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Pretty Pink Rose is thirty

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“The left wing’s broken, The right’s insane”

Before we say goodbye to May 2020, it’s worth marking the 30th anniversary of an oft-overlooked single, released sometime in May 1990.

Issued ahead of the Adrian Belew album, Young Lions, from whence it came, Pretty Pink Rose was a Bowie composition billed as a duet and performed practically every night on the 1990 Sound + Vision Tour.

The song does seem to divide fans, but perhaps not quite as much as the video featuring Bowie, Belew and Julie T. Wallace. Make up your own mind about that, here.

FOOTNOTE: The closing track on Young Lions was a Belew/Bowie composition sung by Bowie, called Gunman.

#BowieBelew #PrettyPinkRose


tags: 2020 May
Sunday 05.31.20
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Sweepstakes at the David Bowie Official Store

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“All you've got to do is win”

Those of you not signed up to the Bowie Monthly newsletter may not have heard about the sweepstakes over at the David Bowie Official Store, wherein you could win a bundle including an Earthling puzzles set, Serious Moonlight throw blanket, and Space Oddity on vinyl.

Have a poke around while you're there and check out the recent T-shirt additions, among lots of other Official Bowie merchandise.

Forgot to mention, sweepstakes ends on May 31st 2020.

#BowieMerch #BowieStore


tags: 2020 May
Saturday 05.30.20
Posted by Mark Adams
 

MADI: Once Upon a Time in the Future

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THE BIGGEST SCI-FI MOVIE OF 2020 IS A GRAPHIC NOVEL - MADI: Once Upon a Time in the Future

“So as happenstance has happened to stance, I began working on this project about a year ago and it's come to fruition now!

It’s a graphic novel I created with the multiple Eisner nominated comic guru Alex de Campi, and I am so bloody proud of it. If you are in any way into comics, sci-fi or a good yarn, it brings together some absolute legends in the world of comic art, to tell a sci-fi story penned by me, and adapted to the comic medium by Alex and myself.

Just look at that list of artists! I think you'll all really like it.” - Duncan Jones

Just over a year ago in April 2019, MOON & MUTE writer / director Duncan Jones put the feelers out over Twitter about potentially telling the third instalment of what has come to be known as the Mooniverse trilogy in graphical novel format.

At the time Duncan was completely new to the format as a creator (massive comics fan though, especially 2000AD which led to him getting on board to direct the forthcoming feature film adaptation of Rogue Trooper) so in typical fashion he surrounded himself with experts in the field and what began as a quick Twitter ponder has evolved into MADI: Once Upon a Time in the Future in collaboration with his “sherpa” Eisner award nominated writer Alex de Campi.

MADI: Once Upon a Time in the Future was officially launched on Kickstarter on the 19th of May, the campaign reached its goal of $50,000.00 on that same day, within hours!

Less than a week after launch MADI: Once Upon a Time in the Future has just gone past $250,000.00 and hit the front page of Kickstarter as a featured project and has been shared and backed with much enthusiasm by the likes of Colin Hanks, Jonathan Ross, Guillermo del Toro, Alex Winter, Mark Kermode, David Baddiel, Peter Ramsey, Clint Mansell, Edgar Wright, and most excitingly for Duncan, legendary author William Gibson who tweeted out

“I first read this as a screenplay. Having myself experienced what can happen when a screenplay becomes a graphic novel, to say I'm excited by this Kickstarter is very much an understatement!”

The Mooniverse Trilogy started with Duncan’s multi award winning feature film debut MOON in 2009, and continued with the exclusive to Netflix feature set in near future Berlin, MUTE in 2018 in which we catch a glimpse of how things work out for Sam Bell after the end of MOON, so the series give us stories set in that shared Universe rather than direct sequels. If you’re keen to spend more time in the Mooniverse, have a thirst for incredible art and storytelling, and a hankering for ‘The biggest sci-fi movie of 2020’, MADI is for you!

So, what’s it all about?…

MADI is a 260-page road trip graphic novel set in the near future, by film director Duncan Jones (MOON, SOURCE CODE) and writer Alex de Campi (BAD KARMA, BLADE RUNNER), and drawn by some of comics’ most exciting artists including Glenn Fabry, Simon Bisley, Duncan Fegredo and Pia Guerra. Each artist tackles a 8-30 page section of the story, bringing to life one location.

