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Two Week Run Of Tmwfte For Us Cinemas

"A RICH KALEIDOSCOPE OF CONTEMPORARY AMERICA!"

Time Out (London)

Nicolas Roeg's

The Man Who Fell To Earth

starring David Bowie

New 35mm Print of 70s Sci-Fi Classic at Film Forum

June 24-July 7 Two Weeks

A new 35mm print of the complete, uncut version of Nicolas Roeg's science fiction classic The Man Who Fell To Earth (1976), starring pop icon David Bowie as an extraterrestrial visitor in search of water for his dying planet, will run at Film Forum from Friday, June 23 through Thursday, July 7 (two weeks).

The complete, uncut version of Nicolas Roeg's The Man Who Fell to Earth, starring David Bowie as an extra-terrestrial visitor, will be re-released nationally this summer, landing at these theaters:

http://www.rialtopictures.com/manwhofell.html


"Are you Lithuanian?" After a space craft seemingly crashes to Earth, David Bowie walks off to sell a ring for twenty bucks in a dusty Southwestern town, then almost immediately hires high-priced, thick-spectacled patent attorney (Graduate screenwriter Buck Henry) to register ten world-changing patents. Orange-haired, pale-faced, minimally expressioned Bowie (obviously well-cast as an alien in his first starring role) desperately yearns to return himself and water to his parched planet ? but will the authorities let him? ? with coed-shtupping professor Rip Torn providing technical help, and chambermaid Candy Clark providing distractions via overdoses of very terrestrial booze, church, sex, and television.

Roeg's science fiction cult classic/cautionary moral tale is an assault of fragmented, non-linear narrative style, typically striking visuals, echt 70s soundtrack by John Phillips of The Mamas and Papas (along with period "needle drops"), with a pathbreaking no-comment depiction of a gay couple and multiple eye-brow-raising sexual romps ? including one punctuated by gunshots. All too often seen in washed-out copies ? and cut by 20 minutes in its first U.S. release -- this new 35mm print of the uncut director's version allows Roeg's dazzling visuals (Pauline Kael called him "the most visually seductive of directors") to be seen as they were meant to be. The re-release marks the film's 35th anniversary.

Showtimes daily (except June 27 & July 4): 1:00, 3:45, 7:00 & 9:35

Mondays, June 27 & July 4: 1:00, 3:45 & 8:45

 

"ABSORBING AND BEAUTIFUL! Mr. Roeg has chosen the garish, translucent, androgynous-mannered rock-star, David Bowie, for his space visitor. The choice is inspired. Mr. Bowie gives an extraordinary performance. The details, the chemistry of this tall pale figure with black-rimmed eyes are clearly not human. Yet he acquires a moving, tragic force as the stranger caught and destroyed in a strange land."

Richard Eder, The New York Times


"A SINGULAR, HAUNTING SCI-FI EXPERIENCE! Like Roeg's Walkabout, Man Who Fell to Earth is an exploration of an individual's grappling with an unfamiliar and unfriendly landscape, but whereas in Walkabout the landscape is the Australian outback, here it's the entirety of Earth."

Matt Noller, Slant Magazine


"Released the year before Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Star Wars, a science fiction film without science, a terrestrial space opera minus matte shots, models, or pyrotechnics that leaves us not wondering at the stars but grieving for ourselves. Roeg delights here in taking away the crutch of time (it has puzzled people whether 25 minutes or 25 years have passed in the film), eliminating transitions, cross-cutting, flashing forward and back, piling dissolve upon dissolve, letting the camera jerk and twirl and zoom finding new ways to see familiar things, while speculating on what the world might look like to someone from Out There."

Robert Lloyd


"Science fiction drama, Western, love story, metaphysical mystery, satire of modern America the most beguiling of the films that, in a dozen years embracing the 1970s, established Roeg as a mainstream heir to such 60s experimentalists as Resnais, Godard, and Marker Roeg is more interested in showing how life on Earth is stranger and more disconcerting than anything in outer space. Bowie made his exquisite film debut in a role that chimed iconographically with his androgynous, futuristic pop persona of the early seventies."

Graham Fuller

140 min | 1976 | Color   -  A Rialto Pictures Release

categories: News
Saturday 06.18.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Lots Of Bowie In Upcoming Duffy Book And Exhibition

With eyes completely open...

