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MOV to release "Heroes" Symphony on vinyl

 

“‘Cos we’re lovers and that is a fact”

 

Music On Vinyl, the company that dares to release the vinyl albums others shy from, has again gladdened the hearts of vinyl junkies everywhere with their latest release.

On March 16 MOV will issue the "Heroes" Symphony by Philip Glass on vinyl for the first time. Keep reading for the official MOV blurb...

 

PHILIP GLASS – HEROES SYMPHONY

MOVCL015

0028948219384

1LP, 180 GRAM

3mm sleeve

 

• 180 gram audiophile vinyl + insert

• From the music of David Bowie & Brian Eno

• PVC protection sleeve

• First pressing of 1000 copies on white vinyl

• Available on vinyl for the first time!

 

Side One

1. Heroes

2. Abdulmajid

3. Sense of Doubt

 

Side Two

1. Sons of the Silent Age

2. Neuköln

3. V2 Schneider

 

Heroes Symphony is a symphony (also known as Symphony No. 4 "Heroes") composed by American composer Philip Glass in 1996 based on the album "Heroes" by David Bowie. Glass also based his earlier Low Symphony [MOVCL009] on the David Bowie album, Low. The symphony is scored for 2 flutes, piccolo, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, 3 horns, 3 trumpets, 2 trombones, bass trombone, tuba, percussion, harp, piano, celesta and strings.

The album includes the "Heroes" Symphony performed by American Composers Orchestra directed by Michael Riesman and conducted by Dennis Russell Davies. Like Low before it, Heroes was one of David Bowie's most experimental and avant-garde records, so it made sense that Philip Glass would follow the Low Symphony with the "Heroes" Symphony, adapting Bowie and Brian Eno's original, minimalistic synthesized sketches for full orchestra.

Surprisingly, Glass' arrangements and orchestrations emphasize the icy allure of the original compositions, and the shimmering, glassy textures sound coldly beautiful. It’s an intriguing listen throughout.

 

Also available: Glassworks [MOVCL008], Low Symphony [MOVCL009], The Photographer [MOVCL005], Solo Piano [MOVCL007]   

categories: News
Sunday 02.15.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Twenty five-page Bowie cover feature in Rock & Folk

 

“There’s been many others, so many times”

 

We’re very happy to be able to give you an exclusive preview of the March edition of French magazine Rock&Folk, which is published tomorrow. (February 17)

In celebration of the forthcoming arrival of David Bowie Is in Paris, the popular music monthly has an impressive twenty five-page cover feature with articles by Eric Dahan, Jérôme Soligny and Patrick Eudeline.

Eric has written some great accompanying text in a ten-page selection of classic Bowie photographic portraits. While in an eight-page feature, Jérôme surveys the vast Bowie discography and selects fifty five of his favourite releases for your consideration.

Patrick has contributed four pages on the theme of David Bowie the mod and the remaining three pages (also by Jérôme) concern themselves with a look at various Bowie book and DVD recommendations with the punning title: Beau, oui!

 

FOOTNOTE: Jérôme informs us that with this edition, Bowie has appeared on the cover of Rock & Folk twenty times since the magazine was founded in 1966. That’s more appearances than any other artist in Rock & Folk’s forty nine-year history.

 

UPDATE: David from the most excellent David Bowie - On the cover of a magazine has been in touch with his own theory of how many times Bowie has been on the cover of Rock & Folk. Over to you David...

 

“I have it on good authority that Bowie has appeared in total on 26 R&F covers. He has had 21 full page covers (shared with another person or by himself), along with five other covers featuring a small picture. So strictly speaking he has had 21 covers.”

 

Of course, Jérôme probably wasn’t including this latest edition so his claim is still good. Perhaps we will feature a gallery of all the covers one of these days.

categories: News
Sunday 02.15.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Happy Birthday Rebel Rebel and YouTube

 

“Looks like you've been there too”

 

As Valentine’s Day draws to a close in the UK, we trust YouTube had a happy 10th birthday and we celebrate the release of the Rebel Rebel 45.

However, even though the press ads back in 1974 claimed the track was “A VALENTINE DAY RELEASE”, the single didn't actually come out till the following day, February 15 1974.

So what better way of celebrating both facts than watching the Reality Tour live version of Rebel Rebel on YouTube now?

categories: News
Saturday 02.14.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Ziggy at Imperial College this day in 1972

 

“Don’t lean on me man, 'cos you can’t afford the ticket”

 

After a false start (Aylesbury Jan 29), three non-starters (Lanchester Polytechnic Arts Festival, Coventry, Feb 3 - Cleopatra’s in Derby, Feb 4 - Guild Hall, Southampton, Feb 7), a pub gig (the official start of the tour at the Toby Jug, Tolworth, Surrey, Feb 10) and a debatable (High Wycombe Town Hall, Feb 11), David Bowie’s UK Ziggy Stardust tour got underway properly with the first Ziggy and The Spiders show (though not yet billed as such) in London at The Great Hall in Imperial College, South Kensington on Feb 12, 1972, for a mere 50p admission.

Ray Stevenson took the black and white shots and the colour picture was taken at Aylesbury a couple of weeks earlier on Jan 29, where Bowie wore the same outfit.

Here follows a piece by Andy Barding of Cygnet Committee, whose partner-in-crime, Martyn Hammond, kindly supplied the ticket from the show in our montage.

 

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David Bowie at The Great Hall, Imperial College, London, Feb 12, 1972 by Andy Barding.

 

Set included: Queen Bitch, The Wild-Eyed Boy From Freecloud, Space Oddity, Amsterdam, Andy Warhol, I Feel Free, Round And Round, Suffragette City, Waiting For The Man and Rock ’n’ Roll Suicide

Just two shows into their first ever tour and the pressure was on: Bowie and the Spiders would make their central London live debut in front of a few hundred bemused students, a handful of cynical rock hacks and – perhaps most daunting of all - a TV film crew from France.

Claude Ventura, director of France’s leading ‘Pop Deux’ music programme, was flitting in and out of London throughout the first few weeks of 1972, capturing various touring prog and art-rock acts on film. The previous night, Monsieur Ventura and his two-man crew had filmed and interviewed Detroit’s legendary MC5 at Aylesbury Friars. And on this Saturday night, the team travelled to Kensington to catch a very young and still rather raw Ziggy Stardust in action. Not a bad weekend’s work...

Some 20 minutes of the set was filmed on 16mm colour stock, but only one song appears to have made it to broadcast on French TV screens – ‘Suffragette City’

Apparently, the remaining footage suffers from badly-distorted sound and was therefore unsuitable for airing. It remains in the vaults.

