The moniker that bloomed into a legendary persona and universal star. Indeed, David Bowie was first credited on a single called โCanโt Help Thinking About Meโ on January 14, 1966. It was his fourth single, but his first as Bowie.

David Bowie, 1966. Photo by David Wedgbury.
Iโm pretty certain youโve never heard of thatย song. I hadnโt even heard of it until this week, and I count myself as a rather large David Bowie fan!
Itโs easy to fall under the mistaken belief that David Bowie emerged fully formed from his own forehead. If youโre a Greatest Hits fan, or just someone who has never fell down the Wikipedia hole too deeply, youโd be perfectly reasonable in thinking there was some olden-days EP containing โSpace Oddity,โ โMan Who Sold The World,โ โChanges,โ and โLife On Marsโ and then Bowie as we all love him exploded into being onย Ziggy Stardust.
Thatโs not the case at all. David Bowie spent eight years as a recording artist before the release ofย Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars. He released a pair of glam albums before that. He had an entire folkish pastiche of an eponymous album prior to his more well-known eponymous album in 1969, later rechristenedย Space Oddity.ย And, even before that, for three years he issued a string of unremarkable vinyl singles. He began at the tender age of 17.
Thus, that is also where weโll begin in my epic chronological listen to David Bowie. This post covers his first single in 1964 to material from before his first album in 1967.
โLiza Janeโ โ Davie Jones with The King Bees
Young David Jones first appeared as a member of The Kon-Rads, who recorded for Decca but were never officially signed or released. Hisย first release as a bandleader was a 1964 single called โLiza Jane,โ as performedย by Davie Jones with The King Bees.
The song itself was much older than young Mr. Jones. It was written in 1910 byย Countess Ada de Lachau and became a standard (hereโs Nina Simone singing it). Bowieโs version is a sort of unremarkable post-Skiffle British R&B that the Beatles had perfected in the past year. Itโs fascinating to thinkย that 17-year old David Bowie cut this single after a year of likely hearing non-stop John, Paul, George, and Ringo on the radio.ย This is unsophisticated, by comparison, with its gallumphing lead line and wheezing sax (yes, played by David Bowie). but thatโs no different than today. Someone breaks through on the radio with a new genre, and the next year a heap of imitators clumsily follow their lead.
The B-side of that release was โLouie, Louie Go Home,โ originally recorded byย Paul Revere and the Raiders as a sequel to their famous โLouie, Louie.โ The King Beesโ version sounds like a decent teenage band in a garage covering one of their favorite songs but not really being sure how to end it. Their cacaphonous shouting of staccato โhome home homeโ backing vocals is charming, but thereโs nothing too memorable here.
You can pick up โLiza Janeโ on Bowieโsย Nothing Has Changed retrospective โ it is the final track.
โI Pity The Foolโ โ The Manish Boys
Bowieโs next incarnation was โThe Manish Boysโ in 1965, which issued one single: โI Pity The Foolโ b/w โTake My Tip.โThe A-Side, โFool,โ was a cover of a 1961 Bobby Bland tune. It iss straight-up blues and, if you think about it, the closest David Bowie has ever really got to the blues was when he sang that one line in โLetโs Dance.โ That should tell you how good this effort his. He doesnโt have the gravity in his delivery to make this remarkable. He sings in the reedy high-end of his baritone, and a hyperactive lead line thinks its adorning another song entire. Once again, itโs the saxophone that steals the show, though we canโt necessarily credit Bowie โ there are multiple horn players on this cut.
The more interesting song here is โTake My Tip.โ It was Bowieโs first published act of songwriting, as Davey Jones. For 2:15 in length, thereโs a lot to dig into here. It has the familiar bounding bass and organ of his pre-glam work, and check out these lyrics:
You think youโre gonna please her
So you walk right up and tease her
But she walks right on by
Youโre scared to walk beside her
โCause youโre playing with the [tiger? spider?] who possesses the sky
Totally normal English beat song and then all of a suddenย weโre playing with a the [something]ย who possesses the sky. Despite all of ourย desperateย wishes that David is singing โSpiderโ so we can call this song the secret origin of Ziggy Stardust, Iโm pretty certain he says โtiger.โ Still, that is a pretty bizarre line in an otherwise totally normal song.
The vocals here remainย adolescent, but heโs beginning to sing in that slightly-nasal, cutting way heโd use on later choruses. Also, there is a brief drum break with chromatic changes in the middle that definitely hints at future arrangements.
