In 1998, David Bowie had reunited with
Tony Visconti to record a song for
The Rugrats Movie called "(Safe in This) Sky Life". Although the track was edited out of the final cut, and did not feature on the film's
soundtrack album, the reunion led to the pair pursuing a new collaborative effort. "(Safe In This) Sky Life" was later re-recorded and released as a single b-side in 2002 where it was retitled "Safe".
Amongst their earliest work together in this period, was a reworking of
Placebo's track "
Without You I'm Nothing", from the album of the same name - Visconti overseeing the additional production required when Bowie's harmonised vocal was added to the original version for a strictly limited edition single release.
1999 found Bowie composing the soundtrack for a computer game called "
Omikron: The Nomad Soul". David Bowie and his wife,
Iman, made appearances as characters in the game. That same year, re-recorded tracks from the game and new music was released in the album
'hours...' featured "What's Really Happening", the
lyrics for which were written by Alex Grant, the winner of Bowie's "Cyber Song Contest" Internet competition. This album presented Bowie's exit from heavy electronica, with an emphasis on more live instruments, and, through songs like "
Thursday's Child" and "
Survive", a thematic move into Bowie's sense of his own aging and sentimentality. After this album, Bowie's guitarist, Reeves Gabrels, quit working with Bowie, feeling that the music was becoming "too soft".
Plans surfaced after the release of
'hours...' for an album titled
Toy, which would feature new versions of some of Bowie's earliest pieces as well as three new songs. Sessions for the album commenced in 2000, but the album was never released, leaving a number of tracks, some as yet unheard, on the editing floor.
In October 2001, Bowie opened
The Concert for New York City with a cover of
Paul Simon's "
America" performed on
omnichord and then launched into a rocking version of "
Heroes" dedicated to his local ladder. Also in 2001 he made two guest appearances on the
Rustic Overtones album
Viva Nueva!.
Bowie and Visconti continued collaboration with the production of a new album of completely original songs instead.The result of the sessions was the 2002 album
Heathen, notable for its dark and atmospheric sound and Bowie's largest chart success in recent years.
Heathen was nominated for the 2002
Mercury Prize and included a cover of the
Pixies song "
Cactus", which was another offshoot of Bowie's consistent interest in the band. Singles for "
Slow Burn" (which featured guitar by Bowie's old friend,
Pete Townshend), "
I've Been Waiting for You", and "
Everyone Says 'Hi'" were released along with numerous B-sides featuring pieces from the
Toy sessions and "Safe", a reworking of "Sky Life". The songs "
Afraid" and "Uncle Floyd" (retitled "
Slip Away") from
Toy were also released as album tracks as songs reminiscent of an earlier style.
In 2003, a report in the
Sunday Express named Bowie as the second-richest entertainer in the UK (behind Sir
Paul McCartney), with an estimated fortune of £510 million. However, the 2005
Sunday Times Rich List credited him with a little over £100 million.
In September 2003, Bowie released a new album,
Reality, and announced a world tour. '
A Reality Tour' was the best-selling tour of the following year. However, it was cut short after Bowie suffered chest pain while performing on stage in the northwestern German town of
Scheeßel on
June 25 2004. Originally thought to be a pinched nerve in his shoulder, the pain was later diagnosed as an acutely blocked
artery; an emergency
angioplasty was performed at St. Georg Hospital in Hamburg by Dr Karl Heinz Kuck.
He was discharged in early July 2004 and continued to spend time recovering. Bowie later admitted he had suffered a minor
heart attack, resulting from years of heavy smoking and touring. The tour was cancelled for the time being, with hopes that he would go back on tour by August, though this did not materialise. He recuperated back in New York City.
In October 2004, Bowie released a live DVD of the tour, entitled
A Reality Tour of his performances in Dublin, Ireland on
22 November and
23 November 2003, which included songs spanning the full length of Bowie's career, although mostly focusing on his more recent albums.
During the tour, Bowie was hit in his damaged left eye with a lollipop stick while performing in Oslo, Norway. Bowie was reported to have stopped the concert and to have yelled "You fucking wanker! You little fucker!" at the lollipop thrower. He later resumed the concert and apologised to the crowd for his response.
Still recuperating from his operation, Bowie worked off-stage and relaxed from studio work for the first time in several years. In 2004, a duet of his classic song "
Changes" with
Butterfly Boucher appeared in
Shrek 2. The soundtrack for the film
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou featured David Bowie songs performed in Portuguese by cast member
Seu Jorge (who adapted the lyrics to make them relevant to the film's story). Most of the David Bowie songs featured in the film were originally from
David Bowie (debut album),
Space Oddity,
Hunky Dory,
The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars and
Diamond Dogs. Bowie commented, "Had Seu Jorge not recorded my songs acoustically in Portuguese I would never have heard this new level of beauty which he has imbued them with".
Despite hopes for a comeback, in 2005, Bowie announced that he had made no plans for any performances during the year. After a relatively quiet year, Bowie recorded the vocals for the song "(She Can) Do That", co-written by Brian Transeau, for the movie
Stealth. Rumours flew about the possibility of a new album, but no announcements were made. In April 2005, film writer and director
Darren Aronofsky revealed Bowie was working on a rock opera adaptation of the comic book
Watchmen.
David Bowie finally returned to the stage on
September 8 2005, alongside
Arcade Fire, for the nationally televised event Fashion Rocks, his first gig since the heart attack. Bowie has shown interest in the
Montreal band since he was seen at one of their shows in
New York City nearly a year earlier. Bowie had requested the band to perform at the show, and together they performed the Arcade Fire's song "Wake Up" from their album
Funeral, as well as Bowie's own "
Five Years". He joined them again on
September 15 2005, singing "
Queen Bitch" and "Wake Up" from Central Park's Summerstage as part of the CMJ Music Marathon.
Bowie contributed back-up vocals for
TV on the Radio's song "Province" from their album
Return to Cookie Mountain. He made other occasional appearances, as in his commercial with
Snoop Dogg for
XM Satellite Radio. He appeared on Danish alt-rockers
Kashmir's 2005 release,
No Balance Palace, which was produced by Tony Visconti. The album also featured a spoken word performance by Lou Reed, making it the second project involving both Bowie and Reed in two years, since Reed's 2003
The Raven.
On
February 8,
2006, David Bowie was awarded the
Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. In November, Bowie performed at the Black Ball in New York for the Keep a Child Alive Foundation alongside his wife, Iman, and
Alicia Keys. He duetted with Keys on "Changes", and also performed "Wild is the Wind" and "Fantastic Voyage".
For 2006, Bowie once again announced a break from performance, but he made a surprise guest appearance at
David Gilmour's
May 29 2006 concert at the
Royal Albert Hall in
London. He sang "
Arnold Layne" and "
Comfortably Numb", closing the concert. The former performance was released, on
December 26 2006, as a single.
In May 2007, it was announced that Bowie would curate the High Line Festival in the abandoned railway park in New York called the
High Line where he would select various musicians and artists to perform.