Madi Preston, a veteran of Britain’s elite special operations J-Squad unit, is burnt out and up to her eyeballs in debt. She and the rest of her team have retired from the military but are now trapped having to pay to service and maintain the technology put into them during their years of service. They're working for British conglomerate Liberty Inc as mercenaries, selling their unique ability to be remote controlled by specialists while in the field, and the debts are only growing as they get injured completing missions. We meet Madi as she decides she’s had enough. She will take an off-the-books job that should earn her enough to pay out her and her sister, but when the piece of tech she’s supposed to steal turns out to be a kid, and she suddenly blacks out... she finds herself on the run from everyone she’s ever known.

In a globe-spanning adventure from Shanghai to Soho, Madi has to stay one step ahead of the giant corporations closing in on her from all sides.

MADI is the third and final story in the “Mooniverse,” an anthology of independent stories that take place in a shared future. You don’t need to have seen MOON or MUTE to fully enjoy this standalone book.

Having met and far exceeded the initial goal, Duncan and Alex are busy responding to comments from backers on the Kickstarter page, and adding additional content to all options for all backers as a way of thanking everyone for backing MADI. What began as an extremely exciting project is getting better and better as the days go by.

If you can’t quite stretch to it yet, or need some convincing, there’s even the first 17 pages to download and read now, free!

For further details on how to pick up a copy (variants of softcover or hardback), AND have Duncan tell you all about it (check out the video at the top of the Kickstarter page), please head over to the MADI: Once Upon a Time in the Future Kickstarter page now!

#MadiGraphicNovel


tags: 2020 May
Thursday 05.28.20
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Lodger is 41 today

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“And it won’t be forgotten”

We don't normally celebrate landmarks in Bowie’s career unless they are in five year increments, but we’ve broken that loose rule today.

In a piece about a promotional T shirt for Lodger in the BOWIE KOOKS fan group on this day last year, we mentioned the 40th anniversary of the album in passing.

Here’s what we said: “With evidence now suggesting that we've been celebrating Lodger a week too early (actual release date is more likely to be May 25th, 1979), here's a very rare promo Lodger T-shirt.”

Further research proves that May 25th, 1979, was indeed the date Lodger was released. The biggest clue has been chart entry dates, particularly during the period when Bowie’s albums would enter the UK chart upon release.

With Lodger, there were other pieces of evidence proving the date of May 18th highly unlikely.

Either way, if you’re not familiar with the album, check out the original 1979 version or Tony Visconti’s 2017 Mix. Here’s Fantastic Voyage from the latter, an incredible song that could have been written for today’s times.

Cover image of Lodger by Duffy Archive.

#BowieLodger #BowieFantasticVoyage #ANewCareerInANewTownBox


tags: 2020 May
Monday 05.25.20
Posted by Mark Adams
 

LIVEANDWELL.COM is streaming now

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“You're released but your custody calls, And I want to be free...”

Well, the 15th has been and gone and LIVEANDWELL.COM is available for streaming everywhere now.

If you've not listened yet, it's a great document of the 1997 shows and it works perfectly as a coherent live album despite being compiled from various gigs, as listed below.

DAVID BOWIE - LIVEANDWELL.COM TRACKLISTING

01 - I'm Afraid Of Americans (Radio City Music Hall New York, 15th October, 1997)

02 - The Hearts Filthy Lesson (Long Marston, Phoenix Festival, 20th July, 1997)

03 - I'm Deranged (Amsterdam, Paradiso, 10th June, 1997)

04 - Hallo Spaceboy (Rio de Janeiro, Metropolitan, 2nd November, 1997)

05 - Telling Lies (Amsterdam, Paradiso, 10th June, 1997)

06 - The Motel (Amsterdam, Paradiso, 10th June, 1997)

07 - The Voyeur Of Utter Destruction (As Beauty) (Rio de Janeiro, Metropolitan, 2nd November, 1997)

08 - Battle for Britain (The Letter) (Radio City Music Hall New York, 15th October, 1997

09 - Seven Years In Tibet (Radio City Music Hall New York, 15th October, 1997)

10 - Little Wonder (Radio City Music Hall New York, 15th October, 1997)

11 - Pallas Athena (Amsterdam, Paradiso, 10th June, 1997)

12 - V-2 Schneider (Amsterdam, Paradiso, 10th June, 1997)

LIVEANDWELL.COM is the first in a series of three David Bowie live releases from the 90s that will be released digitally over the coming months. Press release here.

