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Relaunched NME with Bowie cover feature out now

 

“You saw him hangin' on the NME”

 

Available for purchase now is the previously-mentioned new look NME magazine, complete with 14 pages of Bowie, including the cover and full-page subscription ad, scroll picture to view ad.

Go here for the digital version or purchase a physical copy on Wednesday morning in the UK.

We’ll be running a contest to win signed copies of a poster of that gorgeous cover shortly.

categories: News
Tuesday 10.08.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Love Is Lost Murphy Mix first play on 6 Music

 

“Oh, what have you done?”

 

DAVID BOWIE 'LOVE IS LOST' (HELLO STEVE REICH MIX BY JAMES MURPHY FOR THE DFA)

WORLD PREMIERE ON BBC RADIO 6 MUSIC THURSDAY 10th OCTOBER AT 8.50am

Taken from THE NEXT DAY the Barclaycard Mercury Music Prize nominated album, LOVE IS LOST has been remixed by LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy into a ten minute plus epic entitled 'HELLO STEVE REICH MIX BY JAMES MURPHY FOR THE DFA'. Artwork especially created for the mix by Jonathan Barnbook is attached.

The remix will get its world premiere at 8.50am Thursday 10th October on BBC Radio 6 Music's breakfast show (bbc.co.uk/6music) and will be available to stream on www.davidbowie.com from midnight the same day.

LOVE IS LOST (HELLO STEVE REICH MIX BY JAMES MURPHY FOR THE DFA) is to be released as part of a three disc collectors set/download THE NEXT DAY EXTRA on November the 4th.

THE NEXT DAY EXTRA will feature the original 14 song album, a 10 track companion album with five unheard songs/two remixes and a DVD featuring four videos from THE NEXT DAY, a 7-track digital EP bundle will also be available.

THE NEXT DAY EXTRA is released on November 4th.

 

THE NEXT DAY EXTRA (digital) http://smarturl.it/TNDE

THE NEXT DAY EXTRA(physical) http://smarturl.it/TNDEamz

categories: News
Monday 10.07.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

S&V 2013 out today - contribute to S&V page

 
“With the sound, with the sound, with the sound (and vision)”
 
To celebrate today’s digital release of the 2013 version of David Bowie's Sound And Vision, a specially created page has been made where you can share images that define what you interpret as 'the gift of Sound and Vision'.
Simply post images, videos or even Vines on Twitter with the hashtag #soundandvision and watch them feed into the dedicated page here.
We look forward to seeing your contributions.
categories: News
Sunday 10.06.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

12-page Bowie cover feature for new look NME

 

“Me, I'm fresh on your pages”

 

The headline and the beautiful new look front cover pictured here pretty much tell you all you need to know about the forthcoming issue of NME.

Under the headline: “David Bowie He’s back…again! ” the feature includes the following...

Personal portraits of The Man Who Owned The Year, by: James Murphy, Faris Badwan, Trent Reznor, St Vincent, Black Francis and Irvine Welsh.

Not to mention an exclusive in-depth analysis of every new tune and Tony Visconti’s guide to The Next Day Extra.

The stunning Bowie shot is another NME exclusive taken by Jimmy King. Hat’s off to him for so many great portraits of DB this year.

The changes to the weekly magazine begin with the cover's new look and heavyweight paper – plus a new, more compact page size. Inside, familiar sections have been improved and expanded, and new features have been added throughout.

Here’s a bit from NME editor Mike Williams...

 

You could call the changes to NME a redesign, but we prefer to think of it as a reinvention. And in the spirit of reinvention, only one artist could grace this week’s cover: David Bowie. David Bowie is the cosmic umbilical cord that connects the past, present and future of music. The new NME aims to be the definitive guide to all the above.

 

We couldn’t have put it better ourselves!

If you’re in the UK look out for some very impressive 60" x 40" billboard posters featuring the new cover.

See NME for more regarding this new look issue, which hits the shelves on Wednesday at the same time as the digital version arrives on your electronic doo dah. (cover date: October 12th)

categories: News
Sunday 10.06.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Chris Hadfield is Aladdin Sane for Maclean’s

 

“And the stars look very different today”

 

If you’re unaware of Commander Chris Hadfield’s cover of a popular David Bowie tune recreated for a tweeted video while orbiting the blue planet, you must have just returned from space.