In the mid 00’s, though, several archived editions of Pop Deux were made available online through the French video archive house, INA. It gave many Bowie fans a first tantalising glimpse of a young Ziggy and the Spiders with a bit of a way to go still in terms of confidence and finesse.

It’s a great clip: Bowie and Ronson look and sound great together, though the lyrics are almost entirely fluffed and Mick mistakenly drops out completely just before the final chorus. But the interplay between the two, and the spectacle of the sparkly and spangly stage clothes (Bowie in high-topped wrestling boots, white satin trousers and the black and white cropped satin top that would later be immortalised on the reissued ‘The Man Who Sold The World’ cover) shines through the single-point camerawork in spades.

It’s raw, but impressive. And belies the difficulty that Bowie had in getting going this particular night. In his excellent autobiography “Apathy For The Devil”, early fan Nick Kent (then a reviewer for Frendz magazine) recalls a power cut striking just as the band are about to launch into their opening number. The tune aired by French TV was close to the end of the set – which might well have proved just as well. Reviews from the time indicate a difficult start to the show.

Technical hitches aside, the reasonable crowd and energetic performance proved a score for Bowie and the Spiders. Though one final gesture, shamelessly copied from Bowie’s then hero Iggy Pop, almost fell flat... literally.

In emulation of the famous clip where the lead Stooge is shown walking on audience members’ hands and smearing peanut butter on his chest, David also tried to summon a few willing strong arms to the front. A grubby still shot from the time, taken by Ray Stevenson, shows Bowie trying to get to his feet atop some shoulders – but sadly there just weren’t enough bodies to make it happen, and he slipped to the floor.

An unnamed audience member at the gig commented that the lights were particularly impressive. There was a bright red spotlight on one side and a bright green one on the right, and at an appropriate moment both would focus on Bowie’s face, so he would be lit half in one colour and half another, with the beams joining right down the middle. No doubt very impressive for the time.

 

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And here’s the Melody Maker review.

 

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CAUGHT IN THE ACT - Melody Maker (19 February 1972)

 

As the band played on and sang "You're Wonderful" in Edith Piaf emotion-drenched voices, DAVID BOWIE stepped down from the stage into the audience until they picked him up and carried him out in the spot light. No bibbity-bobbity hat, but shimmering white satin trousers and shirt ripped open..........Clothes by Liberty, boots by Michel, as the man said........

But this was no fag show, a drag act full of lisping gestures and limp hands. Don't expect Danny La Rue or any Alice Cooper rubbish with boa constrictors and electric chairs. The costumes - and there were several changes - are the gilt on the lily, but they're not the substance.

The music is muscular, the performances witty and assured. What other group would dare to do "I Feel Free" before a London audience, complete with Cream rip-off solo - so calculated as to be a thing of glorious absurdity? Because Bowie and his band are nothing if not superb parodists, right down to the way in which Ronson walked to the front of the stage and invited the front row to caress the body of his guitar. It plucked the heartstrings, friends, the pathos of that moment.

Bowie has a tremendous sense of pace and timing. He varied things by slotting in a 15-minute acoustic piece, where he did "Port of Amsterdam", "Andy Warhol" and "Space Oddity", then threw in rockers like "Reeling and Rocking", and then highly abstract pieces such as "Wild-Eyed Boy From Freecloud."

The harmony singing between Bowie and Ronson was brilliant. "Space Oddity" was as perfect as the record.

Not surprisingly, there was references to the Velvet Underground. There was "Queen Bitch", dedicated to Lou Reed, and even a version of "I'm Waiting For The Man". Later on, in the dressing room, two chicks were saying they'd see Bowie at his next gig in Brighton. They'd seen all his others so far.

Dedicated to bringing theatrics back to rock music, David Bowie swirled and captivated at London's Imperial College on Saturday, queening his way through old and new songs, before a house packed to the door. And they hung on every word that dropped from his lips.

 

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categories: News
Thursday 02.12.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Bowie Record Store Day 2015 release part 1

 

“Well the record’s so white, but it may come clear”

 

April 18th sees the release of a limited edition white/clear vinyl 'Side By Side' 7" 'Kingdom Come'. One side features the original Tom Verlaine version of the track and the other has Bowie's rendition from the album 'Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps)'.

'Kingdom Come' was first released by ex Television frontman Tom Verlaine on his eponymous solo album in 1979, a year later Bowie covered the song for inclusion on the album 'Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps)', Bowie wanted to know how the song would sound in the style of Ronnie Spector thus giving us this very unusual performance.

This 'Side By Side' release will be issued in a clear stickered sleeve on white/clear vinyl.

 

DAVID BOWIE/TOM VERLAINE - KINGDOM COME LIMITED EDITION 7" 'SIDE BY SIDE' WHITE/CLEAR VINYL FOR RECORD STORE DAY 2015

 

A-Side Kingdom Come by Tom Verlaine (1979)

(Tom Verlaine)

Produced by Michael Ewasko and Tom Verlaine

 

AA-Side Kingdom Come by David Bowie (1980)

(Tom Verlaine)

Produced by David Bowie and Tony Visconti

 

KINGDOM COME is released on Parlophone/Elektra April 18th 2015

categories: News
Sunday 02.08.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Rex Ray says goodbye and FU

 

“And now I close my eyes”

 

It is with great sadness we report that Rex Ray, the San Francisco-based fine artist, graphic designer and beautiful human being, succumbed to a long illness today.

Rex, who was 58, was active online right up to last week before he entered hospice care over the weekend.

Bowie fans will know him best for a series of incredible album and single artworks along with prints and gig posters for Bowie.

With the news of his death a message was posted on the closed FB group: REX RAY SUPER-ELITE MF FAN CLUB CLUB! And though it may not have been in his own words, it captured his spirit nicely:

 

“Okay bitches I left the building and for the last time...FU”

 

Those of us privileged to have known him personally, understood what a generous and talented man he was.

Blessed with a quick wit and a keen intelligence he was a wicked comedian and a hugely popular member of the Bowie community.

He will be sorely missed by many, but leaves an incredible body of breath-taking artworks that will live on as a fitting legacy to this important artist and great man.

Whether you’re familiar with his work or not, take a look at his site or check out this image search page.

We plan to collect together all of his Bowie-related artwork and present it to you as a gallery in the near future.

 

The only fitting goodbye is a massive collective FU Rex Ray...Now piss off!

categories: News
Sunday 02.08.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Bowie Record Store Day 2015 release part 2

 

“I still don’t know what I was waiting for”

 

April 18th sees the release of the latest special limited David Bowie 7" picture disc, the Record Store Day 2015 edition of Changes.

