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Let's Dance (Music)

 Let's Dance (Music)
type
TVTItem
 Let's Dance (Music)
label
Let's Dance (Music)
 Let's Dance (Music)
page
LetsDance
 Let's Dance (Music)
comment
Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })Let's Dance is the fifteenth studio album recorded by English rock musician David Bowie. It was released through EMI America Records on 14 April 1983.Having finally broken ties with RCA Records after worsening Creative Differences throughout the late '70s, and having spent several years wrangling with a costly and lopsided severance agreement with his ex-manager, Bowie was determined to have a big, moneymaking hit with his first release for his new label, EMI America. With this in mind, he enlisted Chic guitarist Nile Rodgers as producer and came up with his most mainstream album to date, a collection of radio-friendly pop rock tunes rooted strongly in post-disco (though not without Bowie's traditionally dark lyrical undercurrents).Released at a time when Black post-disco artists like Michael Jackson and Prince were breaking back through to white audiences in the US (after a lengthy shunning of Black music there in the wake of the 1979 Disco Sucks! movement), the album was even more successful than he planned. "Modern Love" and the title track were international Top 5 hits (with the latter being his only single to top both the UK Singles chart and the Billboard Hot 100) and the follow-up Serious Moonlight Tour of '83 a sell-out worldwide. The album itself topped the charts in the UK, Australia, Canada, the Netherlands, France, Japan, Norway, and Sweden, peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard 200, and went on to become the second-best-selling album of 1983 in the UK and Canada. It was later certified quintuple-platinum in Canada, platinum in the UK, the US, France, the Netherlands, and New Zealand, and gold in Finland and Spain.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_2'); })This unprecedentedly high success caused a Newbie Boom, and to this day, Let's Dance remains Bowie's highest-selling album ever released, selling over 10.7 million copies around the world over the decades. As a testament to its commercial popularity, the 1999 remastered CD alone was certified silver by the British Phonographic Industry. The album was later nominated for Album of the Year at the 1984 Grammy Awards, only to lose out to Michael Jackson's Thriller.Let's Dance was supported by four singles: the Title Track, Bowie's cover of the Iggy Pop song "China Girl", "Modern Love", and "Without You". Notably, the B-Side to "Modern Love", a live performance of the same track during Bowie's 1983 Serious Moonlight tour, was featured as the final track of the 2018 Live Album Serious Moonlight [Live '83].Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_3'); })
 Let's Dance (Music)
fetched
2022-08-02T16:26:52Z
 Let's Dance (Music)
parsed
2022-08-02T16:26:52Z
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Dropped link to Bowdlerize: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Dropped link to God: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Dropped link to HotSpace: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Dropped link to TheIdiot: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Let's Dance (Music)
processingUnknown
Bowdlerize
 Let's Dance (Music)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_1f37a427
type
Face on the Cover
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_1f37a427
comment
Face on the Cover: Bowie's torso and face, shown in a fighting stance against a projection of a painting of a city skyline.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_1f37a427
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_1f37a427
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1.0
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_1f37a427
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_22093e9b
type
New Sound Album
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_22093e9b
comment
New Sound Album: The third big 180, ditching the unique brand of rough, abstract art rock that Bowie had built up with Tony Visconti & Brian Eno in continental Europe in favor of mainstream pop rock & post-disco. The closest tie to Bowie's earlier work is the re-recorded version of "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)" included on this album, which still maintains a visible connection to the original 1982 version's Post-Punk direction.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_22093e9b
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 Let's Dance (Music) / int_22093e9b
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_22093e9b
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_23b0d78
type
Title Track
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_23b0d78
comment
Title Track: "Let's Dance"
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_23b0d78
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_23b0d78
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_23b0d78
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_2719ab04
type
Special Guest
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_2719ab04
comment
Special Guest: Bowie met a young blues guitarist from Texas named Stevie Ray Vaughan at the Montreaux Jazz Festival, and Bowie asked Vaughan to play on this album. It was Vaughan's first mainstream exposure and a stepping stone in his career.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_2719ab04
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_2719ab04
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_2719ab04
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_27a42ebc
type
Spiritual Successor
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_27a42ebc
comment