Lots of visual treats for the discerning Bowie fan in the upcoming Duffy book published this month and also at the attendant exhibition in London next month.

Here's the publisher's blurb regarding the book...

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Duffy, an incredible never-before-seen visual record to the photographic genius that was Brian Duffy, featuring Duffy?s own words and an introduction by Philippe Garner is available from all good bookstores and Amazon from mid-June, published by the ACC Publishing Group (RRP £45.00).

*** A limited edition containing a rare print from the David Bowie Aladdin Sane cover shoot is priced at £250.00 ***

ISBN: 9781851496570
Publisher: ACC Editions
Territory: World excluding Belgium and The Netherlands
Size: 300 mm x 240 mm
Pages: 208
Illustrations: 48 colour, 160 b&w

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

We can exclusively reveal that the print accompanying the limited edition is of the image on the left in the montage above, and that's the book cover on the right. (The one on Amazon is incorrect)

David Bowie is well represented in the book with five full pages of mono Scary Monsters outtakes, and two full-page colour plates from The Lodger and Aladdin Sane cover sessions...by far and away the most featured artist in the book.

One of the great things that has come to light with the recent publication of many of Duffy's Bowie shots is the detail that had gone previously unnoticed.

For example...and don't pretend you already noticed it...if you look closely at the Aladdin Sane flash on the left in the montage above, it's not quite right on the left hand side just under the eye. This is true of all the outtakes from the session.

It only lines up properly for the final cover artwork, above right, where it has been widened and lined up correctly. Whether this detail was adjusted during the session (which I doubt) or afterwards by Philip Castle (most likely) I don't know for sure.

Having said that, it's not likely that just the one good frame would have been taken right at the end of the session with the flash correctly aligned, so my money is on post-session Castle trickery for sure...and what a good job he did too!

For me, the other intriguing detail is in the Lodger cover outtake in the book, (final cover and outtake pictured above), particularly in David's face and the shirt he is wearing.

David's decision to go with a Polaroid from the session for the final cover artwork meant that most of the detail was blown out, giving the cover what was an intentionally poorly-reproduced, rougher and more urgent feel with the immediacy of a snap or indeed a Polaroid.

I guess it was meant to look voyeuristic to some degree and the technical accuracy of the high quality images was perhaps considered too staged. It was also more in keeping with the quality of the various images printed within the gatefold sleeve.

Despite the valid reasons there may have been to go with the Polaroid, I have to say as a portrait of David Bowie I prefer the version printed in the Duffy book. There's actually a pattern on David's shirt and the detail in the unflatteringly twisted facial features is beautifully surreal.

It was a brave sleeve to produce, even more so when one considers the beautiful portraits that had adorned previous Bowie sleeves. It was also a sleeve whose orientation confused people...and how Bowie is that?

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Here's the blurb regarding aforementioned exhibition at the Idea Generation Gallery in July...

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

We're proud to present the first ever full retrospective of Brian Duffy - a man who changed the face of British photography.

The first ever full-career retrospective of the legendary British photographer opens to the public on July 8th 2011, coinciding with the publication of Duffy ? the first and only book of the photographer's work.

Duffy infamously quit photography in 1979 when, at the height of his career, he took the majority of his photographic work into the back garden and set it on fire. Featuring more than 160 images painstakingly rediscovered by Duffy?s son after years of searching through archives and publications around the world, this exhibition has truly risen from the ashes.

Exhibition Details:

Dates: 8th July ? 28th August 2011
Address:
Idea Generation Gallery
11 Chance Street
London E2 7JB
Tube: Liverpool Street or Old Street
Price: Free
Opening Hours:
Monday to Friday: 12pm - 6pm
Saturday & Sunday: 12pm ? 5pm
First Thursdays: Open to 8pm

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

If you can get along to the exhibition it really is worth making the effort, there will be some pretty impressive and large scale Bowie prints from what I've been told. Both editions of the book will also be available to purchase from the gallery.

Finally, I'll tantalise you with the information that there is another picture of interest to the Bowie fan in the book. It's a shot from 1974 of a headless William Burroughs and a headless David Bowie, wherein Burroughs has a photographic portrait of himself (taken by Duffy in 1960), tucked under his arm.