Collectors of the 40th anniversary series of picture discs (which celebrate the original RCA releases of Bowie’s singles), have long bemoaned the absence of Changes from the series on account of it being the first Bowie single on RCA.

For some mad reason, the 40th anniversary releases commenced with Starman, and we didn’t really appease fans with the April 1st story last year regarding a Changes picture disc.

So it is with those reasons in mind that it gives us great pleasure to finally announce this release. Here’s a bit more about the disc.

 

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'CHANGES' was first released in January 1972 and was the first of two singles taken from the album 'Hunky Dory', the other being 'Life On Mars?' It was originally backed with the 'Hunky Dory' track 'Andy Warhol'.

 

The AA-side for the 2015 picture disc is 'EIGHT LINE POEM (GEM PROMO VERSION)' which is making its official debut with this picture disc. 

 

In August 1971, David Bowie's then management had a small run of promo LPs made to secure him and another Mainman artist, Dana Gillespie, a record deal. This promo album, featuring seven songs by Bowie on side A and five by Dana Gillespie on the reverse, is often referred to as the GEM Promo, a reference to GEM Records, the company that pressed the album.

 

The white label LP came in a plain white card cover (sometimes with a green Gem logo sticker) with typed green Gem labels pasted over the white labels, or simply hand-written white labels. The stamped matrix number (BOWPROMO 1A-1/1B-1) is another identifier. Most of the Bowie songs on this promo LP would appear four months later on Hunky Dory. However, as the recording and mixing of that album was not yet completed, it transpired that the Gem Promo LP was the only source for the Bowie song 'Bombers', which would not get an official release for a further 20 years. The GEM Promo also contained alternative takes/mixes of the tracks. The 2015 AA-side version of 'EIGHT LINE POEM' is taken from this promotional album.

 

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DAVID BOWIE - CHANGES LIMITED EDITION 7" PICTURE DISC FOR RECORD STORE DAY 2015

 

A-Side Changes

(David Bowie)

Produced by Ken Scott and David Bowie

 

AA-Side  Eight Line Poem (GEM promo version)

(David Bowie)

 

The images used for the picture disc were taken by Brian Ward from the Hunky Dory album shoot. The mono image is a previously unpublished shot from the session.

 

CHANGES is released on Parlophone April 18th 2015

categories: News
Sunday 02.08.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Let's Dance: Bowie Down Under at 65th Berlinale - BIFF

 

“Under the moonlight, this serious moonlight”

 

Let's Dance: Bowie Down Under (a film by Ed Gibbs and Rubika Shah), screens at the 65th Berlinale - Berlin International Film Festival next week.

Four screenings of the film commence on Tuesday February 10 and here’s the synopsis.

 

 

The remarkable, forgotten story behind David Bowie's biggest-ever hit record – and how an unlikely journey deep into the Australian outback led to its unprecedented success.

 

An early pioneer of music video, Bowie’s visual legacy hit a new peak in 1983, on the newly launched MTV. With rare political insight, Let’s Dance told the story of a young couple’s struggle with assimilation in the New World – one of the few times Indigenous Australians had been seen on global television by a mainstream audience.

 

Let’s Dance: Bowie Down Under looks back at this oft-overlooked period of Bowie’s celebrated career, exploring his sudden appearance in the outback, the social and cultural issues of the time, and the legacy of a remarkable work that still resonates today.

 

 

Check out the official FB page for links and updates.

FOOTNOTE: scroll the pictures to see the cover for the original Australia & New Zealand Let’s Dance sheet music.

categories: News
Saturday 02.07.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

One final push for Lea DeLaria Bowie Jazz Album

 

“But she jumped into the furnace, Singing old songs we loved”

 

Orange Is the New Black star Lea DeLaria (Carrie “Big Boo” Black) announced her crowdfunding project last year, a jazz rendition of the greatest hits of David Bowie.

In a video posted on Pledge Music, she had this to say regarding her appeal: “You may not know it, but I have five records on the Warner Brothers jazz label. So now, I am working on 'House of David: DeLaria + Bowie = Jazz'. I'm recording 12 David Bowie tunes, and I'm swinging the hell out of them.”

She continued: “The trick is to make the people want to hear it in a completely and entirely different way. I think we've got it. When you see the beautiful ballad for 'Life on Mars' and the big church number in 'Modern Love,' and the bossa nova version of 'Golden Years,' it's a completely different sound of Bowie, but all very much within the confines of who he is.”

With just 14 days of the campaign left, DeLaria has reached 78 percent of her goal. For a mere $10 donation, you can get an AccessPass to unlock videos, music, behind the scenes photos and private updates, including live performances of some of the Bowie tunes.

To help fund the project and get House of David released, please make your pledge here.

Keep an eye on Lea’s FB page for updates.

categories: News
Tuesday 02.03.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Earthling is eighteen

 

“My, my, the time do fly”

 

David Bowie’s 1997 album Earthling was released in the UK on February 3rd 1997 (with worldwide regional variations).

The album produced a slew of excellent singles (most of them accompanied by some of Bowie’s best ever videos), in the shape of Telling Lies, Little Wonder, Dead Man Walking, I'm Afraid of Americans and Seven Years In Tibet.

Produced by David Bowie, Reeves Gabrels and Mark Plati, Earthling reached #6 on the UK album chart and entered the top ten in several other countries.

The band personnel for this release was Reeves Gabrels, Mark Plati, Gail Ann Dorsey, Mike Garson and Zachary Alford, with some brilliant and possibly overlooked solos from Gabrels and Garson. (Listen to Looking For Satellites and Battle for Britain (The Letter) respectively)

Earthling is a remarkable album that not only stands the test of the last eighteen years but still sounds fresh and vital. But don’t take our word for it, check it out here.

categories: News
Tuesday 02.03.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

ISOLAR tour commences in Vancouver this day in 1976

 

“Does my face show some kind of glow?”

 

David Bowie’s 1976 ISOLAR tour of North America and Europe in support of the Station To Station album, commenced on February 2 at the Pacific Coliseum, Vancouver, British Columbia, concluding at the Pavillon de Paris in Paris, France, on May 18 the same year, close to seventy shows later.

Variously known as the Station to Station and White Light tours, it is now referred to as the ISOLAR tour, as reflected by the title of the official tour programme. (The 1978 World Tour is now referred to as the ISOLAR 2 tour)

Bowie’s band for the shows (collectively known as Raw Moon) consisted of: Carlos Alomar (rhythm guitar), Stacey Heydon (lead guitar), Dennis Davis (drums and percussion), George Murray (bass) and Tony Kaye (keyboards and synthesisers). Bowie himself also played saxophone on occasion.

Our montage shows images from tour rehearsals taken by Andy Kent and a ticket from the opening night.

