David Bowie & Dana Gillespie - "Bowpromo1" (1971)
Recorded at Trident Studios, London
Synopsis:
Sound quality is excellent, from a crisp near mint copy of the LP that belonged to Dana herself!
Media:
Original UK LP 1st pressing, Gem "BOWPROMO1", Matrix A: BOWPROMO 1A-1, Matrix B: BOWPROMO 1B-1
Equipment:
Vpi HW-17F Record Cleaning Machine
Heybrook TT2 with Origin Live! power supply and DC motor
Rega RB 300 tonearm (Origin Live! mod)
Lyra Helikon M/C Cartridge
Denon PMA 8500 (M/C phono section)
ESI Systems Juli@ A/D
Adobe Audition 1.5 / 3.0
Tracklisting - as given on LP
Side A: = David Bowie
01. Oh! You Pretty Things (3:12)
02. Eight Line Poem (2:55)
03. Kooks (2:58)
04. It Ain't Easy (3:01)
05. Queen Bitch (3:17)
06. Quicksand (5:07)
07. Bombers-Andy Warhol intro (3:30)
Side B: = Dana Gillespie
08. Mother Don't Be Frightened (4:15)
09. Andy Warhol (2:44)
10. Never Knew (3:32)
11. All Cut Up On You (3:23)
12. Lavender Hill (3:22)
Personnel:
Side A: As per David Bowie 'Hunky Dory' LP
David Bowie (vocals, guitar, alto & tenor sax, piano)
Mick Ronson (guitar)
Rick Wakeman (piano)
Trevor Bolder (bass)
Mick Woodmansey (drums)
Side B: See track details below.
Method:
- Record cleaned on Vpi machine.
- Audio sampled at 96/32 float.
- Filter to roll-off frequencies below 20 HZ (only below audible frequencies).
Audio restoration:
- 'Younglove' decrackling scripted method throughout.
- Manual declick and deglitch.
- All whole sides normalized to 100% NEVER using compression or limiting.
Here is a genuine David Bowie rarity! Featured on this UK only promotional LP are 5 songs that were
to appear on 'Hunky Dory' but with different mixes plus 2 songs that didn't ever appear on the album.
The Dana Gillespie material is also from the Mick Ronson / David Bowie 'Mainman'
writing and production team.
In August 1971, David Bowie's manager Tony Defries had 500 promo LPs pressed to secure him
and other Mainman artist Dana Gillespie a record deal.
This promo album, featuring seven songs by David on side A and five by Dana Gillespie
on the flip, is often being referred to as the BOWPROMO white-label album.
The LP came in generic white outer and inner sleeves and had no printed labels,
so its matrix number (BOWPROMO 1A-1/1B-1) is the only way to safely identify it.
Most of the Bowie songs on this promo LP would appear four months later on Hunky Dory.
However, as the recording and mixing of that album had not yet been finished, it transpired
that the BOWPROMO LP contained two songs that would not end up on any official album
for the next 20 years (Bowie's 'Bombers' and Gillespie's 'Lavender Hill').
Besides, it features marginally to very different early mixes/versions.
The following is a complete breakdown of the differences and relevant info on the selections:
01: Oh! You Pretty Things: side A opens with a version of 'Oh! You Pretty Things' that sounds very close
to the Hunky Dory version, but with a few subtle differences. Bowie's vocal is slightly more upfront
on the Hunky Dory version, while the piano on the BOWPROMO version sounds much more 'spatious'.
The only genuine difference that is detectable though is the amount of reverb used on the chorus.
The BOWPROMO uses this on both the main and backing vocals, whereas the album version uses much less,
if any, for both.
02: Eight Line Poem: on Hunky Dory, the guitar is more central during the intro, drifts to the left
and then back to the centre for the end. On the BOWPROMO version it starts on the right then switches
between left and right during the second half, again ending in the centre. On the BOWPROMO, the piano
completely natural sounding, whereas on the Hunky Dory it has a flanging effect applied.
However, this version is best known for a different vocal take.
Bowie sings 'The tactful cactus by your window' vs 'Tactful...' and 'They've opened shops...' vs 'Opened...'.
The echo used on 'collision' in the line 'Mobile spins to its collision' is also missing on the BOWPROMO.
03: Kooks: a different stereo mix that fades two seconds later than the official version.
E.g. in the intro, both acoustic guitars are centered in the Hunky Dory version whereas they are clearly
present in the left and right channels in the BOWPROMO version.
