Rockalia rock music site, albums, songs, info, photos and videos

Rock and roll music

Todas las bandas, solistas, guitarristas y músicos del rock.

"Black Tie White Noise" is the title track from British singer-songwriter and actor David Bowie`s 18th album of the same name (1993). Featuring guest vocals by Al B. Sure!, it was written by Bowie, produced by Nile Rodgers and released as the second single from the album in June 1993 by Arista, BMG and Savage. It peaked at number 36 in the UK. The accompanying music video for the song was directed by Mark Romanek.

Background

Leer más

Singles chronology

Jump They Say
Jump They Say
15/3/1993
Miracle Goodnight
Miracle Goodnight
11/10/1993

Black Tie White Noise (with Al B. Sure!)

David Bowie

1993 Single
  • Released: 1 June 1993 · Fecha Grabación: 1993 -
    Label: Arista BMG Savage · Studios: Mountain (Montreux) Hit Factory (New York City) · Productor: Nile Rodgers
    1
    Black Tie White Noise (with Al B. Sure!)
    David Bowie • w: David Bowie • 1993 /06 /01
    0:00
  • 2
    You`ve Been Around (Dangers remix)
    David BowieDavid Bowie • w: David Bowie • 1993 /06 /01
    4:26
  • Album


    Black Tie White Noise

    Black Tie White Noise

    Fecha Lanzamiento: 5 April 1993 · Fecha Grabación: November 1992 -
    Discográfica: Savage Arista · Estudio de Grabación: Mountain (Montreux, Switzerland); 38 Fresh (Los Angeles); The Hit Factory (New York City) · Productor: David Bowie , Nile Rodgers
    1
    The Wedding
    David Bowie • w: instrumental • 1993 /03 /15 Black Tie White Noise track li
    5:04
  • 2
    You`ve Been Around
    David BowieDavid Bowie • w: David Bowie • 1993 /04 /05 Black Tie White Noise track li
    4:26
  • 3
    I Feel Free (featuring Mick Ronson)
    David Bowie • w: Pete Brown • 1993 /04 /05 Black Tie White Noise track li
    4:52
  • 4
    Black Tie White Noise (featuring Al B. Sure!)
    David Bowie • w: David Bowie • 1993 /04 /05 Black Tie White Noise track li
    0:00
  • 5
    Jump They Say
    David BowieDavid Bowie • w: David Bowie • 1993 /04 /05 Black Tie White Noise track li
    3:55
  • 6
    Nite Flights
    David Bowie • w: Noel Scott Engel • 1993 /04 /05 Black Tie White Noise track li
    4:30
  • 7
    Pallas Athena
    David BowieDavid Bowie • w: Don`t Stop Praying mix • 1993 /04 /05 Black Tie White Noise track li
    5:38
  • 8
    Miracle Goodnight
    David BowieDavid Bowie • w: David Bowie • 1993 /04 /05 Black Tie White Noise track li
    4:13
  • 9
    Don`t Let Me Down & Down
    David Bowie • w: Tahra Mint Hembara, trans. Martine Valmont • 1993 /04 /05 Black Tie White Noise track li
    4:55
  • 10
    Looking for Lester
    David BowieDavid Bowie • w: instrumental • 1993 /04 /05 Black Tie White Noise track li
    5:37
  • 11
    I Know It`s Gonna Happen Someday
    David Bowie • w: Morrissey • 1993 /04 /05 Black Tie White Noise track li
    4:14
  • 12
    The Wedding Song
    David Bowie • w: David Bowie • 1993 /04 /05 Black Tie White Noise track li
    4:29
  • 1
    Jump They Say
    David BowieDavid Bowie • w: David Bowie • 1993 /04 /05 Original CD issue bonus tracks
    3:55
  • 2
    Pallas Athena
    David BowieDavid Bowie • w: Don`t Stop Praying mix • 1993 /04 /05 Original CD issue bonus tracks
    5:38
  • 3
    Lucy Can`t Dance
    David Bowie • w: David Bowie • 1993 /04 /05 Original CD issue bonus tracks
    5:45
  • "Black Tie White Noise"
    Single by David Bowie featuring Al B. Sure!
    from the album Black Tie White Noise
    B-side"You`ve Been Around" (Dangers remix)
    Released1 June 1993 (1993-06-01)[1]
    Studio
    GenreSoul
    Length
    • 4:52 (album version)
    • 4:10 (radio edit)
    Label
    Songwriter(s)David Bowie
    Producer(s)Nile Rodgers
    David Bowie singles chronology
    "Jump They Say"
    (1993)
    "Black Tie White Noise"
    (1993)
    "Miracle Goodnight"
    (1993)
    Music video
    "Black Tie White Noise" on YouTube

