Hours was first released through Bowie's website
BowieNet on 21 September 1999, followed by an official
CD release on 4 October through
Virgin Records; it was the first album released for download through the
Internet. On
Hours, "The Pretty Things Are Going to Hell" was sequenced as the seventh track, between "What's Really Happening?" and "New Angels of Promise". Before its release on
Hours, "The Pretty Things Are Going to Hell" first appeared in remixed form in the film
Stigmata; the soundtrack album mix differs from the film mix, and another variant appeared on the CD single for "
Survive". The
Stigmata version also featured in the
Omikron: The Nomad Soul game. The original
Hours version replaced "Thursday's Child" as the first single from the album in Australia and Japan in September 1999. A shortened US promo edit, plus the two
Stigmata mixes, later appeared on the 2004 bonus disc of
Hours. An unreleased
music video for "The Pretty Things Are Going to Hell" was shot by "
I'm Afraid of Americans" directors
Dom and Nic on 7 September 1999 at the Kit Kat Club in New York. In it, Bowie rehearses the song on stage while encountering four life-size puppets of his past personas:
Ziggy Stardust, the dress-wearing
Man Who Sold the World,
the Thin White Duke and
Pierrot from "
Ashes to Ashes". The puppets were built by
Jim Henson's Creature Shop for a reported £7,000 each. According to Pegg, the figures represent Bowie's "constant struggle to avoid being overwhelmed by his own past". Canadian actor Chad Richardson portrayed a younger version of Bowie. Discussing its unreleased status, Bowie stated that the directors failed to achieve the proper lighting with the puppets. He quipped: "I'm sure it will make its way onto a video compilation one of these days – to be a source of amusement to you all and another form of Chinese torture for myself." Two of the puppets later appeared in the video for Bowie's 2013 single "
Love Is Lost", while the unreleased video itself leaked online in 2014. "The Pretty Things Are Going to Hell" was performed throughout the 1999
Hours Tour and 2000
summer shows. A live version recorded in New York City on 19 November 1999 was released on some formats of the single "
Seven" in July 2000.
Ultimate Classic Rock placed the single at number 99 (out of 119) in a list ranking every Bowie single from worst to best in 2016. ==Track listing==