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David Live released 45 years ago today, probably

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“And he was alright, the band was altogether” 

According to the flyer reproduced here, David Live was released in the UK on 29th October, 1974. October 29 was a Tuesday back in 1974, a highly unusual day to release an LP in the 70s as the great majority were issued on a Friday. Given the other information available, we can deduce that the true release date would normally have been Friday November 1.

Whatever the truth, the date didn't hinder its success as David Live entered the official UK album chart at #2 on 16th November, 1974, and remained in the Top 20 for another six weeks till the end of the year.

David Live was Bowie’s first officially released live album, and it was compiled from performances during a run of shows in July 1974, at the Tower Theatre in Philadelphia during The Diamond Dogs Tour. It’s a magnificent recording capturing the energy and excitement of a completely new band that had started the tour a month earlier in Canada.

Incredible to think that Bowie had only arrived in New York three months earlier, but within two months had learnt and rehearsed a whole new set and embarked upon his most ambitious stage show to date.

The album really does stand the test of the past forty five years and sounds as exciting now as it did when it was released in 1974. Listen to the 2005 mix (remastered in 2016), the most complete version, here.

#BowieDavidLive

tags: 2019 October
Tuesday 10.29.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Stylophone capitalises on Bowie success 50 years ago today

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“And I think my spaceship knows which way to go”

The week before Space Oddity reached its final destination of #5 on the UK singles chart (it was at #6 fifty years ago today), Dubreq made the most of the record’s success by placing Stylophone adverts featuring Bowie in the music weeklies and trade magazines.

Bowie himself was keen enough on the handy little ‘pocket synthesizer’ to resurrect it for Slip Away on 2002’s Heathen album, and he even played it live right up until his final tour in 2004. The live picture here was taken during Slip Away by Total Blam Blam in Dublin on 3rd November, 2003.

#SpaceOddity50  #BowieDubreqStylophone 

tags: 2019 October
Friday 10.25.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Jim Reeve reviews Amsterdam Lazarus premiere

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“I’ve got drama, can’t be stolen”

Jim Reeve is currently researching for a book about Lazarus, which will also cover Blackstar and elements of The Next Day. The project has taken him all over the world to see productions of Lazarus, including to Australia, Brazil, Israel, Germany, Austria, Norway, Denmark and, most recently, the Netherlands. As far as we know he is the only person to have seen all of the productions.

A lifelong Bowie fan, Jim has spoken with numerous actors, directors, musicians and production staff to understand their approaches to the play and the themes that they have found within it. He has also extensively researched the rich background of Lazarus, its antecedents, its diverse and often surprising inspirations and, of course, the influence of both Walter Tevis’ novel and Nicolas Roeg’s movie of The Man Who Fell To Earth.

The recent Dutch-language production of Lazarus at the DeLaMar theater in Amsterdam is the first chance for two and a half years for audiences to see Ivo van Hove’s original staging, as previously mounted in New York and London. At our invitation Jim attended the premiere, read his review below.

 Lazarus tickets

#LazarusNL  #LazarusMusical 

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Lazarus premiere at the DeLaMar Theater by Jim Reeve

Last Sunday Lazarus premiered at the DeLaMar Theater in Amsterdam. In many ways it was like visiting an old friend, as Ivo van Hove’s meticulous production closely mirrors his London staging. Jan Versweyveld’s elegant set appears unchanged, Tal Yarden’s immersive video work displays only minimal modifications, the band has again been expertly marshalled by Henry Hey and even costuming and movement are familiar. The Dutch script, I was assured by the charming Chiel Roovers (a veteran of the New York and London shows, amongst others) is an excellent translation which adheres to the English text. But for all its similarities, this is much more than a mere recreation of the original production. There may have been no revolution but there has certainly been evolution, with a number of elements subtly sharpened. De Volkskrant headed its review ‘The Dutch Lazarus is better than the original” and on balance that’s probably true.

The major changes lie in the details of the performances, all of which are strong both dramatically and vocally throughout. Dragan Bakema is outstanding as Newton, a role which he took over at short notice after Gijs Naber withdrew. Whilst Michael C Hall presented a masterclass in semi-anaesthetised delivery through which his inner pain only surfaced occasionally, Bakema is much more openly tormented and, perhaps ironically, more human. By turns he’s nervous, fearful, hopeful, confused; but capable too of exploding with anger and maniacal energy. There’s a moment when he sits alone on his bed, wracked with anguish and giving way to heartrending sobs; but during When I Met You he briefly lunges at Valentine with the knife, with such intent that just for a moment I thought that we might be in for a very different ending. It’s a fresh interpretation of Newton, and it’s very, very good.