Aside from Hadfield’s recent earthbound live performances of Space Oddity, Canadian magazine, Maclean’s, has now followed up the musical adventure on board the International Space Station with a delightful makeover of the popular spaceboy in a remake of the Aladdin Sane sleeve.

Photographer Christopher Wahl explains Hadfield’s willingness to imitate the iconic 1973 album cover...

 

“He went full-bore with it. I explained we needed bare shoulders as opposed to the collared shirt he was wearing, so he happily took it off,” says Wahl, who ensured the lighting during the shoot also matched Bowie’s album perfectly. “He was fully participating—it was awesome. I was on a portrait high for a day and a half afterward.”

 

Watch a behind-the-scenes video of Wahl’s photo session on the Maclean’s site. 

You can also read about the making of the Space Oddity video and read an exclusive excerpt from Hadfield’s new book in the October 14th issue of Maclean’s, which is out now.

On November 3rd, Toronto readers can also attend a special In Conversation with Maclean’s event. Maclean’s will be speaking with Chris Hadfield for the launch of his new book, An Astronaut’s Guide to Life on Earth.

categories: News
Sunday 10.06.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Bowie, best-dressed Briton in history? You decide

 

“I like the clothes that you wear”

 

In a feature titled “Who’s the best-dressed Briton in history? ”, the October issue of BBC History Magazine has asked 10 fashion experts to select the men and women they believe have dominated the world of fashion over the centuries, stretching all the way back to Henry III (1207–72).

Chosen by English designer Wayne Hemingway, David Bowie is the only living person among the ten nominations. Mr Hemmingway has nailed his colours high to the Bowie mast over the years, and he makes a compelling case for DB in the magazine, from where, this edited extract.

“I saw David Bowie for the first time on the 1973 Aladdin Sane tour when I was nearly 13: I left the gig utterly blown away by his music and style. Bowie changed youth culture, and had a gift for predicting and anticipating fashion trends, always doing his own thing. His clothes, including the huge-legged striped bodysuit designed by Kansai Yamamoto, were works of art that were the result of his vision and creativity, and as memorable as his music.”

 

With a little over a week to go, the voting currently stands thus...

 

Anne Messel = 8%

Queen Alexandra = 11%

David Bowie = 25%

Henry III = 4%

Georgiana Cavendish = 14%

'Beau’ Brummell = 12%

Charles James Fox = 2%

Elizabeth I = 19%

Ellen Terry = 3%

Samuel Pepys = 2%

 

Bowie is in the lead with a healthy quarter of the votes cast. But who do you think is the best-dressed Briton in history? Cast your vote here.

History magazine will announce the name of the individual who receives the most votes on October 15th.

You can read that Wayne Hemingway piece and the nominations in full in the October issue of BBC History Magazine. 

categories: News
Sunday 10.06.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Bowie’s top 100 books - the complete list

 

“Lend us a book we can read up alone”

 

It’s likely that most people reading this will have already seen either the original story on openbookstoronto.com last week, or a version of it referring back to that original list of “DAVID BOWIE'S TOP 100 BOOKS”.

There have also been numerous suggestions of a Bowie Book Club to tackle each of the 100 volumes. However, there was a problem with that particular openbookstoronto.com feature in that only 75% of the books were actually listed!

For anybody planning on completing this epic voyage of discovery, we’ve listed every single one of the 100 books here (in no particular order) for your reference.

You may have also noticed the two chaps in the middle of our montage. Well, it’s none other than David Bowie sporting a Clockwork Orange T-shirt (the book by Anthony Burgess is in the list) with his old chum, George Underwood.

George kindly supplied the previously unpublished photograph, which according to him was taken aboard Amtrak somewhere between New Orleans and Chicago on the first US tour in 1972.

 

And so, on to that COMPLETE list of David Bowie’s Top 100 (count 'em) Books.

