*** Welcome to piglix ***

Never Let Me Down (song)

"Never Let Me Down"
Bowie NeverLetMeDownSingle.jpg
Single by David Bowie
from the album Never Let Me Down
B-side "'87 and Cry"
Released 17 August 1987
Format
Recorded Early 1987
Power Station studios
(New York City)
Length 3:58
Label EMI
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
David Bowie singles chronology
"Time Will Crawl"
(1987)
"Never Let Me Down"
(1987)
"String Module Error: Match not found"
(1988)
"Time Will Crawl"
(1987)
"Never Let Me Down"
(1987)
Tin Machine: "Under the God"
(1988)
Music video
"Never Let Me Down" on YouTube

"Never Let Me Down" is a song recorded by English singer David Bowie, serving as the title track for his 1987 studio album of the same name. It was released as the third and final single from the record in 1987, and served as his last single until 1992's "Real Cool World" (although a remix of "Fame" was released in 1990). "Never Let Me Down" was written by the singer himself and Carlos Alomar, while production was handled by Bowie along with David Richards.

Music critics viewed the track as one of the best on Never Let Me Down and listed it among the most underrated of his career. An accompanying music video for the single was shot by French director Jean-Baptiste Mondino and similarly received positive response. Commercially, "Never Let Me Down" reached number 27 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 34 on the UK Singles Chart. It was aided by a CD release, Bowie's first, and remained the singer's last single to chart within the top 40 in the United States until "Lazarus" (2015).

"Never Let Me Down" was the last track written and recorded for the album, but despite this, Bowie said that the song was "completely finished in twenty-four hours from the beginning of the writing to the end of the arranging". He had started with his own chord structure for the song but wasn't happy with it, calling it "ponderous and funereal." Long-time collaborator and co-songwriter Carlos Alomar reworked the chords for "Never Let Me Down", using a chord structure from a song he had written on his own called "I'm Tired", and thus received part of the writing credit for the track. The singer described the single as a "pivotal" track for himself, calling it the most personal song he had written for an album to that point in his career. The recording is about Bowie's long-time personal assistant, Coco Schwab. Bowie described their relationship, saying:


...
Wikipedia

...