The other major roles are similarly reworked. Noortje Herlaar’s Elly lacks the unhinged manic energy of Cristin Milioti or Amy Lennox, instead conveying a quieter and more profound sense of inner sadness and frustration. As a result you feel her tragedy more deeply: you’re watching an intelligent, sensitive woman driven slowly to the edge, then rapidly over it. She sings Changes and Always Crashing in the Same Car with real depth.

Pieter Embrechts is a much more physically imposing presence than Michael Esper, and is a more dominant, commanding and sardonic Valentine. Whilst Ben is telling his taxi story Embrechts is shown in disturbing close-up on the screen, his mouth twisting in irritation and, as his fragile self-control erodes, his hands beginning to violently squeeze his own throat as if they had a life of their own. It’s a chillingly psychotic moment, although one can’t help having some sympathy for his feelings (if not his later actions) as Ben and Maemi are presented throughout as wholly self-absorbed: an alpha couple who know it and want you to know it too.

As the Girl, Juliana Zijlstra most closely mirrors the New York/London original, though she discards Sophia Anne Caruso’s New York sparkiness in favour of a more understated – and possibly more European – teenage truculence. Vocally she’s magnificent, bringing beautiful clarity to her songs and taking on Life On Mars? seemingly effortlessly.

Audience members to whom I spoke at the after-premiere party were uniformly enthusiastic, with the word “moving” cropping up frequently – pleasing to hear about a play which has sometimes been criticised for not sufficiently engaging its audience emotionally. The production is set to run for six months at the DeLaMar, with some 75,000 tickets reportedly already sold. It’s great news that so many people will finally get the chance to see a production that brings Bowie’s vision to the stage so accurately and well.

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Great stuff. Thanks Jim and good luck with the book.

tags: 2019 October
Saturday 10.19.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

David and Duncan donate UNICEF dove doodles

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“Rise together, Through these clouds, As on wings”

This story started with David Bowie twenty years ago and has gone full circle in that time to reach its conclusion tonight.

Doves for Peace was established in 1999 by Dorothy Claxton in response to the plight of innocent children caught up in violent conflicts and fleeing from war torn countries around the world. High profile personalities were invited to make a spontaneous drawing of a dove.

On Thursday 17th October, 2019, from 7:00pm BST, 107 drawings donated to Doves For Peace over the past twenty years will go under the hammer in aid of UNICEF.

The first of those pieces was created by David Bowie (Lot 75) on the 25th October, 1999, and the last was donated just a few days ago by Duncan Jones (Lot 107).

View both lots here.

Register to auction and see the full catalogue of all 107 doves here.

While you're waiting for the auction to start, read the full history of how David Bowie kick-started Doves For Peace below.

#DavidAndDuncan  #DovesForPeace  #Unicef

 

How Dorothy Claxton created Doves For Peace by David Launchbury

As a huge David Bowie fan I was lucky enough to be a winner on a competition Mark & Lard ran on their Radio One afternoon show back in October 1999. The prize was to visit the Maida Vale studios on the 25th October as part of a select audience to see David’s session throughout the show. My very talented artist and now retired art teacher neighbour (Dorothy Claxton) so kindly painted a beautiful portrait of David (see montage) for me to hopefully get signed.

She also had a wonderful idea to try and raise awareness for children whose lives have been devastated by war and wanted to do something to help, she thought that by asking famous people to draw a picture of a dove that maybe someday when she had enough she could raise some money for UNICEF.

I was incredibly lucky to meet David and not only did he sign her artwork he also drew a picture of a dove...see montage.

When I got back home I couldn't wait to show Dot the signed artwork and also gave her the dove picture David had drawn. She was so excited, and said that it was the first picture she had received. Fast forward twenty years and Dot feels she now has enough pieces of art from famous people to be able to auction them off in the hope of raising a substantial amount for UNICEF. The auction takes place on the 17th October.

I think it’s an incredible achievement that Dot has accomplished and the link between the first and last dove sketch is remarkable.

Website

Twitter

tags: 2019 October
Thursday 10.17.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

First Bowie magazine cover is fifty today

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“I can work the scene babe, I can see the magazines”

In the week that David Bowie entered the UK Top 20 at #13 with Space Oddity, DISC and MUSIC ECHO magazine rewarded him with his first ever front cover. *

The pictures was taken by @AlecByrneArchive at Paddington Street Gardens, London, in September 1969.