 

Interviews With Francis Bacon by David Sylvester

Billy Liar by Keith Waterhouse

Room At The Top by John Braine

On Having No Head by Douglass Harding

Kafka Was The Rage by Anatole Broyard

A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess

City Of Night by John Rechy

The Brief Wondrous Life Of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz

Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert

Iliad by Homer

As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner

Tadanori Yokoo by Tadanori Yokoo

Berlin Alexanderplatz by Alfred Döblin

Inside The Whale And Other Essays by George Orwell

Mr. Norris Changes Trains by Christopher Isherwood

Halls Dictionary Of Subjects And Symbols In Art by James A. Hall

David Bomberg by Richard Cork

Blast by Wyndham Lewis

Passing by Nella Larson

Beyond The Brillo Box by Arthur C. Danto

The Origin Of Consciousness In The Breakdown Of The Bicameral Mind by Julian Jaynes

In Bluebeard’s Castle by George Steiner

Hawksmoor by Peter Ackroyd

The Divided Self by R. D. Laing

The Stranger by Albert Camus

Infants Of The Spring by Wallace Thurman

The Quest For Christa T by Christa Wolf

The Songlines by Bruce Chatwin

Nights At The Circus by Angela Carter

The Master And Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov

The Prime Of Miss Jean Brodieby Muriel Spark

Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov

Herzog by Saul Bellow

Puckoon by Spike Milligan

Black Boy by Richard Wright

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea by Yukio Mishima

Darkness At Noon by Arthur Koestler

The Waste Land by T.S. Elliot

McTeague by Frank Norris

Money by Martin Amis

The Outsider by Colin Wilson

Strange People by Frank Edwards

English Journey by J.B. Priestley

A Confederacy Of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole

The Day Of The Locust by Nathanael West

1984 by George Orwell

The Life And Times Of Little Richard by Charles White

Awopbopaloobop Alopbamboom: The Golden Age of Rock by Nik Cohn

Mystery Train by Greil Marcus

Beano (comic, ’50s)

Raw (comic, ’80s)

White Noise by Don DeLillo

Sweet Soul Music: Rhythm And Blues And The Southern Dream Of Freedom by Peter Guralnick

Silence: Lectures And Writing by John Cage

Writers At Work: The Paris Review Interviews edited by Malcolm Cowley

The Sound Of The City: The Rise Of Rock And Roll by Charlie Gillete

Octobriana And The Russian Underground by Peter Sadecky

The Street by Ann Petry

Wonder Boys by Michael Chabon

Last Exit To Brooklyn By Hubert Selby, Jr.

A People’s History Of The United States by Howard Zinn

The Age Of American Unreason by Susan Jacoby

Metropolitan Life by Fran Lebowitz

The Coast Of Utopia by Tom Stoppard

The Bridge by Hart Crane

All The Emperor’s Horses by David Kidd

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters

Earthly Powers by Anthony Burgess

The 42nd Parallel by John Dos Passos

Tales Of Beatnik Glory by Ed Saunders

The Bird Artist by Howard Norman

Nowhere To Run The Story Of Soul Music by Gerri Hirshey

Before The Deluge by Otto Friedrich

Sexual Personae: Art And Decadence From Nefertiti To Emily Dickinson by Camille Paglia

The American Way Of Death by Jessica Mitford

In Cold Blood by Truman Capote

Lady Chatterly’s Lover by D.H. Lawrence

Teenage by Jon Savage

Vile Bodies by Evelyn Waugh

The Hidden Persuaders by Vance Packard

The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin

Viz (comic, early ’80s)

Private Eye (satirical magazine, ’60s – ’80s)

Selected Poems by Frank O’Hara

The Trial Of Henry Kissinger by Christopher Hitchens

Flaubert’s Parrot by Julian Barnes

Maldodor by Comte de Lautréamont

On The Road by Jack Kerouac

Mr. Wilson’s Cabinet of Wonders by Lawrence Weschler

Zanoni by Edward Bulwer-Lytton

Transcendental Magic, Its Doctine and Ritual by Eliphas Lévi

The Gnostic Gospels by Elaine Pagels

The Leopard by Giusseppe Di Lampedusa

Inferno by Dante Alighieri

A Grave For A Dolphin by Alberto Denti di Pirajno

The Insult by Rupert Thomson

In Between The Sheets by Ian McEwan

A People’s Tragedy by Orlando Figes

Journey Into The Whirlwind by Eugenia Ginzburg

 

#BowieBookClub

categories: News
Tuesday 10.01.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

3-disc The Next Day Extra due for November release

 

“And another day”

 

It gives us much pleasure to announce details of a 3-disc version of David Bowie’s brilliant The Next Day album.