We’ll tell you more about the rehearsals and the show nearer the publication of the exclusively previewed book at the top of our montage.

It’s the cover of the next publication from Cygnet Committee: The Dawn Of The Duke - David Bowie in Vancouver, 1976,

This volume will feature rare and exclusive Andy Kent shots from rehearsals and the opening show, along with his recollections of both.

The Dawn Of The Duke will also have the usual reviews and memorabilia, with accompanying text by Andy Barding.  

Keep an eye on the Cygnet Committee page for updates.

categories: News
Monday 02.02.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Bowie and Iggy on Radio 4 plus Kraftwerk in UNCUT

 

“From station to station, back to Düsseldorf City, Meet Iggy Pop and David Bowie”

 

First up, in case you missed it, you can still catch BBC Radio 4’s new show, Marc Riley's Musical Time Machine, on the BBC iPlayer. Here’s a bit from the BEEB’s blurb...

 

In each episode, Marc lines up the Time Machine to travel to two different points in time and revisit two interviews with something in common - a person or place, a shared influence or ideology, a discovery, a misunderstanding.

 

In this first episode, the interviews share a geographic connection - Berlin. David Bowie, in conversation with Radio 1's Stuart Grundy from 1977, explains why the city was so good for his creativity. The second interview comes from 1990 when Iggy Pop spoke to Nicky Campbell about how he hooked up with Bowie and offered another perspective on their time together in Germany.

 

It’s a great listen, but frankly Bowie did well to stay composed with some of Stuart Grundy’s mildly irritating line of questioning. Nicky Campbell’s approach to Iggy is far more agreeable. If you have access to the BBC’s iPlayer, go listen here.

 

Meanwhile the March issue of UNCUT magazine (out now) has a feature on Kraftwerk which they describe thus: “The "German Beach Boys" on Autobahn, which 40 years ago heralded a new era of electronic music”.

In it they have a contribution from DB, cribbed from an old UNCUT interview about the Berlin recordings, which they never fully published. However, you can read the full thing below.

 

FOOTNOTE: Today’s lyric quotation is from the title track of Kraftwerk’s 1977 album, Trans-Europe Express, as if you didn’t already know.

 

Uncut Interviews David Bowie on Berlin - The Real "Uncut" Version

 

BERLIN/GERMANY

 

UNCUT: Many reasons have been suggested for moving to Berlin: the local art and music scene, to escape superstardom, for spiritual and physical detox - plus the creative stimulation of being in an isolated, edgy, divided city. Are these theories accurate? Can you remember why the city appealed?

 

Bowie:  Life in LA had left me with an overwhelming sense of foreboding. I had approached the brink of drug induced calamity one too many times and it was essential to take some kind of positive action. For many years Berlin had appealed to me as a sort of sanctuary like situation. It was one of the few cities where I could move around in virtual anonymity. I was going broke; it was cheap to live. For some reason, Berliners just didn't care. Well, not about an English rock singer anyway.

 

Since my teenage years I had obsessed on the angst ridden, emotional work of the expressionists, both artists and film makers, and Berlin had been their spiritual home. This was the nub of Die Brücke movement, Max Reinhardt, Brecht and where Metropolis and Caligari had originated. It was an art form that mirrored life not by event but by mood. This was where I felt my work was going. My attention had been swung back to Europe with the release of Kraftwerk’s Autobahn in 1974. The preponderance of electronic instruments convinced me that this was an area that I had to investigate a little further.

 

Much has been made of Kraftwerk’s influence on our Berlin albums. Most of it lazy analyses I believe. Kraftwerk’s approach to music had in itself little place in my scheme. Theirs was a controlled, robotic, extremely measured series of compositions, almost a parody of minimalism. One had the feeling that Florian and Ralph were completely in charge of their environment, and that their compositions were well prepared and honed before entering the studio. My work tended to expressionist mood pieces, the protagonist (myself) abandoning himself to the 'zeitgeist' (a popular word at the time), with little or no control over his life. The music was spontaneous for the most part and created in the studio.

 

In substance too, we were poles apart. Kraftwerk’s percussion sound was produced electronically, rigid in tempo, unmoving. Ours was the mangled treatment of a powerfully emotive drummer, Dennis Davis. The tempo not only 'moved' but also was expressed in more than 'human' fashion. Kraftwerk supported that unyielding machinelike beat with all synthetic sound generating sources. We used an R&B band. Since 'Station To Station' the hybridization of R&B and electronics had been a goal of mine. Indeed according to a 70s interview with Brian Eno, this is what had drawn him to working with me.

 

One other lazy observation I would like to point up, btw, is the assumption that 'Station To Station' was homage to Kraftwerk’s 'Trans-Europe Express'. In reality 'Station To Station' preceded 'Trans-Europe Express' by quite some time, 76 and 77 respectively. Btw, the title derives from the Stations of the Cross and not the railway system.

 

What I WAS passionate about in relation to Kraftwerk was their singular determination to stand apart from stereotypical American chord sequences and their wholehearted embrace of a European sensibility displayed through their music. This was their very important influence on me.

 

Interesting sidebar. My original top of my wish list for guitar player on LOW was Michael Dinger, from Neu. Neu being passionate, even diametrically opposite to Kraftwerk. I phoned Dinger from France in the first few days of recording but in the most polite and diplomatic fashion he said 'No'.

 

UNCUT: Some biographers speculate the Berlin era was an instinctive reaction to the mid-Seventies ethos of punk rock - dressed down, blunt, serious, doom-laden, emotionally raw. A plausible theory?

 

Bowie: Whether it was my befuddled brain or because of the lack of impact of the English variety of punk in the US, the whole movement was virtually over by the time it lodged itself in my awareness. Completely passed me by. The few punk bands that I saw in Berlin struck me as being sort of post 1969 Iggy and it seemed like he'd already done that. Though I do regret not being around for the whole Pistols Circus as that kind of entertainment would have done more for my depressed disposition than just about anything else that I could think of.

 

Of course, I had met them fairly early on when I was touring with Iggy, at least Johnny and Sid. John was obviously quite in awe of Jim but on the occasion of meeting Sid, Sid was near catatonic and I felt very bad for him. He was so young and in such need of help.

 

As far as the music goes, Low and its siblings were a direct follow-on from the title track 'Station To Station'. It's often struck me that there will usually be one track on any given album of mine, which will be a fair indicator of the intent of the following album.

 

UNCUT: Was there ever a serious plan to record with Kraftwerk, as some biographers claim?

 

Bowie:  No, not at any time. We met a few times socially but that was as far as it went.

 

UNCUT: Did you cruise the autobahns listening to 'Autobahn' non-stop, as Ralf Hutter once insisted?

