David BowieLow

Label:

RCA Victor – PL 12030

Format:

Vinyl , LP, Album, Stereo

Country:

UK

Released:

Genre:

Rock

Style:

Experimental

Tracklist

A1 Speed Of Life
BassGeorge Murray
PercussionDennis Davis
PianoRoy Young
Rhythm Guitar [Rhythm Guitars]Carlos Alomar
Synthesizer [ARP], Chamberlin [Tape Horn And Brass - Synthetic Strings]David Bowie
Written-ByBowie*
A2 Breaking Glass
BassGeorge Murray
GuitarCarlos Alomar
PercussionDennis Davis
Rhythm GuitarRicky Gardener*
Synthesizer [Splinter Mini-moog]Eno*
VocalsDavid Bowie
Written-ByMurray*
A3 What In The World
BassGeorge Murray
Guitar [Guitars]Ricky Gardener*
PercussionDennis Davis
Piano, Electric Organ [Farfisa Organ]Roy Young
Rhythm GuitarCarlos Alomar
Synthesizer [Farfisa Organ]Roy Young
Synthesizer [Report ARP, Rimmer E.M.I.]Eno*
VocalsIggy Pop
Written-ByBowie*
A4 Sound And Vision
BassGeorge Murray
Guitar [Guitars]Ricky Gardener*
PercussionDennis Davis
PianoRoy Young
Rhythm GuitarCarlos Alomar
Saxophone [Saxophones], Chamberlin [Synthetic Strings], VocalsDavid Bowie
VocalsMary Visconti
Written-ByBowie*
A5 Always Crashing In The Same Car
BassGeorge Murray
Chamberlin [Tape Cellos], VocalsDavid Bowie
Effects [Guitar Treatments], Synthesizer [E.M.I.]Brian Eno
GuitarRicky Gardener*
OrganRoy Young
PercussionDennis Davis
Rhythm GuitarCarlos Alomar
Written-ByBowie*
A6 Be My Wife
BassGeorge Murray
GuitarRicky Gardener*
PercussionDennis Davis
PianoRoy Young
Rhythm GuitarCarlos Alomar
Vocals, Bass [Pump Bass], GuitarDavid Bowie
Written-ByBowie*
A7 A New Career In A New Town
BassGeorge Murray
GuitarRicky Gardener*
Harmonica, Chamberlin [Tape Sax Section], PianoDavid Bowie
PercussionDennis Davis
PianoRoy Young
Piano, Synthesizer [All Synthetics]Eno*
Rhythm GuitarCarlos Alomar
Written-ByBowie*
B1 Warszawa
Piano, Synthesizer [Mini-moog, E.M.I.], Chamberlin [Chamberlain]Brian Eno
Written-ByBowie*
B2 Art Decade
Cello [Cellos]Eduard Meyer
Percussion [Pre-arranged Percussion], Piano, Chamberlin [Chamberlain], Guitar, Synthesizer [Synthetic Strings]David Bowie
Piano, Chamberlin [Chamberlain], Synthesizer [E.M.I., Mini-Moog]Eno*
Written-ByBowie*
B3 Weeping Wall
Piano [Pianos], Guitar, Vocals, Synthesizer [ARP, Synthetic Strings], Vibraphone [Vibraphones], Xylophone [Xylophones]David Bowie
Written-ByBowie*
B4 Subterraneans
BassGeorge Murray
GuitarCarlos Alomar
Piano, Guitar, Vocals, Saxophone [Sax]David Bowie
Synthesizer [ARP], PianoPeter*
Written-ByBowie*

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright ℗RCA Records
  • Copyright ©RCA Limited, Record Division, England
  • Manufactured ByRCA Ltd.
  • Published ByBewlay Bros. S.A.R.L.
  • Published ByFleur Music
  • Published ByE.G. Music Ltd.
  • Published ByChrysalis Music Ltd.
  • Printed ByGarrodprint Ltd.
  • Made ByGarrodprint Ltd.
  • Recorded AtStudio Hérouville
  • Recorded AtHansa Tonstudios
  • Mixed AtHansa Tonstudios
  • Lacquer Cut AtSterling Sound
  • Pressed ByRCA Records Pressing Plant, Washington, UK

Credits

  • Arranged ByDavid Bowie
  • Design [Uncredited]George Underwood
  • ProducerTony Visconti

Notes

Issued with a 12" paper insert with credits; most copies with an orange sticker with the track list on rear cover.

