11. In the Heat of the Morning - (previously unreleased)
12. Laughing Gnome [Single Version - 2010 Stereo Mix], The (remix, p
13. Gospel According To Tony Day [Single Version - 2010 Stereo Mix],
14. Did You Ever Have a Dream [Single Version - 2010 Stereo Mix] (re
15. Let Me Sleep Beside You - (remix, previously unreleased)
16. Karma Man [Stereo Mix] - (remix, previously unreleased)
17. In the Heat of the Morning [Stereo Mix]
18. When I'm Five [Love You till Tuesday Soundtrack Version - Mono]
19. Ching-a-Ling [Full Length Version Stereo Mix] - (remix, previous
20. Sell Me a Coat [Remix - Mono] (remix)
21. Love You till Tuesday [BBC "Top Gear" 18/12/67 Mono] - (previous
22. When I Live My Dream [BBC "Top Gear" 18/12/67 Mono] - (previousl
23. Little Bombardier [BBC "Top Gear" 18/12/67 Mono] - (previously u
24. Silly Boy Blue [BBC "Top Gear" 18/12/67 Mono] - (previously unre
25. In the Heat of the Morning [BBC "Top Gear" 18/12/67 Mono] - (pre
26. In the Heat of the Morning
Details:
2 cd/deluxe ed.
More Info:
UK 'Deluxe Edition 53-track digitally remastered 2-CD album set - Originally released in 1967, this 2010 deluxe issue of David Bowie's eponymously titled debut album comprises original stereo and mono mixes of the album stunningly remastered by Peter Mew and Tris Penna at Abbey Road Studios, making this the first time that the mono mix has been available in any format since the late '60s and is obviously the first time on CD, and is expanded with a selection of singles, unreleased stereo mixes, the legendary unreleased single 'London Bye Ta-Ta' and 5 Previously Unreleased tracks recorded for John Peel's Top Gear program in 1967. Comes complete with a picture booklet containing extensive sleeve notes by Tris Penna and Kevin Cann.
Reviews:
''David Bowie'' is the debut album by rock musician David Bowie, released in 1967 by Deram Records, a Decca offshoot. Its content bears little overt resemblance to the type of music that later made Bowie famous, such as the folk rock of "Space Oddity" or the glam of ''The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars''. ''NME'' critics Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray have said, "a listener strictly accustomed to David Bowie in his assorted '70s guises would probably find this debut album either shocking or else simply quaint", while biographer David Buckley describes it as "the vinyl equivalent of the madwoman in the attic". - Wikipedia