I'm afraid the mental images that description must have conjured for those of you that haven't seen the photograph, can only lead to a feeling of disappointed perceptual expectation when you finally do view it.

categories: News
Saturday 06.18.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Life On Mars Revisited More Details From Paris

The wall-to-wall is calling...

We told you about the Paris premiere of film director Barney Clay's latest work, Life On Mars Revisited, last week. (06.10.2011 NEWS: LIFE ON MARS REVISITED INSTALLATION PREMIERS IN PARIS)

As we explained in aforementioned story, Life On Mars Revisited is presented across four screens simultaneously. However, we didn't realise then that the four walls were all the walls of a single room and that this remixed version of the track is played in quadraphonic sound too.

This makes David Bowie's request that the piece only be shown in galleries and museums more understandable now as it couldn't be presented in any normal setting anyway.

It also means that anyone experiencing Life On Mars Revisited is unlikely to get the same experience twice, unless they either stay motionless or have eyes in the back of their head!

Here's some stuff from the information sheet available at the presentation...

For the non-French reading among you, that information loosely translates into English thus...

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Life On Mars Revisited is a transfer from analogue to digital, altered and excreted by the emptiness of fame, adulation and self-destruction, culminating in rebirth.

Production by Captain Blyth
Music remixed by Tristan Bechet
Post production by The Mill

Quadraphonic sound mixed by Peter Buccellato at the Sound Lounge

Equipment supplied by Flame

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I'll leave you with some French types looking a bit existentialist, while getting some Bowie projected all over their visages.

categories: News
Thursday 06.16.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Source Code Bds And Dvds Due In July And August

I Want to Live, Live, Live, Live...

North America get their BD (Blu-ray Disc) and DVD release of Duncan Jones' Source Code next month, on July 26.

The rest of us have to wait until the following month, August 15, but we do get the Double Play, 3D cover edition.

The Double Play edition means that the single disc contains the film in both DVD and BD formats...which is a jolly good idea if you ask me and I hope it catches on.

You all know the synopsis by now, (if you don't you're probably not interested) so I'll leave you with the special features...

~ Audio commentary with Jake Gyllenhaal, director Duncan Jones and writer Ben Ripley
~ Cast and crew insights
~ Focal points
~ Expert Intel ? The Science Behind Source Code
~ Access Source Code: Trivia track

categories: News
Thursday 06.16.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Studio Engineer Pockets £8,750 For Evening's Work

It's all I ever wanted...

That headline will make sense once you read the lot description that accompanied two pages of handwritten, in-progress Bowie lyrics for Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing (Reprise).

The two fascinating documents fetched £8,750 GBP (Approx. $14,350 USD) at a Christie's Rock and Pop Memorabilia auction in London on Tuesday (June 14th). Here's that lot description...

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Lot Notes

The medley of 'Sweet Thing', 'Candidate' and 'Sweet Thing (reprise)' was the centrepiece of Bowie's 1974 album, Diamond Dogs, and it remains one of his most highly regarded recordings, by critics, fans and the singer himself. The two sheets of handwritten lyrics were used during the recording sessions for the medley at Olympic Studios in Barnes, South-West London during the early weeks of 1974.

On this album, Bowie was experimenting for the first time with the use of the 'cut-up' writing technique made famous by the American author William S. Burroughs, in which passages of prose or orthodox lyrics were literally cut up by the artist and then reassembled. Bowie created the lyrics of this medley using a mixture of 'cut-up' and phrases taken from the notebooks which he carried with him, containing lines or combinations of words that he was keen to use in his work. As these manuscript pages demonstrate, he would then piece together a set of lyrics from these various sources, before making amendments during the recording session.

One sheet (beginning "it's safe in the city") contains the lyrics - without the chorus - for both 'Sweet Thing' and 'Sweet Thing (reprise)', the latter being added in felt-tip pen at the bottom of the sheet. The other (beginning "It's a street") is a draft of 'Candidate', with some sections marked to be moved around, and others replaced. Most notably, the four first lines of this draft (two of which Bowie had already crossed through) were completely rewritten when he recorded the song.

These manuscripts provide a rare insight into Bowie's creative methods at a key moment in his career, when he had abandoned his Ziggy Stardust character and was about to move to America. In particular, it is fascinating to see that he appears to have added the most personal and revealing lines of the song, which formed the climax of the medley, as a spontaneous decision - in keeping with the almost intuitive way in which he created his material during this period.

