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Dancing Out In Space - The Words

 

“Dancing Out In Space”

 

Today’s lyrics are track number ten from The Next Day, Dancing Out In Space.

As you’ve no doubt noticed by now, we’ve illustrated each set of words with vaguely connected images from the upcoming David Bowie is Exhibition at The V&A. 

Today is a detail from the 1979 jumpsuit designed by Willie Brown with a graphic pattern inspired by Le Corbusier.

The outfit was worn by Bowie for his 'future nostalgic' performance of Space Oddity in December 1979 on NBC's Dick Clark’s Salute to the Seventies.

Stills from the performance were used for various picture sleeve releases for Alabama Song/Space Oddity in February 1980.

 

Dancing Out In Space
 
Cutting through the water
Hands upon the ghost
To the city of solid iron
Through the kingdom of the ghost
Send your friend away now
Let him sail back home tonight
 
Something like religion
Dancing face to face
Something like a drowning
Dancing out in space
 
No-one here can see you
Dancing face to face
No-one here can beat you
Dancing out in space
 
Silent as Georges Rodenbach
Mist and silhouette
Girl, you move like water
You’ve got stars upon your head
You’ve got my name and number
You’ve got to take the floor
 
Something like religion
Dancing face to face
Something like a drowning
Dancing out in space
 
No-one here can see you
Dancing face to face
No-one here can beat you
Dancing out in space
 
Dancing face to face
Dancing out in space
 
Dancing face to face
Dancing out in space
 
Dancing face to face
Dancing out in space
categories: News
Tuesday 03.12.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

TND #1 in UK midweeks and #1 on North American iTunes

"Look out you rock 'n rollers"

Released today in America and Canada, among other places, The Next Day is straight in at #1 on the iTunes chart this morning.

Bowie is also on course for his first #1 album in nearly 20 years in the UK, according to this morning’s Official Charts Company sales data.

If The Next Day can maintain its lead going into the weekend, it will be Bowie’s ninth Number 1 album in the UK, his first since Black Tie White Noise, which topped the Official Albums Chart in April 1993.

The Next Day has also clocked up the biggest first day sale of any album this year (56,000 copies) and is currently outselling its closest competitor, Bon Jovi’s What About Now (Number 2) by nearly three to one.

Official Charts Company Managing Director, Martin Talbot, had this to say this morning:

Bowie is officially back! The Next Day is a true gift for all Bowie aficionados. It already sounds like a classic Bowie album – and its popularity this week is already showing that the great British public have taken it to their hearts.

Read more on this story on the Official Charts Company page. 

#TheNextDay #DavidBowie

categories: News
Monday 03.11.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Boss Of Me - The Words

“I look to the stars” 

And you though we posted a young picture of David Jones yesterday. In this detail from a contact sheet of 48 different images, the baby Bowie is pictured at just ten months old.

The wee nipper is undeniably looking to the stars in the selected frames (well, 1947 was the year of the Roswell incident), and that’s our tenuous link to today’s lyric, Boss Of Me, track number nine from The Next Day.

As we’ve suggested previously, we will endeavour to provide a daily marriage of lyrics from The Next Day to images from the upcoming David Bowie is Exhibition at The V&A. 

 

 

Boss Of Me  (David Bowie/Gerry Leonard)
 
Tell me when you’re sad
I wanna make it cool again
I know you’re feeling bad
Tell me when you’re cool again
 
Who’d have ever thought of it
Who’d have ever dreamed
That a small town girl like you
Would be the boss of me
 
We fly through the night
The tears on your lips
Life has your mind and soul
It spins on your hips
 
Who’d have ever thought of it
Who’d have ever dreamed
 
Who’d have ever thought of it
Who’d have ever dreamed
That a small town girl like you
Would be the boss of me
Would be the boss of me
Would be the boss of me
 
You look at me and you weep
For the free blue sky
I look to the stars
As they flicker and float in your eyes
And under these wings of steel
The small town dies
 
Who’d have ever thought of it
Who’d have ever dreamed
 
Who’d have ever thought of it
Who’d have ever dreamed
That a small town girl like you
Would be the boss of me
 
Who’d have ever thought of it
Who’d have ever dreamed
That a small town girl like you
Would be the boss of me
Would be the boss of me
Would be the boss of me
categories: News
Sunday 03.10.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

The Next Day at #1 in 40 countries on iTunes

"What In The World?"

