David Bowie Ringtones
David Bowie Albums
Aladdin Sane Ringtone Download 
Anthology 1966-1968 Ringtone Download 
Best Of Bowie Ringtone Download 
Black Tie White Noise Ringtone Download 
David Bowie Ringtone Download 
David Live Ringtone Download 
Diamond Dogs Ringtone Download 
Early On Ringtone Download 
Earthling Ringtone Download 
Heathen Ringtone Download 
Heroes Ringtone Download 
Hours… Ringtone Download 
Hunky Dory Ringtone Download 
Labyrinth Ringtone Download 
Let’s Dance Ringtone Download 
Lodger Ringtone Download 
Low Ringtone Download 
Never Let Me Down Ringtone Download 
Outside Ringtone Download 
Pinups Ringtone Download 
Reality Ringtone Download 
Scary Monsters… And Super Creeps Ringtone Download 
Space Oddity Ringtone Download 
Space Oddity Ringtone Download 
Stage Ringtone Download 
Station To Station Ringtone Download 
The Man Who Sold The World Ringtone Download 
The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust … Ringtone Download 
Tin Machine Ringtone Download 
Tin Machine II Ringtone Download 
Tonight Ringtone Download 
Young Americans Ringtone Download 
David Bowie Songs
David Bowie - ‘87 And Cry Ringtone 
David Bowie - (Don’t Sit Down) Ringtone 
David Bowie - 1984 Ringtone 
David Bowie - 5:15 The Angels Have Gone Ringtone 
David Bowie - A Better Future Ringtone 
David Bowie - A Big Hurt Ringtone 
David Bowie - A New Career In A New Town Ringtone 
David Bowie - A Small Plot Of Land Ringtone 
David Bowie - Absolute Beginners Ringtone 
David Bowie - Across The Universe Ringtone 
David Bowie - Afraid Ringtone 
David Bowie - African Night Flight Ringtone 
David Bowie - After All Ringtone 
David Bowie - Alabama Song Ringtone 
David Bowie - Aladdin Sane Ringtone 
David Bowie - All The Madmen Ringtone 
David Bowie - All The Young Dudes Ringtone 
David Bowie - Always Crashing In The Same Car Ringtone 
David Bowie - Amazing Ringtone 
David Bowie - Amlapura Ringtone 
David Bowie - An Occasional Dream Ringtone 
David Bowie - And I Say To Myself Ringtone 
David Bowie - Andy Warhol Ringtone 
David Bowie - Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere Ringtone 
David Bowie - Art Decade Ringtone 
David Bowie - As The World Falls Down Ringtone 
David Bowie - Ashes To Ashes Ringtone 
David Bowie - Baby Can Dance Ringtone 
David Bowie - Baby Loves That Way Ringtone 
David Bowie - Baby Universal Ringtone 
David Bowie - Band Intro Ringtone 
David Bowie - Bang Bang Ringtone 
David Bowie - Bars Of The County Jail Ringtone 
David Bowie - Battle For Britain (The Letter) Ringtone 
David Bowie - Be My Wife Ringtone 
David Bowie - Beat Of Your Drum Ringtone 
David Bowie - Beauty And The Beast Ringtone 
David Bowie - Because You’re Young Ringtone 
David Bowie - Betty Wrong Ringtone 
David Bowie - Big Brother Ringtone 
David Bowie - Black Country Rock Ringtone 
David Bowie - Black Tie White Noise Ringtone 
David Bowie - Blackout Ringtone 
David Bowie - Blue Jean Ringtone 
David Bowie - Boys Keep Swinging Ringtone 
David Bowie - Breaking Glass Ringtone 
David Bowie - Bring Me The Disco King Ringtone 
David Bowie - Bus Stop Ringtone 
David Bowie - Cactus Ringtone 
David Bowie - Can You Hear Me Ringtone 
David Bowie - Can’t Help Thinking About Me Ringtone 
David Bowie - Candidate Ringtone 
David Bowie - Cat People Ringtone 
David Bowie - Changes Ringtone 
David Bowie - Chant Of The Ever Circling Skeletal Family Ringtone 
David Bowie - Chilly Down Ringtone 
David Bowie - China Girl Ringtone 
David Bowie - Ching-A-Ling Ringtone 
David Bowie - Come And Buy My Toys Ringtone 
David Bowie - Crack City Ringtone 
David Bowie - Cracked Actor Ringtone 
David Bowie - Criminal World Ringtone 
David Bowie - Cygnet Committee Ringtone 
David Bowie - D.J. Ringtone 