Spiritual Successor: Invoked: Bowie himself considered this album one to Young Americans, as both are uncharacteristically mainstream-accessible albums consisting of eight songs that combine black music (soul and funk for Young Americans, post-disco for Let's Dance) with Bowie's trademark dark & artsy musical and lyrical undercurrents.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_27a42ebc
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1.0
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_27a42ebc
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_29ee1e5b
type
Regional Riff
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_29ee1e5b
comment
Regional Riff: "China Girl" prominently features a variation on the infamous Oriental riff in its guitar part, tying in with its criticism of how white society fetishizes Asian women.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_29ee1e5b
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_29ee1e5b
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_29ee1e5b
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_4583a262
type
Shirtless Scene
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_4583a262
comment
Shirtless Scene: The album artwork depicts a shirtless Bowie in a fighting stance.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_4583a262
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_4583a262
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_4583a262
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_54f999c
type
AlternateCharacterInterpretation
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_54f999c
comment
Alternate Character Interpretation: Invoked in Bowie's version of "China Girl". Producer Nile Rodgers interpreted the song as a metaphor for speedballing — "China Girl" being code for China White heroin and cocaine (referred to as "girls" among New York druggies, with heroin also being "boys"). Bowie wrote the song as a satire of the fetishization of Asian women, but liked Rodgers' interpretation and how it informed the more polished, pop-friendly arrangement of what was originally a rough proto-Post-Punk track, deciding to keep the Let's Dance version that way as a result.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_54f999c
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_54f999c
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 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_54f999c
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_6053dc28
type
Record Producer
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_6053dc28
comment
Record Producer: Nile Rodgers of Chic.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_6053dc28
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_6053dc28
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_6053dc28
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_74149c93
type
Epic Rocking
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_74149c93
comment
Epic Rocking: The 7 and a half minute Title Track.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_74149c93
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_74149c93
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_74149c93
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_79b16b48
type
Japanese Ranguage
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_79b16b48
comment
Japanese Ranguage: In "China Girl", Bowie drops "roud as thunder" the first time it's said. Subsequent verses would use the correct "loud".
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_79b16b48
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_79b16b48
featureConfidence
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
hasFeature
Let's Dance (Music) / int_79b16b48
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_80a247a9
type
Breather Episode
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_80a247a9
comment
Breather Episode: "Without You" and "Shake It", which are decidedly shorter and more upbeat than the other six songs on the album. Coincidentally (or not?), each song marks the end of its respective side on the original LP release.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_80a247a9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_80a247a9
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
hasFeature
Let's Dance (Music) / int_80a247a9
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_8e3980c7
type
Mistaken Nationality
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_8e3980c7
comment
Mistaken Nationality: Iggy Pop's infatuation for an Asian woman was the inspiration for "China Girl", a song that appeared earlier on his solo debut The Idiot from 1977, which was also produced by Bowie. Even though she was actually Vietnamese.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_8e3980c7
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_8e3980c7
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
hasFeature
Let's Dance (Music) / int_8e3980c7
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_954ad71c
type
Evil Colonialist
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_954ad71c
comment
Evil Colonialist: "China Girl" is narrated by one, who promises the title character that he'll "ruin everything you are" in exchange for television, "eyes of blue," and "men who want to rule the world." Bowie, who co-wrote the song with Iggy Pop, intended for the song to be a critique on western exoticization of east Asia, and thus invoked this trope to further the message.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_954ad71c
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_954ad71c
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
hasFeature
Let's Dance (Music) / int_954ad71c
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_a939a527
type
Red Eyes, Take Warning
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_a939a527
comment
Red Eyes, Take Warning: In "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)", the singer's eyes start as green as he warns his inamorata of his dangerous need for her... in verse two, they turn red, and he mentions that "Those who feel me near/Pull the blinds and change their minds".
