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David Bowie The Shel Talmy Recordings

The Definitive 1965 Collection Featuring Ten Previously Unreleased Tracks On CD & Digital & Six On Vinyl

David Bowie The Shel Talmy Recordings

AVAILABLE ON CD, LP, & DIGITAL 

1LP RED VINYL AVAILABLE EXCLUSIVELY AT DAVIDBOWIE.COM

RELEASED ON PARLOPHONE SEPTEMBER 18, 2026

AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER NOW

LISTEN TO THE PREVIOUSLY UNHEARD I WANT YOUR LOVE NOW

“I thought he absolutely was going to make it. The only unfortunate thing is that he and I were about six years ahead of the market” Shel Talmy, 2017

DAVID BOWIE THE SHEL TALMY RECORDINGS is the most complete collection of tracks recorded by a nascent David Bowie, then Davie Jones, with legendary ‘60s producer Shel Talmy, best known for his groundbreaking hits with The Who and The Kinks. The album features ten previously unheard tracks on CD and digital, and six songs on LP, with contributions from legendary Yardbirds and Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page, then a guitar slinger for hire, and Nicky Hopkins, celebrated piano player for The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, The Who and Jeff Beck.

As the musician and music historian Alec Palao puts it in his comprehensive sleeve notes that accompany the album, “David Bowie the artist is a book of chapters, the turn of each page delivering something completely different and unexpected from the last. And in perusal, a cardinal error would be to pit any of these episodes against the others, when in fact each fascinating phase in his career should be considered complementary. This collection, a primary chapter if not the very earliest instalment in David’s musical journey, deserves legitimate consideration. It is invariably tempting to search for clues in an artist’s tentative beginnings, and Bowie’s juvenilia has been dissected more than most, but this has rarely been done within the proper context. The sounds here should not be judged by the standards of his later career, but by the standards of what was happening in Britain at that precise point in time. In which case, they speak as loudly of the excitement of London and its music scene in that pivotal year of 1965 as they do for the launch of its brightest future star.”

Bowie and Talmy first encountered each other while frequenting London’s Denmark Street, which is now a guitar aficionado’s paradise but was then the centre of the British music industry, where budding songwriters sold their songs to the big publishers of the day. Talmy had already achieved huge success with The Who, The Kinks, and others, but was now branching out on his own to develop new talent. Talmy signed David and the Manish Boys in December 1964 and set about recording them, but Bowie was already moving on, forming Davie Jones & The Lower Third. The majority of the recordings Bowie made with Talmy featured The Lower Third or were solo demos. Talmy’s studio of choice was invariably IBC in Portland Place, also a favourite of The Who, who later recorded Tommy there, and which he considered to have the best outboard gear in London. The up-and-coming Glyn Johns, later to work with The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Who, and many more, was the engineer, and the producer had enough confidence in The Manish Boys to bring in just the one outside player. Jimmy Page was the precocious guitar-slinger Talmy used to supercharge the more anaemic of his acts, and in this period, the future Yardbirds/Led Zeppelin eminence would frequently bring along his new toy, a custom-built fuzz pedal, to add extra bite. For The Lower Third’s IBC session, Nicky Hopkins was featured on keyboards.

This year in Bowie’s career clearly held great importance to him; in 1973, when he recorded the ‘Pin-Ups’ album, it was very much a love letter to that time in his life and to the sound of the bands that had inspired him. No fewer than four titles on ‘Pin-Ups’ (by The Kinks, The Who and The Easybeats) were originally produced by Shel Talmy. Featured on this new collection are tracks such as ‘You’ve Got A Habit Of Leaving’ and ‘Baby Loves That Way’, originally released as singles on Parlophone, that Bowie would return to later in his career, re-recording them with his Glastonbury band for the album ‘TOY’, which would finally be released in 2021.

By the end of September 1965, Davie Jones was now David Bowie, and he was once more writing another musical chapter, but the twenty-two songs featured here capture a very special time just before the ‘birth’ of David Bowie. 

DAVID BOWIE

THE SHEL TALMY RECORDINGS

CD

You've Got A Habit Of Leaving (2026 Remaster)^

I Want Your Love *^

Cupid *^

I Pity The Fool (2026 Remaster)+

Baby Loves That Way (2026 Remaster)^

Keep Up With The Jones (Instrumental) *^

Leave Her To Me *^

I’ll Follow You^

You Gotta Tell Her (2026 Remaster)*^

Take My Tip (2026 Remaster)+

Certain Woman *^

Today (Demo) *-

I Want My Baby Back (Demo) (2026 Remaster)-

I Live In Dreams (Demo) *-

Bars Of The County Jail (Demo)-

That’s Where My Heart Is (Demo) (2026 Remaster)-

I Do Believe I Love You (Demo) *-

You’ve Got A Habit Of Leaving (Alternative overdub/vocal) (2026 Remaster)^

I Pity The Fool (Alternative vocal take) (2026 Remaster)+

Baby Loves That Way (Alternative vocal take) *^

Take My Tip (Alternative vocal take) (2026 Remaster)+

 

*Previously Unreleased

^ Davie Jones & The Lower Third

+ The Manish Boys

- Davie Jones

 

DAVID BOWIE

THE SHEL TALMY RECORDINGS

VINYL

 