Published by:
A1 to A6, B4 Bewlay Bros. S.A.R.L./Fleur Music.
B1 Bewlay Bros. S.A.R.L./Fleur Music/E.G. Music Ltd.
A7, B2, B3 Bewlay Bros. S.A.R.L./Chrysalis Music Ltd./Fleur Music.

Recorded at The Chateau and Hansa By The Wall.
Mixed at Hansa By The Wall.
Cover photo from 'The Man Who Fell to Earth', a Cinema 5 release.

RCA on sleeve, RCA Victor on labels. (L1 2030) appears as reference on labels only.

Initial copies included a small black and white pamphlet advertising the official David Bowie Fan Club and back catalogue.
Generic white die-cut inner sleeve of the Variant 1 shows printer run date 12/76. Copies also exist with printer run date of 11-76 upon initial release.
Variant 27 and 32 has an inner sleeve date 2-77.

NB. The sticker shown in the photos here "Featuring the hit single Sound and Vision", would not have appeared on initial copies and not until at least later in February when the single was released and charted in the UK.

The two different fonts used for catalogue numbers on the fan club leaflet is due to RCA England using a US original leaflet as the basis - UK catalogue numbers which differ from the US numbers are shown in a different font to those where the US and UK catalogue numbers are the same (see the leaflet image of Low).

Less noticeable is the rescan (of the US cover) in the very top RH corner - the area where the US catalogue number appeared has been "shaded in". There is the faint outline of a rectangular section where this has been performed.

Runouts are etched except STERLING. Many of the letters/numbers are scratched out.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Pressing Plant ID (Runouts): W
  • Price Code: ZZ
  • Other (Labels): (L1 2030)
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A label): PL 12030 A
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B label): PL 12030 B
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 1): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1̶ W A2H STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 1): PL 12030-B-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-̶1̶ A1J W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 2): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1̶ W A1AK STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 2): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-̶2̶ A5O W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 3): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1̶ W A2N STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 3): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-̶2̶ A2X W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 4): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1̶ W A4W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 4): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶B̶-̶2̶ A6H W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 5): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶A̶-̶2̶ W A2AO STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 5): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶B̶-̶2̶ A5G W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 6): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶2 W A3Z STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 6): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-̶2̶ A4W W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 7): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶2̶ W A3B STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 7): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶B̶-̶2̶ A6B W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 8): PX̶L 12030-A-1 W A1AV A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1 STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 8): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-̶2 A2H W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 9): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1̶ A2Z W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 9): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B-̶2 A30 W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 10): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶ A2D W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 10): PL 12030-B-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B-̶1̶ A1L1 STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 11): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-ƻ W A2P STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 11): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B-̶2 A2AM STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 12): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1 A4K W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 12): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-̶2 A6J W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 13): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1̶ W A1R STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 13): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-̶1̶ A5B W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 14): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶ 2̶0̶3̶0̶ A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶2̶ W A1H STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 14): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶-̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶B̶-̶2̶ A1P W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 15): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶ 2̶0̶3̶0̶ A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-2 W A2T STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 15): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶-̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶B̶-̶2̶ A2A W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 16): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1̶ W A1N STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 16): PL 12030-B-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-1̶ W A1H STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 17): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1̶ A2E W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 17): PL 12030-B-1 A1O A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-̶1̶ W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 18): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1̶ W A1AI STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 18): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶-̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶B̶-̶2̶ A2AS W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 19): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶-̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶A-̶2̶ A3T STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 19): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶-̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶B-̶2̶ A6F STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 20): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶-̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶A-̶2̶ W A1AG STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 20): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶-̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶B-̶2̶ A2AX STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 21): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1 W A1W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 21): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-̶2 A2J W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 22): PxL 12030-A-1 W A1AY A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1 STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 22): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-̶2 A6E W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 23): PxL 12030-A-1 W A1AE A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1 STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 23): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-B̶-̶2 AZAC STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 24): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶A̶-̶2̶ W A3G STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 24): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-B̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶B̶-̶2̶ A6E W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 25): PL 12030-A A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶A̶-̶1 W A1F STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 25): PL 12030-B A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶B R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶B-̶1 W A1F STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 26): PL 12030-A A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶A̶-̶2 W A3U STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 26): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-B̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶B̶-̶2̶ \\ A6G W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 27): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶A̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶A̶-̶1̶ A4I W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 27): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶B̶-̶2̶ A4U W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 28): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶A̶-̶2̶ W A1E STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 28): PL 12030-B A̶P̶L̶1̶-̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶B-̶1 W A1E STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 29): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ ̶ ̶R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ A̶-̶2 W A3T STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 29): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶-2̶ A4T W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 30): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶A̶-̶1 STERLING A3F W
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 30): PL 12030-B-1 A/B A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶B R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶B-̶1 STERLING W
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 31): PL 12030-A-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶A̶-̶2̶ W A3P STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 31): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶B̶-̶2̶ A6H W STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 32): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶A̶-̶1 STERLING A4H W
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 32): PL 12030-B-2 ̶A̶P̶L̶1̶-̶2̶0̶3̶0̶-̶B̶ ̶R̶S̶1̶1̶0̶8̶-̶B̶-̶2̶ A6F STERLING W
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 33): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶A̶-̶1 STERLING W AIX
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 33): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶B R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶B-̶2 STERLING W AIAG
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A, variant 34): PL 12030-A-1 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶A̶ R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶A̶-̶1 STERLING A2 A W
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B, variant 34): PL 12030-B-2 A̶P̶L̶1̶2̶0̶3̶0̶ ̶B R̶S̶ ̶1̶1̶0̶8̶ ̶B-̶2 A1AH STERLING W

