"Loving the Alien" is a song written and recorded by David Bowie. It was the opening track to his sixteenth studio album Tonight. One of two tracks on the album written solely by Bowie, an edited version of the song was released as a single in May 1985, nine months after the release of lead single "Blue Jean" and eight months after the release of the album. "Loving the Alien" peaked at No. 19 in the UK Singles Chart. "Loving the Alien" inspired the title of Christopher Sandford's 1997 biography of Bowie and the 2018 Bowie box set release, Loving the Alien (1983–1988).
Background
One of two tracks on the album written solely by Bowie, as a demo the song was simply called "1". The singer said the track "...came about because of my feeling that so much history is wrong – as is being rediscovered all the time – and that we base so much on the wrong knowledge that we've gleaned."[2] He recorded a demo of the song in Montreux, Switzerland prior to recording the song for the album.[3] Bowie later said that the production on the song undid the power of the lyric, saying he preferred the demo version,[4] and in a separate interview lamented "You should hear 'Loving the Alien' on demo. It's wonderful on demo. I promise you! (laughs). But on the album, it's ... not as wonderful."[5]
The single's b-side, "Don't Look Down", a cover of Iggy Pop's song and included on Tonight, are remixed on both the 7" and 12" single release.[6]
Promotion
A music video was co-directed by Bowie with David Mallet.[7] The original video included a short shot of Bowie with a nosebleed; this original version was only released on the 1987 video single "Day-In Day-Out", and all subsequent releases of the video have the nosebleed scene edited out.[7] A single version of the song was released as a single in May 1985, nine months after the release of lead single "Blue Jean" and eight months after the release of the album.[7]
Critical reception
Bowie's biographer David Buckley called it "the only track on the album with the gravitas of much of his earlier work".[8]Yo Zushi of the New Statesman described the song as a "seven-minute masterpiece".[9] While critical of much of Bowie's 1980s output in his appraisal of Best of Bowie in 2002, BBC reviewer Chris Jones stated: "Loving the Alien does have a strange distant beauty to it. Like watching a ballet through a telescope."[10]
Live performances
Bowie performed "Loving the Alien" every night of his 1987 Glass Spider Tour,[4] released on home video as Glass Spider in 1988. On the A Reality Tour in 2003 and 2004, he again performed the song, but this time as a stripped-down version with only Bowie on vocals and Gerry Leonard on guitar. Bowie said that the latter arrangement was "perhaps the way it should have always been done."[7] A live performance from this tour, recorded in November 2003, was included on both a concert video (2004) and live album (2010).
In 2002, Dutch-American producer the Scumfrog made a club mix of the song and released it as a single together with the original video of the song. The Scumfrog version of "Loving the Alien" reached #41 in the UK that year.[11] It also reached #9 on the UK Dance Singles Chart.[12]