• News
  • About
  • Sound
  • Vision
  • Pin Ups
  • Shop
    • US Store
    • EU/UK Store
  • Connect
David Bowie
  • News
  • About
  • Sound
  • Vision
  • Pin Ups
  • Shop
    • US Store
    • EU/UK Store
  • Connect

Selfridges Bowie window installations on V&A FB

 

“They’ve opened shops down the West End”

 

We told you about the Selfridges David Bowie is all yours: London Concept Store recently.  

Now the V&A FB page has a great photo album of the shop’s window displays along Orchard Street.

The installations pay brilliant homage to Bowie's footwear with particular focus on several of Ziggy's most famous creations in eye-catching Perspex interpretations of the originals.

The Art Deco flavoured fabric used to make the iconic jumpsuit on the sleeve of the Ziggy Stardust album has also been utilised in the upholstery of a few pieces of very desirable furniture for the display too.

Check out the V&A’s FB David Bowie is all yours photo album here.

The picture accompanying this piece and those in aforementioned photo album are © Photos by Melvyn Vincent for Prop Studios.

categories: News
Thursday 04.18.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

June is good for Life On Mars?

 

 

“Mars happy nation”

 

EMI is set to release the fifth in a series of limited edition 40th anniversary 7” picture discs in June.

These anniversary 45s mirror the original UK RCA release schedule from forty years ago.

Here follows the information regarding the release of this particular all-time classic Bowie song.

 

DAVID BOWIE - 40TH ANNIVERSARY LIMITED EDITION 7” PICTURE DISC SINGLE OF ‘LIFE ON MARS?’

Following the announcement of the Record Store Day release of a limited edition ‘Drive-In Saturday’ picture disc, EMI will release a 40th anniversary limited edition 7” picture disc of David Bowie’s iconic ‘Life On Mars?’ single on 24th June.

Originally appearing on the Hunky Dory album, ‘Life On Mars?’ was released as a single on 22nd June, 1973 on RCA – reaching #3 in the UK - when Bowie’s career had gone stratospheric following the huge success of his The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars and Aladdin Sane albums and tours.

This 40th anniversary release features the rare Ken Scott mix of the single on the A-side (mixed at Abbey Road Studios in 2003 for the Ziggy Stardust 5.1 mixes) with ‘Life On Mars? (Live)’ taken from a recording at The Music Hall, Boston on 1st October, 1972’, on the AA-side. The live version waspreviously only available on the 2 CD 30th Anniversary Edition of Aladdin Sane. Both sides feature photos from legendary photographer Mick Rock: the A-side, a photo from the era-defining ‘Life On Mars?’ promo film, which the photographer also directed; the AA-side a photo from the Music Hall, Boston concert.

 

Track details:

A/ Life On Mars? (2003 Ken Scott mix)

Produced by Ken Scott (assisted by the actor)

Arranged by Mick Ronson

 

AA/ Life On Mars? (Live)

Recorded live by Mike Moran at the Music Hall, Boston, October 1st, 1972

 

Mastering by Ray Staff at AIR Mastering.

 

 

categories: News
Monday 04.15.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Aladdin Sane 40th global release dates

 

“It’s happening now, and tomorrow”

 

Some of you will have got your hands on a copy of the AS40 CD as early as last Friday.

Here follows the worldwide release dates so the rest of you know when it’s available in your CD emporium/iTunes, etc.

 

 

FRIDAY April 12th
Australia
Austria
Benelux
Finland
Germany
Ireland
Netherlands
Norway
Switzerland
Turkey
 
MONDAY April 15th
UK
Arabia
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
Denmark
France
Greece
Hungary
India
Mexico
New Zealand
Poland
Portugal
South Africa
South East Asia
 
TUESDAY April 16th
USA
Canada
Italy
Spain
 
WEDNESDAY April 17th
Japan
Sweden
 
#aladdinsane40th 
categories: News
Sunday 04.14.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Thirty years of Dance

 

“Let me dance dance dance”

 

Though it reached #10 in our recent poll, such was the global success of Let’s Dance it’s possibly the album that most people are familiar with around the world and it remains Bowie's best-selling album.

Produced by David Bowie and Nile Rodgers, Let’s Dance was released on this day (April 14th) in the UK where it spent 13 weeks in the Top 5. The album also made it to #4 on the US chart. 

The attendant singles, Let’s Dance, China Girl and Modern Love were also worldwide smashes and you can remind yourself of the reason why here.

categories: News
Saturday 04.13.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

A lad in fortieth birthday celebrations

 

“Watching him dash away”

 

Forty years ago on a glam-rocked planet, on April 13th 1973, Aladdin Sane was gifted to the world (see the RCA adverts on the Facebook version of this item for evidence).  