Called The Next Day Extra, the set includes the original 14-track CD, a 10-track CD of bonus tracks and a DVD of the four promotional films made for the album: Where Are We Now?, The Stars (Are Out Tonight), The Next Day and Valentine’s Day.

The 10-track bonus CD includes four previously unreleased tracks, two new mixes and God Bless The Girl, the track that was only released on the Japanese issue of The Next Day. The remaining three tracks gather up the bonus tracks from the deluxe version of the album.

The whole thing comes in a wonderful new Barnbrook package with a lyric booklet and a book of stills from the promo films. Scroll the image here to view a mock-up of the package.

In addition to the physical release of The Next Day Extra, there will be a 7-track digital EP bundle.

Keep reading the press release below for tracklistings and more details.

 

PRESS RELEASE

DAVID BOWIE 'THE NEXT DAY EXTRA' 3 DISC COLLECTORS EDITION RELEASED NOVEMBER 4th

 

FIVE UNHEARD TRACKS

TWO BRAND NEW REMIXES 

DVD FEATURING THE VIDEOS FROM THE NEXT DAY

 

'THE NEXT DAY' the critically acclaimed and Barclaycard Mercury Music Prize nominated album is to be released as a three disc edition on November the 4th. 

 

The critically lauded 'THE NEXT DAY' album released in March was number 1 in 15 countries.

'THE NEXT DAY EXTRA' will feature the original 14 song album, a 10 track companion cd with five unheard songs, two remixes (including one by LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy) and a DVD featuring four videos from 'THE NEXT DAY'.

 

'THE NEXT DAY' companion album track listing

 

ATOMICA

LOVE IS LOST (HELLO STEVE REICH MIX BY JAMES MURPHY FOR THE DFA)

PLAN

THE INFORMER

LIKE A ROCKET MAN

BORN IN A UFO

I'D RATHER BE HIGH (VENETIAN MIX)

I'LL TAKE YOU THERE

GOD BLESS THE GIRL

SO SHE

 

ATOMICA, THE INFORMER, LIKE A ROCKET MAN, BORN IN A UFO and GOD BLESS THE GIRL are previously unheard tracks and the epic 10 minute LOVE IS LOST (HELLO STEVE REICH MIX) is remixed by LCD Soundsystem mainman James Murphy fresh from production duties on the new Arcade Fire album, which also features Bowie on the title track 'Reflektor'.

 

'THE NEXT DAY' DVD features the visuals for 'WHERE ARE WE NOW?', 'THE STARS (ARE OUT TONIGHT)' 'VALENTINE'S DAY' and the title track 'THE NEXT DAY'.

 

In addition to the 'THE NEXT DAY EXTRA' there will be a 7-track digital EP bundle featuring...

 

ATOMICA

LOVE IS LOST (HELLO STEVE REICH MIX BY JAMES MURPHY FOR THE DFA)

THE INFORMER

LIKE A ROCKET MAN

BORN IN A UFO

I'D RATHER BE HIGH (VENETIAN MIX)

GOD BLESS THE GIRL

 

Critical acclaim for 'THE NEXT DAY'

NME 

"These songs feel like stories that insisted on being told"

Rolling Stone

"A triumphant album"

Q 

"Start arguing for it's merits as an equal to Low or a Heroes"

The Guardian

"The Next Day makes you hope it's not a one-off, that his return continues apace: no mean feat, given that listening to a new album by most of his peers makes you wish they'd stick to playing the greatest hits"

The Independent

"The greatest comeback album ever"

The Telegraph

"An absolute wonder: urgent, sharp-edged, bold, beautiful and baffling

The Times

"A great album and something that is rare in an age when everything is explained and revealed: a sense of mystery"

Los Angeles Times

"Breathtaking... a marvelously successful return"

The Quietus

"David Bowie, then. History, but still happening. And the next day, and the next. Greatness. It can't go on. It goes on"

 

'THE NEXT DAY EXTRA' will be released on November 4th  

 

#TheNextDayExtra

categories: News
Sunday 09.29.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

S&V 2013 lyric video on YouTube now

 

“Waiting for the gift”

 

The quite beautiful Sonjay Prabhakar 2013 Sound and Vision remix we’ve been telling you about, is now available to view as a lyric video on YouTube. 