The Next Day has gone straight to the top of 40 different countries’ iTunes charts and it’s also Top 10 on iTunes in another 10 countries.

categories: News
Sunday 03.10.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Limited edition signed Bowie fine art print available now

 

"Hang him on my wall..."
 
St Pauls Gallery in the UK is proud to add another David Bowie print to their collection of fine art poster prints.
 
We can exclusively reveal that their latest print is the David Bowie ‘The Archer’ Fine Art Poster Print hand-signed by David Bowie and photographer John Robert Rowlands. (Pictured)
 
 This iconic image of David Bowie as The Thin White Duke was taken by renowned Rock photographer, John Rowlands, on February 26th, 1976, at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto, Canada.
 
 Having seen the previous evening's show on the 1976 Station To Station / Isolar Tour, Rowlands was primed to capture the image of Bowie as ‘The Archer’ while the singer was preparing to ‘fire’ his imaginary bow and arrow.
 
 The pose was used as a signal for Bowie’s lighting engineer to kill the lights. The picture was taken moments before the lights were killed.
 
 Rowlands took the shot about 30 feet away from the stage and he credits his Hasselblad camera for producing an image that is striking in its sharp tonal range of whites, blacks and greys.
 
 This Fine Art Print was produced from the original negative and has been re-created in 3 sizes (small, medium and large). Each size being an edition of 100 prints worldwide.
 
 Each of the prints is numbered and hand-signed in pencil by both David Bowie and John Rowlands, with every print also being accompanied by a certificate of authenticity. (COA)
 
 Rowlands travelled to the UK in Feb 2013 to sign the prints at St Pauls Gallery in Birmingham. They were then dispatched to David Bowie in New York to sign.
 
 ‘The Archer’ is among Bowie’s favourite photographs and has been adopted as the main promotional image for the V&A's ‘David Bowie is’ Exhibition in London, March through August, 2013.
 
‘The Archer’ is available here now.
 
FOOTNOTE: If you use this code: IGALO209 on checkout you will get free postage on any order from the St Pauls Gallery range of Bowie prints.
 
FOOTNOTE 2: Obviously the signatures in this image are not to scale!
 
categories: News
Saturday 03.09.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Full-page TND advert in today’s Observer

“This time tomorrow I'll know what to do”

Page twelve of today’s Observer newspaper in the UK is carrying the third and final advert of Jonathan Barnbrook’s clever full-page ad campaign for The Next Day. 

Those of you of a certain age may remember the original “Heroes“ music press advert from 1977, which today’s Observer ad obviously references.  

The Next Day is released in the following countries tomorrow:

 

UK
Croatia
Denmark
France 
Greece
Hong Kong
Hungary 
Norway
Poland 
Portugal
Serbia 
South Africa
Latin America (ex-Mexico, ex-Brazil)
Asia (ex-Japan, ex-Taiwan, ex-Korea)
 
Can you hear it coming?
 
#TheNextDay
categories: News
Saturday 03.09.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

I’d Rather Be High - The Words

“I’m seventeen my looks can prove it”

Actually, the teenage David Jones is only sixteen in this picture, a promotional shot taken in 1963 during a Kon-rads’ photo session with Roy Ainsworth.

OK, so we’re on to I’d Rather Be High, track number eight from The Next Day and the story of a young man who’d prefer to be in the shoes of the teenager pictured here than the ones he’s in.

As we said yesterday, we’ve decided to try and illustrate each set of lyrics with images from the upcoming David Bowie is Exhibition at The V&A. 

