Recording for
Tin Machine II began in September 1989 in
Sydney, Australia, where the band spent three weeks recording new material. They maintained the lineup of
Tin Machine, with Armstrong as an additional guitarist. Tin Machine played an impromptu show at a small Sydney venue on 4 November 1989 before taking a rest in January 1990 as Bowie conducted his solo
Sound+Vision Tour, filmed a role in
The Linguini Incident (1991) and made a brief appearance in the
HBO series
Dream On. The tour concluded in September 1990, after which Bowie announced his split with
EMI. According to Pegg, EMI were continuously expecting another success equivalent of ''
Let's Dance'' (1983) and became fed up with Bowie's uncommercial work as part of Tin Machine to the point where they refused to market another Tin Machine record, leading Bowie to depart. At the time, EMI were undertaking a
reissue campaign with the American label
Rykodisc of Bowie's back catalogue, which remained unaffected by the split. In March 1991, Tin Machine signed with Victory Music, a newly formed record label created by the
JVC corporation, with worldwide distribution by
London Records and
PolyGram. The same month, the band reconvened at
A&M Studios in Los Angeles, California, to record three new tracks. The label requested a radio-friendly hit so
Hugh Padgham, Bowie's co-producer for
Tonight (1984), was hired to oversee work on the song "
One Shot". Padgham told the biographer David Buckley that he was not a fan of Tin Machine's prior work, stating it "sounded like a mad bunch of people". Upon working with them, he praised Gabrels' guitar contributions but called the Sales brothers "basically mad".
Tim Palmer, who produced their debut album, was brought back to produce and
mix Tin Machine II. Some tracks originated from the sessions for
Tin Machine. Bowie and Gabrels had begun working on "Shopping for Girls" in August 1988 before the sessions began, while "
If There Is Something", a
Roxy Music cover, was the second song the band recorded after "
Heaven's in Here". Bowie stated: "We were so exhausted that we didn't have it in us to write another song, so we used an old song to show how we as a band would approach someone else's material." The song was then shelved and placed on
Tin Machine II, with Bowie saying "we pulled it out to see how it sounded. We really got off on it." ==Music and lyrics==