The lyric pages were acquired by Producer Jon Astley, while he was working as a sound engineer at Olympic Studios in January 1974 on the sessions for Sweet Thing and Candidate. He asked Bowie if he could keep the discarded lyric sheets, which he agreed to in a trade for Astley ...to stay behind that evening to engineer Lulu singing The Man Who Sold The World, which he happily obliged to do.

Christie's are grateful to Peter Doggett for his assistance with this catalogue entry.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I have to say, as good a wage as that is for an evening of engineering Lulu, I'm surprised the lot didn't go for even more. Particularly when one considers that a single sheet of handwritten lyrics for The Jean Genie fetched £9,375 GBP (Approx. $13,809 USD) just under a year ago at the same auction house.

The Jean Genie lyrics (above) weren't even a work-in-progress and there was just the one sheet. I personally find the Sweet Thing sheets far more desirable...though it's completely academic as I have the funds for neither!

categories: News
Wednesday 06.15.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

David Bowie's Ten Best Albums - Mojo Readers Decide

Ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five...

As mentioned back in April (04.19.2011 NEWS: MOJO WANTS YOU TO HELP SELECT DAVID BOWIE's BEST ALBUMS), the folks at MOJO magazine have David Bowie as the subject of July's HOW TO BUY feature and perhaps you even had a hand in choosing the selections that made the grade.

As I'm sure you'll agree, it's not easy to pick a Bowie top ten without rejecting a crucial release. And as tasteful a selection as the above is, I can't help thinking that ten Bowie albums that weren't selected would be better than ten from most artists' back catalogue.

How about these for example? Space Oddity, Young Americans, Lodger, Let's Dance, Tin Machine, The Buddha of Suburbia, 1. Outside, Earthling, 'hours...', Reality?

Either way, the ten albums selected in MOJO truly are an unbeatable canon of work the consistency of which I can't imagine we'll ever witness again.

I'll leave you with Mark Paytress' lovely introduction to the piece...

Always a class act indeed.

categories: News
Tuesday 06.14.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Changes Are Afoot At Bowienet

Feels like something's gonna happen this year...

Dear BowieNet members and all David Bowie fans,

At some point during the coming autumn/fall, BowieNet will be shedding a few leaves to make way for a new DavidBowie.com with a new look and feel to the entire site.

Right now we can't tell you much more than that, but please note we will not be accepting any new memberships or membership renewals for the time being.

Don't panic though, you can continue to use BowieNet now exactly as you have been doing and you will get plenty of notice before any updates regarding these ch, ch, ch, ch, changes...

categories: News
Saturday 06.11.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

The Michael Clark Company Performs Th At Tate Modern

Drive-in Saturday*...

Strictly speaking it's Sunday here in the UK as I write this, but it's still Saturday night to the less pedantic.

Just back from Michael Clark's presentation of th in the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern and still buzzing from the experience.

Some folk seemed a little puzzled by the title of th... I could be wrong, but I'm guessing it stands for Turbine Hall.

We first told you about this one back in August of last year (08.24.2010 NEWS: CLARK USING BOWIE TUNE FOR MASS DANCE AT TATE MODERN), and again in March of this. (03.09.2011 NEWS: CLARK IN SCOTLAND & GERMANY PLUS TATE UPDATE)

In those news stories we weren't sure if Michael would be using anything more than It's No Game (Part 1). However, in the event the music was predominantly Bowie's with six of the eleven pieces utilising Bowie tunes.

Here's the running order for those that can't make out the details on the sheet above...

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Programme

Part 1

The Heavy - Relaxed Muscle
Maggot Brain - Funkadelic
Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing (reprise) - David Bowie

Part 2

Beatmaster - Relaxed Muscle
Wickerman - Pulp
It's No Game (Part 1) - David Bowie
Hall Of Mirrors - Kraftwerk
"Heroes" - David Bowie
Future Legend/Chant Of The Ever-Circling Skeletal Family - David Bowie
Aladdin Sane - David Bowie
The Jean Genie - David Bowie

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

As you know, this presentation differed from come, been and gone mainly due to the scale of the cathedral-like Turbine Hall where it was performed, as opposed to the more modest confines of The Barbican, which was the London home of come, been and gone.