 

Bowie:  Certainly on the streets of LA in 1975, yes. But by Berlin Autobahn was rather last year‘s news. So, in short , no.

 

UNCUT: Were there any meetings or planned collaborations with other 'Krautrock' bands like Cluster, Neu! or Tangerine Dream?

 

Bowie:  Not at all. I knew Edgar Froesse and his wife socially but I never met the others as I had no real inclination to go to Düsseldorf as I was very single minded about what I needed to do in the studio in Berlin. I took it upon myself to introduce Eno to the Düsseldorf sound with which he was very taken, Connie Plank et al (also to Devo btw who in turn had been introduced to me by Iggy) and Brian eventually made it up there to record with some of them.

 

LOW

 

UNCUT: Generally perceived as David at his most emotionally honest, but most unhappy. Looking back, is this interpretation accurate?

 

Bowie:  Yes, it was a dangerous period for me. I was at the end of my tether physically and emotionally and had serious doubts about my sanity. But this was in France. Overall, I get a sense of real optimism through the veils of despair from Low. I can hear myself really struggling to get well.

 

Berlin was the first time in years that I had felt a joy of life and a great feeling of release and healing. It's a city eight times bigger than Paris remember and so easy to 'get lost' in and to 'find' oneself too.

 

UNCUT: Is it true that Chateau d'Herouville was haunted by the ghosts of Chopin and George Sand, and you refused to sleep in the master bedroom because it was spooked? Did this affect the record's mood?

 

Bowie:  It was a spooky place. I did refuse one bedroom, as it felt impossibly cold in certain areas of it. To my knowledge though, the place itself had no bearing on the form or tonality of the work. The studio itself was a joy, ramshackle and comfy feeling. I liked the room a lot.

 

UNCUT: There are rumours that Robert Fripp was involved, but uncredited. Was he?

 

Bowie:  No.

 

UNCUT: Rumour also has it that an alternative version exists with different lyrics - is this true, and if so, why?

 

Bowie:  If there had been different lyrics to anything, then I'm sure they would have been working lyrics or 'placement' words to identify a melody that I wanted to use. I do remember singing joke words to some of the melodies but I frequently do that when I'm getting a feel for where I want it to go. Tony would have wiped or recorded over them when I put down final vocals. I'm not aware of any existing alternative versions.

 

UNCUT: The couplet in 'Breaking Glass which begins "don't look at the carpet" - is this a reference to drawing Kabbalistic symbols on the floor in LA?

 

Bowie:  Well, it is a contrived image, yes. It refers to both the cabbalistic drawings of the tree of life and the conjuring of spirits.

 

UNCUT: Is it true that 'Weeping Wall', 'Subterraneans' and 'Some Are' were left over from your proposed soundtrack to The Man Who Fell To Earth?

 

Bowie:  The only hold over from the proposed soundtrack that I actually used was the reverse bass part in Subterraneans. Everything else was written for LOW.

 

 

"HEROES"

 

UNCUT: Widely seen as a more upbeat and positive album than 'Low'. Is this accurate?

 

Bowie:  It's louder and harder and played with more energy in a way. But lyrically it seems far more psychotic. By now I was living full time in Berlin so my own mood was good. Buoyant even. But those lyrics come from a nook in the unconscious. Still a lot of house cleaning going on I feel.

 

UNCUT: The album was mostly written in the studio and completed in very quick takes. Correct? Was there an intent behind this method?

 

Bowie:  A couple were very definitely first and only takes. I think the rest were probably run at two or more times until the feel was right. With such great musicians the notes were never in doubt so we looked at 'feel' as being the priority.

 

Most of my vocals were first takes, some written as I sang. Most famously 'Joe the Lion' I suppose. I would put the headphones on, stand at the mike, listen to a verse, jot down some key words that came into mind then take. Then I would repeat the same process for the next section etc. It was something that I learnt from working with Iggy and I thought a very effective way of breaking normality in the lyric.

 

UNCUT: It is often said that the album sleeve was an allusion to Gramatte's self-portrait, or to Heckel's Roquairol - is either of these correct? And did the Heckel painting also inspire Iggy's 'The Idiot' cover?

 

Bowie:  Heckel's 'Roquairol' and also his print from 1910 or thereabouts called 'Young Man was a major influence on me as a painter. I personally couldn't stand Gramatte. He was wishy washy imo. I have seen the Grammatte in question but no, it was Heckel.

 

UNCUT: Is there a creative connection between the Brücke school of painting and this album?

 

Bowie:  Explained elsewhere I hope.

 

UNCUT: Eno says you both spent most of the sessions doing Peter Cook and Dudley Moore voices, the recording was a real laugh, and that you were virtually living on one raw egg a day. True?

 

Bowie:  We certainly had our share of schoolboy giggling fits. I think that 'most of the sessions' is a little bit of an exaggeration. However, Brian and I did have Pete and Dud down pretty pat. Long dialogues about John Cage performing on a 'prepared layer' at the Bricklayers Arms on the Old Kent Road and such like. Quite silly.

 

I was eating extremely well as my drug intake was practically zero. I would eat a couple of raw eggs to start the day or finish it, with pretty big meals in between. Lots of meat and veg, thanks mum. Brian would start his day with a cup full of boiling water into which he would cut huge lumps of garlic. He was no fun to do backing vocals with on the same mike.

 

UNCUT: Conflicting stories: "Heroes" was inspired by (a) Two lovers David observed standing by the Berlin Wall, (b) Tony Visconti and Antonia Maass kissing by the Wall, (c) Otto Mueller's painting 'Lovers Between Garden Walls' (d) all of the above? (e) None of these.

 

Bowie:  I'd prefer Tony to answer this.

 

UNCUT: Conflicting stories: 'Blackout' is a reference to David collapsing in Berlin, or to the New York City power cut of 1977 - both of these? Neither?

 

Bowie:  It did indeed refer to power cuts. I can't in all honesty say that it was the NY one, though it is entirely likely that that image locked itself in my head. (you would have to check the date of both the recording and the NY blackout to make an intelligent assumption.)

 

UNCUT: 'V2 Schneider' - a tribute to Florian?

 

Bowie:  Of course.

 

 

LODGER

 

UNCUT: An album which really divides Bowie fans - it is either devout love or total indifference. Can you understand both reactions?

 

Bowie:  I think Tony and I would both agree that we didn't take enough care mixing. This had a lot to do with my being distracted by personal events in my life and I think Tony lost heart a little because it never came together as easily as both Low and Heroes had. I would still maintain though that there are a number of really important ideas on Lodger. If I had more time I would explore them for you…but…you can probably pick them out as easily.

