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David Bowie

Ready, Set, Go! (Live, Riverside Studios '03) (RSD 25)

Record Store Day 2025 - 180g 2LP - £45.99 | Buy
Record Store Day 2025 - CD - £13.99 | Buy
On September 8th 2003, David Bowie made history with the biggest ever live and interactive music satellite event the world had ever seen.
David Bowie

Young Americans (50th Anniversary Edition)

limited picture disc LP with poster - £45.99 | Buy
limited half-speed mastered LP - £36.99 | Buy
The album saw Bowie broaden his musical horizons once more, embracing what he called 'Plastic Soul' and would give Bowie his first number one single in ...
David Bowie

The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (Dolby Atmos Edition)

Dolby Atmos Blu-Ray - £23.99 | Buy
Parlophone Records is proud to announce the first ever Dolby Atmos spatial audio version of David Bowie’s The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spid...
David Bowie

David Bowie (Deluxe Edition)

limited indies only cloudy green 2LP with exclusive 'The Laughing Gnome – Vocal Take 1/Mix 1' bonus track - £36.99
David Bowie’s groundbreaking debut album gets a vibrant revival with a reissue boasting exclusive tracklists to tantalize fans old and new.
David Bowie

Diamond Dogs (50th Anniversary Edition)

limited picture disc lp - £37.99 | Buy
half-speed mastered lp - £32.99 | Buy
The songs on the album created an urban apocalyptic scenario with Bowie appearing on the cover as a controversial half-man, half-dog hybrid painted by the Belgi...
The Man Who Sold The World (2015 remaster)

David Bowie

The Man Who Sold The World (2015 remaster)

parlophone
  • CD

    Released: 25th Sep 2015

    £7.99
    Buy

Even though it contained no hits, ‘The Man Who Sold the World’, for most intents & purposes, is the beginning of David Bowie's classic period.

Working with guitarist Mick Ronson & producer Tony Visconti for the first time, Bowie developed a tight, twisted heavy guitar rock that appears simple on the surface but sounds more gnarled upon each listen. The mix is off-centre, with the fuzz-bass dominating the compressed, razor-thin guitars & Bowie's strangled, affected voice. The sound of ‘he Man Who Sold the World’ is odd, but the music is bizarre itself, with Bowie's bizarre, paranoid futuristic tales melded to Ronson's riffing and the band's relentless attack. Musically, it is almost all hard blues-rock or psychedelic folk-rock - but there's an unsettling edge to the band's performance, which makes the record one of Bowie's best albums.