Recorded in rapid response to the success of Let’s Dance, David Bowie’s 1984 album, Tonight, found a spot somewhere between its predecessor’s exploration of Black music history and what Bowie called, in a conversation with Musician magazine, “a kind of violent effort at a kind of Pin Ups”. Embellishing the core elements of vintage rock’n’roll with unusual instrumental flourishes and modern production touches, Tonight’s lead single, Blue Jean, went Top 10 on both sides of the Atlantic, proving that Bowie was keen to maintain his mainstream appeal even if, with the song’s high-concept short-form promo video, Jazzin’ For Blue Jean, he still kept an eye on pushing the boundaries of pop music.
This is the full story of Blue Jean and how, remarkably, it scored Bowie his only Grammy win during his lifetime.
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The backstory: “I didn’t want to put out things that ‘would do’”
It had been more than a decade since David Bowie reshaped the future of rock music with his 1972 album, The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars, but despite numerous hit singles and countless plaudits from the critics, mainstream record-buyers had sometimes looked askance at his increasingly avant-garde assault on pop and rock music’s tropes. With the Nile Rodgers-produced Let’s Dance album, however – and its globe-conquering singles Let’s Dance, China Girl and Modern Love – Bowie proved that he could do the straight-up pop thing on his own terms.
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But when, following the success of his subsequent Serious Moonlight Tour, his record label requested a new album in record time, Bowie admitted to feeling “rushed” into a compromised situation. “I can’t write on tour,” he explained to NME, “and there wasn’t really enough preparation afterwards to write anything that I felt was really worth putting down, and I didn’t want to put out things that ‘would do’.” In the event, Blue Jean would be one of only two Tonight songs that met Bowie’s high standards for himself, with the remainder of the album’s tracks being either covers or co-writes with his longtime friend Iggy Pop.
The recording: “It’s really got the band sound that I wanted”
Bringing many of the Let’s Dance musicians back into the studio for the Tonight sessions, which took place throughout May 1984, at Le Studio, Morin-Heights, in Quebec, with Hugh Padgham in the producer’s chair, Bowie tapped into some of the rock’n’roll basics that had underpinned his previous record. “I’ve got to a point that I really wanted to get to where it’s really an organic sound, and it’s mainly saxophones,” he told NME. “It’s really got the band sound that I wanted, the horn sound.”