We would clearly be preaching to the converted if we tried to suggest to you how great an album Aladdin Sane is, particularly as the album was voted #5 in a recent poll of Bowie’s studio albums on David Bowie (Official). 

We will be celebrating this and the release of EMI’s Aladdin Sane 40th Anniversary remaster on Monday, with a new contest on the Facebook page.

For the curious among you, the picture here is of one of the rarer formats of the original album. It’s the American Aladdin Sane reel-to-reel.

categories: News
Saturday 04.13.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Don’t waste your cash, V&A members go free

 

“Put you all inside my show”

 

We’re hearing horrendous stories of inflated ticket prices for the David Bowie is Exhibition at the V&A, with reports of some tickets going for upwards of £200.

There are still limited tickets available, but, aside from that, an annual V&A membership is cheaper than the price of some of the tickets that have sold on the likes of eBay!

There are also some other great package offers available here, if you don’t want to become a member. 

And with membership you can visit as many times as you like, when you like, or you can even have somebody accompany you with the plus guest option.

Though you should please note that the V&A cannot guarantee entry for Members in the last fortnight of the exhibition so please plan your visit carefully.

Here’s the official stuff:

LIMITED AVAILABILITY ONLINE

The V&A advises that you do not buy tickets from unauthorised ticket sellers. Authorised advance tickets are only available from the Museum or via LOVEtheatre and FNAC Tickets.

Tickets are available to purchase at the Museum in advance or on day of visit. You are advised to arrive at the V&A for when the Museum opens at 10.00 for the best chance of purchasing a ticket.

Please note tickets bought on the day may not be for immediate entry to the exhibition, but for later on that day.

Any ticket re-sold or transferred for profit or commercial gain without written permission from the V&A becomes void and the holder may be refused entry or ejected from the venue.

Any customer unsure of the legitimacy of a website should contact the Museum before purchasing their tickets.

MEMBERSHIP: here's the link to our membership page.

categories: News
Thursday 04.11.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

TND is most successful Bowie album in 30 years

 

“1, 2, 3-4, oooo”

 

It gives us much pleasure to report that David Bowie’s The Next Day remains in the UK Top Five again this week with its #4 placing today.

The Official Charts Company has just announced the album rundown via BBC Radio 1’s Official Chart Show.

This fourth week in the Top Five means that The Next Day has now enjoyed a longer stay in the Top Five than any Bowie studio album since 1983’s Let’s Dance.

Congratulations to David Bowie and thanks to all of you around the globe that bought The Next Day and made it such a success.

categories: News
Saturday 04.06.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Drive-In Saturday single is forty today

 

“It’s a crash-course for the ravers”

 

As hard as it may be to comprehend, David Bowie’s Drive-In Saturday was released forty years ago on this day in 1973.

The track was backed by the non-album Ziggy Stardust outtake, Round And Round, a Chuck Berry song originally titled Around And Around.

Drive-In Saturday was the second single taken from the forthcoming Aladdin Sane album (it was the follow up to The Jean Genie), and it made #3 on the UK’s official single chart.

The song name-checks Twiggy (Twig the Wonder Kid) along with Mick Jagger, whose band The Rolling Stones also covered Around And Around and whose Let’s Spend The Night Together also appeared on Aladdin Sane.

The success of the 45 was certainly not hampered by the unforgettable appearance of Bowie and The Spiders on the Russell Harty Show in the UK in January 1973.

Pictured here is the original UK press advert and both sides of the upcoming exclusive Record Store Day Drive-In Saturday 45.

The limited edition picture disc is to be released on April 20th along with two other exclusive-to-RSD Bowie 45s.

Go here to remind yourself of just how good a recording Drive-In Saturday remains, a true Bowie classic still sounding as futuristically nostalgic and exciting as it always will do.

categories: News
Saturday 04.06.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

David Bowie is all yours store is now open at Selfridges

 

“Come and buy my toys”

 

We posted the press release regarding this venture last week and as we said back then, it opened today.

 

We’re talking about the Selfridges in collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum, David Bowie is all yours: London Concept Store, and you can go and check it all out here. 

categories: News
Thursday 04.04.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Cracked Actor on BBC tonight, Yentob at V&A tomorrow

 

“Crack, baby, crack, show me you're real”

 

If you’re planning to be at the V&A’s Evening Talk with Alan Yentob and the screening of his Cracked Actor film on Friday evening, you may want to swot up before you attend by tuning in to BBC1 at 10:35pm this evening. (Thursday)

Here’s a bit from the BBC blurb:

In 1974 Alan Yentob, a 27-year-old producer-director for the BBC's Omnibus strand, received a call from Tony Defries, whose management company MainMan looked after David Bowie. After meeting Bowie in New York, agreement was reached to film a documentary around his Diamond Dogs tour of North America. The legendary film Cracked Actor was the result, capturing Bowie at an extraordinary moment in his life.