David Bowie - Dancing In The Street Ringtone 
David Bowie - Dancing With The Big Boys Ringtone 
David Bowie - Day-In Day-Out Ringtone 
David Bowie - Days Ringtone 
David Bowie - Dead Man Walking Ringtone 
David Bowie - Diamond Dogs Ringtone 
David Bowie - Did You Ever Have A Dream Ringtone 
David Bowie - Do Anything You Say Ringtone 
David Bowie - Don’t Bring Me Down Ringtone 
David Bowie - Don’t Let Me Down And Down Ringtone 
David Bowie - Don’t Look Down Ringtone 
David Bowie - Drive-In Saturday Ringtone 
David Bowie - Eight Line Poem Ringtone 
David Bowie - Everyone Says ‘Hi’ Ringtone 
David Bowie - Everything’s Alright Ringtone 
David Bowie - Fall Dog Bombs The Moon Ringtone 
David Bowie - Fame Ringtone 
David Bowie - Fantastic Voyage Ringtone 
David Bowie - Fascination Ringtone 
David Bowie - Fashion Ringtone 
David Bowie - Fill Your Heart Ringtone 
David Bowie - Five Years Ringtone 
David Bowie - Friday On My Mind Ringtone 
David Bowie - Future Legend Ringtone 
David Bowie - Glad I’ve Got Nobody Ringtone 
David Bowie - Glass Spider Ringtone 
David Bowie - God Knows I’m Good Ringtone 
David Bowie - God Only Knows Ringtone 
David Bowie - Golden Years Ringtone 
David Bowie - Good Morning Girl Ringtone 
David Bowie - Goodbye Mr. Ed Ringtone 
David Bowie - Hallo Spaceboy Ringtone 
David Bowie - Hallucination Ringtone 
David Bowie - Hang On To Yourself Ringtone 
David Bowie - Heathen (The Rays) Ringtone 
David Bowie - Heaven’s In Here Ringtone 
David Bowie - Here Comes The Night Ringtone 
David Bowie - Here Today, Gone Tomorrow Ringtone 
David Bowie - Heroes Ringtone 
David Bowie - Home At Last Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Can’t Explain Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Can’t Read Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Dig Everything Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Feel Free Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Have Not Been To Oxford Town Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Keep Forgettin’ Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Know It’s Gonna Happen Someday Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Pity The Fool Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Took A Trip On A Gemini Spaceship Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Want My Baby Back Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Wish You Would Ringtone 
David Bowie - I Would Be Your Slave Ringtone 
David Bowie - I’ll Follow You Ringtone 
David Bowie - I’m Afraid Of Americans Ringtone 
David Bowie - I’m Deranged Ringtone 
David Bowie - I’m Not Losing Sleep Ringtone 
David Bowie - I’ve Been Waiting For You Ringtone 
David Bowie - If I’m Dreaming My Life Ringtone 
David Bowie - If There Is Something Ringtone 
David Bowie - In The Heat Of The Morning Ringtone 
David Bowie - Into The Labyrinth Ringtone 
David Bowie - It Ain’t Easy Ringtone 
David Bowie - It’s No Game (Part I) Ringtone 
David Bowie - It’s No Game (Part II) Ringtone 
David Bowie - Janine Ringtone 
David Bowie - Jean Genie Ringtone 
David Bowie - Joe The Lion Ringtone 
David Bowie - John I’m Only Dancing Ringtone 
David Bowie - Join The Gang Ringtone 
David Bowie - Jump They Say Ringtone 
David Bowie - Karma Man Ringtone 
David Bowie - Kingdom Come Ringtone 
David Bowie - Knock On Wood Ringtone 
David Bowie - Kooks Ringtone 
David Bowie - Lady Grinning Soul Ringtone 
David Bowie - Lady Stardust Ringtone 
David Bowie - Law (Earthlings On Fire) Ringtone 
David Bowie - Leon Takes Us Outside Ringtone 
David Bowie - Let Me Sleep Beside You Ringtone 
David Bowie - Let’s Dance Ringtone 
David Bowie - Let’s Spend The Night Together Ringtone 
David Bowie - Letter To Hermione Ringtone 