    Review

    "Black Tie White Noise" is the title track from British singer-songwriter and actor David Bowie`s 18th album of the same name (1993). Featuring guest vocals by Al B. Sure!, it was written by Bowie, produced by Nile Rodgers and released as the second single from the album in June 1993 by Arista, BMG and Savage. It peaked at number 36 in the UK. The accompanying music video for the song was directed by Mark Romanek.

    Background

    Leer más

    The track was inspired by Bowie`s stay in Los Angeles in April 1992, when the city saw race riots in reaction to the Rodney King incident.[2]

    It is among the most jazz- and soul-influenced tracks on the album, highlighted by the key vocal of Al B. Sure!, although Lenny Kravitz was reportedly Bowie`s first choice for the duet. Essentially a rhythm and blues tune, the song ultimately reinforced the feeling of Bowie`s tendency as a chameleon of musical styles.[citation needed]

    Release

    Released as the album`s second single, "Black Tie White Noise" was a top 40 hit in Britain and subsequently reached No. 36 in the UK chart[3] and No. 74 in Australia.[4]

    Critical reception

    Dave Simpson from Melody Maker commented, "This isn`t bad. Nice cosmopolitan New York rhythm section, vague hints of Low-era sax. Hmmm. Apparently it`s inspired by the LA riots, or rather David`s view of them from the rooftop of his mansion."[5] Alan Jones from Music Week wrote, "This oddly churning but attractive track is a little too slow for current dancefloor tastes. Not as instant as many of Bowie`s bigger hits, it will need a lot to push it into the top end of the chart. A moderate hit."[6] Parry Gettelman from Orlando Sentinel felt it`s "one of the better ones" on the album, adding, "The groove is faux-funky, and the melody is undercooked, but Bowie`s trumpet injects flavor, and the lyrics have something to say about race relations in America: "Getting my facts from a Benetton ad/ looking through African eyes/ lit by the glare of an L.A. fire/ I`ve got a face, not just my race." Bowie`s cool, detached voice is nicely partnered by that of soul singer Al B. Sure!, and Bowie sneaks in a Marvin Gaye allusion."[7] James Hamilton from the Record Mirror Dance Update described it as a "gloomy slow roller".[8] Leesa Daniels from Smash Hits gave it five out of five, declaring it as "fabulous", "funky and soulful – and you could listen to it again and again and never get bored. Genius."[9]

    Music video

    The music video for "Black Tie White Noise" was produced by American filmmaker and photographer Mark Romanek, featuring a montage of African-American youth playing in urban Los Angeles, while intercut with scenes of Bowie in a blue suit with his saxophone and Al B. Sure! singing. The video attempted to capture Bowie`s image behind the song: multiple ethnic groups coexisting with their own identities, and not attempting to absorb one another.[citation needed]

    Track listing

    Tracks #1-3 re-produced, re-arranged and mixed by Marc `Funkyman` Paley, Raul `DJ EFX` Recinos & Jeremy `DJ Digit` Cowan


    Track # 2 remix and additional production by John Waddell


    Track # 4 remix and additional production by Al B. Sure & Timar

    Credits and personnel

    • Producers:

      • Nile Rodgers
    • Musicians:

      • David Bowie – vocals
      • Al B. Sure! – vocals
      • Nile Rodgers – guitar
      • Barry Campbell – bass
      • Sterling Campbell – drums
      • Richard Hilton – keyboards
      • Lester Bowie – trumpet
      • Reeves Gabrels – guitar on "You`ve Been Around"

    Charts

    Chart (1993)

    Peak
    position

    Australia (ARIA)

    74

    Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)[10]

    75

    Europe (European Hit Radio)[11]

    32

    UK Singles (OCC)[12]

    36

    UK Airplay (Music Week)[13]

    18

    UK Dance (Music Week)[14]

    25

    Other releases

    The "3rd Floor US Radio Mix" and "Here Come Da Jazz" remixes appeared on the bonus disc of the 10th anniversary re-release of the Black Tie White Noise album.

