DAVID BOWIE
“THE MAN WHO SOLD THE WORLD” (2020 MIX)
DIGITAL SINGLE AVAILABLE NOW
TAKEN FROM METROBOLIST (AKA "THE MAN WHO SOLD THE WORLD") 50th ANNIVERSARY EDITION
REMIXED BY TONY VISCONTI
WITH ARTWORK BASED ON THE ORIGINAL TITLE AND DESIGN
ALBUM TO BE RELEASED NOVEMBER 6 ON LIMITED VINYL AND CD FORMATS,
ALSO FOR STREAMING AND DOWNLOAD AT STANDARD AND HIGH RESOLUTION DOWNLOAD
London Parlophone Records is proud to announce details for the digital single release of DAVID BOWIE's "THE MAN WHO SOLD THE WORLD (2020 MIX)" digital single release.
This November sees the 50th Anniversary of the North American release of the original The Man Who Sold The World album. The rest of the world would have to wait until April 1971 to witness Bowie’s landmark entry into the 1970s. Originally titled Metrobolist, the album's name was changed at the last minute -- the original stereo master tapes were in fact labelled Metrobolist, with the title The Man Who Sold The World being added subsequently.
The 2020 re-release of the album under its Metrobolist moniker, remixed by original producer Tony Visconti, it is preceded by the digital single release of "The Man Who Sold The World (2020 mix)." The track was not released as a single by Bowie at the time, only appearing as the B-side to Life On Mars? on RCA Records in June '73. It wasn't until the 1974 version by Scottish singer Lulu (produced by Bowie and Mick Ronson) that the song gained mainstream attention. In subsequent years, Bowie’s 1979 performance of the song on Saturday Night Live and Nirvana’s cover on the classic MTV Unplugged album, among others, would establish and reaffirm its status as one of his most beloved songs.
Bowie performed the track live later in his career, including an electronic arrangement during 1995's Outside Tour (as featured on the live album Ouvrez Le Chien) and in an acoustic arrangement in 1996 for the recent Record Store Day release ChangesNowBowie.
The Metrobolist 50th anniversary artwork has been created by Mike Weller who was behind the originally intended album artwork. The gatefold sleeve also features many images from the infamous Keith MacMillan Mr Fish ‘dress’ shoot at Haddon Hall which would cause controversy when one of the shots was used on the cover of The Man Who Sold The World album in the rest of the world in spring of 1971.
For the 50th anniversary, the story of the gatefold sleeve can be told in full. As Mike Weller explains, “There is a story concealed in the carpet-scattered playing cards, David has thrown a plain 52 card deck in the air as though “casting the runes” but in a significant break from 60s Tarot divinations such as I Ching he casts runes using a four-suit pack and switches man-dress, along with the Court Card of the Future from right hand to left, signifying a new decade and new cultural era.” This theme is continued via one of the unused ‘dress’ photos which makes up the packshot for "The Man Who Sold The World" (2020 mix) single.
As with the Space Oddity 50th anniversary vinyl, as well as a 180g black vinyl edition, it will come in 2020 limited edition handwritten numbered copies on gold vinyl (# 1971 - 2020) and on white vinyl (# 1 - 1970) all randomly distributed.