David Bowie - Life On Mars? Ringtone 
David Bowie - Little Bombadier Ringtone 
David Bowie - Little Wonder Ringtone 
David Bowie - Liza Jane Ringtone 
David Bowie - Look Back In Anger Ringtone 
David Bowie - Looking For Lester Ringtone 
David Bowie - Looking For Satellites Ringtone 
David Bowie - Looking For Water Ringtone 
David Bowie - Louie, Louie Go Home Ringtone 
David Bowie - Love You Till Tuesday Ringtone 
David Bowie - Loving The Alien Ringtone 
David Bowie - Lucy Can’t Dance Ringtone 
David Bowie - Magic Dance Ringtone 
David Bowie - Maid Of Bond Street Ringtone 
David Bowie - Memory Of A Free Festival Ringtone 
David Bowie - Miracle Goodnight Ringtone 
David Bowie - Modern Love Ringtone 
David Bowie - Moonage Daydream Ringtone 
David Bowie - Moss Garden Ringtone 
David Bowie - Move On Ringtone 
David Bowie - Neighborhood Threat Ringtone 
David Bowie - Neukoln Ringtone 
David Bowie - Never Get Old Ringtone 
David Bowie - Never Let Me Down Ringtone 
David Bowie - New Angels Of Promise Ringtone 
David Bowie - New Killer Star Ringtone 
David Bowie - New York’s In Love Ringtone 
David Bowie - Nite Flights Ringtone 
David Bowie - No Control Ringtone 
David Bowie - Oh! You Pretty Things Ringtone 
David Bowie - One Shot Ringtone 
David Bowie - Opening Titles Including Underground Ringtone 
David Bowie - Outside Ringtone 
David Bowie - Pablo Picasso Ringtone 
David Bowie - Pallas Athena Ringtone 
David Bowie - Panic In Detroit Ringtone 
David Bowie - Please Mr. Gravedigger Ringtone 
David Bowie - Pretty Thing Ringtone 
David Bowie - Prisoner Of Love Ringtone 
TV on the Radio - Province (feat. David Bowie) Ringtone 
David Bowie - Queen Bitch Ringtone 
David Bowie - Quicksand Ringtone 
David Bowie - Reality Ringtone 
David Bowie - Rebel Rebel Ringtone 
David Bowie - Red Money Ringtone 
David Bowie - Red Sails Ringtone 
David Bowie - Repetition Ringtone 
David Bowie - Ricochet Ringtone 
David Bowie - Right Ringtone 
David Bowie - Rock ‘N’ Roll Suicide Ringtone 
David Bowie - Rock ‘N’ Roll With Me Ringtone 
David Bowie - Rosalyn Ringtone 
David Bowie - Rubber Band Ringtone 
David Bowie - Run Ringtone 
David Bowie - Running Gun Blues Ringtone 
David Bowie - Sacrify Yourself Ringtone 
David Bowie - Sarah Ringtone 
David Bowie - Saviour Machine Ringtone 
David Bowie - Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps) Ringtone 
David Bowie - Scream Like A Baby Ringtone 
David Bowie - See Emily Play Ringtone 
David Bowie - Segue - Algeria Touchshriek Ringtone 
David Bowie - Segue - Baby Grace (A Horrid Cassette) Ringtone 
David Bowie - Segue - I Am With Name Ringtone 
David Bowie - Segue - Nathan Adler Ringtone 
David Bowie - Segue - Nathan Adler (Part II) Ringtone 
David Bowie - Sell Me A Coat Ringtone 
David Bowie - Sense Of Doubt Ringtone 
David Bowie - Seven Ringtone 
David Bowie - Seven Years In Tibet Ringtone 
David Bowie - Shake It Ringtone 
David Bowie - Shapes Of Things Ringtone 
David Bowie - She Shook Me Cold Ringtone 
David Bowie - She’ll Drive The Big Car Ringtone 
David Bowie - She’s Got Medals Ringtone 
David Bowie - Shining Star (Makin’ My Love) Ringtone 
David Bowie - Shopping For Girls Ringtone 
David Bowie - Silly Boy Blue Ringtone 
David Bowie - Slip Away Ringtone 
David Bowie - Slow Burn Ringtone 
David Bowie - Somebody Up There Likes Me Ringtone 
David Bowie - Something In The Air Ringtone 
David Bowie - Song For Bob Dylan Ringtone 
David Bowie - Sons Of The Silent Age Ringtone 
David Bowie - Sorrow Ringtone 
David Bowie - Sorry Ringtone 
David Bowie - Soul Love Ringtone 
David Bowie - Sound And Vision Ringtone 
David Bowie - Space Oddity Ringtone 
David Bowie - Speed Of Life Ringtone 
David Bowie - Star Ringtone 
David Bowie - Starman Ringtone 