The track is released by Parlophone Records as a digital download only on October 7th and you can pre-order it here on iTunes. 

 

#soundandvision2013

categories: News
Sunday 09.29.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Bowie’s Elephant Man wows New York 33 years ago

 

“He’s a broken man”

 

While we’re on the subject of The Elephant Man (see previous Derek Boshier item) it was 33 years ago last week that David Bowie triumphed on Broadway with his stunning performance in the play at The Booth Theatre.

The Broadway run was preceded by presentations in Denver and Chicago with unanimous praise heaped upon Bowie for his portrayal of John Merrick.

 

29 July - 3 August 1980 Denver Centre of Performing Arts

5 August 1980 - 31 August 1980 Blackstone Theatre, Chicago

23 September 1980 - 3 January 1981 The Booth Theatre, 222 W. 45th St, New York

 

Sadly, it seems there is no complete record of Bowie’s performance and so we have to rely on the bits of film that do exist and the memories of those who witnessed the play first hand.

If you can't make out the words in the image here, scroll the picture for a larger version of the text.

Check out the superb BOWIEGOLDENYEARS for a page relating to Bowie’s time in The Elephant Man.

categories: News
Sunday 09.29.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Derek Boshier Bowie portrait at the NPG

 

“Painting our faces”

 

A selection of portraits by renowned Pop Artist Derek Boshier is on display in the UK for the first time in a new exhibition of the artist’s work which opened at the National Portrait Gallery on Saturday. (September 27th)

 

Derek Boshier: Imaginary Portraits (27 September 2013 – 4 May 2014) will feature 10 works from the artist’s ‘imaginary portraits’ series, including his oil-on-canvas portrait of David Bowie, which was painted in New York in 1980 while Bowie was rehearsing for his role in Bernard Pomerance’s play The Elephant Man at the city’s Booth Theatre. Based on the life of a nineteenth-century man who developed severe bodily deformities and travelled as a circus performer, the production required Bowie to distort his face and body, holding poses for long periods of time. It was Bowie’s first major theatre role and he received huge critical acclaim for his performance. He talked about the role with Boshier at the artist’s studio, resulting in the striking portrait of Bowie in character.

 

Bowie fans will be familiar with the name Derek Boshier on account of his work on both the 1979 Lodger album and 1983’s Let's Dance LP. Here’s a bit from DerekBoshier.com regarding his work on both the albums...

 

David Bowie's "Lodger" album, 1979

"The cover for "Lodger" was a collaboration between David, the photographer Duffy, and myself. I loved this solution to the problem of David being photographed falling. Shooting him from above, on a specially made table built to match the falling form. The table was designed to be completely obscured by David's body (You can see the table in the photograph right centre on the inside of the book-style cover). The wash hand basin was laid underneath the table on the floor." D.B.2003.

The cover for Bowie's subsequent "Let's Dance" album included the projection of a Boshier painting across David Bowie's figure in boxing gloves. The inner sleeve of "Let's Dance" had line drawings by Boshier including his characteristic heads and walking figures.

 

If you didn’t already see it at the David Bowie is exhibition, check out this page to view Polaroids of three models of sets by Boshier commissioned by Bowie for his stage shows in 1978.

categories: News
Sunday 09.29.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Ziggy in Memphis 1972 Super 8 footage unearthed

 

“Elvis is English…”

 

Mike McCarthy of Guerrilla Monster Films has been in touch with the news that he has posted a shaky, albeit fascinating, bit of silent super 8 footage from Ziggy and The Spider’s evening performance in Memphis in 1972.

The film went live on the eve of the 41st anniversary of the show, which originally took place on Sunday, September 24th, 1972 at Ellis Auditorium, Memphis, Tennessee.

