David Bowie - The Deram Anthology 1966-1968

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Album Details

Title: The Deram Anthology 1966-1968
Artist: David Bowie
Release Date: 1997
Label: Decca Pop, Deram, Universal, Universal International
Album Type(s): Greatest Hits, lyrics/libretto
UPCs: 042284478427, 4988005357373, 0602498490044, 766482972623, 766486829442, 060249849004
Genre: Rock
Styles: Singer/Songwriter, Pop/Rock, Mod
Moods: Brooding, Clinical, Eccentric, Eerie, Stylish, Bravado, Cerebral, Complex, Detached, Dramatic, Elegant, Enigmatic, Exciting, Literate, Lush, Nocturnal, Playful, Provocative, Quirky, Rebellious, Sophisticated, Swaggering, Tense/Anxious, Theatrical, Urgent, Wry, Campy, Hypnotic, Intense, Ironic, Sexy, Yearning, Outrageous, Austere, Elaborate, Refined/Mannered
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Rubber Band [Mono Version][Version]
  2. The London Boys [Mono Version]
  3. The Laughing Gnome [Mono Version]
  4. The Gospel According to Tony Day [Mono Version]
  5. Uncle Arthur
  6. Sell Me a Coat
  7. Rubber Band
  8. Love You Till Tuesday
  9. There Is a Happy Land
  10. We Are Hungry Men
  11. When I Live My Dream
  12. Little Bombardier
  13. Silly Boy Blue
  14. Come and Buy My Toys
  15. Join the Gang
  16. She's Got Medals
  17. Maid of Bond Street
  18. Please Mr. Gravedigger
  19. Love You Till Tuesday [Mono Version][Version]
  20. Did You Ever Have a Dream [Mono Version]
  21. Karma Man [Mono Version]
  22. Let Me Sleep Beside You [Mono Version]
  23. In the Heat of the Morning [Mono Version]
  24. Ching-A-Ling
  25. Sell Me a Coat
  26. When I Live My Dream
  27. Space Oddity [Mono Version][Demo Version]

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2007CDDecca Pop9849004
2004CDUniversal9411
2004CDUniversal International535737
1997CDDeram844784

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

In 1973, at the height of David Bowie's Ziggy-shaped excess, a small, smirking skeleton came creeping out of his closet, paused to adjust its merry pointy hat, then rocketed to number eight on the U.K. chart. It was, of course, "The Laughing Gnome," a reminder of his days directionlessly drifting through the '60s, and a cause for ribald amusement wherever it played. Today, of course, Bowie is no stranger to embarrassment...nor to "The Laughing Gnome." What, after all, was his role in the Labyrinthe movie but a twisted reprise of the Gnome's naughtier excesses, while his Earthling album even offered its own return to the same kind of basics, including the varispeed vocals that made the Gnome laugh. But Bowie still remains acutely aware of the nature of his musical roots. Initial intentions for this compilation included a second disc packed with outtakes and oddities; these plans were abandoned at Bowie's own request (the bootleg The Forgotten Songs of David Robert Jones celebrates his demands), and Anthology suffers accordingly. Of its 27 tracks, a mere handful can be missing from even a disinterested Bowie collection -- the Love You Till Tuesday soundtrack version of "Ching A Ling," and a handful of re-recordings made for 45 release. Everything else has now been repackaged so many times that even fresh remastering at first seems academic. And then you play the album. And then you play "The Laughing Gnome." Though Bowie plotted a similar course through the mundane backwaters of nostalgic Englishness as fired Ray Davies' best contemporary efforts, it's not difficult to understand why this work was doomed to commercial failure. He was, at this time, targeting most of his energy directly into the heart of the Hip easy listening Intelligentsia -- without pausing to wonder whether that crowd actually existed. Of course it didn't, and Bowie was doomed before he got started. Too twee for mainstream rock tastes, and way too heavy for the Anthony Newley crowd with which subsequent critics have most gleefully allied him, Bowie's subject matter was essentially little different to anything he has written about in the decades since then. If anything, in fact, it was even darker -- child abuse ("Little Bombardier"), cannibalism (the magnificently apocalyptic "We Are Hungry Men"), and infanticide ("Please, Mr. Gravedigger") vied with what might now be called the more characteristic themes of transvestism ("She's Got Medals") and sci-fi inflected utopia ("There Is a Happy Land"). Rearrange the songs a little and, thematically, "The London Boys" -- a tale of betrayed modishness that takes the Kinks' similarly themed "Big Black Smoke" to its inevitable, lonely conclusion -- would not have been out of place on Bowie's own Pin-Ups. The soaring, soulful "When I Live My Dream" could easily have lived with Young Americans, while the impulsive "Let Me Sleep Beside You" still demands a modern reprise. Elsewhere, "Ching A Ling" lent part of its melody line to the subsequent "Saviour Machine"; "Karma Man" was still appearing in Bowie's live set into the early '70s; and "Space Oddity," present here in early demo form, would of course become one of his most enduring hits ever. But in allying all this incipient brilliance to a distinctly MOR soundtrack of piano, strings, and orchestral arrangements, Bowie was shooting himself in the foot, and today, excellent liner notes and a topnotch remastering job do not disguise the sheer unconventionality of this material. Even now, with his subsequent reputation as a musical chameleon firmly a part of his legend, "Silly Boy Blue," "Maid of Bond Street," and "There Is a Happy Land" remain disconcerting members of his canon. At the time, they were positively alien, and even Bowie would take another five years before he learned to understand that. ~ Dave Thompson, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
David BowieVocals, Author, Guitar, Keyboards, Main Performer, Arranger
Derek "Dek" FearnleyArranger
Dorian WathenProduct Manager
Gerald FearnleyCover Photo
Gus DudgeonEngineer
Kenneth PittOriginal Liner Notes
Mike VernonProducer
Minoru HaradaProduct Manager
Minoru NishimotoReissue Art Coordinator
Phil SmeePackaging

Member Reviews

Michael L. (Popmeister) wrote on 8/26/2009...

Alot of this is just plain bad, but it's interesting to hear what he was doing early in his career.