David Bowie - Stateside Ringtone 
David Bowie - Station To Station Ringtone 
David Bowie - Stay Ringtone 
David Bowie - Strangers When We Meet Ringtone 
David Bowie - Subterraneans Ringtone 
David Bowie - Suffragette City Ringtone 
David Bowie - Sunday Ringtone 
David Bowie - Survive Ringtone 
David Bowie - Sweet Thing Ringtone 
David Bowie - Sweet Thing (Reprise) Ringtone 
David Bowie - Take My Tip Ringtone 
David Bowie - Teenage Wildlife Ringtone 
David Bowie - Telling Lies Ringtone 
David Bowie - That’s Where My Heart Is Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Bewlay brothers Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Dreamers Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Goblin Battle Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Gospel According To Tony Day Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Hearts Filthy Lesson Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Last Thing You Should Do Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Laughing Gnome Ringtone 
David Bowie - The London Boys Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Loneliest Guy Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Man Who Sold The World Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Motel Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Prettiest Star Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Pretty Things Are Going To Hell Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Secret Life Of Arabia Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Supermen Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Voyeur Of Utter Destruction (As Beauty) Ringtone 
David Bowie - The Wedding Song Ringtone 
David Bowie - There Is A Happy Land Ringtone 
David Bowie - Thirteen O’Clock Ringtone 
David Bowie - This Is Not America Ringtone 
David Bowie - Thru These Architect’s Eyes Ringtone 
David Bowie - Thursday’s Child Ringtone 
David Bowie - Time Ringtone 
David Bowie - Time Will Crawl Ringtone 
David Bowie - Tin Machine Ringtone 
David Bowie - Tonight Ringtone 
David Bowie - Too Dizzy Ringtone 
David Bowie - Try Some, Buy Some Ringtone 
David Bowie - Tumble And Twirl Ringtone 
David Bowie - TVC15 Ringtone 
David Bowie - Uncle Arthur Ringtone 
Queen - Under Pressure (with David Bowie) Ringtone 
David Bowie - Under The God Ringtone 
David Bowie - Underground Ringtone 
David Bowie - Unwashed And Somewhat Slightly Dazed Ringtone 
David Bowie - Up The Hill Backwards Ringtone 
David Bowie - V-2 Schneider Ringtone 
David Bowie - Warszawa Ringtone 
David Bowie - Watch That Man Ringtone 
David Bowie - We Are Hungry Men Ringtone 
David Bowie - We Are The Dead Ringtone 
David Bowie - We Prick You Ringtone 
David Bowie - Weeping Wall Ringtone 
David Bowie - What In The World Ringtone 
David Bowie - What’s Really Happening Ringtone 
David Bowie - When I Live My Dream Ringtone 
David Bowie - When i’m five Ringtone 
David Bowie - Where Have All The Good Times Gone Ringtone 
David Bowie - Width Of A Circle Ringtone 
David Bowie - Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud Ringtone 
David Bowie - Wild Is The Wind Ringtone 
David Bowie - Win Ringtone 
David Bowie - Wishful Beginnings Ringtone 
David Bowie - Within You Ringtone 
David Bowie - Without You Ringtone 
David Bowie - Word On A Wing Ringtone 
David Bowie - Working Class Hero Ringtone 
David Bowie - Yassassin (Turkish For: Long Live) Ringtone 
David Bowie - You Belong In Rock ‘N’ Roll Ringtone 
David Bowie - You Can’t Talk Ringtone 
David Bowie - You’ve Been Around Ringtone 
David Bowie - You’ve Got A Habit Of Leaving Ringtone 
David Bowie - Young Americans Ringtone 
David Bowie - Zeroes Ringtone 
David Bowie - Ziggy Stardust Ringtone 
About David Bowie
