Can't Help Thinking About Me

"Can't Help Thinking About Me"
Single by David Bowie with The Lower Third
B-side "And I Say to Myself"
Released 14 January 1966
Format 7" single
Recorded 10 December 1965, Pye Studios, London
Genre
Length 2:47
Label Pye Records (UK) / Warner Bros. (US)
Pye 7N 17020 (UK) WB 5815 (US)
Writer(s) David Bowie
Producer(s) Tony Hatch
David Bowie singles chronology
"You've Got a Habit of Leaving"
Davy Jones & the Lower Third
(1965)
"Can't Help Thinking About Me"
David Bowie & the Lower Third
(1966)
"Do Anything You Say"
(1966)

"Can't Help Thinking About Me" is a song written by David Bowie in 1965 and released as a single under the name David Bowie with The Lower Third. This was the first single released after he changed his name from David (also Davie) Jones to David Bowie.

It was the first David Bowie record to be released in the US as well as the first time the name "Bowie" appeared under the songwriters credit.

The song was recorded within 15 days of the 18-year-old Bowie signing to the Pye Records label as "David Bowie with the Lower Third" on 25 November 1965 through successful Producer and songwriter Tony Hatch. Hatch signed Bowie to the label based on two demos (this song and "Now You've Met The London Boys", as it was originally titled) proffered by Bowie's (then) manager Ralph Horton. The single and B-side were both recorded in the basement of Pye's offices in Great Cumberland Place (near Marble Arch, Central London) on 10 December 1965. Hatch also played piano on the single and provided backing vocals along with the rest of the group.

The single was "promo launched" by Pye on 6 January 1966 at The Gaiety Bar, Bayswater. The launch party (for Pye records staff and music journalists) was paid for by a loan from businessman Raymond Cook, an agreement which took several years to untangle and eventually pay back. Among those who attended the launch party that evening was John Lennon's father Alfred Lennon, who was also signed to the Pye label as an artist. Lennon Senior's presence was recalled as him being "highly inebriated" and asking the attendees "Do you know who I am?"

"Can't help thinking about me" was officially released on Friday 14 January (and later released in the US by Warner Bros. in May 1966), however, the Lower Third split from Bowie on 28 January over financial disagreements regarding "who was being paid what" with manager Ralph Horton. Believing Bowie was not supporting their side of the argument, Graham Rivens, Phil Lancaster and Dennis Taylor ended their short-lived collaboration and reluctantly walked away, literally weeks after their record deal with Pye Records. A strikingly similar manipulation of "divide and rule" about money between Bowie and his band by the incumbent manager (Tony DeFries) occurred 7 years later with the Spiders from Mars.

The single failed to make either the UK or the US charts despite being reasonably well received by the critics at the time.

After dropping the song from his gigs after mid 1966 (he played it several times with new band Buzz at The Marquee due to it being released in May in the USA), "Can't Help Thinking About Me" was eventually resurrected 31 years later and played live regularly in 1999, as well as on the Bowie VH1 Storytellers programme. Prior to singing it, he explained that it was "a beautiful piece of solipsism" then told the audience that the song featured two of the worst lines he felt he had ever written. "I actually have to sing this....'My girl calls my name "Hi Dave", Drop in, Come back, See you around if you're this way again...."

A key collector's item today because of its rarity, the UK vinyl release averages over £600 per copy with the UK and the US "Demonstration Only" copies achieving in excess of £1000. The single has been re-released many times (on EP's, 10" singles and compilation CD's) from 1973 onwards following Bowie's Ziggy commercial success.

Track listing

Written by David Bowie.

  1. "Can't Help Thinking About Me" - 2:47
  2. "And I Say to Myself" – 2:29

Production credits

Live versions

Other releases

Cover versions

References

David Buckley (1999), Strange Fascination – David Bowie: The Definitive Story, pp. 30–50. Kevin Cann (2010), "David Bowie, The London Years (1947-1974)"

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.