UNCUT

BECAUSE YOU’RE YOUNG

MANHATTAN Center, New York, August 1999. David Bowie is coming face to face with one of his former selves. But it’s not the Thin White Duke, Halloween Jack or Ziggy – but an earlier incarnation of Bowie, one almost nobody knows or has long since forgotten. The occasion is VH1 Storytellers, a show in which songwriters talk about and perform choice moments from their back catalogue. Among hits like “Life On Mars?” and “China Girl”, Bowie suddenly pulls out one of the first songs he wrote: an R&B thumper called “Can’t Help Thinking About Me”. He prefaces it with a lengthy impression of Steve Marriott – before confessing that the song contains “two of the worst lines I’ve ever written”. The audience laugh appreciatively. What no-one – perhaps not even Bowie himself – realises is that this brief detour back to 1965 will launch an unexpected and extended reckoning with Bowie’s past.

Accompanying Bowie on guitar in New York was Reeves Gabrels, Bowie’s musical right-hand man since 1988. It transpires that Gabrels has suggested Bowie give “Can’t Help Thinking About Me” a long-overdue airing. “I had it on a compilation record when I was about 14,” he tells Uncut. “You’d get three vinyl discs for a dollar if you sent in a coupon. They were like anthology records. I had a bunch of them as they were so affordable. I’d heard ‘Can’t Help Thinking About Me’ almost before I knew anything else David had done. Then we were in Chung King Studios in New York mixing ‘hours...’ and drawing up the setlist for VH1 Storytellers. I said it as a joke. David paused and he thought and he said, ‘You know, that might be a good one.’ Next thing I knew, we were playing it.”

“HE WAS PEELING BACK THE LAYERS” GERRY LEONARD

In fact, the enthusiastic reception to “Can’t Help Thinking About Me” encouraged Bowie to dig deeper, unearthing other lost songs including “The London Boys” and “I Dig Everything”. What sent him on this unexpected detour back to his pre-fame days? His love of the internet might have been partly responsible. “I must’ve had 743 singles come out before ‘Space Oddity’,” Bowie told in 1999. “And half of them daft as a brush. And the other half – well, there may have been potential, but only so much. Ha! But it’s kinda fun now, actually – I see sites on the internet where they study those areas very intimately. You can see them picking through the peppercorns of my manure pile. Looking for something that might indicate I had a future. They’re fewshould have been Bowie’s first release of the incoming millennium – old skin for a new century. Instead, it was shelved – the victim of an unsympathetic label and Bowie’s own impatience. Now, 21 years later, is finally appearing on the boxset, which collects Bowie’s studio albums and additional material from 1992–2001, and then on in January, featuring , outtakes and bonus material. These twice-lost arcana from another age are getting their moment in the sunshine, offering a glimpse into Bowie at the other end of his career; before, in some instances, he was even ‘Bowie’. “These songs give a little glimpse of his teenage soul,” says Emm Gryner, backing singer on .

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from UNCUT

UNCUT2 min read
Editor's Note
“Snake it, take it/Panther princess you must stay” ONE of my favourite moments of the new David Bowie boxset, covering the birth of Ziggy Stardust, is the demo of “Soul Love” recorded at Haddon Hall in November 1971. This has evidently been made for
UNCUT14 min read
Where it’s At
you’re having a picnic lunch, that’s when shit gets real,” says Dan Auerbach with a laugh. The Black Keys singer and guitarist is recounting the lengthy sessions for the band’s 12th album, Ohio Players, which the duo partly recorded with Beck, acting
UNCUT1 min read
The Road To All Born Screaming
Though she was covering Big Black’s “Kerosene” in her live set, there was as yet little of that energy in Annie Clark’s recordings. But her songs were growing darker and more direct – notably on “Cruel”, the video. On her breakthrough album, Annie go

Related Books & Audiobooks