The cliché about David Bowie says he’s a musical chameleon, adapting himself according to fashion and trends. While such a criticism is too glib, there’s no denying that Bowie demonstrated remarkable skill for perceiving musical trends at his peak in the ’70s. After spending several years in the late ’60s as a mod and as an all-around music-hall entertainer, Bowie reinvented himself as a hippie singer/songwriter. Prior to his breakthrough in 1972, he recorded a proto-metal record and a pop/rock album, eventually redefining glam rock with his ambiguously sexy Ziggy Stardust persona. Ziggy made Bowie an international star, yet he wasn’t content to continue to churn out glitter rock. By the mid-’70s, he developed an effete, sophisticated version of Philly soul that he dubbed “plastic soul,” which eventually morphed into the eerie avant-pop of 1976’s Station to Station. Shortly afterward, he relocated to Berlin, where he recorded three experimental electronic albums with Brian Eno. At the dawn of the ’80s, Bowie was still at the height of his powers, yet following his blockbuster dance-pop album Let’s Dance in 1983, he slowly sank into mediocrity before salvaging his career in the early ’90s. Even when he was out of fashion in the ’80s and ’90s, it was clear that Bowie was one of the most influential musicians in rock, for better and for worse. Each one of his phases in the ’70s sparked a number of subgenres, including punk, new wave, goth rock, the new romantics, and electronica. Few rockers ever had such lasting impact.
David Jones began performing music when he was 13 years old, learning the saxophone while he was at Bromley Technical High School; another pivotal event happened at the school, when his left pupil became permanently dilated in a schoolyard fight. Following his graduation at 16, he worked as a commercial artist while playing saxophone in a number of mod bands, including the King Bees, the Manish Boys (which also featured Jimmy Page as a session man), and Davey Jones & the Lower Third. All three of those bands released singles, which were generally ignored, yet he continued performing, changing his name to David Bowie in 1966 after the Monkees’ Davy Jones became an international star. Over the course of 1966, he released three mod singles on Pye Records, which were all ignored. The following year, he signed with Deram, releasing the music hall, Anthony Newley-styled David Bowie that year. Upon completing the record, he spent several weeks in a Scottish Buddhist monastery. Once he left the monastery, he studied with Lindsay Kemp’s mime troupe, forming his own mime company, the Feathers, in 1969. The Feathers were short-lived, and he formed the experimental art group Beckenham Arts Lab in 1969.
Bowie needed to finance the Arts Lab, so he signed with Mercury Records that year and released Man of Words, Man of Music, a trippy singer/songwriter album featuring “Space Oddity.” The song was released as a single and became a major hit in the U.K., convincing Bowie to concentrate on music. Hooking up with his old friend Marc Bolan, he began miming at some of Bolan’s T. Rex concerts, eventually touring with Bolan, bassist/producer Tony Visconti, guitarist Mick Ronson, and drummer Cambridge as Hype. The band quickly fell apart, yet Bowie and Ronson remained close, working on the material that formed Bowie’s next album, The Man Who Sold the World, as well as recruiting Michael “Woody” Woodmansey as their drummer. Produced by Tony Visconti, who also played bass, The Man Who Sold the World was a heavy guitar rock album that failed to gain much attention. Bowie followed the album in late 1971 with the pop/rock Hunky Dory, an album that featured Ronson and keyboardist Rick Wakeman.