 

 

I’d Rather Be High  (David Bowie)
 
Nabokov is sun-licked now
Upon the beach at Grunewald
Brilliant and naked just
The way that authors look
 
Clare and Lady Manners drink
Until the other cows go home
Gossip till their lips are bleeding
Politics and all
 
I’d rather be high
I’d rather be flying
I’d rather be dead
Or out of my head
Than training these guns on those men in the sand
I’d rather be high
 
The Thames was black, the tower dark
I flew to Cairo, find my regiment
City’s full of generals
And generals full of shit
 
I stumble to the graveyard and I
Lay down by my parents, whisper
Just remember duckies
Everybody gets got
 
I’d rather be high
I’d rather be flying
I’d rather be dead
Or out of my head
Than training these guns on those men in the sand
I’d rather be high
 
I’m seventeen my looks can prove it
I’m so afraid that I will lose it
I’d rather smoke and phone my ex
Be pleading for some teenage sex,
Yeah
 
I’d rather be high
I’d rather be flying
I’d rather be dead
Or out of my head
Than training these guns on the men in the sand
I’d rather be high
categories: News
Saturday 03.09.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

French advert for tomorrow’s TND release

“Switch on the TV we may pick him up on channel two”

There has been a pretty impressive billboard and press campaign in the run up to the release of The Next Day.

We’ve decided to post just a few of the more interesting ones over the coming days on here and on the David Bowie (Official) Facebook page. 

The one pictured here is of French origin and utilises the BBC 2 television test card.

But it’s not just any old test card, this is yer actual test card for the BBS channel two, as favoured by one Ziggy Stardust, in the song Starman.

Now that’s either close attention to detail or serendipity. You decide! (See the FB version of this story to make this one mildly more amusing.)

categories: News
Saturday 03.09.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

The Next Day at #1 in 21 countries

"And the next day, And the next"

Further congratulations are due to David Bowie for the continued success of his new album. 

The Deluxe version of The Next Day has entered the iTunes album chart at #1 in 21 countries around the globe, as you can see from the accompanying graphic.

Thanks again to everybody who has bought the album thus far, both in the digital and physical formats, couldn’t do it without your support.

categories: News
Friday 03.08.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Barbara Nessim illustration for V&A magazine

“Painting our faces”

Some of you have been asking about the beautiful V&A Magazine cover (Spring 2013 issue) that we posted a smaller version of a few days back in our magazine round up. (BOWIE WORLDWIDE PRESS BLITZ CONTINUES APACE)

The magazine was published officially today and both the cover illustration and montage on the inside of the cover are by Barbara Nessim and were specially commissioned for this edition by the V&A.

Barbara has a feature inside the mag regarding an exhibition of her own work at the V&A, but here's a bit from the Creative Review website about Barbara's cover illustrations:

The image on the first panel is a pastel drawing on paper. The brief referred to Mick Rock's 'Life on Mars' video, and asked Nessim to create an ethereal, ghostly image – something that suggests great presence and absence while also having the qualities of a transmission from another planet.

The second portrait of Bowie is a collage that depicts a contemporary Bowie (the profile photograph is taken from Jonathan Barnbrook's cover for the Bowie album 'Heathen') looking at himself through a telescope at the point at which he became a star. The quote between the images is from an essay on Bowie written for V&A Magazine by Dylan Jones.

As Creative Review points out, the wording on the inside cover is a quote taken from the essay by Dylan Jones “on the twists and turns that created the most spectacular pop musician in recent history”.

Meanwhile, Creative Review also has an excellent review with pictures of the V&A's David Bowie is book, which we can confirm is truly a thing of rare beauty and an absolute visual feast for Bowie fans everywhere.

categories: News
Friday 03.08.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Full-page TND advert in Saturday's Times

“Times, is waiting in the wings”

The Times newspaper in the UK are carrying another of Jonathan Barnbrook’s intriguing full-page adverts for The Next Day on Saturday.

It‘s possible that you can‘t make out the advert at the size reproduced here, but it‘s simply all of Bowie‘s lyrics for the 17-track deluxe version of the album. Cool eh?

categories: News
Friday 03.08.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

If You Can See Me words plus V&A footwear

“I could wear your new blue shoes”

With this track we’re half way through The Next Day and on to the words for If You Can See Me.

Though many of you have them allready, we'll continue posting more lyrics for now.

Pretty much all of Jonathan Barnbrook‘s album cover artwork has been revealed one way or another, not least of all on his blog. 

So we decided we would try and post some vaguely-relevant-to-the-lyrics images from the upcoming David Bowie is Exhibition at The V&A.  

Pictured today are the blue, blue, ’lectric blue boots that Bowie wore for Mick Rock’s Pin-Ups album cover session.

We all presumed they were shoes actually, but you can view them here for the first time in all their unhidden glory.

And so, the words.