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_a939a527
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_a939a527
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
hasFeature
Let's Dance (Music) / int_a939a527
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_aabe2fb
type
Deliberate Values Dissonance
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_aabe2fb
comment
Deliberate Values Dissonance: The video for "China Girl". Bowie intended to present an anti-racist message through the video by making it as blatantly stereotypical as possible. Best exemplified by the shot of Bowie mocking the racist schoolyard game of pulling back the corners of the eyes and pretending to be Asian.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_aabe2fb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_aabe2fb
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
hasFeature
Let's Dance (Music) / int_aabe2fb
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_b24ce4b2
type
Rearrange the Song
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_b24ce4b2
comment
Rearrange the Song: "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)" was originally written as the Title Track to the 1982 remake of Cat People before being re-recorded for this album, owed to Bowie's personal dissatisfaction with the original rendition.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_b24ce4b2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_b24ce4b2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
hasFeature
Let's Dance (Music) / int_b24ce4b2
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_b53077b3
type
Take That!
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_b53077b3
comment
Take That!: "China Girl" is an open jab at Asian fetishism; the music video makes this even more overt, intentionally playing up a number of Asian stereotypes to make people who earnestly believe in them look silly and cartoonish.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_b53077b3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_b53077b3
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 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_b53077b3
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_bdd027c5
type
Den of Iniquity
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_bdd027c5
comment
Den of Iniquity: "Criminal World" is set in one.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_bdd027c5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_bdd027c5
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_bdd027c5
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_c4b74656
type
One-Woman Song
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_c4b74656
comment
One-Woman Song: "China Girl", based on Iggy Pop's brief infatuation for Kuelan Nguyen, who was French pop singer Jacques Higelin's partner at the time. Both Pop and Higelin were recording at the Château d'Hérouville in France when the song was written for The Idiot.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_c4b74656
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_c4b74656
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_c4b74656
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_cdee850f
type
Dancing Is Serious Business
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_cdee850f
comment
Dancing Is Serious Business: "Let's Dance".
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_cdee850f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_cdee850f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
hasFeature
Let's Dance (Music) / int_cdee850f
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_ce6555f0
type
Lighter and Softer
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_ce6555f0
comment
Lighter and Softer: Both musically and lyrically, not only in comparison to Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps), but also to most of Bowie's prior oeuvre. In particular, darker lyrical elements serve as undercurrents here rather than being front and center.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_ce6555f0
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_ce6555f0
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 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_ce6555f0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_cff53786
type
Cover Version
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_cff53786
comment
Cover Version: "China Girl" is a cover of a song he co-wrote for Iggy Pop's album The Idiot in 1977 and "Criminal World" was from English glam rock band Metro's 1977 Self-Titled Album. "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)", meanwhile, is a rerecorded version of a song Bowie himself recorded with Giorgio Moroder a year earlier for the motion picture of the same name, but without Moroder's involvement.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_cff53786
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_cff53786
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
hasFeature
Let's Dance (Music) / int_cff53786
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_d9761a10
type
Performance Video
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_d9761a10
comment
Performance Video: The video for "Modern Love", taken from the album's Serious Moonlight Tour.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_d9761a10
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_d9761a10
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_d9761a10
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_e1573096
type
Let's Dance
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_e1573096
comment
Let's Dance: The exact name of both the album and its title track, though in this case it seems to refer to literal dancing. An implied instance of this trope being played straight can be found on the cover art, which depicts Bowie as a leather-gloved boxer.
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_e1573096
featureApplicability
1.0
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_e1573096
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1.0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_e1573096
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_name
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 Let's Dance (Music) / int_name
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 Let's Dance (Music) / int_name
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 Let's Dance (Music)
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Let's Dance (Music) / int_name
 Let's Dance (Music) / int_name
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Let's Dance (Music)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 David Bowie (Franchise)
seeAlso
Let's Dance (Music)
 Let's Dance (Music)
hasFeature
Boxed Set / int_9e4646c0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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British Music / int_9e4646c0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Covered Up / int_9e4646c0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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New Sound Album / int_9e4646c0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Progressive Rock / int_9e4646c0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Sharp-Dressed Man / int_9e4646c0
 Let's Dance (Music)
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Tagline / int_9e4646c0