Identifier | 9550266 |
Created At | Tue May 23 2023 23:54:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) |
Media Type | FLAC |
Note | "Lover To The Dawn" bootleg |
Source Info | Studio>?>CD |
Trades Allowed |
Performance
David Bowie 1969-04-?? Foxgrove Road, Beckenham, England | |
---|---|
Set 1 | Space Oddity Janine An Occasional Dream Conversation Piece Ching-A-Ling I'm Not Quite (Letter To Hermione) Love Song When I'm Five Life Is A Circus Lover To The Dawn (Cygnet Committee) |
Set 2 | |
Set 3 | |
Comment | "Lover To The Dawn" bootleg
A fascinating glimpse of the genesis of the Space Oddity album is afforded by a ten-song acoustic demo tape recorded by David and his Feathers partner John "Hutch" Hutchinson, probably in mid-April 1969. In addition to the 'Space Oddity' demo, the tape features early versions of 'Janine', 'An Occasional Dream', 'Conversation Piece', 'Letter To Hermione' (here called 'I'm Not Quite') and 'Cygnet Committee' (with very different lyrics and called 'Lover To The Dawn'). There are also renditions of the Feathers staples 'When I'm Five', 'Ching-a-Ling', 'Love Song' and 'Life Is A Circus'. Exactly when and where this demo tape was recorded remains difficult to pinpoint. It was almost certainly after Kenneth Pitt's meeting with Simon Hayes on 14 April, and the presence of Hutch means that it can't have been a great deal later, for he bowed out and returned to Yorkshire the same month. It has been suggested that the demos were recorded on professional equipment at Mercury Records' headquarters in Knightsbridge, but this seems highly unlikely considering Bowie's apologies on the tape for the "very bad tape recorder and microphone" and for the noises coming from the piano teacher upstairs; the usual consensus is that the venue was his new flat in Foxgrove Road, Beckenham, where he moved on 14 April. In mid-May Pitt successfully negotiated a one-year contract with Simon Hayes whereby Bowie was to receive royalties and production costs for a new album, while Mercury retained two one-year renewal options. The record would be distributed on the Mercury label in America, and its affiliate Philips in the UK. - Nicholas Pegg: "The Complete David Bowie" |