 

 

If You Can See Me  (David Bowie)
 
If you can see me I can see you
 
I could wear your new blue shoes
I should wear your old red dress
And walk to the crossroads
So take this knife
And meet me across the river
 
Just shoots and ladders and this is the kiss
American anna fantasticalsation
From nowhere to nothing
And I go way back
 
Children swarm like thousands of bugs
Towards the lights the beacons above the hill
The stars to the West, the South, the North
And to the East
 
Now you could say I’ve got a gift of sorts
A fear of rear windows and swinging doors
A love of violence a dread of sighs
If you can see me I can see you
If you can see me I can see you
 
I have seen these bairns wave their fists at God
Swear to destroy the beasts stamping the ground
In their excitement for tomorrow
 
I could wear your new blue shoes
I should wear your old red dress
And walk to the crossroads
So take this knife
And meet me across the river
 
I will take your lands and all that lays beneath
The dust of cold flowers prison of dark ashes
I will slaughter your kind who descend from belief
I am the spirit of greed a lord of theft
I’ll burn all your books and the problems they make
If you can see me I can see you
If you can see me
categories: News
Friday 03.08.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

The Next Day straight in at #1 in 11 countries

 

"He's got something to say"

Congratulations are due to David Bowie for the incredible success of his new album on the first day of its release.

The Deluxe version of The Next Day has entered the iTunes album chart at #1 in eleven of the twelve countries it is released in today.

Only the Czech Republic has the album lower and it's top 5 there too. Here's the breakdown

 

Austria #1

Australia #1

Belgium #1

Czech Republic #5

Finland #1

Germany #1

Ireland #1

Netherlands #1

New Zealand #1

Sweden #1

Switzerland #1

Turkey #1

 

Thanks to everybody who has bought the album thus far, your support is hugely appreciated.

Here's to similar successes in the other territories the album is released in over the coming days.

categories: News
Thursday 03.07.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Barnbrook blogs plus TND advert in Today’s Guardian

“Yes, I've read the morning papers”

The Guardian newspaper in the UK is carrying a rather enigmatic full-page advertisement for The Next Day this morning.

The advert is the work of Jonathan Barnbrook, who is a pretty tasty designer in our books.

Check out his latest blog entry wherein he talks about the packaging design for the album. 

categories: News
Thursday 03.07.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

V&A feature and 5-star TND review in Time Out London

“Now you've met the London boys, Things seem good again”

The current issue of Time Out London (March 5-11 #2218), has a 3-page feature entitled: The Man Who Styled The World in celebration of the upcoming David Bowie is exhibition at the V&A. Here‘s the blurb: 

From south-east London to outer space, David Bowie is rock‘s greatest self-reinventor. As the V&A opens a blockbuster show of his outfits and art, Katie Dailey talks to the curators and picks seven ages of an icon.

Elsewhere in the mag there‘s a great 5-star review for The Next Day by Oliver Keens. Here‘s a line from it:

If there‘s one thing ‘The Next Day’ screams, it‘s that Bowie‘s one of the few artists left who can craft a chorus the way Fabergé crafts an egg.

And as for the statement made on the cover of this issue: ‘London – The greatest city in the world’ - It certainly will be for the duration of David Bowie is at the V&A.

categories: News
Wednesday 03.06.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Noel Gallagher praises Bowie's return in NME

“I hope I make it on my own”

This morning's media has picked up on Noel Gallagher's potty-mouthed praise of David Bowie for avoiding nostalgia and coming back with new material.

In an exclusive interview with NME published yesterday, Noel says that David Bowie's recent comeback “blew his mind”, adding that the way in which he came back with a brand new album shows that established acts don't always have to rely on their former glories.

The former Oasis mastermind also scuppered any thoughts of a reunion with his old band when he said: “What it proved to me is that reunions are fucking shite. ”.

Read the full thing on NME.com.  

#NoelGallagherBowie

categories: News
Wednesday 03.06.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

The return of Bowie on BBC radio 4's FrontRow tonight

“And me I'm a radio show...part 283”

Tune in to BBC Radio 4 in the UK at 7:15 this evening to listen to a half hour programme called David Bowie - the return, made for John Wilson's excellent FrontRow programme.  

Don‘t worry if you miss the live broadcast, the show will be available on the FrontRow page (from where, the following blurb) for over a year.