 

UNCUT: Moving away from pure electronic sounds - was this a deliberate strategy to stay ahead of the synthesizercopycat bands who were busy aping 'Low' and "Heroes"?

 

Bowie:  I think it's the lack of instrumentals that give you the impression that our process was different. It really wasn't. It was a lot more mischievous though. Brian and I did play a number of 'art pranks' on the band. They really didn't go down too well though. Especially with Carlos who tends to be quite 'grand'.

 

UNCUT: Was the backwards tape of 'All The Young Dudes' for 'Move On' originally an accident? And does this song have any connection to the unfinished Iggy collaboration 'Moving On'?

 

Bowie:  Not really an accident but I did stumble upon it. I had put one of my reel to reel tapes on backwards by mistake and really quite liked the melody it created. So I played quite a few more in this fashion and chose five or six that were really quite compelling. Dudes was the only one to make the album, as I didn't want to abandon the 'normal' writing I was doing completely. But it was a worthwhile exercise in my mind. It has the same title as the song I wrote for Iggy. But as the one for Jim was a working title, I passed it onto the Lodger song.

 

UNCUT: The final refrain in 'Red Money' - "project cancelled". Is this significant? A curtain being drawn on the Eno triptych?

 

Bowie:  Not at all. Mere whimsy.

 

UNCUT: What is 'cricket menace'?

 

Bowie:  Little crickety sounds that Brian produced from a combination of my drum machine (I would, and still do, use one to write with when I'm on my own) and his 'briefcase' synth. You can hear them on African Nightflight.

 

UNCUT: Moving to New York - had Berlin served its purpose? Was New York chosen for musical reasons?

 

Bowie:  It was an irreplaceable, unmissable experience and probably the happiest time in my life up until that point. Coco, Jim and I had so many great times. But I just can't express the feeling of freedom I felt there. Some days the three of us would jump into the car and drive like crazy through East Germany and head down to the Black Forest, stopping off at any small village that caught our eye. Just go for days at a time. Or we'd take long all afternoon lunches at the Wannsee on winter days. The place had a glass roof and was surrounded by trees and still exuded an atmosphere of the long gone Berlin of the twenties. At night we'd hang with the intellectuals and beats at the Exile restaurant in Kreutzberg. In the back they had this smoky room with a billiard table and it was sort of like another living room except the company was always changing.

 

Sometimes we'd go shopping at KaDeWe, the giant department store in the Centre of West Berlin, which had the hugest food counters anyone could imagine with displays that are only imaginable in a country which either must have been seriously deprived of food at one time or where the populace just plain likes to eat a lot. We'd stock up occasionally on what felt like luxuries at the time like chocolates or a small tin of caviar. One day, while we were out, Jim had come in and ate everything in the fridge we had spent all morning shopping for. It was one of the few times that Co and I were truly mad at him. I could write a lot more on all this…but.

 

I had not intended to leave Berlin, I just drifted away. Maybe I was getting better. Jim decided to stay on a while longer as he had pretty much hitched up with a girl he'd met there and had by now gotten his own apartment, next door to ours. Then Elephant Man came up, which caused me to be in the US for a considerable spell. Then Berlin was …over.

 

 

MISCELLANEOUS

 

UNCUT: David and Iggy apparently met Giorgio Moroder during sessions for 'The Idiot'. Was there ever a plan to work with him on that record, or 'Low' or "Heroes"?

 

Bowie:  No.

 

UNCUT: Iggy claims 'Lust For Life' was written by you in front of the TV in Berlin, on a ukelele, with a rhythm copied from the tapping Morse Code beat of the Forces Network theme. Is this the case?

 

Bowie:  Absolutely.

 

UNCUT: A 'Stage' tour film was shot by David Hemmings at Earl's Court. Why was it never released?

 

Bowie:  I simply didn't like the way it had been shot. Now, of course, it looks pretty good and I would suspect that it would make it out some time in the future.

 

UNCUT: The Berlin albums are now widely seen as foundation stones of post-punk/ambient/electronica/world music. Does this surprise you?

 

Bowie:  No.

 

UNCUT: Were you aware of their importance when you were making them?

 

Bowie:  Yes, yes, yes.

 

For whatever reason, for whatever confluence of circumstances, Tony, Brian and I created a powerful, anguished, sometimes euphoric language of sounds. In some ways, sadly, they really captured unlike anything else in that time, a sense of yearning for a future that we all knew would never come to pass. It is some of the best work that the three of us have ever done. Nothing else sounded like those albums. Nothing else came close. If I never made another album it really wouldn't matter now, my complete being is within those three. They are my DNA.

 

categories: News
Thursday 01.29.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Schneider talks to Jazz Times about Bowie project

 

“We are the best jazz you've ever heard...”

 

Maria Schneider has given an interview to Michael J. West for the January/February edition of Jazz Times, regarding working with David Bowie on Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime).

Titled: David Bowie and Maria Schneider's Enigmatic Collaboration, the article/interview discusses the creation of the track, from inception to completion. Here’s an excerpt...

 

The two worked closely together, exchanging and trying out new ideas—but freely rejecting them as well. “He was very good at saying, ‘No, I don’t like that. Yes, I love that.’ And that made it really easy, that he didn’t hem and haw around things he didn’t like,” says Schneider. The music came first; the words followed and reshaped the music around them. The opposite was also true, with Bowie’s final lyrics adapted to what he and Schneider had written. Schneider and Bowie then called in the orchestra’s rhythm section to workshop the tune—along with McCaslin and Keberle, whom Bowie had handpicked to solo. After further refinement they went into the studio in July. It took only a few takes, with the band laying down their parts before Bowie added the vocal; Schneider had imagined that he would sing in between the orchestral figures she had arranged, but his delivery instead crossed bar lines and overlapped organically with the ensemble. “It was kind of mind-blowing,” she says. “He automatically heard the unexpected.”

 

Read the full online version over at JazzTimes.com

categories: News
Tuesday 01.27.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Alan Yentob's Cracked Actor film is forty today

 

“I'm just the space cadet...he's the commander”

 

Around this time on the evening of Sunday 26th January 1975, Bowie fans were readying themselves for the 10:15pm broadcast of Alan Yentob's fifty minute BBC 1 Cracked Actor documentary, which was part of the Omnibus series.

Forty years later it's almost impossible to calculate just how important that screening was to Bowie-starved fans in the UK.

In America, not only did followers of the man and his music have the Diamond Dogs/Philly Dogs tours, but they also enjoyed TV broadcasts of The 1980 Floor Show, Ziggy Stardust The Motion Picture and The Dick Cavett Show.