Following the release of Hunky Dory, Bowie began to develop his most famous incarnation, Ziggy Stardust: an androgynous, bisexual rock star from another planet. Before he unveiled Ziggy, Bowie claimed in a January 1972 interview with the Melody Maker that he was gay, helping to stir interest in his forthcoming album. Taking cues from Bolan’s stylish glam rock, Bowie dyed his hair orange and began wearing women’s clothing. He began calling himself Ziggy Stardust, and his backing band — Ronson, Woodmansey, and bassist Trevor Bolder — were the Spiders from Mars. The Rise & Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars was released with much fanfare in England in late 1972. The album and its lavish, theatrical concerts became a sensation throughout England, and it helped him become the only glam rocker to carve out a niche in America. Ziggy Stardust became a word-of-mouth hit in the U.S., and the re-released “Space Oddity” — which was now also the title of the re-released Man of Words, Man of Music — reached the American Top 20. Bowie quickly followed Ziggy with Aladdin Sane later in 1973. Not only did he record a new album that year, but he also produced Lou Reed’s Transformer, the Stooges’ Raw Power, and Mott the Hoople’s comeback All the Young Dudes, for which he also wrote the title track.
Given the amount of work Bowie packed into 1972 and 1973, it wasn’t surprising that his relentless schedule began to catch up with him. After recording the all-covers Pin-Ups with the Spiders from Mars, he unexpectedly announced the band’s breakup, as well as his retirement from live performances, during the group’s final show that year. He retreated from the spotlight to work on a musical adaptation of George Orwell’s 1984, but once he was denied the rights to the novel, he transformed the work into Diamond Dogs. The album was released to generally poor reviews in 1974, yet it generated the hit single “Rebel Rebel,” and he supported the album with an elaborate and expensive American tour. As the tour progressed, Bowie became fascinated with soul music, eventually redesigning the entire show to reflect his new “plastic soul.” Hiring guitarist Carlos Alomar as the band’s leader, Bowie refashioned his group into a Philly soul band and recostumed himself in sophisticated, stylish fashions. The change took fans by surprise, as did the double-album David Live, which featured material recorded on the 1974 tour.
Young Americans, released in 1975, was the culmination of Bowie’s soul obsession, and it became his first major crossover hit, peaking in the American Top Ten and generating his first U.S. number one hit in “Fame,” a song he co-wrote with John Lennon and Alomar. Bowie relocated to Los Angeles, where he earned his first movie role in Nicolas Roeg’s The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976). While in L.A., he recorded Station to Station, which took the plastic soul of Young Americans into darker, avant-garde-tinged directions, yet was also a huge hit, generating the Top Ten single “Golden Years.” The album inaugurated Bowie’s persona of the elegant “Thin White Duke,” and it reflected Bowie’s growing cocaine-fueled paranoia. Soon, he decided Los Angeles was too boring and returned to England; shortly after arriving back in London, he gave the awaiting crowd a Nazi salute, a signal of his growing, drug-addled detachment from reality. The incident caused enormous controversy, and Bowie left the country to settle in Berlin, where he lived and worked with Brian Eno.
Once in Berlin, Bowie sobered up and began painting, as well as studying art. He also developed a fascination with German electronic music, which Eno helped him fulfill on their first album together, Low. Released early in 1977, Low was a startling mixture of electronics, pop, and avant-garde technique. While it was greeted with mixed reviews at the time, it proved to be one of the most influential albums of the late ’70s, as did its follow-up, Heroes, which followed that year. Not only did Bowie record two solo albums in 1977, but he also helmed Iggy Pop’s comeback records The Idiot and Lust for Life, and toured anonymously as Pop’s keyboardist. He resumed his acting career in 1977, appearing in Just A Gigolo with Marlene Dietrich and Kim Novak, as well as narrating Eugene Ormandy’s version of Peter and the Wolf. Bowie returned to the stage in 1978, launching an international tour that was captured on the double-album Stage. During 1979, Bowie and Eno recorded Lodger in New York, Switzerland, and Berlin, releasing the album at the end of the year. Lodger was supported with several innovative videos, as was 1980’s Scary Monsters, and these videos — “DJ,” “Fashion,” “Ashes to Ashes” — became staples on early MTV.