In the spirit of the original project, the image we have used today is a version of the sleeve we've mocked up using elements made available for the LIVEANDWELL.COM project in 1999, including Kevin Mazur's superb live shot taken at The Supper Club in NYC in October, 1997.

Join the official BOWIE KOOKS fan group to see roughs of the original sleeve in this thread: https://smarturl.it/LAWroughsBOWIEKOOKS

FOOTNOTE: LIVEANDWELL.COM is not an active website

#BowieLiveAndWell


tags: 2020 May
Saturday 05.16.20
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Little Richard dies aged 87

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“Some cat was layin’ down some rock n roll...”

The young David Jones soaked up influences like a dry sponge and he found the music and attitude of Little Richard, among others, inspirational to say the least.

As a 15-year-old in 1962, Jones saw Little Richard live for the first time and then again the following year with The Rolling Stones as one of the support acts.

He listed the 1959 album, The Fabulous Little Richard, among his favourite 25 for a Vanity Fair feature in 2003.

Here’s Bowie talking about the content of today’s montage in 1991.

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“I sent away for a photograph of Little Richard when I was seven years old, it was called Star Pic and it took eight weeks to arrive and when it arrived it was torn…and I was absolutely broken-hearted.

The first record I think I bought was called I Got It, which he later re-wrote as She’s Got It. And ever since I saw that photograph, I realised he had so many saxophones in his band. So I went out and bought a saxophone intending that when I grew up I'd work in the Little Richard band as one of his saxophonists.

Anyway it didn’t work out like that, but without him I think myself and half of my contemporaries wouldn’t be playing music.”

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We’ll leave you with a Tweet posted by David’s son, Duncan Jones, earlier today:

“From what my dad told me about his love of this legend growing up, it’s very likely he would not have taken the path he did without the huge influence of Little Richard. One of the highest of the high. Enjoy whatever’s next, Superstar.”

FOOTNOTE: The framed picture of Little Richard bottom right, is the actual Star Pic mentioned above. Bowie once described it as his most treasured possession. © The David Bowie Archive.

#BowieLittleRichard


tags: 2020 May
Saturday 05.09.20
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Three 90s Bowie shows being made available to stream soon

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“Sending me so far away, so far away”

DAVID BOWIE ‘LIVEANDWELL.COM’ 1997 LIVE ALBUM AVAILABLE TO STREAM FROM 15th MAY

LITTLE WONDER (LIVE IN NEW YORK) AVAILABLE TO STREAM FROM 8th MAY

Parlophone Records is delighted to announce the first in a series of three David Bowie live releases from the 90s that will be released digitally over the coming months.

DAVID BOWIE LIVEANDWELL.COM is a live album, previously only available in limited quantities to BowieNet subscribers in 2000 and expanded for this edition to include two bonus tracks; Pallas Athena and V-2 Schneider.

LIVEANDWELL.COM is now a 12-track live album, recorded in New York, Amsterdam, Rio De Janeiro and at the UK’s Phoenix festival during the 1997 Earthling tour, all tracks have only been available on the very limited BowieNet release while the two bonus tracks were released as a 12” single under the punning Tao Jones Index, the name Bowie and his band used for an unannounced dance set in the Radio One Dance Stage at the Phoenix Festival on 19th July, 1997, the day before Bowie’s main stage performance the following day.

LIVEANDWELL.COM was Produced by David Bowie, co-produced by Reeves Gabrels and Mark Plati and mixed by Mark Plati at Looking Glass Studios, NYC. The musicians on the live recordings are David Bowie – vocals, guitar, saxophone, Zachary Alford – drums, Gail Ann Dorsey – bass, vocals, keyboards, Reeves Gabrels – guitars, synthesisers, vocals and Mike Garson – piano, keyboards, synthesisers.