Yentob, now the presenter of BBC One's imagine series, recalls Bowie demonstrating his use of William S. Burroughs' cut-up style of writing, and Bowie talking in the back seat of a car - footage which encouraged Nicolas Roeg to cast him in The Man Who Fell to Earth.

Alan Yentob says "I'd caught him at what was an intensely creative time, but it was also physically and emotionally gruelling. Our encounters tended to take place in hotel rooms in the early hours of the morning or in snatched conversations in the back of limousines. He was fragile and exhausted, but also prepared to open up and talk in a way he had never really done before."

Cracked Actor has become one of the classic rock documentaries of all time, remaining an enduring influence on generations of Bowie fans.

Check it out on BBC One and BBC One HD, Imagine on 4 April 2013 at 22:35 and on BBC iPlayer for seven days.

A limited number of tickets are still available for the Alan Yentob talk and screening tomorrow at the V&A.

Meanwhile, check out this BBC Cracked Actor special to tide you over.

categories: News
Wednesday 04.03.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Yamamoto returns to the world of fashion

 

“We’re painting our faces and dressing in thoughts from Kansai”

 

WWD.com has posted a report about the return of Kansai Yamamoto to the world of fashion design.

He had this to say after a show in Tokyo on Friday:

The first 20 years of my career I spent as a fashion designer, then the next 20 years I focused on entertainment. Now, for the first time, I am combining those two things.

Though it might not have had quite the same effect as Bowie did when he wore the outfit 40 years ago on the Aladdin Sane tour, Yamamoto appeared at the Tokyo show in a version of the same amazing creation that confronts visitors as they enter the David Bowie is Exhibition at the V&A.

Our accompanying image is of Yamamoto in that outfit, while Lady Stardust hovers in the background (courtesy of a hasty Photoshop job) looking remarkably familiar.

categories: News
Tuesday 04.02.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

No Eurovision for Bowie just yet

 

“And stories they made up”

 

If you tuned in to The John Murray Show on Ireland’s RTÉ Radio 1 on Monday, you may have heard Gerry Leonard in conversation with John regarding his favourite iPod selections.

It was a fascinating item with lots of great little insights into Gerry’s world, including the creation of the live version of Loving The Alien.

However, you may have also been distressed by the revelation during the interview that Bowie was lined up for Eurovision 2013. If you were, you probably hadn’t noticed the date. We're safe for at least another year! 

Apparently Bowie himself was in on the joke, as Gerry explained to Herald.ie:

I couldn't have done this without David’s agreement so when RTE approached me, I contacted him. He was up for the gag immediately. 'Me doing Eurovision. This is supposed to be secret. How did they find out?' He really liked the idea.

You can listen to the full John Murray Show interview here.

While we’re talking April 1st, you may want to check out the Delta Lemons item we posted here yesterday. Scroll to the bottom of the piece for the real identity of the artwork we used. Sorry folks, but you really should be used to it.

(The picture here is of Gerry and DB on stage at The Point in Dublin in November 2003, the show that was recorded for the A Reality Tour DVD and CD.)

categories: News
Monday 04.01.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Bowie album cover proof from 1963 unearthed

 

“Secret secrets never seen”

 

Among the delights at the V&A’s David Bowie is Exhibition are the numerous items even the Bowie uberfans had absolutely no knowledge of.

Gig posters by the sixteen-year-old David Jones in 1963 (years before the name change to Bowie) included designs for both The BOW-MEN and The Delta Lemons.

Well, now a printer’s proof for an album cover for the latter has surfaced, too late for the exhibition, but not too late for an exclusive here.

Apparently young Jones commissioned a local illustrator to create the sleeve for what would have been a live album.

The painting was based on a photograph of David and friends at a local dance and you can clearly make out which of the characters is David.

The mop of long blond hair is the giveaway, as evidenced in portraits of David with the Kon-Rads in the same year.

As for the tracklisting, we’ll probably never know as only the front cover was taken to proof stage and it is unknown whether there were serious plans to release it.

Fascinating to see how Jones was already aware of professional presentation at such a young age.

 

FOOTNOTE: We’re sure many of you will have noticed the date of this news item, but for those that didn’t, sorry folks, but the above tale is April Fool’s Day poppycock.

Of course, it’s based on a truth, in 1963 the sixteen-year-old David Jones did create artworks for The BOW-MEN and The Delta Lemons (as witnessed at the V&A), but the above is actually detail from a 1963 painting, by Doris Leireiser, called The Rockers courtesy of Wayne Hemingway’s splendid collection, Just Above the Mantelpiece: Mass Market Masterpieces. It’s a fine publication which, coincidentally, designed by Jonathan Barnbrook’s company, a name you may be familiar with.