This pair of tunes appear on a Bowie! 1965 MP3 release from Parlaphone.
Davy Jones & The Lower Third
From The Manish Boys, later that same year we hop toย Davy Jones (& The Lower Third). Clearly he was going with the โDavy Jonesโ name before The Monkeesย hit it big. Their first single was โYouโve Got a Habit of Leavingโ b/w โBaby Loves The Way.โ Both areย Bowie writing credits and are bothย inoffensive, at best. He has abandoned his R&Bย sound of the prior single, but he hasnโt replaced it with much else. He tries on a cutesy, whiney boy voice that must have been popular on the radio at the time.
The interesting thing is the entrance of a fuzz bass on โLeavingโ that leads to major psychedelic breakdown in the middle of the song. Despite some fluttering harmonica, itโs legitimately heavyย โ but just as it settles in to a groove,ย out pops the acousticย guitar from the other side. By contrast, โBaby Loves That Wayโ is super-vanilla,ย aside from a lovely little reverb guitar chord intro.
Both songs appear on the Parlaphoneย Bowie! 1965ย EP.
I located another handful of songs that profess to be โDavy Jones with The Lower Thirdโ tunes. They are โGlad Iโve Got Nobody,โ perhaps a bit more Who-flavored than the prior two, and โIโll Follow You,โ which feels a bit like the throwback-y Beatles tunes like โMr. Moonlight.โ Itโs very Sonny and Cher, but his plaintive singing is enjoyable. Thereโs a hint of some of the fluidity and grit to come.
Thereโs another obscure tune, โBaby, Thatโs a Promise,โ which isnโt on any compilations though itโs easily findable on the web. Itโs one of the catchier and better-performed of the songs of this period. A delightful, throaty vocal from Bowie shows some signs of his fine vibrato and falsetto.
David Bowie on Pye Records
Here, we arrive on January 14 1996, the debut of David Bowie โ still with The Lower Third โ with their single โCanโt Help Thinking About Meโ b/wย โAnd I Say to Myself.โ This not only introduced David Bowie, but itโs was his first song to find its way to official release in the US (though it was a flop).With the name change came some trademark Bowie-isms. The B-side, โAnd I Say To Myself,โ is a sort of Motown-y R&B song, but itโs also the first time we get a lengthy listen to Bowieโs lower baritone vocals. And, the way he belts โguilt-ay!โon โCanโt Helpโ before the first refrain is pure glam-era, it gave me chills when I first heard it. While it is a pretty basic mod-rock acoustic guitar-driven track, the lyrics are edging into familiar dystopia:
Question-time that says I brought dishonour
My headโs bowed in shame
It seems that Iโve blackened the family name
Mother says that she canโt stand the neighbours talking
Iโve gotta pack my bags, leave this home, start walking, yeah
Iโm guilty!ย I wish that I was sorry this time
I wish that I could pay for my crime
I canโt help thinking about me
Bowie then discarded โThe Lower Thirdโ (by the way, such a bad name โ does that refer to them singing his underneath harmonies? Hereโs some history on them) in favor of backing band โThe Buzzโย on โDo Anything You Sayโ b/w โGood Morning Girl.โ Of the lyrical vomit and scatting on โGood Morning Girl,โ I will say nothing further, but you will immediately recognize the throaty baritone on โDo Anything You Say.โ It sounds like Bowie of five years later.
His next 1966 single, โI Dig Everything,โ is so very much of the moment that it would fit perfectly into a montage in an Austin Powers movie. It has everything you associate with that sound โ the organ, the guiro, the shuffling drums, the occasional mellotron. Itโs pretty much a song about Bowie walking around town with a string of somewhat terrible things happening to him, periodically declaiming, โEverythingโs fine and I dig everything.โ
It was b/w โIโm Not Losing Sleep,โ which is in the same vein but with a lower vocal that is a bit reminiscent of Tom Jones. The melody on the chorus of โIโm just counting sheep,ย Iโm not losing sleep, my friendโ is a bit catchy.
All of the Pye songs are available on I Dig Everything: The 1966 Pye Singles, more cheaply had as MP3s than a physical CD.
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I wonder if David Bowie had many fans from this string of singles in the UK, following him from band name to band name. Earlier this week, Bowieโs response to fan letter from 1967 circulated and mentioned a British fan club. However, that was from September of 1967 after his solo full-length debut on Deram Records โย but thatโs a topic for another post!
byย CRUSHING KRISIS