Clark got around the problem of filling such a vast space by utilising 48 volunteer members of the public as 'untrained' dancers.

Before I got moved on, I was alone in experiencing a balcony view for the first piece. I enjoyed the Busby Berkeley effect of the aerial view for one delightful moment.

The volunteers, dressed in simple black toga-like garments, employed the beauty of repetition to great effect as they moved as one in stark white light.

The only problem I had with the 'untrained' dancers was that some didn't seem as committed as others, and when, on occasion, one was out of time, it spoilt the overall effect as your eye would go immediately to the transgressor.

One lovely moment was when a group of the untrained were dancing in what I remember to be various different styles during that brilliant weird bit of instrumental at the end of Sweet Thing (reprise). The overall effect was like a scene from a mutant disco and I had a strong urge to join in.

The contrast between the volunteers and Clark's own brilliant troupe was never more obvious than when they shared the stage. Clark's dancers seemed god-like, gigantic, brightly-coloured, preening birds-of-paradise among the Epsilons.

I'm bound to say it, but it's true nevertheless, the Bowie sections did seem to be a bit more special than the others in a similar way to the contrast between the volunteers and Clark's dancers. Different class.

The final group of four pieces were pretty much as they were in come, been and gone with some tweaks here and there. In the "Heroes" piece the Bowie video seemed to play for a longer period before Clark took to the stage in what looked like a silk martial arts costume from where I was...though it probably wasn't.

His table prop had changed from the Barbican performances from some kind of high chair/baby safety seat to a black three-legged affair with a mirrored top. As before he spent the duration seemingly trying to both escape from and become part of the table, while his own dancers occupied another part of the floor in their little black leather jackets in homage to the "Heroes"video playing on a big screen at the other end of the hall.

As with come, been and gone the evening ended with The Jean Genie which really is a stunning piece.

Anyway, I'll leave you with links to several online reviews from the last few days by people who know how to talk about dance...

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Independent - Laura McLean-Ferris - June 8

Financial Times - Clement Crisp - June 9

The Guardian - Judith Mackrell - June 9

Londonist - Lindsey Clarke - June 9

Evening Standard - Sarah Frater - June 9

The Telegraph - Sarah Crompton - June 9

The Independent - Zoe Anderson - June 10

Pink Paper - Jane Czyzselska - June 10

The Express - Neil Norman - June 10

The Observer - Luke Jennings - June 12

The Independent - Jenny Gilbert - June 12

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Stay tuned for details of more performances of come, been and gone shortly.

*Well, I Did.

categories: News
Friday 06.10.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Life On Mars Revisited Installation Premiers In Paris

Hooked to the silver screens...

Film director Barney Clay premiered his latest work, Life On Mars Revisited, at a presentation by The Creators Projectat la Gaîté lyrique in Paris.yesterday.

Barney has been working closely with the director of the film, photographer Mick Rock, and post-production house, The Mill NY.

The work utilises previously unseen footage from the original Life On Mars? shoot to create a modern reworking of the video.

Life On Mars Revisited is presented across four screens simultaneously and though it starts and ends with the classic footage we all know and love, it goes on a rather different journey for the rest of the film.

I spoke to Mick yesterday and first reports back from Paris suggest that the film received the best reception of the installations during The Creators Project event in the French capital.

However, it's unlikely that many of us will get to see the work anytime soon as David Bowie has apparently requested that the piece only be shown in galleries and museums.

The Creators Project were honoured to premiere the final film and sound installation during the Paris event (which runs from June 9-11), with showings each day.

There are plans to show the work outside of Europe and we'll give you details of further screenings as we get them.

Meanwhile, check out this page over at The Creators Project to find out more about the working process behind Life On Mars Revisited and watch a video interview with the impossibly cool Barney Clay while you're there.

categories: News
Thursday 06.09.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Rock For Pussy In Minneapolis Friday Night

Like some cat from Minneapolis...

The annual Rock For Pussy Bowie tribute event is upon us. Here's the blurb...

89.3 THE CURRENT presents REBEL, REBEL - ROCK FOR PUSSY VIII A Tribute to David Bowie on Friday 10th June at First Avenue's Mainroom in Minneapolis, USA.