Also note the acoustic guitar throughout the entire song on the BOWPROMO, which has been completely faded
in the verses on Hunky Dory.
04: It Ain't Easy: this song was possibly already recorded before 'Changes' and 'Life On Mars',
as the latter two are not included on the BOWPROMO album. Of course they would have been very likely
candidates to secure Bowie a record deal. 'It Ain't Easy' ended up in 1972 on Ziggy Stardust,
in an identic version.
05: Queen Bitch: this tribute to The Velvet Underground appeared in slightly different form on Hunky Dory.
Compared to the latter, the BOWPROMO lacks any reverb on the vocals but adds some reverb on Mick Ronson's
riff. The BOWPROMO version can be identified easiest by the very subdued 'Hmmm' at the very end,
which apparently later was overdubbed on the Hunky Dory version.
06: Quicksand: the intro of the Hunky Dory version is in mono and only opens up to stereo
at 0'51" ('I'm frightened by the total goal...'); the intro on the BOWPROMO is in full stereo from the very
start. Furthermore, some additional strings have been added to the Hunky Dory version
at 3'20" ('If I don't explain what you ought to know...').
07: Bombers-Andy Warhol intro: the version of 'Bombers' that in 1990 ended up as a bonus track on the Rykodisc
edition of Hunky Dory is a rather tinny mix, lacking in bass.
Besides, at 0'23" ("Seemed a good idea to drop a bomb on the wasteland here")
and 1'12" ("So the Pentagon sent a cable and the Queen a telegram") into the Ryko mix,
there are extra drum beats that do not sound convincingly intentional.
As can be heard in the audio excerpt, these 'jumps' are absent on the BOWPROMO album.
Also interesting is that 'Bombers' develops into an alternate version of the intro to 'Andy Warhol',
which runs slightly longer, as it includes a strum on the acoustic guitar
and a few more laughs of Bowie at the very end. 'Bombers' and part of the intro to 'Andy Warhol'
have appeared on the ChangesThreeDavidRobertJones (Grace AZL1-1984) bootleg LP.
The 'Andy Warhol' intro is also found on MissingLinksOneZiggy (Icon One), but the sound quality of both
recordings is rather poor.
08: Mother Don't Be Frightened: the first of five Dana Gillespie tracks on side B. This song, which was produced
and arranged by David Bowie and Mick Ronson, appeared in 1974 on her "Weren't Born A Man" album.
09: Andy Warhol: originally written by David for Dana Gillespie, musically backed by The Spiders and produced by Bowie/Ronson.
This is a quite different, shorter version (2'45" vs 3'02"), compared to what appeared on Weren't Born A Man.
The intro is faded in and the mix is more direct and less echoey than on that album.
The outro on the BOWPROMO also is much shorter and less guitar-heavy. This version has recently been released
on Oh! You Pretty Things.
10: Never Knew: released on Dana Gillespie's Ain't Gonna Play No Second Fiddle and reissued on Andy Warhol.
11: All Cut Up On You: this is a much shorter version (3'23" vs 4'12") than on Weren't Born A Man.
12: Lavender Hill: this ballad was not released until the 1994 Andy Warhol CD.
Info from www.illustrated-db-discography.nl
Euripides May 2011
A very clean copy that actually used to belong to Dana Gillespie herself and according to her never got played
until I had it briefly in the office whilst putting it on eBay for a friend (it sold for 2.400 GBP!!!)
In all respects a fine example of a standard EMI 1970's pressing.
The restoration work needed to be careful due to the presence of a few large clicks but really nothing
to bother complaining about. Artwork: Annoyingly I don't have the original scans anymore (the burglary you know...)
so the art I have provided comes from a scan of the CD case I originally made for my DVD-A copy, others from the internet.
Never mind, it's the music you're really after isn't it? Enjoy!
NOTE:
This show is in 24-bit format and may be burned to a DVD-Audio(with 'Lplex'= shareware for example).
It cannot be burned to a CD as is.
Davesolar's comment:
This is one of the absolute best sounding records of those days that I know.
The equipment used for the transfer is of the best, Vinyl-Lovers will love this gem, I'm sure !
Thanks to 'bot'. I moderated his original text, not the words, only the place where they are.
Uploaded to TTD by 'bot' in 2012
Seeded to MWP by Davesolar on 2014-07-04