You can view the complete unadulterated painting by scrolling the image above.

categories: News
Sunday 03.31.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Vote now for your chance to win signed Bowie CD of your choice

 

“I asked for an autograph...”

 

In celebration of the wonderful news that David Bowie’s The Next Day remains in the Official UK Albums Chart at #3 today, we're giving you the chance to win a signed CD of your choice simply by voting for your favourite Bowie album.

What’s your favourite David Bowie studio album?

Vote for your favourite of David Bowie's 27 studio albums for your chance to win a signed-by-Bowie copy of the Bowie CD of your choice (includes standard issues from the currently available back catalogue of studio albums only).

Take your time with this difficult vote as the poll is open until midnight PST of Sunday April 7th, 2013.

A random voter will be selected each day, with all seven being posted on Monday April 8th, 2013. 

Go here to cast your vote now.

categories: News
Sunday 03.31.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

THE SPACE and the V&A present five Bowie film shorts

 

“Hallo Spaceboy”

 

The excellent online arts magazine, The Space, presents five short films made in collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum, which each explore the genius of David Bowie on occasion of the first full-scale retrospective of his career, David Bowie is, at the V&A in London.

Featuring insight from the curators of the exhibition, Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh, music journalist Paul Morley as well as film-maker Alan Yentob, the films examine the many facets of David Bowie, as well as the fascination with his creative output across the past five decades.

See below for details of each and view all five films here.

 

 

Victoria Broackes
Exhibition Overview (3 minutes)
Victoria Broackes, co-curator, gives insight into the curatorial vision behind the exhibition David Bowie is and how the V&A managed to capture the creativity and spirit of the artist through objects, archive and on-screen.
 
Geoffrey Marsh
Space Oddity (4 minutes)
Space travel and moon landings in the 1960s opened up new artistic themes for Bowie and influenced an entire body of work. Space Oddity, released in 1969 went to number five in the music charts. It was Bowie’s first breakthrough. Geoffrey Marsh, co-curator of the David Bowie is exhibition, takes us on a journey through Bowie’s creative landscape.
 
Paul Morley
David Bowie is (3 minutes)
Music journalist Paul Morley discusses the title and theme for the exhibition, David Bowie is. Cleverly employing the present tense David Bowie is suggests the potential for his multiple artistic incarnations and their ongoing influence. Whilst the exhibition is a retrospective survey of Bowie’s work, the title suggests his talents are as relevant today as they ever were and will remain so into the future.
 
Paul Morley
Bowie in Berlin (6 minutes)
David Bowie’s career-shaping years in Berlin are assessed by Paul Morley.
 
Alan Yentob
Cracked Actor (5 minutes)
Made by film-maker Alan Yentob and first screened on the BBC in 1975, Cracked Actor follows Bowie on his Diamond Dogs tour and captures an extraordinary moment in Bowie’s life. Alan Yentob tells how the film first came about and discusses iconic scenes as well as his own favourite moments from the documentary.
 
categories: News
Thursday 03.28.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Sennheiser presents David Bowie is Behind The Scenes

 

“Don't you wonder sometimes, 'bout sound and vision”

 

Sennheiser has posted a short film about the making of David Bowie is online.

The film features contributions from the curators of the exhibition, Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh, along with some fascinating insights into the creation of the exhibition from some of those involved with making the unique sound and vision for David Bowie is.

View the 4 minute film here now.

Also, watch out for Sennheiser‘s David Bowie is edition of Blue Stage, their very cool free iPad app.

categories: News
Thursday 03.28.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

V&A’s David Bowie is blowing our minds film

 

 

“He’d like to come and meet us, but”

 

The V&A Channel has just posted a nine minute film entitled David Bowie is blowing our minds, which includes wonderful tributes from musician Thurston Moore, artist Jeremy Deller, music journalist Simon Price, dedicated Bowie fan Ziggy Jacobs and artist Daphne Guinness.

 

Go here now to view it now.

 

#davidbowieis

categories: News
Thursday 03.28.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

The Immeasurable Bowie by Eric Dahan

 

“And now you're telling me you understand...”

 

We posted a cover feature from Saturday’s Libération magazine last weekend, within which there was printed a great analysis of David Bowie is at The V&A, albeit in French.

After having exhausted numerous translators, here is an approximate version of the article written by Eric Dahan in the very idiomatic French of a student of Jacques Derrida...

 

 

The Immeasurable Bowie
 
The V&A museum in London explores the aesthetic and cultural legacy of the most influential artist of the last forty years.
 