Proceeds benefit Feline Rescue

Featuring John Eller, Ciaran Daly, Liám Pádraig Watkins, Chris Perricelli, Chris Pavlich, Reed Wilkerson, Jim Walsh, Venus DeMars, Sam Keenan, Lori Barbero, Laurie Lindeen, Matt Coffee, David Campbell, David J Russ, Janey Winterbauer, Christian Erickson, Orion Treon, Michelle Massey, Chris Koza, Dan Israel, Adam Levy and more

Venue: First Avenue
Location: 701 First Avenue North, Minneapolis, MN 55403-1327, USA.
Phone: 612-332-1775.

More details and information can be found by clicking on the CHANGESONEPUSSY poster above.

categories: News
Wednesday 06.08.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Sukita Checks Speed Of Life Proofs At Genesis

Like some cat from Japan...

Those of you that subscribe to Genesis Publications' newsletter (and why wouldn't you), will be aware of a recent communication within which it was stated that the forthcoming SPEED OF LIFE: BOWIE BY SUKITA book by David Bowie and Masayoshi Sukita, was "coming along very nicely".

Now those lovely chaps at Genesis have been in touch with us here at BowieNet with the above visual evidence of progress and a few encouraging words too...

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Masayoshi Sukita recently visited the Genesis publishing house to develop work on the forthcoming limited edition 'Speed of Life' - a new publishing collaboration with Sukita and David Bowie. Mr. Sukita reviewed the photo sequence that he and David Bowie have created so far. Small changes were made to the running order and various anecdotes and details added to the book's captions.

'Speed of Life' by David Bowie & Masayoshi Sukita is a forthcoming book by Genesis Publications and readers interested in registering their interest in this co-signed limited edition should please visit www.genesis-publications.com for further details and updates.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

If you haven't already seen it (03.05.2011 NEWS: GENESIS PUBLICATIONS PRESENTS SUKITA'S BOWIE PHOTOGRAPHS), check out our previous news story for a couple of other content teasers from this fine volume.

categories: News
Tuesday 06.07.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Andy Kent Bowie 76 Gallery At Rockpaperphoto

I'm happy, hope you're happy too...

While we're all still in Thin White Duke mode with the current S2S/Golden Years/TMWFTE thirty five year celebrations (of which, more to come), I think you'll appreciate a gallery of ten photographs and accompanying text by Andrew Kent over at RockPaperPhoto.

I'm sure you're all aware that Mr Kent was responsible for many of the very best Bowie shots from the period, not least of all the live images contained within the S2S deluxe package.

But he also spent a short time travelling in Europe with DB, Iggy and Coco as reflected in these words related to the above picture...

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

David Bowie, Moscow 1976

David shows his pleasure at finally having arrived in Moscow after a long train trip from Switzerland in the spring of ?76.

En route, David and fellow travellers Jimmy Osterberg (aka Iggy Pop) and photographer Andrew Kent were stopped at the Polish-Russian border, pulled off the train and interrogated by an albino GGB border guard, Andrew recalls. ?We were not expecting you,? the man announced ominously. Apparently, embassy contacts had failed to put their names on a transit list. The only harm done, says Andrew: ?They confiscated a copy I had of Playboy.?

Arriving in Moscow days later, the group again failed to meet up with an assigned contact. While Andrew fretted, David remained calm. ?He was a confident, experienced traveller. We were on our own but David knew how to make his way around. When he gave me the thumbs up, I knew that everything was going to be fine.?

After a quick stop at the Aeroflot head office for assistance, the group arrived at their hotel. ?We got into two separate taxis, they had all the passports in one taxi and I was in another with the baggage. It was the most alone I ever felt in my life. But eventually we got to our hotel, and then spent the rest of the day seeing Moscow.?

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Andrew considers his ?76 European road trip with David, culminating with the shots in Paris, as a highlight of his career. ?This was the best work I?ve ever done for anybody, before or after.?

Well, despite photographing many different performers, Andrew's comment doesn't surprise me...after all, Bowie was the best subject he was ever going to photograph. And I bet there are a lot of photographers that agree with that statement. I know I do!

categories: News
Monday 06.06.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Golden Years Kcrw Ep And Remix App Available Now

Last night I loved you, opening apps and playing 12-string...

Been up all night engrossed in the EMI/iKlax Golden Years iPhone application that went live at midnight here in the UK.