After Bowie’s 70s TOTPs appearances and his first proper television interview on Russell Harty Plus in January 1973, there had been little to sate the appetite of the hungry Bowie fan on UK television.

So Cracked Actor came as a very welcome oasis in an otherwise dry spell of Bowie TV.

Filmed in California and Philadelphia during the legendary Diamond Dogs Tour of 1974, it captured Bowie at a transitional stage in his life. The BBC had unique access to Bowie on and off stage, in the recording studio and while travelling. This gave fans a rare glimpse of the private Bowie and it made for compelling viewing.

As with the aforementioned UK TV appearances, Cracked Actor had a profound effect on Bowie fans. It was their first real glimpse of the incredible live presentations that never reached the UK and despite the all-access nature of the documentary, it only added to the Bowie mystique.

Also, like much of the dialogue from The Man Who Fell To Earth the following year (coincidentally it was Cracked Actor that inspired Nicolas Roeg to approach Bowie for the film), many fans would learn parrot-fashion the majority of the one-liners that Bowie uttered throughout: “Bleedin’ wax museum in the middle of the desert...you'd think it would melt” and “I never wanted to be a rock ‘n’ roll star. Honest guv, I wasn‘t even there. But I was, you see, I was there.”

And thank goodness he was there! If you’ve not seen this remarkable film yet, check it out here complete with an introduction from Alan Yentob.

categories: News
Sunday 01.25.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Limited vinyl releases for David Bowie Is in Paris

 

“Moi, Je serai un roi, Et toi, Tu seras ma reine”

 

The headline hints at the story below. Two new vinyl Bowie collectables for those lucky, lucky French types.

 

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DAVID BOWIE "HEROES" LIMITED EDITION BLUE VINYL 7" / "iSELECT" LIMITED EDITION RED VINYL LP

 

To commemorate the opening of the 'David Bowie Is' exhibition at the Philharmonie de Paris, Tuesday March 3rd 2015 sees the release of two very special limited pieces of DAVID BOWIE vinyl.

The first is a blue vinyl 7", the French language version of "Heroes". The single will be limited to 2000 copies and will only be available in France from the exhibition shop and selected FNAC stores. However, fans may want to stay tuned to davidbowie.com for the chance to win copies of this instant Bowie collectable.

"Heroes" was originally released in France in September 1977 and was backed by the "Heroes" album track 'V-2 Schneider'. The 2015 edition has the AA-side of "Heroes" (Live) which was recorded on the Serious Moonlight Tour at the Pacific National Exhibition Coliseum, Vancouver, Canada on the 12th of September 1983 and it makes its audio debut here.

Also as part of the opening of 'David Bowie Is', the compilation 'iSELECT' is getting its debut vinyl release as a very limited red pressing. Originally released on CD in 2008 few of the selections are well known to the general record buying public but are songs which Bowie says he 'never seems to tire of'. The sleevenotes feature a track by track annotation written by Bowie himself. All of the versions of the tracks on 'iSELECT' other than 'Life On Mars?' are currently unavailable on vinyl.

 

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DAVID BOWIE IS - PHILHARMONIE DE PARIS - 3rd MARCH - 31st MAY 2015

'David Bowie Is' was originally presented in 2013 at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London and is now touring internationally, the exhibition has been met with resounding critical success around the globe as well as breaking attendance records in the UK and the US. 'David Bowie Is' will be presented in a slightly modified form in Paris for the opening of the Philharmonie de Paris Exhibition space at the Philharmonie de Paris from 3rd March to 31st May 2015. Ticket details and more information is available here: http://smarturl.it/DBisInParis

 

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DAVID BOWIE - "HEROES" LIMITED EDITION 7" BLUE VINYL

 

A-Side "Héros" (French single version)

(David Bowie/Brian Eno)

Produced by David Bowie and Tony Visconti

Recorded at Hansa By The Wall, Berlin

 

AA-Side "Heroes" (Live)

(David Bowie/Brian Eno)

Recorded live at Pacific National Exhibition Coliseum, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, September 12 1983

 

The "Heroes" sleeve (pictured) is an updated version of the original French 7" single release.

 

French language version of "Heroes" YouTube link: http://youtu.be/zcFIj56KL6g

French language version of "Heroes" Spotify link: http://smarturl.it/FrenchHEROES

 

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DAVID BOWIE - "iSELECT" LIMITED EDITION RED VINYL ALBUM

 

Life On Mars? (taken from the album Hunky Dory)

Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing (taken from the album Diamond Dogs)

The Bewlay Brothers (taken from the album Hunky Dory)

Lady Grinning Soul (taken from the album Aladdin Sane)

Win (taken from the album Young Americans)

Some Are (currently exclusive to this compilation)

Teenage Wildlife (taken from the album Scary Monsters)

Repetition (taken from the album Lodger)

Fantastic Voyage (taken from the album Lodger)

Loving The Alien (taken from the album Tonight)

Time Will Crawl (MM Remix) (new remix by David Bowie)

Hang On To Yourself (live) (taken from the album Live Santa Monica '72)

 

Scroll images to view the the "iSELECT" sleeve.

 

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We’ll leave you with David’s sleeve notes for Time Will Crawl (MM Remix) and his explanation of the song’s harrowing inspiration.

 

Time Will Crawl (MM Remix)

Produced by David Bowie.

Recorded & mixed by Mario J McNulty.

String arrangements by Gregor Kitziz.

String Quartet: Martha Mooke/Krista Bennion Feeney/Robert

Chausow/Matthew Goeke.

Drums: Sterling Campbell.

 

"There are a host of songs that I’ve recorded over the years that for one reason or another (clenched teeth) I’ve often wanted to re-record some time in the future. This track from 'Never Let Me Down' is one of those. I’ve replaced the drum machine with true drums and added some crickety strings and remixed. I’m very fond of this new version with its Neil Young of Shortlands accents. Oh, to redo the rest of that album.

 

One Saturday afternoon in April 1986, along with some other musicians I was taking a break from recording at Montreux studios in Switzerland. It was a beautiful day and we were outside on a small piece of lawn facing the Alps and the lake. Our engineer, who had been listening to the radio, shot out of the studio door and shouted, “There’s a whole lot of shit going on in Russia.” The Swiss news had picked up a Norwegian radio station that was screaming for anyone who would listen that huge billowing clouds were moving over from the Motherland and they weren’t rain clouds. This was the first news in Europe of the satanic Chernobyl.