Inside was an interview feature by Penny Valentine who had long been a champion of David’s. Her love of Space Oddity only cemented her belief that Bowie would amount to something special. Here’s the concluding paragraph:

““Space Oddity” is the first tenuous link in a long chain that will make David Bowie one of the biggest assets, and one of the most important people British music has produced in a long long time.”

The front cover also featured new skinhead band, Slade. Ironic that both these newcomers would have to wait for the emergence of the glam rock movement before they found lasting success.

Skinheads themselves had dampened David’s enthusiasm for performing live, as he recounted to Timothy White for Musician magazine in 1983:

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MUSICIAN: When Space Oddity hit England in 1969, weren't you suddenly faced with a weird juxtaposition in live performance - something that later Bowie might have conjured up - where you'd be doing Dylanesque shows in front of pissed-off skinheads?

BOWIE: It was odd. I was not prepared for that at all. It was, unfortunately, a very good song that possibly I wrote a bit too early, because I hadn't anything else substantial at the time. What I was involved in to a lesser or greater extent at that point was what were known in England as the "Arts Labs". The idea was to encourage people to locally congregate at this meeting house in Beckenham and become involved in all aspects of arts in society. To come and watch strange performances by longhaired, strange people. They started out with altruistic aims. We'd all contribute to the funding, but those things were always broke, owing money left, right and center. You'd hire Bunuel films like Un Chien Andalou for people to see and not be able to pay for rental. Then you'd have poets who'd come down from Cumberland in their transit vans to read, and so on.

In the midst of all this, I'd written this little thing about Major Tom and gotten it recorded, and I was told I had a concert tour if I wanted it! I thought haughtily, "I'll go out and sing my songs!" not knowing what audiences were like in those days. Sure enough, it was the revival of the mod thing which had since turned into skinheads. They couldn't abide me. (laughter) No! No way! The whole spitting, cigarette-flicking abuse thing by audiences started long before the punks of 1977 in my own frame of reference.

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Thankfully, the fast-moving music scene of the early 70s was more prepared for David Bowie when he returned as a “Cosmic Yob” in 1972.

You will have noticed that the beautiful painting we have posted with the magazine cover is a piece by @saracaptainart (based on another of Alec’s shots taken on the same day), called AN OCCASIONAL DREAM.

* The cover of NME in January 1966 doesn't count as it was a paid for advert for Can’t Help Thinking About Me.

#BowieAlecByrne  #SpaceOddity50  #DBCP2019  #SaraCaptainArt 

tags: 2019 October
Friday 10.11.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

VH1 Storytellers vinyl released tomorrow

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“With the hymns of night, Singing come to me”

As mentioned previously, David Bowie’s 23rd of August 1999 performance to an intimate crowd at The Manhattan Center’s Grand Ballroom in New York, will be released by Parlophone as a limited edition double vinyl LP tomorrow (11th October), with four bonus recordings not included on the original 2009 CD version.

Recorded for the VH1 Storytellers series, Bowie used the opportunity to promote his forthcoming album, 'hours...'. And he had a right laugh while he was about it.

Order here

Further details here

#BowieStorytellers

tags: 2019 October
Thursday 10.10.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

NetAid at Wembley 20 years ago tonight

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“What to wear, What to say, What to do on a sunny day, Who to phone, Who to fight, Who to dance with on a Saturday night” *

Thirty years to the day after Bowie’s first appearance on Top Of The Pops with Space Oddity, David chose to celebrate the occasion with a short set and a few folk at Wembley Stadium for NetAid.

NetAid was an anti-poverty initiative to raise awareness for the challenges in developing countries, and to allow people to volunteer online, donating their skills to help people in the developing world. NetAid's goal was to make global philanthropy to support developing countries more efficient.

Following a press launch that included Bowie, Bono and Wyclef Jean, NetAid was globally launched with concerts on October 9, 1999 at Wembley Stadium in London, Giants Stadium in New Jersey and the Palais des Nations in Geneva.

Performers at Wembley Stadium included: Eurythmics, The Corrs, Catatonia, Bush, Bryan Adams, George Michael, David Bowie, Stereophonics and Robbie Williams. Proceedings were kicked off by Iman and footballer David Ginola.

The duo of Bowie and Mike Garson opened the six-song set with Life On Mars? They were then joined alphabetically by Sterling Campbell, Gail Ann Dorsey, Page Hamilton and Mark Plati, to perform a set which included two songs from the new release, 'hours...', for which David thanked the audience for the success of.

01 - Life On Mars?

02 - Survive

03 - China Girl

04 - The Pretty Things Are Going To Hell

05 - Drive-In Saturday

06 - Rebel Rebel

Emm Gryner and Holly Palmer joined the band from China Girl onwards.

