Product Details
Never Let Me Down

Never Let Me Down
David Bowie

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Product Description

1. Day In Day Out (1999 Digital Remaster) 2. Time Will Crawl (1999 Digital Remaster) 3. Beat Of Your Drum (1999 Digital Remaster) 4. Never Let Me Down (1999 Digital Remaster) 5. Zeroes (1999 Digital Remaster) 6. Glass Spider (1999 Digital Remaster) 7. Shining Star (Makin' My Love) (1999 Digital Remaster) 8. New York's In Love (1999 Digital Remaster) 9. 87 And Cry (1999 Digital Remaster) 10. Bang Bang (1999 Digital Remaster)

Track Listing

  1. Day In Day Out
  2. Time Will Crawl
  3. Beat Of Your Drum
  4. Never Let Me Down
  5. Zeroes
  6. Glass Spider
  7. Shining Star (Makin' My Love)
  8. New York's In Love
  9. 87 And Cry
  10. Bang Bang

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #22550 in Music
  • Released on: 1999-09-20
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Formats: Enhanced, Original recording reissued
  • Dimensions: .23 pounds

Editorial Reviews

CD Description
After having spent the the mid-'80s putting on his acting shoes for Absolute Beginners and Labyrinth, Bowie returned tomusic by grabbing his usual henchmen Carlos Alomar and Carmine Rojas and joining forces with old schoolmate Peter Frampton. NEVER LET ME DOWN found Bowie writing or co-writing everything with the exception of Iggy Pop's "Bang Bang". Songs such as "Day-In Day-Out" and "Time Will Crawl" were perfect Bowie songs that worked opposite ends of the spectrum; the everyday reality of a struggling woman living on the periphery of society versus the ambiguity of time itself. Although the creamy synths and slick production are occasional reminders that NLMD was cut in the '80s, these flourishes work especially well on "Zeroes" and the title track. The only hint of indulgence comes in the semi-mythical "Glass Spider" and the rap duet vignette with Mickey Rourke (!) that Bowie dropsinto the middle of "Shining Star (Makin' My Love)". After that chilling encounter, Bowie fled the solo life for the safer confines of Tin Machine in 1989.


Customer Reviews

Highly ironic album title!3
This was the first David Bowie album I ever bought, when it came out in 1987, and the beginning of a great adventure, so I have a bit of a soft spot for this album. It's often described as his worst album, but that's really not fair. The real word for it is disappointing - Bowie had proved he was albe to still come up with great music during this time, just listen to the lost classic "When The Wind Blows" (not on any album, grr) or the more well-known songs from the films "Absolute Beginners" and "Labyrinth". He also co-wrote and produced Iggy Pop's "Blah Blah Blah" back to back with this album, and the Iggy album is a Bowie record in all but name and full of great songs - if he'd kept them to himself things would have been completely different!

I was only 11 when I got this album (wanting to find out more about this strange singer after seeing Labyrinth and being very impressed) and to my untrained ears "Never Let Me Down" had a certain something that made it stand out from the bland yuppie pop of the time, but compared to recent efforts like "Outside", "Heathen" and "The Buddha of Suburbia" it certainly is weak for Bowie. The only other albums (OK tapes!) I bought in 1987 also go to show how weak "Never Let Me Down" was in comparison, and how low Bowie had fallen from his creative peak - "so" by Peter Gabriel, and "Actually" by Pet Shop Boys.

There are some terribly uninspired songs that leave me cold - a pointless remake of Iggy Pop's "Bang Bang", and "Too Dizzy" a song so bad that it has been left off the most recent version of this album! But, wierdly, it also features songs that are much better than almost everything on "Let's Dance" and "Tonight"! "Day in Day out" is an early attempt at the drum- and sequencer-led techno-rock of "Earthling" with some good one-liners, but suffers from very '80s horn arrangements. "Time Will Crawl" is vintage Bowie - reminiscent of "Ashes To Ashes" mixture of synth and guitar with lyrics full of wierd, apocalyptic surreal images and a suprisingly profound look at the chilliung idea that the boy round the corner could grow up to be the next Hitler-style nemesis! "Beat of your drum" oscillates between some icy slow verses with Bowie sounding like a man on the edge of the world (you can imagine his character in labyrinth singing it), and a very lusty chorus a la "Rebel Rebel". Again, too many horns though! The title song is a great ballad that really should be put in his live set. Despite typical ballad fare - harmonica, a whistling coda! - it has a certain strangeness in its jangly, jerky chorus that almost sends it into "Lodger" territory!"zeroes" is a brave attempt to make a 'fake' psychedelic song, maybe this was to blame for Kula Shaker?! And "Glass Spider" is quite like nothing else in his back catalogue and certainly not "Let's Dance"! The rest of the album is disposable, except for "87 & Cry" although the version on the "never let me down" twelve inch is a better mix.

So, not quite as atrocious as the critics make out - and not as boring as the very overrated "Let's Dance" - but not exactly his finest hour! Thankfully he made "Tin Machine" after this, which completely destroyed his '80s middle of the road pop star persona and got him thinking about making interesting records again, and most of his '90s work has been essential listening, with the exception of the rather dull "Hours".

Definitely the worst Bowie record sleeve ever!

hitting an all time low2
Frankly, I don't believe in the notion that great artists suddenly can loose their ability to create great art. However, with a lack of inspiration, no amount of raw talent and genius can save you. I believe that was what happened to David Bowie in the mid-80's. After reaching a much higher level of fame with Let's Dance (a very good album by most standards, but quite mediocre by Bowie's) he seemed lost as to what to do. Trying to keep his new audience he started to make albums to satisfy them rather than himself which naturally led to a lack of inspiration and interest. The first album after Let's Dance, Tonight, I thought was dreadful at the time, but it has in fact improved somewhat with time. This is, however, not the case with NLMD. Of course, it does contain a few good songs, but the overall quality of the songs is quite mediocre. It could have been a decent album though, hadn't it been for the bland production. The "big drums", the bad synthesizers, the non-inspired guitar-playing, the lack of depth... I could go on and on. Even Bowie's vocals seem totally uninspired, as if he already when making the album had lost faith in it.

Fortunately, David Bowie got his inspiration back in the 90's and has been making consistently great albums for the last 12 years. Too bad so few people gives him a chance and try to listen to more of his recent stuff.

From dire to terrible1
I really thought things couldn't get much worse for Bowie after Tonight and Let's Dance, but this really has got to be the worst of Bowie, well almost: he quite obviously lost the plot here somewhat. In fact, I'd say that this and the aforementioned albums would make good partners in a triple CD set named 'The 80's: The Worst of Bowie'. However, my brother liked the Let's Dance album, so I'm sure there are others that liked it also, so maybe I'm just too fond of earlier Bowie to let this through (probably not though).

After enduring almost every track on this CD, the very last track, Bang Bang, came on and I thought, "Blimey, hang on, this isn't bad." Turns on this track wasn't Bowie's so that could explain it.

I've been listening to Bowie for decades. I own all the studio albums on CD up until end of the 80's, then I skipped replacing the 80's vinyl with CD for obvious reasons. However, I definitely got suckered here.

So if you see it for £1.50 in a second hand shop one day, you may want to buy it just to finish the set off. This is the only good reason I can see of forking out good money for this awful album