Despite the fact that the quality is not good and there is no sound, it’s still definitely worth a watch just to see the brilliant young Bowie throwing a few shapes which are pure Elvis (The Memphis Flash) via the Lindsay Kemp school of mime.

The footage is accompanied by a wonderful essay by Elizabeth Dollarhide, from which, this excerpt.

 

“And then, Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars arrived in Memphis, their second tour stop in America. No one attending any concert at Ellis Auditorium had ever before witnessed anything like this. There are no words. The energy was so electrified I swear we were levitating. The red-orange hair, the bright colored costumes, the flash, the music, that voice. I had never seen anything so spectacular. This was far grander than the moon landing. Ziggy had landed right in front of me like a glittering star, firmly establishing himself as the king of all he surveyed. The footage shown here is what Danny and I shot of the concert. We had a Super-8 camera with no sound and were trying to capture as many different moments from the concert as could be held on the two-minute reel. Looking at this footage for the first time in 40 years is exhilarating, bringing the memories of that night solidly home. Stage lights flash and strobe the dark stage and then suddenly Bowie is there, glowing magnificently.”

 

To see the footage, which Elizabeth actually filmed, and to read her essay, go here.

 

Elsewhere on the site, Ron Hall has written a great review from his memory of the same show. Here’s a bit from that...

 

“I thought this was going to be something people would be talking about for years. Something we had never quite seen before. I was right. There was no way, you could describe the vibe, visual and physical charge that was felt that night. Those that missed it, blew it. They could go to later shows, but this one was special, one of a kind.

When Bowie came on that stage in a green and orange jumpsuit, red boots, with the strobe lights flashing, hi-lighting his orange hair and giving a ghostly effect aided by his white makeup, I remember thinking “Holy shit, here we go!” I know I was on the edge of my seat throughout the entire show, I didn’t want to miss a damn thing. The band smoked. Mick Ronson was every bit as good as advertised and I’m sure the early shows are what built his legend and stature and a true rock guitarists. And Trevor Bolder, what the fuck was going on with those mutton chops?! The clothes, the boots, the hair, the lights, you tried to take it all in, without missing a thing. But you were always sucked back to that specter in the center of the stage. His voice, grew you back in, bringing you back from watching Ronson's fingers, or even glancing around to see how others were responding. Most of the crowd sat like zombies, their mouths agape, with a “what the fuck?” look of wonderment, totally into the entire scope of this man. ”

 

Read Ron's full piece here.

 

Finally, take a look at a few other Memphis related Bowie items that Mike McCarthy has posted here. Have a good poke around, but beware, you’ll be lost in there for some time.

categories: News
Tuesday 09.24.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Dress as David Bowie and win AGO tickets tomorrow

 

“So swishy in your satin and tat”

 

The Canadian media is gearing up for the arrival of David Bowie is at the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) in Toronto tomorrow. (Wednesday 25th)

The original curators of David Bowie Is, Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh from the V&A in London, appeared in two three and a half minute behind-the-scenes news items on the City News breakfast show this morning.

Breakfast Television’s Jennifer Valentyne got a sneak look at the AGO exhibition and interviewed the pair who explained some of the exhibits.

View both reports here:

Part One

Part Two

 

Meanwhile, The AGO is asking Bowie fans to get into the spirit by showing up in costume tomorrow. The first 200 Thin White Dukes, Halloween Jacks or Ziggy Stardusts, etc. to show up get admission to the “opening night spectacular,” which is otherwise sold out. There will also be live music and Bowie impersonators at the gallery between 6:00 pm and 8:30 pm for the opening tomorrow.

 

Two nights later (Friday 27th) The AGO will host a David Bowie is Here Official Opening Party from 9:00 pm to 1:00 am, featuring music by DJs Luis Jacob and Odessa Paloma Parker, video tributes to Bowie by Toronto new media artist Lorna Mills and an exhibition of memorabilia collected by Toronto artist Andrew Zealley and others. There is limited capacity to this event so go here now for tickets to this and the exhibition itself.

categories: News
Monday 09.23.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Win Sorrow and Life On Mars 40th Anniversary 45s

 

“All you’ve got to do is win”

 

Just in case you’re not subscribed to the Parlophone David Bowie newsletter service, here’s a link to their latest communication which includes a contest to win both the Sorrow and Life On Mars? 40th Anniversary limited edition picture discs.

