« Back to Top Level | David Bowie

David Bowie - Rarest One Bowie (1995)

Track listing:
  1. All The Young Dudes [original Studio Version 1973] 4:10
  2. Queen Bitch [live at long island, NY1976]
  3. Sound And Vision [live At Earl's Court, London 1978]
  4. Time [from The 1980 Floor Show 1973]
  5. Be My Wife [live At Earl's Court 1978]
  6. Footstompin'-Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate[from Dick Cavett, 1974]
  7. Ziggy Stardust [live At Santa Monica, 1972]
  8. My Death [live At Carnegie Hall, 1972]
  9. I Feel Free [live At Kingston Polytechnic 1972]

Notes


Nine tracks and 36 minutes long, the easiest way to summarize Rarest One Bowie's decidedly oddball march through David Bowie's 1970s is to regard it as an official sampler for some decidedly unofficial albums. Aside from a version of "Ziggy Stardust" lifted directly from the 1972 Live at Santa Monica album, nothing here hails from even a halfway legitimate album project. But, from a fabulous take on "All the Young Dudes culled from the Aladdin Sane sessions through "Time" from the 1980 Floor Show and "Queen Bitch" from 1976's Thin White Duke, Rarest One is essentially an echo of all that Columbia attempted with Bob Dylan's unofficial catalog — the chief difference being that the Dylan tapes were at least cleaned up first. Some of this album sounds like it came straight off a cassette tape. Two tracks ("Sound and Vision" and "Be My Wife") lifted from the 1978 London shows that spawned the official Stage live collection do benefit from having escaped the ambience-enhancing remix to which Bowie subjected the original tapes, and a 1973 in-concert version of "My Death" cannot reasonably be faulted. But "I Feel Free" is a murky mess, while a playful version of James Brown's "Footstompin'" sounds precisely like what it is — a domestic tape recording of Bowie's appearance on The Dick Cavett Show in 1974, packed with so much distortion that you can almost see the microphone against the mono television speaker. Historically, the performance is priceless — Bowie's own "Fame" developed directly from this arrangement. It's a shame it couldn't be presented in a form that matched its pedigree. Collectors looking for a quick glimpse into the highlights of their vinyl bootleg collection will probably find Rarest One of some use — students of the Asian music industry's occasional problems with the English language will enjoy the hopelessly garbled track information placed on the Japanese reissue. But, ultimately, Rarest One offers little of any real value, and nothing of sonic importance. Look out for the original bootlegs instead. [The 2002 reissue features six bonus tracks.]