It's great to be able to deconstruct a Bowie classic such as Golden Years via the eight stems (bounced down from the original 16 tracks), to create something quite different to the original.

If you already have the Space Oddity remix app, you'll know just how much fun and how addictive these things are...and all for just £1.19.

Anyway, rather than waffle on about just how good this is, why not find out for yourself via the EMI Bowie catalogue page here.

Also, check out our news item and the press release from the beginning of April (04.02.2011 NEWS: GOLDEN YEARS KCRW EP AND REMIX APP DUE IN JUNE + 04.02.2011 PRESS RELEASE: DAVID BOWIE ?GOLDEN YEARS? APP & E.P. RELEASES) to find out more about the App, and the Golden Years David Bowie Vs KCRW EP 12", CD and download...all of which are available now.

Stay tuned for your chance to win copies of both the 12" and CD shortly.

categories: News
Sunday 06.05.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Happy 19th Anniversary To David And Iman

And she was awful nice, Really quite paradise...

Thirty nine years ago today David Bowie released the album that changed his life forever: The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and The Spiders From Mars.

Exactly twenty years later to the day, on June 6th 1992, his life changed again when he married his very own Lady Stardust.**

Today is the nineteenth anniversary of David and Iman's official church wedding at Saint James Episcopal Church, in Florence, Italy.

The couple are pictured above at their most recent public appearance together on May 28th at the DKMS 5th Annual Gala at Cipriani Wall Street in New York City. (04.28.2011 NEWS: DAVID AND IMAN ATTEND DKMS FIFTH ANNUAL GALA)

Congratulations and our very best wishes to David and Iman from everybody here at BowieNet.

And so, a year from today? Well, they do say things come in threes.***

** Obviously I was just trying to be clever here. The Iman/Lady Stardust comparison doesn't bear scrutiny!

*** Another attempt at being a smart arse. Please do not read anything in to this, I know of nothing planned for that date aside from a couple of big celebrations for Ziggy and the couple above.

categories: News
Saturday 06.04.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Tony Visconti Comments On 'absurd' Kaiser Chief Claims

Man I need TV when I've got tall tales...

Following the publication of a piece on the Kaiser Chiefs' new album in the News Of The World, (clipping above) Tony Visconti has decided to set the record straight on claims made by the band's songwriting drummer, Nick Hodgson, regarding the song Man On Mars.

I'll leave you with TV's response...

"I have never asked David Bowie to write lyrics for the Kaiser Chiefs. I was hired for the production job because of Nick's obsession with Bowie and T. Rex, and I freely shared some of my production "secrets" with them. But, that did not include getting Bowie to write lyrics for them. That is absurd."

categories: News
Friday 06.03.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Life Begins For Duncan Jones - Happy 40th From Bowienet

Scanning life through the picture window...

Many happy returns of the day to film director Duncan Jones who is pictured above at the tender age of twenty nine filming a rock concert at the Roseland Ballroom, NYC, in June 2000.

Before he became the internationally-renowned director we know him as, he would occasionally do 'favour' jobs to keep his hand in while he learned his trade.

This particular concert was a performance by his father, the Glam Rock singer, David Bowie, who is worth checking out if you've not stumbled upon him. Seems to be an abundance of talent in this particular family.

Anyway, hope you're having a great day, Duncan...much love from everybody here at BowieNet and here's to your continued success in that there movie business.

CHEEKY FOOTNOTE: Could I also take this opportunity to abuse my position and wish my own daughter, Holly, a wonderful 21st birthday today!

categories: News
Sunday 05.29.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Legacy.com Celebrates The Life Of Mick Ronson

What can I do? Standing next to you...

On what would have been his 65th birthday, legacy.com takes a brief look back on the life and career of Mick Ronson.

You can read the full thing and watch a couple of videos here, but here's an excerpt in the shape of a comment from DB which he made on The Arsenio Hall Show shortly after Mick?s death

?The band ? The Spiders From Mars ? that was the whole situation that sort of got me the kind of fame I had in the early '70s. The lead guitarist for that band was Mick Ronson and unfortunately, tragically, he succumbed to cancer 3 or 4 days ago... and in his passing I want to say that of all the early '70s guitar players Mick was probably one of the most influential and profound and I miss him a lot.?