DAVID BOWIE - LIVEANDWELL.COM TRACKLISTING

01 - I'm Afraid Of Americans (Radio City Music Hall New York, 15th October, 1997)

02 - The Hearts Filthy Lesson (Long Marston, Phoenix Festival, 20th July, 1997)

03 - I'm Deranged (Amsterdam, Paradiso, 10th June, 1997)

04 - Hallo Spaceboy (Rio de Janeiro, Metropolitan, 2nd November, 1997)

05 - Telling Lies (Amsterdam, Paradiso, 10th June, 1997)

06 - The Motel (Amsterdam, Paradiso, 10th June, 1997)

07 - The Voyeur Of Utter Destruction (As Beauty) (Rio de Janeiro, Metropolitan, 2nd November, 1997)

08 - Battle for Britain (The Letter) (Radio City Music Hall New York, 15th October, 1997)

09 - Seven Years In Tibet (Radio City Music Hall New York, 15th October, 1997)

10 - Little Wonder (Radio City Music Hall New York, 15th October, 1997)

11 - Pallas Athena (Amsterdam, Paradiso, 10th June, 1997)

12 - V-2 Schneider (Amsterdam, Paradiso, 10th June, 1997)

#BowieLiveAndWell


tags: 2020 May
Thursday 05.07.20
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Bowie on Kraftwerk and his Florian tribute

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

You've no doubt heard the sad news regarding the passing of Kraftwerk founder, Florian Schneider, aged 73. A spokesperson said he “passed away from a short cancer disease just a few days after his 73rd birthday”, his birthday being 7th April.

Schneider formed Kraftwerk with Ralf Hütter in 1970, and remained a member until his departure in 2008. He is pictured bottom left in our montage at Düsseldorf Hbf station with the rest of the band.

In a Kraftwerk feature for MOJO magazine Ralf Hütter responded to the question: “How important was David Bowie's infatuation with you?”, thus:

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“That was very important for us, because it linked what we were doing with the rock mainstream. Bowie used to tell everyone that we were his favourite group, and in the mid-'70s the rock press used to hang on every word from his mouth. We met him when he played Düsseldorf (April 8th 1976) on one of his first European tours. He was travelling by Mercedes, listening to nothing but Autobahn all the time.” (Keep reading for David's comment on the accuracy of the latter observation.)

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In 1978 Bowie recalled the meeting in an interview:

“I like them as people very much, Florian in particular. Very dry. When I go to Düsseldorf they take me to cake shops, and we have huge pastries. They wear their suits. A bit like Gilbert and George, actually, God, whatever happened to those two? I used to really like them... When I came over to Europe – cause it was the first tour I ever did of Europe (1976), the last time – I got myself a Mercedes to drive myself around in, cause I still wasn’t flying at that time, and Florian saw it... He said, “What a wonderful car”, and I said, “Yes, it used to belong to some Iranian prince, and he was assassinated and the car went on the market, and I got it for the tour.” And Florian said, “Ja, car always lasts longer.” With him it all has that edge. His whole cold emotion/warm emotion, I responded to that. Folk music of the factories.”

Kraftwerk immortalised the Düsseldorf meeting on the title track of the band’s 1977 album, Trans-Europe Express (see today’s lyric quotation), even including a shot of David and Iggy in the original German language video for the single.

David returned the compliment later the same year on the "Heroes" album, when he paid Florian the ultimate tribute by using his name for the title of V-2 Schneider.

Bowie also spoke in some depth about Kraftwerk in an UNCUT interview several years back. We reprinted the full unedited version of it on DavidBowie.com at the time and we’ll leave you with some of the relevant bits...

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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?

DB: 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 Rheinhardt, 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 Ralf 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 machine-like 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 drives 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 Rother, from Neu!. Neu! being passionate, even diametrically opposite to Kraftwerk.

I phoned Rother from France in the first few days of recording but in the most polite and diplomatic fashion he said 'No'.

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

DB: 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 Hütter once insisted?

DB: 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?

DB: Not at all. I knew Edgar Froese 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, Conny 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.

UNCUT: 'V-2 Schneider' - a tribute to Florian?

DB: Of course.

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So long Florian.

#BowieKraftwerk


tags: 2020 May
Wednesday 05.06.20
Posted by Mark Adams