 

I phoned a writer friend of mine in London but he hadn’t heard anything about it. It wasn’t for many more hours that the story started trickling out as major news. For those first few moments it felt sort of claustrophobic to know that you are one of only a few witnesses to something of this magnitude. Over the next couple of months a complicated crucible of impressions collected in my head prompted by this insanity any one of which could have become a song. I stuck them all in 'Time Will Crawl'. That last sentence rhymes." - David Bowie 2008

 

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French language version of "Heroes" 

 

categories: News
Sunday 01.25.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Jessica Lange covers Bowie on AHS again

 

“And you, you will be queen”

 

Spoiler alert: Following the Elsa Mars (Jessica Lange) cover of Life On Mars? for the premiere of American Horror Story: Freak Show back in October, Lange’s character again tackled Bowie for the season finale last night.

As with her wonderful performance of Life On Mars?, the original video was again clearly the inspiration for Lange’s cover of “Heroes” last night. Even her posture and the backlighting echoes the Bowie original, which you can view here.

We won’t give anything more away for those of you that have yet to catch the finale, but keep an eye on the Season 4 American Horror Story: Freak Show FB page for updates.

categories: News
Thursday 01.22.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Station To Station released this day in 1976

 

“Such is the stuff from where dreams are woven”

 

As the headline suggests, Station To Station (the album that introduced the world to The Thin White Duke), is thirty nine today.

Considered a classic among fans and critics alike, the record was unusual for a Bowie album in that it contained just six tracks, even though it still clocked in at a little over thirty eight minutes.

Four of those six songs were released as commercial A-sides by RCA, with Golden Years being the pre-album hit. The song scored Bowie yet another top ten just in time for the Christmas UK chart in 1975, where it remained right up to the release of the album in January 1976.

 

Here’s the tracklisting:

 

1. Station To Station (10:08)

2. Golden Years (4:03)

3. Word On A Wing (6:00)

4. TVC15 (5:29)

5. Stay (6:08)

6. Wild Is The Wind (5:58)

 

Top right in our montage is how the withdrawn colour version of the sleeve would have looked had it hit the racks. Top left is the two-colour version (red and black ink on a white sleeve) which is the version actually released.

The stark appearance of the final sleeve was more in keeping with the monochromatic look of the 1976 Station To Station tour, or the Isolar tour as it’s since become known.

If you’ve not listened to the album in a while, remind yourself of its majesty here.

categories: News
Thursday 01.22.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Bowie on Russell Harty Plus broadcast this day in 1973

 

“Like the video films we saw”

 

Generally agreed to have been taped on January 17 1973 (while The Jean Genie was at its peak of #2 on the official UK singles chart), there is some confusion as to when the actual broadcast of David Bowie on Russell Harty Plus took place.

We’re going with today’s date (which was a Saturday and in keeping with other broadcast dates of RHP), unless one of you out there has some other definite proof of broadcast, such as a TV listing magazine. (It worked last time we asked)

The original show which included Drive-In Saturday, the Bowie/Harty interview and a solo performance of My Death, was wiped by LWT.

A partial repeat on Russell Harty Plus Pop rescued the first song and much of the interview, but sadly My Death and the full interview survive as audio only.

If you’ve never seen it, it’s an absolute treat to look back at the 26-year-old Bowie, nervous in interview but peacock proud in performance for his first ever chat show appearance.

Our montage shows two stills from the interview plus pictures from the broadcast version of My Death (bottom left) and the rehearsal of My Death (bottom right)

Check out the surviving footage and audio on YouTube.

categories: News
Tuesday 01.20.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

My Night With Reg poster banned...or is it?

 

“And you daren’t look behind”

 

Following a sell-out season at London’s Donmar Warehouse, the late Kevin Elyot’s play, My Night With Reg, transferred to the Apollo Theatre for a limited run at the weekend. (Saturday January 17th – Saturday April 11th 2015)

The new poster, unveiled last week, features actor Lewis Reeves with nothing to cover his modesty aside from a vinyl copy of the Ziggy Stardust album.

The image passed Advertising Standards Authority restrictions but the London Evening Standard reported that Transport For London (TFL) won’t allow it on the Underground. Here’s a bit from the Standard piece...

 

Last October posters for Shakespeare’s Globe’s ’Tis Pity She’s a Whore, which featured a couple embracing, were also banned as it broke rules banning “nude or semi-nude figures in an overtly sexual context”, but Reeves is presumably merely listening to some David Bowie, not what most people would categorise as an “overtly sexual act”. So why the ban?

A press officer for TFL hadn’t seen the ad but “if it has been rejected it means that it doesn’t meet the guidance that we have set.”

 

However, further investigations have proved that the poster is indeed all over Zone 1 of the London Underground, albeit in the smaller framed rows of adverts on escalators.

Either way, the resultant publicity won’t have harmed ticket sales, not that they need any help. Check out the Donmar Warehouse page for booking information, and more regarding the play, including cast pictures.

 

FOOTNOTE: Eagle-eyed pedants (i.e. the person writing this), may note that, even though the play is set in the summer of 1985, the version of Ziggy Stardust being held by a cast member in one of the onstage shots (scroll images), is in fact the 1990 reissue which obviously didn't exist in 1985. Yeah yeah... some people have too much time on their hands!

categories: News
Monday 01.19.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Helen Green talks about that Bowie animation

 

“And nothing has changed, Everything has changed”

 

One of the more inventive Bowie birthday tributes this year was created by illustrator, Helen Green.

Unless you've been in hibernation, you’ve no doubt already seen her animated drawings of David Bowie sporting 29 different hairstyles, which she posted on her homepage and her facebook and tumblr pages on Bowie’s birthday.

Since then, it seems the planet has gone crazy for Helen’s Time May Change Me movie, with even the likes of The Guardian picking up on it today.

Helen kindly said a few words for us regarding the project:

 

“It’s become somewhat of a tradition for me to create something to celebrate David Bowie’s birthday - a little token of appreciation for someone that has inspired me so much over the years. This year I decided to put my inspiration in motion. The result; an animated portrait illustrating Bowie’s evolution and reinvention, from the pre-Bowie 1964 to 2014, with the release of 'Sue (Or In A Series Of Crime)’.

Each pencil drawing was coloured digitally and animated in Photoshop, and took around 35 hours in total (though much of that time was spent finding references where David was facing in a specific direction). For many of the drawings, I used a reference from a different year, but facing the correct way. For example, the reference for Ashes to Ashes Bowie was his 1976 mugshot, and a sideways-facing ‘Heroes' Bowie for the drawing of Davie Jones. It was quite a triumph to see all 29 drawings in motion for the first time!”

 

35 hours?! That’s dedication.

 

Scroll the images above to see all 29 drawings one by one, and if you haven’t actually seen the animation yet, visit Helen’s home page and view even more of her stunning Bowie portraits.

categories: News
Saturday 01.17.15
Posted by Mark Adams
 
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