By Eric Dahan
 
The announcement, a year ago, of a large exhibition dedicated to David Bowie by the Victoria & Albert Museum in London did not make me happy.  Even if more than any other popular music artist, the author and the composer of Ziggy Stardust and Station to Station deserved such treatment, so much has his body of work and person influenced song and today's fashion.  But the idea of an exhibition seemed morbid, reducing the artist to samples to be looked at through glass, there, when a site like YouTube offers a daily renewable inventory of never released stage and studio performances put on line by fans, to be heard or reheard, to see or re-see the artist at his best, living for eternity. 
 
I imagined already how, that which was in the very first place rock 'n roll even if deviant or sublimate, would be discussed ad nauseum by the predictable jargon of contemporary art and media, holding forth on deconstruction, as in suspending the logics of identity, authorship and signature per the model.
 
We know that Bowie blurred in spectacular fashion the frontiers between masculine and feminine with the character of Ziggy Stardust, that he introduced Rock in the postmodern intertextuality era, to "a pretense of", a generalised fetishism, to reprise the concepts of Jean Baudrillard.  But is it not more important that he wrote Panic in Detroit or TVC 15?  Can an exhibition show the most modern literary writing in rock, the originality of the alloys of timbres, the genius interpreter finding for each syllable the color that suits, and who's catalogue of nuances has no need to envy a Fischer-Dieskau, when he renders justice to a lied from Schubert or Mahler?
 
This exhibition justifies itself nonetheless entirely as without the theatricalisation of his art, without its spectacular presentation on stage and in a bundle of cultural references from Kabuki to German expressionism, by way of Hollywood film, the profound and ironic art of David Bowie would perhaps have passed unnoticed or would have touched a maximum of only a handful of aesthetes.  
 
A few days before the opening of the exhibit to which he did not participate but to which he gave free access to his personal archives, David Bowie released The Next Day, his first album in ten years, in a Duchamp like sleeve, currently number 1 on iTunes in 64 countries and number 1 in physical sales in 12 countries.  Simultaneously "the greatest Art and Design museum in the world" announced a 40,000 tickets presale.
 
Striped vinyl dress
 
Such a craze for the music and person of David Bowie hasn't been seen since the year he released Let’s Dance, starred in two films, Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence by Nagisa Oshima and The Hunger by Tony Scott, made the cover of Time magazine and multiplied his audience by 10 : 100,000 people at each of his two concerts at the Hippodrome d’Auteuil, speaking only of Paris where 5 years earlier he made do with 10,000 spectators twice at the Pavillon de Paris.
 
This context of a worldwide plebiscite, to which the New York Times has just added a final touch qualifying The Next Day  as a "twilight masterpiece" naturally influences the perception that one could have of the exhibition at the V&A: purely nostalgic and destined for the fans of the artist, whether rock or fashion, "David Bowie Is" becomes the exhibition one must have seen to be current.
 
First question that everyone is asking themselves, and most of all the disappointed of the last Bob Dylan exhibit which ran last year at the Cité de la Musique de Paris, is, is "David Bowie Is" important in size?  Yes and no.  The 5 rooms containing 300 objects from the 75,000 archived in the private collection of the artist, is visited in one hour.  But one could spend the day if one read all the manuscripts, looked at all the video documents, closely studied all the costumes, and if one hung out in the room where the films are projected in which David Bowie has either acted or made an appearance.
 
The Japanese designer Kansai Yamamoto- who does not hesitate to affirm that he was the most important designer for David Bowie and that their collaboration was as important for the singer as for himself-has for all purposes been heard since his striped vinyl dress opens the exhibition. It is nevertheless flanked by a video of Gilbert & George and works by John Cage and Carl Andre, to remind one that one is not at the Hard Rock Cafe.
 
Above the dress, a quote by David Bowie dated 1995, the period when he released Outside and mentioned often in our presence the American philosopher and art historian Arthur C. Danto. A student of Maurice Merleau-Ponty at the Sorbonne, Danto has been teaching since 1951 at Columbia University in New York and has written many works influenced by the Philosophy of History and the Aesthetics of Hegel, concluding with "the end of Art". The Bowie quote placed as the inscription of the exhibition is the following: "All art is unstable. The significance of the work is not necessarily the one the author intended. There is no authoritative voice. There are only multiple readings".
 
Past this preamble one enters the prehistory of the artist who left school at 15 years old to become a pop star and who, in the early sixties, could not imagine that he would speak one day the language of philosophers and that one would use the word "polysemy" a propos of rock 'n roll.  On the wall, a white plaque "Stansfield Road S.W.9" reminds one that David Bowie was born and grew up at number 40 on this road in Brixton, in a suburb south of London.  
 
Photos of the pretty baby, school books, electric train, concert poster for a Jimi Hendrix gig which he attended or of the theatre piece Look Back in Anger which he would use the title for one of his songs, first TV appearance where Bowie is spokesperson for boys with long hair who are tired of being mocked in the street; nothing is left out to understand that he was not an overnight success but he knew his vocation very early on.
 