For the occasion, Bowie wore a customised-by-sharpie shirt with braces (suspenders to some of you) and grey trousers.

Watch the full thing here.

* Correct, the original lyric says “Sunday night”. But the NetAid show was on a Saturday. It all makes sense now.

#BowieHours  #BowieNetAid

tags: 2019 October
Wednesday 10.09.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

 Bowie’s first TOTPs broadcast 50 years ago tonight

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“Do you remember a guy that's been, In such an early song?”

Taped the previous week, David Bowie’s appearance on Top Of The Pops with Space Oddity was broadcast fifty years ago tonight on 9th October, 1969.

The single had reached #13 and it would continue its ascent of the UK chart till it peaked at #5.

Sadly, the tape was wiped by the BBC, but were you lucky enough to catch this historic performance?

The mono pic in our montage is another exclusive and previously unpublished shot by BBC photographer Harry Goodwin taken from the Conversation Piece book.

#SpaceOddity50  #DBCP2019

tags: 2019 October
Wednesday 10.09.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Minnesota gets soul 45 years ago today

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“For you’re dancing where the dogs decay”

 After a break of almost three weeks away from the stage, on 5th of October 1974 David Bowie recommenced his The Year Of The Diamond Dogs tour of North America, which had kicked off in Montreal on the 14th of June.

 By this point he had dispensed with the trappings of the theatrical spectacle that was Hunger City and had stripped back the show to a simpler presentation, for what became affectionately known as The Soul Tour or Philly Dogs Tour, a reference to the new setlist which included songs from the forthcoming Young Americans album, mostly recorded in Philadelphia during the August break from the tour.

 As you can see from the flyer and ticket, the first show of this final 29-date* leg of the tour was at the 18.000-seater St. Paul Civic Centre Arena in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

 The musicians for these shows were: Mike Garson (piano, Mellotron), Carlos Alomar (guitar), Earl Slick (lead guitar), Emir Ksasan (bass guitar), Dennis Davis (drums), Pablo Rosario (percussion), David Sanborn (alto sax, flute), Richard Grando (baritone sax flute), Michael Kamen (electric piano, moog, oboe), Geoff McCormack, Ava Cherry, Robin Clark, Jean Fineberg, Anthony Hinton, Diane Sumler and Luther Vandross (backing vocals).

*Though it’s generally accepted to have been 29 shows, these statistics have changed over the years as new evidence of previously unknown and cancelled shows is uncovered.

FOOTNOTE: The accompanying photograph of Bowie in our montage was apparently taken by Tony De Nonno. We've not been able to find out which particular show it was shot at though.

#BowieDiamondDogs  #BowiePhillyDogs  #BowieSoulTour

tags: 2019 October
Saturday 10.05.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

'hours...' gets physical twenty years ago today

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“I can see it now”

Though it had been made available as an online download for a couple of weeks already and BowieNet members had been teased with snippets and the album's sleeve, the physical version of the 'hours...' album wasn’t released until 4th October 1999 in the UK, twenty years ago today. It was released the following day in many other territories.

Preceded by the top 20 hit Thursday's Child in September (The Pretty Things Are Going To Hell in some territories), it's hard to imagine now just how pioneering the download version of 'hours...' was. Here’s a bit from Rolling Stone magazine published on 30th August  1999:

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David Bowie has pulled another cyber-coup by becoming the first major-label artist to sell a complete album online in download form. Starting Tuesday, Sept. 21, fans will be able to purchase the digital files for hours… at VirginRecords.com, BowieNet (www.davidbowie.com) and at participating record-store Web sites (unspecified at press time). More than fifty stores have signed on to offer the record for the two-week period preceding the album’s North American CD release on Oct. 5. Pricing will be left up to retailers.

“I couldn’t be more pleased to have the opportunity of moving the music industry closer to the process of making digital downloads available as the norm and not the exception,” said Bowie in a statement Monday. Bowie has long been a fan of the Internet and digital distribution. He was one of the first name-brand artists to release a single online in 1997 (the drum ‘n’ bass track “Telling Lies”), he pioneered the use of Webcasts and chats, and launched the world’s first artist-created Internet service provider in 1998 with the formation of BowieNet.

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Supported by a heavy TV and radio campaign of Bowie appearances, the David Bowie and Reeves Gabrels produced 'hours...' was another top five hit in the UK for Bowie...and downloading became quite popular too.

#BowieHours

tags: 2019 October
Friday 10.04.19
Posted by Mark Adams