Go here for your chance to win and why not sign up to the newsletter while you’re about it. It would be churlish not to.

categories: News
Wednesday 09.18.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Soul version of Ziggy Stardust unearthed

 

“When I needed soul revival, I called your name”

 

“Rediscover the music of Milky Edwards & The Chamberlings“ runs the catchline on the rather sparse home page for this intriguing outfit. 

Milky Edwards & The Chamberlings is not a name that has particularly endured over the years, and that's despite having apparently released an album of fine Bowie covers in the Motown tradition, sometime in the 1970s.

The 11-track LP (pictured here), is called Starman and it features versions of all of the tracks on Ziggy Stardust. However, information regarding the group is hard to come by as are pressings of the record itself.

Comments left on their YouTube page suggest the band came to a premature end after a spell on Mercury records amid rumours of Satanism and suicide.

Sadly, the evidence points to this actually being a modern day hoax and that Milky Edwards & The Chamberlings never really existed.

But don't let that put you off. The three tracks available on YouTube (Soul Love, Moonage Daydream and Starman) are still well worth a listen and let’s hope that whoever is behind this deceit gets around to recording the rest of the album soon.

We’re looking forward to Rock 'N' Roll Suicide with a Detroit Emeralds twist and Star in the style of The Temptations.

FOOTNOTE: If that album sleeve looks at all familiar to you, check out Reflections the Diana Ross and The Supremes long player from 1967. 

categories: News
Wednesday 09.18.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

We Are Bowie exhibition in Bristol till Sunday

 

“Put you all inside my show”

 

Artist Stephen Collings has been in touch with details of an exhibition he has curated at the Parlour Showrooms in Bristol in the UK, which runs until this Sunday, September 22nd. 

The show includes an incredibly diverse collection of works, with Bowie as the theme, from the following artists: Stephen Collings, Cyril Crentsil, Joseph Kelly, Philip Collings, Joe Wakeman, Jak Flash, Morgan Howell, Incwel, David Collings, Andrew Scaife, Stanley Chow and James George.

You can view many of the beautiful pieces including the compelling and quite bizarre Boyz Keep Swinging film on the dedicated tumblr page.

Also, stay tuned to the davidbowie.com community forum for updates.

We’ll leave you with a bit from the press release...

 

+ - + - + - + - + - + - + - + - + - + - + - + - + - + - + - + - +

 

David Bowie is many things to many people. Gateway to the avant-grade, pioneer of art rock and sexual plurality. Wearer of masks, musician, performer, actor, comedian and fashion icon.

Following on from my 2010 exhibition The Importance of Being Vincent dedicated to my own ‘fan art’ of Vincent Price, I wanted to further explore fan art, and the creative compulsions that turn inspiration into music, art, fashion or performance.

Back in 1997, I attended Turner Prize-winner Jeremy Deller’s exhibition The Uses of Literacy, which comprised art created by fans of Manic Street Preachers. Beyond idolatry, these pieces expressed nascent independent creativity where the artist - the inspiration - were curators. The fans were both audience and creators, each bringing their own identities, experiences and desires into play. We are at once constant, yet unknowing collaborators in art, and arguably no other artist as much as David Bowie has displayed the art of the possible.

Certainly few other modern artists can claim to such a cultural ripple effect, whether it be the New Romantics of the 80s, acolyte Britpop bands of the 90s or modern pop such as Lady Gaga, whose branding owes much to Bowie’s cross-cultural transgressions in the 1970s and beyond.

This project gained momentum as Bowie sprung back into popular consciousness this year with a new album and the timely V&A exhibition, David Bowie Is, heralding die-hard, brand new and transitory fans alike to pick up plectrums, paintbrushes, pencils and pins.

The V&A exhibition set a challenge - If Bowie is a catalyst for art, for the obscure and the new, condensed for a new audience, then where next for this creative exchange? The works displayed in this exhibition are merely a microcosm, a ripple, but also perhaps a love letter to an artist who continues to challenge and inspire.