A student of graphic art at Bromley Technical College where he had as a teacher the father of pop star Peter Frampton, Bowie draws, in 1962, costumes and theatrical attitudes for the Konrads with whom he recorded his first 45's. On the headphones given at the entry and reacting to pick ups positioned throughout the exhibition, the voice of the young Bowie explains: "I wanted to become famous, turn people on to something new", and: "I thought that I had a chance, because I was an artist, to escape insanity", an allusion to the schizophrenia that was suffered by a part of his family notably his half brother Terry, who was institutionalised at the end of the sixties, and threw himself on the tracks under a train in the mid 1980's. Bowie has alluded to him in his songs All the Madmen, The Bewlay Brothers and Jump, They Say.
 
If he has always declined the definition of inventor, preferring the more humble observer who's songs are "polaroids" or "moments in time" Bowie is not for nothing an initiator of a generation. It is all the more tasty to hear him say in the headphones a propos of the jazz saxophonist Eric Dolphy: " I understood nothing of his music but I persuaded myself that I was a fan until I ended up liking him". Or: I put books much too complicated for my age in my pocket, with the title showing, so that people would see how intelligent I was.  But as I did read them, I ended up bearing their fruits".
 
The appearance of Ziggy Stardust
 
Next to the poster for a concert shared with T. Rex and a photo of Lindsay Kemp, his mime teacher, a record company press release presents Bowie as a refined literary man citing Kafka, Pinter, Wilde but equally John Rechy, the author far more marginalised of City of Night, a book published in 1963 describing a year before Last Exit to Brooklyn by Hubert Selby Jr. the world of male prostitutes from New York and Los Angeles. The musical references in the press release are not less impressive: Ragtime for Eleven Instruments by Stravinski, where many would have been satisfied to mention The Rite of Spring, Dvorak symphonies,  Holst, Elgar and Vaughan Williams and the big bands of Glenn Miller and Stan Kenton.
 
The second room opens on Space Oddity, in which its context is recreated: the Vasarely kinetic painting having served as the record sleeve, the poster of the film 2001: A Space Odyssey that inspired the song, a J. G. Ballard text extract from his psychotic novel the Atrocity Exhibition, prefaced by William Burroughs speaking after Alexander Trocchi (a Scottish beat writer) about "astronauts of inner space".  One finds also the manuscript of the score, the photo in Time which revealed in 1969, after the return of the Apollo 8 mission, that earth was blue and not green as we had always thought ("Planet earth is blue", sings Bowie in Space Oddity), the stylophone that he played on the record, and finally the gray jumpsuit adorned by motifs inspired by Le Corbusier and worn on the 45 record sleeve, Alabama Song/Space Oddity in 1980, a short time after Bowie had recorded his classic for the Dick Clark's Salute to the Seventies TV broadcast airing on NBC in 1979.
 
Time to remember the London opening of Warhol's Chelsea Girls in 1968, then the arrival in London of his troupe to interpret Pork in 1971, a play openly evoking sex and drugs, and Kubrick is again appealed to for introduction to the character of Ziggy Stardust from which Bowie drew inspiration for the look of A Clockwork Orange droogies.  "Ultraviolence in Liberty print" he said ironically about his own version.  In the place of honor in a gigantic window and surrounded by video installations, the costume worn by Bowie during the Top of the Pops broadcast during which he sang Starman, July 6 1972.  an important date this first televised appearance as Ziggy Stardust, because practically all those who saw this broadcast, from Boy George to Ian McCulloch via Siouxsie Sioux, had their revelations as to their own pop destinies.
 
All the costumes worn by Bowie are here and these alone justify the trip on Eurostar. They are by Freddi Buretti and Kansai Yamamoto (for the period Ziggy Stardust, Aladdin Sane, Diamond Dogs), Ola Hudson (mother of Slash, future Guns 'n Roses, who dressed Bowie for The Man Who Fell to Earth and the 1976 tour where he incarnated the Thin White Duke) Natasha Korniloff (Stage Tour 1978, the Pierrot costume for the cover of the album Scary Monsters and the video clip Ashes to Ashes) Peter J. Hall (the Opera costume maker who dressed the 1983 Serious Moonlight tour) and also Alexander McQueen (for the album Earthling and the 50th Birthday concert at Madison Square Garden).
 
I bet, on this day that the exhibition opens that certain visitors will be struck by the Jerusalem syndrome and be immediately evacuated by security services, from seeing intact three feet away and without a glass case, the ice blue costume from the video clip Life on Mars or the Ziggy Stardust in a glass coffin Rudolph Valentino style.  One of the most surprising costumes is the one realised from a model conceived by Sonia Delaunay for the dada piece by Tristan Tzara The Gas Heart in 1921.  Bowie ordered a copy made for his televised performance in 1979 on Saturday Night Live, where he interpreted among other songs, The Man Who Sold The World with as backing vocalists the transformist Joey Arias and the pop techo counter-tenor Klaus Nomi, who then took up the Bowie costume for his own stage performances.
 