Other Versions (5 of 211)

View All
Title (Format) Label Cat# Country Year
Recently Edited
Low (LP, Album, Stereo, Indianapolis Pressing) RCA L1-2030 US 1977
Recently Edited
Low (LP, Album, Stereo) RCA Victor PL 12030 1977
Low (LP, Album, Stereo) RCA RVP-6154 Japan 1977
Recently Edited
Low (LP, Album, Misprint, Stereo) RCA PL 12030 Netherlands 1977
Recently Edited
Low (LP, Album, Stereo) RCA Victor L1-2030 1977

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Reviews

  • hedache's avatar
    hedache
    I have a first pressing with runouts consistent with variant 6, but the inner sleeve is printed R.S. 5-76.

    Anyone have info on this? I can't find it mentioned anywhere.
    • punkybampot's avatar
      punkybampot
      Got a first press with fan club insert, but the insert doesn’t have the back catalogue LP pics… Anyone else’s missing this?
      • Powerg's avatar
        Powerg
        Edited 2 years ago
        Bowie was the Beatles of the 1970s, constantly reinventing himself, always one step ahead of the competition and fastening onto emergent trends with such alacrity he appeared to have invented them. From 1972 onwards Bowie was a major pop star but one fuelled by the marginal and esoteric strands of music and culture. He was major league pop star as cult artist, drawing arcane ideas from the periphery to the centre, and making them mainstream. The Beatles had performed a similar role in the mid to late ‘60s, but they never made an album as radical as Low.

        Low was Bowie's first collaboration with Eno and, supposedly, the first part of the Berlin Trilogy. I say supposedly because 'Berlin Trilogy' seems to be something of a misnomer or journalistic construct. Bowie was living in Berlin during this period but only "Heroes" was completely recorded in Berlin (Lodger was recorded in Montreux and New York and most of Low was recorded at the Chateau d'Herouville in and then completed in Berlin). And while I'm in the mood for tedious nit-picking here's a bit more: Low does not consist of a songs side and an instrumental side (despite the fact we've been told it does countless times). There are two instrumentals on side one, the album starts with one of them, and three of the four tracks on side two feature vocals.

        Bowie had been fascinated by Eno's solo albums, including Another Green World, which with its mixture of punchy songs and atmospheric instrumentals, shares a good deal in common with Low. Eno arrived at the Honky Chateau with his trusty portable synthesiser in a briefcase. What else did he bring? A profound knowledge of avant-garde artistic traditions, a love of deconstructing conventional song structures, a non-musician's conceptual approach to music making, an irresistible itch to do things differently for the sheer mischief of seeing what happened. And his pack of cards, naturally: Oblique Strategies, 55 instructional cards - a sort of I Ching set up designed to aid creativity and even constructively disrupt it. Bowie and Eno played card games a great deal while making Low. He may only get one songwriting co-credit on the record (for Warszawa, an Eno tune to which Bowie added vocals), and according to Tony Visconti, who co-produced the album with Bowie, about half of the record was recorded before he even turned up, but Eno's maverick sensibility is nonetheless stamped right through Low like Blackpool through a stick of rock.