Tony Parsons, Miranda Sawyer and La Roux's Elly Jackson discuss David Bowie's music and influence, in the light of his new album The Next Day.

As the Victoria and Albert Museum prepares for a major David Bowie retrospective exhibition, John visits the Museum's store-rooms to see sketches, costumes and instruments, drawn from Bowie's personal archive.

John's guides are designer Jonathan Barnbrook, who is involved in the exhibition and the new album artwork, and curators Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh.

John also draws on his own archive of interviews with David Bowie, including a recording from 2002 where Bowie discusses his influences, the experience of growing older, and how writing can sometimes be a traumatic experience.

Producer Claire Bartleet.

categories: News
Wednesday 03.06.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Valentine’s Day - The words

 

“He’s got something to say...”

We‘re on to track #6 from The Next Day and so here we have the lyrics for the delightful and deliciously uplifting Valentine’s Day.

Obviously we'll be posting more lyrics but it won‘t be long before you‘ve had your own glimpses of Jonathan Barnbrook‘s complete album artwork one way or another, particularly with the album being released in the following territories tomorrow.

March 8:

Australia/New Zealand

Germany

Switzerland

Austria

Belgium

Czech Republic

Finland

Netherlands

Ireland

Sweden

Turkey Digital (physical one week later)

 

Some of you will already have your hands on a copy, including the downunders from the future, which is lucky for you as your iTunes stream will be turned off sometime around now. http://smarturl.it/DBsplash

And so, on to the matter in hand, the words to Valentine’s Day

 

Valentine’s Day  (David Bowie)

 

Valentine told me who’s to go

Feelings he’s treasured most of all

The teachers and the football star

It’s in his tiny face

It’s in his scrawny hand

Valentine told me so

He’s got something to say

It’s Valentine’s Day

 

The rhythm of the crowd

Teddy and Judy down

Valentine sees it all

He’s got something to say

It’s Valentine’s Day

 

Valentine told me how he’d feel

If all the world were under his heel

Or stumbling through the mall

It’s in his tiny face

It’s in his scrawny hand

Valentine knows it all

He’s got something to say

It’s Valentine’s Day

 

Valentine Valentine

Valentine Valentine

 

It’s in his scrawny hand

It’s in his icy heart

It’s happening today

Valentine Valentine

categories: News
Wednesday 03.06.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

6 Music Salutes David Bowie this Easter

 

BBC Radio 6 Music is celebrating the musical virtuoso that is David Bowie throughout Easter week. 

Programme specials reveal precious gems from the archive featuring concerts and interviews with Bowie, some of which have not been heard for over 30 years. And fascinating documentaries uncover more about his life and work. There will be additional complimentary programming on Radio 2. Together the networks offer a week of unmissable Bowie magic that is sure to thrill fans and enthral those yet to discover his brilliance.  

Particular focus is given to the Berlin era. Following his massive success with glam-rock alter ego Ziggy Stardust in the early 70s and in a bid to recharge his creativity, Bowie lived in the West of the city from 1976-1979. Here, the seminal album Low was created followed by Heroes and then Lodger. Bowie called the three albums collectively his ‘triptych’.  Across the week, 6 Music’s presenters pour over this productive time in Bowie’s career and give their thoughts and insights into this mythical period in Bowie’s legacy.

Further highlights include Adam Buxton giving his own unique guide to BBC Archive interviews with Bowie; Cerys Matthews gets an exclusive visit to the V&A’s Bowie exhibition before it opens; and the Live Music Hour will play David Bowie’s 1971 Paris Theatre In Concert set, which has only ever been played out in its entirety twice before and was last heard by listeners on 20 June, 1971.

And 6 Music’s presenters will be honouring Bowie in their shows. For them, his influence has been massive.

Marc Rileysaid, “It was June 15th 1972 that David Bowie changed my life. Performing Starman on a kids TV programme called Lift Off three weeks before his legendary appearance on Top of the Pops. When he announced  ‘the last show we’ll ever do’ from  the stage of the Hammersmith Odeon just about a year later I thought I’d never even get to see him in concert. Who’d have thought over nearly three decades later I’d be introducing him onto that very same stage. Bowie changed my life. It’s a simple as that.”