A moonwalk that Michael Jackson will remember
 
From a saxophone used by Bowie for Pin Ups in 1973 to a telegram sent to him by Elvis Presley (‘from a King to a King’) the relics are not wanting. Metaphysical?  The keys to the apartment on 155 Hauptstrasse, in the Berlin neighborhood of Schoneberg, where the writer Christopher Isherwood lived in 1925. Bowie lived here with Iggy Pop from autumn of 1976 to the end of 1978 and composed there the albums Heroes for himself and The Idiot and Lust for Life for the American rocker.
 
But there is better: the preparatory sketches. The drawings of costumes, stage sets, album covers, story boards of videos and shows, show that Bowie conceives absolutely everything, even if he delegates to other artists the technical realisation. It is from Bowie's drawings that Guy Peellaert painted the sleeve of Diamond Dogs, that Mark Ravitz carried out the sets for the tour inspired by George Orwell's 1984 and Fritz Lang's Metropolis, that David Mallet co-directed the video clip for the song Ashes to Ashes, or that Alexander McQueen tailored the "Union Jack" costume worn by Bowie on the cover of Earthling.
 
Among the unfinished projects, one would adore to read one day The Return of The Thin White Duke, the autobiography started during the filming of The Man Who Fell To Earth, or the screenplay that Bowie wrote at the beginning of the nineties which was never made.  One is not less fascinated to discover here the storyboard for a film project inspired by the Diamond Dogs project and the apocalyptic Hunger City which the exhibit shows acrylics of and that are captioned by Bowie: "The skaters are carrying torches advancing towards us. People are chasing us through alleys. The image of a skater floats between the teeth of a mouth. A close-up of the teeth show two child victims fighting to liberate themselves."
 
Returning to the stage set of the Ziggy Show at the Rainbow Theatre, there are projections on giant scaffolding of unseen images from the Diamond Dogs tour, that is to say different to those used by Alan Yentob for his documentary Cracked Actor. This innovative show, described as ‘Broadway Rock’, influenced many artists who saw it at the Hollywood Universal Amphitheater, such as Michael Jackson who remembered 10 years later David Bowie's moonwalk for the video clip Billie Jean.
 
With Diamond Dogs, Bowie, who's writing had already been influenced by beat poetry, used for the first time the cut up technique invented by Brion Gysin and William Burroughs, which the exhibition reminds us of with a video showing the Verbasizer in action: this program conceived by a computer science friend from San Francisco upon Bowie's request allows one to divide text into pieces and then recombine them to produce new phrases; an automatic and instantaneous version of the cut-up.  Right next to this is the Oblique Strategies card game invented by Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt, a sort of tarot for artists used by Bowie during the recording of his trilogy Low, Heroes and Lodger.  One of these cards reads "Use unqualified people", which Bowie did, asking his musicians to exchange instruments to record the song Boys Keep Swinging.  
 
Those who know Bowie's body of work and ,with 140 million records sold, that’s quite a few people, will be rewarded to see the list of songs planned for Hunky Dory, We Should Be On By Now which will become Time on Aladdin Sane, or Lady Stardust, Hang On To Yourself and Moonage Daydream which will end up on Ziggy Stardust, and finally Hole In The Ground, which Bowie recorded in 2000 for his unreleased album Toy, but that the fans have pirate copies of.
 
Ironic and Poetic Masterpieces
 
No less enjoyable are the text manuscripts and tens of crossed out songs showing Bowie accumulating sentences that may appear banal before, in the excitement of the studio, transforming, compressing and reorganising them to produce ironic and poetic masterpieces. For the historians and the seekers this exhibition is a well without end. When I wrote three years ago, the history of the Station to Station album and tour, I would have liked to have had the list of songs rehearsed in Keith Richard's house in Jamaica, i.e. Young Americans, Wild is the Wind, Sorrow, Fascination and Golden Years. As for Major Tom from Space Oddity, we discover reading about a film project that should have accompanied the album Young Americans in 1975, that he should have made his return five years before the song Ashes to Ashes.
 
Portraits of Iggy pop and Yukio Mishima painted by Bowie during his stay in Berlin are shown with comparison to one of his apparent sources of inspiration, the Dada painter George Grosz. Finally a room allows for those still in doubt, to view a video montage and fashion shows and magazine covers such as Vogue showing the Bowie looks, costumes, make-up that have been imitated, copied, pastiched, revived, hijacked by all the big names from fashion, pret-a-porter and photography.
 