        Bowie's genius lay in creating something new by fusing apparently disparate elements. Low draws on the German electronic bands of the period and New York Minimalism but is equally indebted to funk and disco (both Bowie and Eno were quick to spot the importance of disco at a time when their less open-minded, not to mention cloth-eared rock contemporaries we're dismissing it as commercial garbage). Like most genuinely original music the album was not universally welcomed on its release. The New Musical Express took the extremely unusual step of printing two reviews of it - one full of praise and the other dismissing it as the self-indulgent ramblings of a man at the end of his tether. Even its irers tended to describe it as gloomy or depressing. They had a point, of course, Low is not exactly a party album, but listening to it all these years later what strikes the listener is something very different - the almost gleeful sense of risk-taking and adventure. The songs on side one might be about alienation, psychic withdrawal and loneliness, but they are also possessed of a febrile energy, sweeping synthetic strings, a jaw-dropping, revolutionary drum sound and sheer funkiness. Bowie's working title for the album, New Music Night and Day, better captures its innovative and exploratory spirit (mind you, the cover, a profile shot of Bowie under the word Low, should have been clear evidence that his sense of humour was still in full working order).

        In The Man Who Fell to Earth, Thomas Jerome Newton, the alien played by Bowie, makes an album but we never get to hear what it sounds like, but then we don't need to - it sounds like side two of Low. These pieces, which feature some of the most startling vocal performances of his career, (but look, Ma, no words! A trick Bowie may have stolen from Meredith Monk), radiate with an otherworldly and glacial beauty. Bowie apparently intended at least some of them for the soundtrack of the film but perhaps it's no bad thing they were turned down. On Low they provide the soundtrack for an infinite number of interior movies, daydreams and nightmares.

        Low was released in January 1977, just at the time the punk revolution was gathering steam. The album byes punk entirely and, rather astonishingly, creates the sonic template for post-punk. Bowie never went quite this far out again, not even on the excellent follow up "Heroes", but the extraordinary thing is that he had the imagination, and indeed courage, to make an album as creative, and also as challenging to the expectations of his audience, as this one at all. Very few world famous pop stars would have done - not even the Beatles.

        • Jellycat1971's avatar
          Jellycat1971
          Edited 3 years ago
          the big drums, chunky riff and girly ooos of sound and vision are what got me into bowie in 1990. The first side songs still sound compelling today. Short and punky yet full bodied, they haven’t gone out of date. The sudden blart of electronic noise in breaking glass still gives a burst of pure pleasure - one the best instrumental breaks ever. bowie sounds vulnerable, emotionally clear and honest, the lyrics spare and to the point. side two is like queens flash gordon at times, but without as much entertainment value, and the vocalising is hammy and a bit silly - he’s hiding behind a performance again. the sax on subterraneans adds a nice melancholy though. some online mag said it’s the best album of the 70s, which is deeply pretentious. I’d say heroes, ziggy, sane, hunky and station are all superior. ‘original’ doesn’t always mean ‘great’. it isn’t, but everyone should hear it. iggy shouting on what in the world would cheer anyone up.
          • bruisedviolet's avatar
            bruisedviolet
            45th anniversary edition on orange vinyl released on Friday 14th January 2022 anyone?
            • 5fives5's avatar
              5fives5
              My variant appears to have A2R W on Side A, which isn't listed above, and A2X W on Side B, which is. The R could be a distorted P or D I guess.
              • shivsidecar's avatar
                shivsidecar
                I found the rear sticker extremely irritating (in 1977), so I peeled it off. Looks better without. Go on, peel yours off too.
                • possvox's avatar
                  possvox
                  Edited 4 years ago
                  Side 1:
                  (Etched) APL1 20230A (Crossed out)
                  (Etched) RS1108A-1
                  (Stamped) STERLING
                  (Etched) A3V (may be a "Y")
                  W PL 12030 A-1
                  Side 2:
                  (Etched) APL1-2030-B
                  (Etched) RS 1108-B-2 (Crossed out)
                  (Etched) AIAB (Very faintly)
                  (Stamped) STERLING
                  (Etched) PL 12030-B-2
                  Inner sleeve is printed 11-76. Contains insert and Bowie "Fan Club" leaflet. Tracklist sticker on rear of sleeve. Purchased on release day. Variant # ???
                  Help please.
                  • simonpj145's avatar
                    simonpj145
                    Hi I have what looks like a first edition - PL12030 - orange sticker without reference to hit single, and I have the insert. But the insert does not have a print run date. Anybody know what this means?
                    • Masterjamcst's avatar
                      Masterjamcst
                      Edited 5 years ago
                      Some parts on the 2n side remind me at Tubular Bells by Mike Oldfield.

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