Freak Zone host, Stuart Maconie says, “From using a stylophone on his first hit to dabbling with drum and bass in the 90s, David Bowie has always been open to new sounds and sonic adventure. And never better than when in the 1970s, he incorporated krautrock and electronica on his Berlin masterpiece Low. Chilly and beautiful.”

Adam Buxton said, “David Bowie has done a lot of interviews in his 45 year career and I've listened to most of them. I'll be taking a journey through my favourite parts of Bowie's work thus far and putting them in the context of a few of his most insightful, charming, and ludicrous interviews.”

And bbc.co.uk/6music will be collating a unique Online Collection bringing together all the 6 Music content and more into one place so fans can immerse themselves and participate in all things Bowie.

Monday 25th to Friday 29th March on 6 Music

Marc Riley, Mon to Thurs, 7-9pm:Throughout the week, Marc has delved into his archive and revisits a series of fascinating interviews he did about Bowie in 2004 with record producer extraordinaire Tony Visconti, rock ‘n’ roll photographer Mick Rock, legendary producer Ken Scott and Bowie’s band mate Bob Soley. Marc will also be playing tracks from a Radio 1 session David Bowie recorded especially for Mark Radcliffe and Marc Riley at the BBC Maida Vale studios back in 2000.

David Bowie Star Special, Mon and Tues, 4-5am:This is a chance to hear a programme, rarely heard since it was made in 1979, in which Bowie presents some of his favourite music which ranges from The Velvet Underground to Elgar and Little Richard to The Mekons.

6 Music Breakfast with Shaun Keaveny, Friday, 7-10am:Shaun introduces Heroes as the Album of the Day, playing a track from the album Bowie made during his years in Berlin. Further tracks will be played on shows throughout the day.

Saturday 30th March on 6 Music

Weekend Breakfast (7-10am):Today and tomorrow, in a special vintage Key of Life interview, Mary Anne Hobbs revisits the 1997 interview she did with Bowie to celebrate his 50th birthday. This selection of her favourite clips feature Bowie speaking about Andy Warhol, Marc Bolan, Mick Jagger, Lou Reed, Brain Eno, the inspiration for Ziggy Stardust, and his enduring love of dance music.

Freakier Zone, 12-1am: Music journalist Marcus O’Dair joins Stuart Maconie to look beyond the makeup and the costumes to Bowie as a songwriter with a selection of suitably freaky cover versions of Bowie originals. From William Shatner’s bonkers version of Space Oddity to Leo Minor’s complete re-interpretation of Ashes to Ashes, Bowie’s classic hits are the gift that keeps on giving.

Sunday 31st March on 6 Music

The Live Music Hour, 3-4am:This is a rare chance to hear Bowie’s 1971 Paris Theatre In Concert set. It was billed as David Bowie and Friends and has only be broadcast twice in its entirety over 30 years ago - when it was recorded live by the BBC on 3rd June 1971 and repeated on the 20th June 1971. The second half of The Live Music Hour will be a selection of BBC Sessions and Concerts from across the years featuring artists performing cover versions of Bowie’s songs.

Cerys Matthews(10am-12pm):  Cerys heads down to London's Victoria and Albert Museum for a personal tour around the hotly tipped ‘David Bowie is’ exhibition accompanied by one of the key curators. The museum has been granted unprecedented access to the David Bowie Archive to curate the first international retrospective of his extraordinary career.

Bowie & Beyond: A Music Fans Guide To Berlin (12-1pm): Comedian and writer, Danny Robins explores the cultural and social forces that have shaped the city's rich musical history from Weimar times, via the Bowie years, to the techno revolution of the 90s and the current vibrant music scene. He visits Bowie’s old haunts and the legendary Hansa studios where he and Iggy Pop recorded together and inspired a creative influx of artists to the city. From those in the music industry, past and present, to those creating the current music scene, Danny builds up a picture of the influences that have shaped the city's unique soundscape and why it continues to be such an inspiring place for musicians. 

Says Danny Robbins, "It's hard to separate Bowie from Berlin and Berlin from Bowie. Each has come to define the legend of the other. So much of what has come musically since has been inspired by the albums he and Iggy made in that city, so to visit Hansa Studios where they worked felt like one of the worthwhile rock ‘n’ roll pilgrimages."