"David Bowie already figured in many departments of the museum, such as the photo, art, fashion, graphic and even Asian section" explain curators Vicky Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh. "We wanted to show that his body of work surpasses by far the world of song and rock". Which the brilliant essayist Camille Paglia also proves in an article crammed with references from Shakespeare to Man Ray that she has written for the catalogue.
 
Secluded in his penthouse overlooking Manhattan, the multimedia prophet of an already arrived apocalypse and of a mutant future, the Zarathoustra of pop, who reaffirmed a century after Nietzsche, the necessity to invent one's own values, has as paradoxical as it may seem, never been so present.
 
"David Bowie Is". Till August 11th at the Victoria and Albert Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7. + 44 20 79 42 20 00 and www.vam.ac.uk
 
categories: News
Wednesday 03.27.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Ziggy tops NME Bowie album poll, TND in top ten

 

“I could make it all worthwhile as a rock 'n' roll star”

 

NME has just published the results of its Bowie poll that we told you about some time ago.

The magazine asked its readers to vote for what they considered to be the greatest Bowie album of all time and here’s what they chose.

(The figures after each album title are the final marks out of 10 given by voters)

 

 

01. The Rise And Fall of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars: 9.61
02. Hunky Dory: 9.24
03. "Heroes": 9.18
04. Station to Station: 8.66
05. Aladdin Sane: 8.62
06. Low: 8.61
07. The Next Day: 8.20
08. Diamond Dogs: 8.04
09. The Man Who Sold the World: 8.00
10. Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps): 8.00
11. Lodger: 7.72
12. Heathen: 7.53
13. Young Americans: 7.14
14. Space Oddity: 7.06
15. Let's Dance: 7.03
16. Earthling: 6.96
17. Pin Ups: 6.46
18. Outside: 6.24
19. Hours: 5.83
20. Reality: 5.78
 
categories: News
Wednesday 03.27.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

David Bowie is all yours at Selfridges

 

“I live above the Concept Store”

 

We can’t say much about this one just yet, but we know there are going to be some very cool items made available next week at the Selfridges London Concept Store.

Stay tuned for more in the coming days, meanwhile here's the press release.

 

 

DAVID BOWIE IS ALL YOURS — 27 MARCH 2013
 
Selfridges, in collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum, launches David Bowie is all yours in its London Concept Store. Opening on 4 April, the Concept Store is transformed into an exclusive tribute experience as colourful as the iconic superstar.
David Bowie is at the V&A is the biggest-ever retrospective of the extraordinary career of one of the most influential musicians and performers of modern times.
In collaboration with the V&A, David Bowie is all yours at Selfridges offers the opportunity for Bowie fans and cool hunters to indulge in a shopping experience that is all about bringing the essence of Bowie’s style to life. 
 
V&A SHOP
You’ll find bespoke David Bowie product, only otherwise available at the V&A. T-shirts, limited edition prints and collectors items expose Bowie’s creative process and his wide-spread impact.
 
DECADES
Decades, the cult vintage fashion emporium, have curated a special capsule collection for Selfridges’ Bowie tribute. The colourful collection features Japanese-inspired wearable art from Katherine Westphal, as well as sequinned, gold and silver numbers from an emerging Gianni Versace. Paco Rabanne is also part of the selection as are vintage Celine, Alaia, Mugler, Dior and Yves-Saint Laurent jackets echoing Bowie’s look for the Man Who Fell To Earth and his Marlene Dietrich persona. The rare Bowie edit by Decades is all for sale.
 
THE SELFRIDGES EDIT
Across menswear and womenswear, the hand-picked Selfridges edit from spring/summer 2013 shows how the iconic artist’s unique style continues to inspire labels such as Peter Pilotto, Gareth Pugh, Rick Owens, Givenchy and others. Today, more than ever, everyone can be a little bit ‘Bowie’.
 
ILLAMASQUA
In an exclusive partnership with Illamasqua and their Creative Director Alex Box, Selfridges is organising daily makeovers and one-off master-classes drawing on Bowie's famous make-up personalities. Alex herself – a devoted Bowie fan – will lead the bespoke master-classes. Stay tuned to find out more about how you can get involved.
 
COLLECTOR’S ITEMS
You’ll find exclusive and limited edition photography by Brian Duffy – who shot the cover for Aladdin Sane (1973) - to be made to order from his original contact sheets. More original material comes in the form of a collection of vintage magazines, all featuring lead articles or covers about Bowie, by another cult outfit: Idea Books. The Vinyl Factory has curated a selection of the most iconic Bowie albums, including Aladdin Sane and Space Oddity (1969) – all are original vinyl discs.
 
categories: News
Wednesday 03.27.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 
Newer / Older