2023-04-14

DAVID BOWIE - LET’S DANCE @ 40

Released forty years ago today, on April 14th, 1983, is David Bowie’s 15th studio album, Let’s Dance. While it set the commercial high water mark of his career, becoming his all time best selling album, it also painted him into a creative corner, boxing him into a commercial sound which drove down the quality of his output throughout the remainder of the decade.

Throughout the latter half of the 1970s, Bowie had been pursuing a distinctly avant-garde tinged approach to pop music, exploring darker themes and sonic experimentation with sales taking a backseat to artistic expression. After the success of his Ziggy Stardust period, veering into these more obscure directions sometimes meant sacrificing commercial appeal. However, his last album on this trajectory, 1980’s Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) found him coming to a near perfect balance between experimentation and commercial viability.

Following the completion of Scary Monsters, Bowie spent some time pursuing acting on both stage and screen, performing in The Elephant Man and Christian F., respectively. The assassination of John Lennon in December of 1980, however, put Bowie into shock and he cancelled an upcoming tour to support Scary Monsters, retreating to Switzerland where he became something of a recluse. Musically, he was not so productive, but still worked with Giorgio Moroder for the Cat People soundtrack and collaborated with Queen for the single, Under Pressure. He also appeared in the films, The Hunger and Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence, both released in 1983.

Scary Monsters also marked the end of his relationship with RCA records, whom he felt had failed to fully support his recent work, instead exploiting only his back catalogue. This took him to EMI records and, looking to have a fresh start while yet again reinvent himself, he set up shop in NYC and chose Chic main-man, Nile Rogers, as producer for his next album. This was a decision which would lead to a sever rift between Bowie and producer Tony Visconti, who had worked on Bowie's previous four albums. Bowie neglected to inform Visconti of the producer change and Tony ended up finding out second hand, to which he took deep offense. While the two would ultimately end up working together again, it would not be until 20 years later for 2002’s Heathen. Bowie’s intent was to go in a completely new direction with an entirely different collection of musicians and focus on the commercial viability of the album. All the regulars from the previous albums were set aside and a fresh group of players were brought in. For this album, Bowie also refrained from contributing as a musician himself, instead opting to focus solely on being a vocalist.

Nile Rogers had made a major name for himself with Chic and by producing a string of dance classics for the likes of Diana Ross & Sister Sledge. This prowess with a groove meant that he was uniquely qualified to put Bowie’s music onto the dance floor and the title track for the album became proof of that skill. The song, Let’s Dance, was released as a single and immediately swept the club scene. I personally recall it being in constant rotation in every type of setting, from mainstream clubs to the most underground warehouse after-hours industrial-goth freak scene. It joined a host of club hits which were rehabilitating the dance floors of the day after the backlash of the “death to disco” movement, which capped off the previous decade. Songs like Let’s Dance, Blue Monday by New Order & Perfect by The The became clarion calls to loose booties on both sides of the Atlantic, announcing that it was okay to cut a rug again.

Recording of the album was done at the Power Station in NYC, over three weeks in December of 1982. Since recording Scary Monsters, Bowie had become obsessed with R&B music from the ‘50s & ’60s and artists like James Brown, Buddy Guy and Albert King. Nile used that interest as a guide to the stylistic structure of Let’s Dance. When Bowie initially played him an acoustic version of the title song, he knew it wasn’t a dance song, but he was able to adapt the arrangement with elements of ‘50s & ’60s music to mutate it into something with a groove.

The idea to recruit Stevie Ray Vaughn came from Bowie after spotting him at the 1982 Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland. Rogers was initially ambivalent about Vaughn, classifying him as too blues-centric for the funkier R&B sound he was crafting, but Bowie was insistent that he had “something”. Vaughn was unknown and hadn’t released his first album yet, but Bowie won out in the end and Stevie contributed guitar solo parts on eight of the album’s cuts. While the album blushed against some of the “new wave” influences of Bowie's so-called “Berlin era”, the mainstream soul & R&B influences brought it far more in line with the feel of Young Americans, which was also heavily influenced by black American music.

At the time of its release, it became an instant smash, topping album charts in numerous countries around the globe. All four of the album’s singles were also significant hits, with music videos for Let’s Dance and China Girl (a cover of an Iggy Pop song from the Bowie produced album, The Idiot) getting heavy rotation on the still fledgling MTV music channel. The massive Serious Moonlight Tour, which launched to promote the album, managed to secure Bowie’s position as one of the biggest pop stars of the day, a triumphant career pinnacle after a decade of weaving in and out of public favor. As previously stated, that commercial success became a double edged sword as its rewards came at the cost of creative freedom, with Bowie feeling obligated to maintain that stature while his artistic integrity suffered with each successive release during the ‘80s.

Despite the album's major commercial success, it received mixed reviews from music critics, with opinions varying on the artistic content. In Musician magazine, David Fricke called it "Bowie at his best". In a piece on Bowie for Time in July 1983, Jay Cocks described the album as "unabashedly commercial, melodically alliterative and lyrically smart at the same time". Robert Christgau felt that it had a "perfunctory professional surface", and that other than the "interesting" Modern Love, Let's Dance was "pleasantly pointless". Steve Bush of Smash Hits found it overall dull and Debra Rae Cohen of The New York Times deemed it Bowie's "most artless" record yet, but one whose familiar dance music is "almost timeless in its appeal".

Yet in terms of its legacy, it stands as the crescendo of one of the most astounding creative runs any artist has ever achieved. With 14 years of artistic genius backing it up, it should more properly be seen as a much deserved victory lap. But it did essentially bookend Bowie’s career relevance as the last significant release of his career, at least until his re-emergence from semi-retirement in 2013 with The Next Day, his penultimate album before his death in 2016. The years between Let’s Dance and The Next Day, while not entirely bereft of notable product, were still lacking in both the sense of Bowie being an artistic visionary working the cutting edge of the culture or a commercial force to be reckoned with.