They Say," the aforementioned covers, the impassioned "You've Been Around," and the self-consciously smooth title track. Moments like these are the first in a long time to feel classically Bowie, and they point ahead toward the more interesting records he made in the second half of the '90s, but they are encased in a production that not only sounds dated years later, but sounded dated upon its release in the spring of 1993, two years into the thick of alternative rock. At that point, the club-centric, mainstream-courting Black Tie White Noise seemed as an anachronism during the guitar-heavy grunge-n-industrial glory days -- something Bowie tacitly acknowledged with its 1995 successor, Outside, which was every bit as gloomy as a Nine Inch Nails record -- but separated from the vagaries of fashion, it's an interesting first step in Bowie's creative revival. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks:
TitleComposerTime
1WeddingBowie5:04
2You've Been AroundGabrels, Bowie4:45
3I Feel FreeBrown, Bruce4:52
4Black Tie White NoiseBowie4:52
5Jump They SayBowie4:22
6Nite FlightsWalker, Engels4:30
7Pallas AthenaBowie4:40
8Miracle GoodnightBowie4:14
9Don't Let Me Down & DownValmont, Tarha, Valmont, Valmont4:14
10Looking for LesterBowie5:36
11I Know It's Gonna Happen SomedayMorrissey, Nevin, Nevin4:14
12Wedding SongBowie4:29
13Jump They Say [Alternate Mix]Bowie3:58
14Lucy Can't DanceBowie5:45

Releases:
YearTypeLabel
2003CDEMI Music Distribution
2008CDToshiba EMI
1995CDVirgin
1993CDDead Line Music



Member Of:
Hype
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Arnold Corns
Tin Machine
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Influenced By:
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Followers:
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