Adam Buxton on David Bowie, 4-6pm: In this special show, self-confessed Bowie nut Adam Buxton takes listeners on a journey through the weird and wonderful world of one of the UK's most colourful pop stars. Featuring rare interviews, some unheard for over 30 years, Adam hand-picks some classic BBC Bowie moments, capturing the alternative spirit of Bowie's ever-changing persona.

Freak Zone, 8-10pm: Stuart Maconie celebrates Low, the first of David Bowie’s hugely influential Berlin LPs, featuring Brian Eno’s atmospheric keyboards to the fore.

And on Tuesday 2nd and Wednesday 3rd April (12-12.30am), in Bowie's Heroes Matt Everitt looks at the writers, musicians, composers and artists who've inspired Bowie throughout his career. It features new and archive interviews from people he’s worked alongside including Dave Grohl, Frank Black, Nile Rogers, Neil Tennant, Tony Visconti, Rick Wakeman, Brian Eno, Moby and Billy Corgan, plus musicians who cite him as a life-changing influence such as Noel Gallagher, Sinead O’Connor and Wayne Coyne.

BBC Radio 2 will also have a number of programmes celebrating the career of the legend that is David Bowie. On Good Friday, Bowie @ The BBC (10pm-midnight) will look back at some of the Bowie best bits – using audio from the BBC’s vast archive.

On Easter Monday, in Mick Ronson – The Man With the Golden Guitar (10-11pm) Gary Kemp marks the 20th anniversary of the death of his guitar hero Mick Ronson with a celebration of his career. With previously unheard archive of Mick and David Bowie, plus fellow Mick Ronson fans, Tony Visconti, Ian Hunter, Lou Reed, John Mellencamp, Chrissie Hynde and the men Mick played with in The Spider From Mars - Trevor Bolder and Woody Woodmansey, Gary explains why Mick is such an important figure in British rock n roll. He highlights the important contribution Mick made to some of the most acclaimed albums in rock history and why his talent deserves to be celebrated. It was through his work with Bowie that Mick came to the attention of and subsequently worked with some of the biggest names in rock.

There will also be a special episode of Sounds of the 70s (3-5pm) on Sunday 31st March. Presenter Johnnie Walker will reflect on Bowie as a style and music icon, and the personification of the 1970s in popular culture. He visits the new ‘David Bowie is’ exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. Plus Johnnie spins the hits and some of his more obscure favourite Bowie tracks, interweaved with archive of Bowie and his friends and collaborators from the 1970's, Mick Ronson, Iggy Pop and Tony Visconti and those he influenced, including Boy George, Gary Numan and Janis Ian. On Saturday 30th March, Pick of the Pops (1-3pm), presented by Tony Blackburn will look at the chart from 29th March, 1986 throwing a Bowie track into the mix.

And in May this year, for the first time on British television, BBC Two will broadcast a feature length profile of the legendary artist. David Bowie - Five Years (working title) will focus on five critical years of his career - 1971, 1975, 1977, 1980 and 1983 before bringing the legend up to date with his latest album.

#6MBowie

categories: News
Wednesday 03.06.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Love Is Lost – The Words

“Oh, what have you done?”

Continuing our posting of the lyrics for The Next Day, here are the words for Love Is Lost.

Stay tuned for more lyrics and further glimpses of Jonathan Barnbrook‘s album artwork, both here on DavidBowie.com and on the David Bowie (Official) Facebook page.  

 

Love Is Lost  (David Bowie)
 
It’s the darkest hour, you’re twenty two
The voice of youth, the hour of dread
The darkest hour and your voice is new
Love is lost, lost is love
 
Your country's new
Your friends are new
Your house and even your eyes are new
Your maid is new and your accent too
But your fear is as old as the world
 
Say goodbye to the thrills of life
Where love was good, no love was bad
Wave goodbye to the life without pain
Say hello
You’re a beautiful girl
 
Say hello to the lunatic men
Tell them your secrets
They’re like the grave
Oh, what have you done? 
Oh, what have you done?
Love is lost, lost is love
 
You know so much, it’s making you cry
You refuse to talk but you think like mad
You’ve cut out your soul and the face of thought
Oh, what have you done? 
Oh, what have you done?
categories: News
Tuesday 03.05.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 
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