Meanwhile, if you're in Mick's hometown of Hull on June 4th, you may want to attend the second annual Mick Ronson Legacy charity event. Full details and musical acts booked for the day can be viewed here.

categories: News
Wednesday 05.25.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Tmwstw In Gibson's Top 20 Best Cover Versions

I gazed a gazely stare at all the millions here...

Following on from Sorrow's appearance in this same poll a few days ago, (05.23.2011 NEWS: SORROW IN GIBSON'S TOP 50 BEST COVER VERSIONS) Gibson.com has now placed Nirvana's version of The Man Who Sold the World at #14 in their poll of the fifty best cover versions of all time. Here's what they said about the recording...

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Kurt Cobain?s affection for this title track from David Bowie?s 1970 album was palpable when Nirvana performed it during the band?s MTV Unplugged appearance.

In Nirvana?s hands, the song took on a warmer hue than the Bowie original, although the band was careful to preserve the mystery at the heart of the song.

Cobain?s faithful rendering of the haunting riff ? which had originally been played by the great Mick Ronson ? was transcendent. ? Russell Hall

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Under normal circumstances I guess that would be quite impressive. However, seeing as how SPIN magazine had the very same track at #1 in an identical poll a couple of years back, (10.03.2009 NEWS: NIRVANA'S TMWSTW VOTED BEST COVER VERSION OF ALL TIME) it kind of takes the shine off this achievement a little.

Check out that original SPIN news item for an amusing quotation from DB regarding his own mid-nineties live performance of the song.

On a related note, Nirvana;s original drummer, Chad Channing, reckons he turned Kurt on to The Man Who Sold The World in the first place...here's a bit from a piece by Greg Prato over on ugo.com, on what the group listened to on the tour bus during their Bleach tour of 1989...

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"There was the one David Bowie record, The Man Who Sold the World, which I bought this copy of the record, because it had a little poster in it. I think in a music store in Boston. And I bought some blank tapes - we were at somebody's house, and I put the record on tape, and put that in the player and started playing that."

"Those guys were like, "Whoa! That's a trip, what's this? Well, I think Krist [Novoselic] heard it before...I know Kurt [Cobain] hadn't though, because he asked me who it was, and I said, 'This is David Bowie'"

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You can read the full thing here.

categories: News
Wednesday 05.25.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Listen To Ny Premiere Of Glass' Heroes Symphony Online

We performed Heroes, just for two days...

For those of you that didn't manage to get along to the live New York premiere of Philip Glass' "Heroes" Symphony on May 20/21, (11.28.2010 NEWS: NY PREMIER OF PHILIP GLASS' HEROES SYMPHONY) you may be pleased to learn that you can hear the whole thing online courtesy of NPR.

The image above is of Brad Lubman conducting the Wordless Music Orchestra, and Signal Ensemble as they performed the piece on the first night (May 20), at New York's Society for Ethical Culture.

You can listen to the performance here, but you should allow yourself a little under fifty minutes if you want to hear the entire "Heroes" Symphony.

In fact, if you also want to listen to the other pieces by Gyorgy Ligeti and Jonny Greenwood, you need to set aside an hour and thirty eight minutes.

categories: News
Tuesday 05.24.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Emi Catalogue Marketing Campaign Wins Mw Award...again!

Drink, drink, drain your glass, raise your glass high...

Congratulations are due to David Bowie and EMI and everybody involved in the Station To Station marketing campaign last year...with particular thanks to Jo Brooks and Nigel Reeve at EMI who have scooped the 2011 Music Week Catalogue Marketing Campaign Of The Year Award at a ceremony at the Roundhouse in London.

Despite my mild cynicism in the shortlist announcement news item, (04.18.2011 NEWS: S2S SHORTLISTED IN MUSIC WEEK AWARDS NOMINATIONS) when I suggested that perhaps winning the same award several years earlier might reduce the chances of winning this year's award, I was very happy to have been proved wrong and glad to see that great work triumphs.

I think most of you will agree that the deluxe box version of Station To Station set the bar for how these repackages should be handled. And who could argue that the 3 disc special box version wasn't incredible value for money too.

Here's to future Bowie catalogue releases receiving the same loving treatment and attention to detail.

categories: News
Monday 05.23.11
Posted by Mark Adams
 
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