    "Black Tie White Noise" is the title track from British singer-songwriter and actor David Bowie`s 18th album of the same name (1993). Featuring guest vocals by Al B. Sure!, it was written by Bowie, produced by Nile Rodgers and released as the second single from the album in June 1993 by Arista, BMG and Savage. It peaked at number 36 in the UK. The accompanying music video for the song was directed by Mark Romanek.

    Background

    The track was inspired by Bowie`s stay in Los Angeles in April 1992, when the city saw race riots in reaction to the Rodney King incident.[2]

    It is among the most jazz- and soul-influenced tracks on the album, highlighted by the key vocal of Al B. Sure!, although Lenny Kravitz was reportedly Bowie`s first choice for the duet. Essentially a rhythm and blues tune, the song ultimately reinforced the feeling of Bowie`s tendency as a chameleon of musical styles.[citation needed]

    Release

    Released as the album`s second single, "Black Tie White Noise" was a top 40 hit in Britain and subsequently reached No. 36 in the UK chart[3] and No. 74 in Australia.[4]

    Critical reception

    Dave Simpson from Melody Maker commented, "This isn`t bad. Nice cosmopolitan New York rhythm section, vague hints of Low-era sax. Hmmm. Apparently it`s inspired by the LA riots, or rather David`s view of them from the rooftop of his mansion."[5] Alan Jones from Music Week wrote, "This oddly churning but attractive track is a little too slow for current dancefloor tastes. Not as instant as many of Bowie`s bigger hits, it will need a lot to push it into the top end of the chart. A moderate hit."[6] Parry Gettelman from Orlando Sentinel felt it`s "one of the better ones" on the album, adding, "The groove is faux-funky, and the melody is undercooked, but Bowie`s trumpet injects flavor, and the lyrics have something to say about race relations in America: "Getting my facts from a Benetton ad/ looking through African eyes/ lit by the glare of an L.A. fire/ I`ve got a face, not just my race." Bowie`s cool, detached voice is nicely partnered by that of soul singer Al B. Sure!, and Bowie sneaks in a Marvin Gaye allusion."[7] James Hamilton from the Record Mirror Dance Update described it as a "gloomy slow roller".[8] Leesa Daniels from Smash Hits gave it five out of five, declaring it as "fabulous", "funky and soulful – and you could listen to it again and again and never get bored. Genius."[9]

    Music video

    The music video for "Black Tie White Noise" was produced by American filmmaker and photographer Mark Romanek, featuring a montage of African-American youth playing in urban Los Angeles, while intercut with scenes of Bowie in a blue suit with his saxophone and Al B. Sure! singing. The video attempted to capture Bowie`s image behind the song: multiple ethnic groups coexisting with their own identities, and not attempting to absorb one another.[citation needed]

    Track listing

    Tracks #1-3 re-produced, re-arranged and mixed by Marc `Funkyman` Paley, Raul `DJ EFX` Recinos & Jeremy `DJ Digit` Cowan


    Track # 2 remix and additional production by John Waddell


    Track # 4 remix and additional production by Al B. Sure & Timar

    Credits and personnel

    • Producers:

      • Nile Rodgers
    • Musicians:

      • David Bowie – vocals
      • Al B. Sure! – vocals
      • Nile Rodgers – guitar
      • Barry Campbell – bass
      • Sterling Campbell – drums
      • Richard Hilton – keyboards
      • Lester Bowie – trumpet
      • Reeves Gabrels – guitar on "You`ve Been Around"

    Charts

    Chart (1993)

    Peak
    position

    Australia (ARIA)

    74

    Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)[10]

    75

    Europe (European Hit Radio)[11]

    32

    UK Singles (OCC)[12]

    36

    UK Airplay (Music Week)[13]

    18

    UK Dance (Music Week)[14]

    25

    Other releases

    The "3rd Floor US Radio Mix" and "Here Come Da Jazz" remixes appeared on the bonus disc of the 10th anniversary re-release of the Black Tie White Noise album.

    More Albums same artist

    No videos available