Scary Monsters was Bowie’s last album for RCA, and it wrapped up his most innovative, productive period. Later in 1980, he performed the title role in stage production of The Elephant Man, including several shows on Broadway. Over the next two years, he took an extended break from recording, appearing in Christine F (1982) and the vampire movie The Hunger (1982), returning to the studio only for his 1981 collaboration with Queen, “Under Pressure,” and the theme for Paul Schrader’s remake of Cat People. In 1983, he signed an expensive contract with EMI Records and released Let’s Dance. Bowie had recruited Chic guitarist Nile Rodgers to produce the album, giving the record a sleek, funky foundation, and hired the unknown Stevie Ray Vaughan as lead guitarist. Let’s Dance became his most successful record, thanks to stylish, innovative videos for “Let’s Dance” and “China Girl,” which turned both songs into Top Ten hits. Bowie supported the record with the sold-out arena tour Serious Moonlight.
Greeted with massive success for the first time, Bowie wasn’t quite sure how to react, and he eventually decided to replicate Let’s Dance with 1984’s Tonight. While the album sold well, producing the Top Ten hit “Blue Jean,” it received poor reviews and ultimately was a commercial disappointment. He stalled in 1985, recording a duet of Martha & the Vandellas’ “Dancing in the Street” with Mick Jagger for Live Aid. He also spent more time jet-setting, appearing at celebrity events across the globe, and appeared in several movies — Into the Night (1985), Absolute Beginners (1986), Labyrinth (1986) — that turned out to be bombs. Bowie returned to recording in 1987 with the widely panned Never Let Me Down, supporting the album with the Glass Spider tour, which also received poor reviews. In 1989, he remastered his RCA catalog with Rykodisc for CD release, kicking off the series with the three-disc box Sound + Vision. Bowie supported the discs with an accompanying tour of the same name, claming that he was retiring all of his older characters from performance following the tour. Sound + Vision was successful, and Ziggy Stardust re-charted amidst the hoopla.
Sound + Vision may have been a success, but Bowie’s next project was perhaps his most unsuccessful. Picking up on the abrasive, dissonant rock of Sonic Youth and the Pixies, Bowie formed his own guitar rock combo, Tin Machine, with guitarist Reeves Gabrels, bassist Hunt Sales, and his drummer brother Tony, who had previously worked on Iggy Pop’s Lust for Life with Bowie. Tin Machine released an eponymous album to poor reviews that summer and supported it with a club tour, which was only moderately successful. Despite the poor reviews, Tin Machine released a second album, the appropriately titled Tin Machine II, in 1991, and it was completely ignored.
Bowie returned to a solo career in 1993 with the sophisticated, soulful Black Tie White Noise, recording the album with Nile Rodgers and his now-permanent collaborator, Reeves Gabrels. The album was released on Savage, a subsidiary of RCA, and received positive reviews, but his new label went bankrupt shortly after its release, and the album disappeared. Black Tie White Noise was the first indication that Bowie was trying hard to resuscitate his career, as was the largely instrumental 1994 soundtrack The Buddha of Suburbia. In 1995, he reunited with Brian Eno for the wildly hyped, industrial rock-tinged Outside. Several critics hailed the album as a comeback, and Bowie supported it with a co-headlining tour with Nine Inch Nails in order to snag a younger, alternative audience, but his gambit failed; audiences left before Bowie’s performance and Outside disappeared. He quickly returned to the studio in 1996, recording Earthling, an album heavily influenced by techno and drum’n'bass. Upon its early 1997 release, Earthling received generally positive reviews, yet the album failed to gain an audience, and many techno purists criticized Bowie for allegedly exploiting their subculture. hours… followed in 1999. For 2002, Bowie reunited with producerToni Visconti and released Heathen to very positive reviews. He continued on with Visconti for Reality in 2003.
Biography taken from All Music.

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