Side One

You've Got A Habit Of Leaving (2026 Remaster) ^ 

I Pity The Fool (2026 Remaster) +

Baby Loves That Way (2026 Remaster) ^

I’ll Follow You^

Take My Tip (2026 Remaster) +

 

Side Two

I Want Your Love *^

Cupid *^

Keep Up With The Jones (Instrumental) *^

Certain Woman *^

Leave Her To Me *^

You Gotta Tell Her (2026 Remaster) *^

 

*Previously Unreleased

^ Davie Jones & The Lower Third

+ The Manish Boys

- Davie Jones

 

All tracks produced by Shel Talmy

Mastered & Remastered in 2026 by John Webber

 

Davie Jones & The Lower Third

Phil Lancaster - Drums

Graham Rivens - Bass

Denis Taylor - Guitar

Les Mighall - Drums

David Bowie - Vocals & Harmonica

 

The Manish Boys

Mick White - Drums

John Watson - Bass

Johnny Flux - Guitar

Bob Solly - Organ

David Bowie - Vocals

 

DAVID BOWIE

THE SHEL TALMY RECORDINGS

THE DEFINITIVE 1965 COLLECTION

FEATURING TEN PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED TRACKS ON CD & DIGITAL 

& SIX ON VINYL

 

AVAILABLE ON CD, LP & DIGITAL 

1LP RED VINYL AVAILABLE EXCLUSIVELY AT DAVIDBOWIE.COM

 

 

RELEASED ON PARLOPHONE SEPTEMBER 18, 2026

AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER NOW

 

 

LISTEN TO THE PREVIOUSLY UNHEARD

I WANT YOUR LOVE NOW 

 

ABOUT DAVID BOWIE

David Bowie (1947-2016) revolutionised popular music and culture through five decades of fearless experimentation and reinvention.

Between the late 1960s and mid-1970s, Bowie pioneered multi-media performance art while recording groundbreaking albums including Space Oddity (1969), The Man Who Sold The World (1970), The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1972), Aladdin Sane (1973), Diamond Dogs (1974), Young Americans (1975), and Station to Station (1976). His single "Fame" from Young Americans became his first US No. 1 hit.

In 1976, Bowie relocated to Berlin, where he collaborated with Brian Eno and Tony Visconti on the influential "Berlin Trilogy": Low (1977), “Heroes" (1977), and Lodger (1979). In 1979 and 1980, he made his Broadway debut in The Elephant Man and released Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) with Visconti, followed by the Nile Rodgers-produced Let's Dance (1983).

Throughout the mid-1980s and early 1990s, Bowie formed the band Tin Machine, collaborated with dance company La La La Human Steps, and composed music for Hanif Kureishi's The Buddha of Suburbia (1993). In 1992, he created Jump, one of rock's first CD-ROMs (Enhanced CD). Reuniting with Eno in 1995, he produced the experimental Outside, followed by Earthling (1997) and 'hours...' (1999). That same year, he was honoured as Commandeur dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.

In 2002, Bowie collaborated again with Tony Visconti on Heathen, performing the album in full alongside the seminal Low during European and American tours. Reality followed in 2003, launched with the world's largest interactive live-by-satellite event, followed by the critically acclaimed "A Reality Tour."

Bowie's film credits include iconic roles in Nic Roeg's The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976), Nagisa Oshima's Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence (1983), Martin Scorsese's The Last Temptation of Christ (1988), Tony Scott's The Hunger(1983), and Christopher Nolan's The Prestige (2006).

In May 2007, he curated the inaugural 10-day High Line Festival in New York. The following month, he received the Webby Lifetime Achievement Award for pioneering the intersection of art and technology. Later that year, he starred as himself in an acclaimed episode of Ricky Gervais's HBO series Extras.

In 2012, a plaque was erected on Heddon Street, London, the site of the Ziggy Stardust album cover, commemorating his extraordinary influence. That same year following year, the Victoria and Albert Museum received unprecedented access to the David Bowie Archive for a groundbreaking exhibition that broke attendance records in London, the US, Berlin, and Paris.

On January 8, 2013, Bowie surprised the world by releasing "Where Are We Now?" and announcing The Next Day, his 30th studio album and first in 10 years. The album received universal critical acclaim. In 2014, the compilation Nothing Has Changed celebrated his 50th year in music, followed by the experimental "Sue (Or in a Season of Crime)" with the Maria Schneider Orchestra and "Tis a Pity She Was a Whore."

Spring 2015 brought Lazarus, an off-Broadway production co-created with playwright Enda Walsh and directed by Ivo van Hove, which later transferred to London's Kings Cross Theatre.

(Blackstar), Bowie's 28th studio album, was released on his 69th birthday, January 8, 2016. Co-produced with Visconti and featuring saxophonist Donny McCaslin and his quartet, received overwhelming critical acclaim, among the best reviews of Bowie's entire career. It became his first album to reach No. 1 in the US, topped charts in over 20 countries, and later won five Grammy Awards.

On January 10, 2016, David Bowie died peacefully, surrounded by his family, after an 18-month battle with cancer. His body of work, multi-generational influence, and legacy of fearless innovation and endless reinvention continue to inspire artists and audiences worldwide.

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