 

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categories: News
Wednesday 09.18.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Sound and Vision 2013 pre-order link and listen now

 
“And I will sing”
 
 
The 2013 Sonjay Prabhakar Sound and Vision remix we’ve been telling you about is now available to pre-order on iTunes. 
 
The track is released by Parlophone Records as a digital download only on October 7th.
 
Meanwhile, if you can access the BBC’s listen again service, Radcliffe and Maconie had an exclusive first play of the track yesterday (Monday 10th).
 
You can listen to the whole thing here - it's about 1hr and 14 minutes in.
 
categories: News
Wednesday 09.11.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

The David Bowie Pin Ups Radio Show

 

“And me I’m on a radio show”

 

To mark the 40th anniversary of the October 1973 release of David Bowie’s only album of cover versions, Pin Ups, we are delighted to be able to announce the David Bowie Pin Ups Radio Show.

On Oct 28th Spotify will have an exclusive stream of this fascinating curio, which was originally recorded as a promotional tool for the release of the record in 1973, but never used.

The radio show features snippets from Pin Ups interspersed with brief but nevertheless wonderful observations from Bowie regarding the bands he covers on the album, wherein he adopts his very best mockney to recall his days as a mod during the period. It's great fun and you’re going to love it.

Meanwhile, why not reacquaint yourself with Pin Ups on Spotify now.

categories: News
Wednesday 09.11.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Earthling green vinyl due on MOV next month

 

“Look out on a green world”

 

Following their successful and very desirable numbered colour vinyl pressings of Heathen and Outside in conjunction with the V&A (copies of both are still selling for around the $200 mark on eBay), Music On Vinyl (MOV) announced today that Earthling [MOVLP815] will be the next release in the series, albeit independently of the V&A.

First issued in February 1997, Earthling is due on October 21st.

The first pressing will consist of 2,000 numbered copies on 180gm audiophile transparent green vinyl and once these have gone the pressing will be available in black vinyl only.

Visit your favourite vinyl LP emporium and pre-order your copy now and stay tuned to David Bowie (Official) for a contest to win copies of the album nearer the release date.

MOV pressings still available on black vinyl: Excerpts From Outside [MOVLP500] and Heathen [MOVLP470]. 

categories: News
Tuesday 09.10.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 

TND nominated for Mercury album of the year

 

“These are your favourite things”

 

The Barclaycard Mercury Prize 2013 nominees for Album Of The Year have just been announced and David Bowie’s The Next Day is currently equal favourite to win along with Arctic Monkeys’ latest, AM.

Here’s a bit regarding The Next Day from the press release...

 

David Bowie The Next Day

The Next Day’ is David Bowie’s 26th studio album and the first he has released in 10 years. The album was recorded in New York with co-producer Tony Visconti. It reached number one when released by RCA in March 2013 and features the top 10 single Where Are We Now?.

’David Bowie celebrates his legendary songwriting ability with panache and a remarkable sense of urgency’

 

Bookmakers William Hill say the odds for the 2013 Barclaycard Mercury Prize are the closest ever: “There are 12 strong albums here – representing a diverse range of styles from UK artists – all of which stand a good chance of winning”, says Rupert Adams of William Hill. “This quality is reflected in the closeness of the odds we’ve given to the 2013 Barclaycard Mercury Prize Albums of the Year”.

 

William Hill's latest odds for the prestigious Prize are as follows:

 

4/1         David Bowie 'The Next Day' 

4/1         Arctic Monkeys 'AM'

5/1         Laura Marling 'Once I Was An Eagle'        

5/1         Foals 'Holy Fire'   

7/1         Disclosure 'Settle'

7/1         James Blake 'Overgrown'             

8/1          Rudimental 'Home'

8/1          Jake Bugg 'Jake Bugg'

8/1         Laura Mvula 'Sing to the Moon'

10/1       Villagers 'Awayland'

10/1       Jon Hopkins 'Immunity'

10/1       Savages 'Silence Yourself'

 

The overall winner of the 2013 Barclaycard Mercury Prize will be announced at the 'Albums of the Year' Awards Show at the Roundhouse on Wednesday, 30 October 2013.

categories: News
Tuesday 09.10.13
Posted by Mark Adams
 
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