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Dogs 45th red vinyl and original rebel digital due

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“You’re a juvenile success”

On 24th May 2019, 45 years to the day since its original release date, David Bowie’s Diamond Dogs will be reissued by Parlophone in a 'one-run-only' red vinyl edition featuring the 2016 remaster. This strictly limited pressing will only be available at ‘bricks and mortar’ retail outlets and not through online stores.

In celebration of the 45th anniversary of Diamond Dogs, there will also be a 1-track digital single of the original single mix of Rebel Rebel.

The original single mix of Rebel Rebel featured on the 2016 boxset 'Who Can I Be Now?’ was taken from a pristine copy of a 45rpm vinyl single from the time. The original tape (which had been missing since the mid-1970s), has now been discovered and remastered for this special one-track digital single.

Preceding the album by more than three months, Rebel Rebel peaked at #5 on the official UK singles chart. The original single mix was substituted by the shorter, ‘phased’ US single version in North America, featuring a new arrangement and overdubbed vocals. The album originally peaked at #1 on the official UK album chart and #5 on the Billboard album chart in the US.

Diamond Dogs is the latest in a series of 45th anniversary Bowie vinyl albums reissued over the last two years. Previous releases in the series have included gold vinyl versions of Hunky Dory and The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars, plus a silver vinyl release of Aladdin Sane.

Diamond Dogs 45th anniversary red vinyl and Rebel Rebel (Original Single Mix) download/stream will be released via Parlophone on 24th May 2019.

#DiamondDogsRed  #BowieRebelRebel  #BowieVinyl 

tags: 2019 March
Thursday 03.28.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Farewell to Scott Walker 1943 - 2019

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“We will be gods on nite flights”

Sad to report the passing of Scott Walker at the age of 76, as announced by his record label, 4AD, this morning.

Most of you will be well aware of David Bowie and Scott Walker’s mutual appreciation for each other’s work, indeed, fans have been sharing the recording of Walker’s 50th birthday message to David on the BBC Radio 1 special, CHANGESNOWBOWIE, presented by Maryanne Hobbs in January 1997: 

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“Hi David, this is Scott Walker. I’m coming to you via a very crappy old handheld tape machine, so I hope it’s alright. I’m gonna be a devil today, and not ask you any questions. I’m certain that among the many messages there’ll be those about how you’ve always embraced the new and how you freed so many artists, and this is, of course, true.”

Like everyone else, I’d like to thank you for all the years, and especially for your generosity of spirit when it comes to other artists, I’ve been the beneficiary on more than one occasion, let me tell you. So have a wonderful birthday, and by the way, mine’s the day after yours, so I’ll have a drink to you on the other side of midnight. How’s that?”

After a short pause and a sharp intake of breath, an emotional Bowie responded:

“That’s amazing...I see God in the window. That really got to me there I'm afraid. I think he’s probably been my idol since I was a kid. That’s very moving. I want a copy of that. I'm absolutely...That’s really thrown me. Thank you very much.”

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David was first made aware of Scott Walker’s catalogue by Lesley Duncan, who had co-written with Walker, including You're All Around Me on The Walker Brothers’ 1965 debut, Take It Easy.

Bowie talked about this and his appreciation of Jacques Brel in Vanity Fair’s November 2003 feature: David Bowie’s Favorite Albums:

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JACQUES BREL IS ALIVE AND WELL AND LIVING IN PARIS

CAST ALBUM (1968, CBS)

“In the mid-60s, I was having an on-again, off-again thing with a wonderful singer-songwriter who had previously been the girlfriend of Scott Walker. Much to my chagrin, Walker’s music played in her apartment night and day. I sadly lost contact with her, but unexpectedly kept a fond and hugely admiring love for Walker’s work. One of the writers he covered on an early album was Jacques Brel. That was enough to take me to the theater to catch the above-named production when it came to London in 1968. By the time the cast, led by the earthy translator and Brooklynite Mort Shuman, had gotten to the song that dealt with guys lining up for their syphilis shots (“Next”), I was completely won over. By way of Brel, I discovered French chanson a revelation. Here was a popular song form wherein poems by the likes of Sartre, Cocteau, Verlaine, and Baudelaire were known and embraced by the general populace. No flinching, please.”

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Over the years Bowie covered Mort Shuman’s translations of Next, My Death and Amsterdam, originally brought to a wider audience via Walker’s own covers. That torch was carried further by successive musicians, including Marc Almond who had this to say in an exclusive interview for DavidBowie.com in 2014:

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Total Blam Blam: Were Bowie's versions of My Death and Amsterdam your introduction to Jacques Brel?

Marc Almond: “It was hearing Bowie's versions of Brel that really turned me onto Brel in a big way. When I turned over Bowie’s single Sorrow and played Amsterdam on the B-side, it really was a seminal influential moment. I had been aware of Brel through hearing Scott Walker and Alex Harvey but it was Bowie who really sanctioned Brel as being very cool. Bowie opened up a whole world to me. When Bowie mentioned a Singer or a Writer or Artist I had to check them out and they would become a big part of my cultural sphere. Genet, Lou Reed, Lindsay Kemp. Iggy Pop, Brel and many more. When Bowie recorded Pin Ups, all the artists he covered were instantly cool. His influence on Pop Culture was and is enormous. I’m sure it was the same for many musicians of my generation. Bowie taught me what my teachers at school couldn’t.”

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Bowie gave several more nods to Walker over the years via the likes of: Nite Flights on Black Tie White Noise in 1993; a 1996 artwork for the Milestones 1997 charity auction titled: The Walker Brothers Triptych; Stephen Kijak’s 2007 film SCOTT WALKER – 30 CENTURY MAN, of which Bowie was Executive Producer, from where today’s montage pic of Bowie was taken and this pre-release quotation from him:

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“He really didn’t want to abide by the rules of the genre. He kind of opted out of rock very early on in his career. It just seems he wanted to expand in some very unusual ways. And that was pretty much what I wanted to do. And it was always guys like that that I admired”

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In an exclusive interview in the film Bowie also had this to say regarding Walker:

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"What I really like about his songwriting is the way that he can paint a picture with what he says. I have no idea what he's singing about and I've never bothered to find out and I'm not really interested. I'm quite happy to take the songs that he sings and make something of them myself, and I read my own reasoning into the images and all that, which is how I use music personally. I construct my own worlds out of the music that I listen to. It's rarely important to me what the reason was that someone wrote something, it doesn't matter to me really. So his songs are really useful! (laughs) They're useful for everyday living!"

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The closest Bowie got to the sound of Scott Walker was possibly the sublime Heat from 2013’s The Next Day, with its echoes of the verse of Walker’s own The Electrician from aforementioned Nite Flights. Also, Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime) was certainly in the spirit of some of Walker’s later recordings, particularly the first single version released ahead of Blackstar.

Bowie continued to champion Walker's work to the end and but we’ll leave you with something Scott himself told Jarvis Cocker in a rare interview on BBC Radio 6 music’s Jarvis Cocker’s Sunday Service in 2017:

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“We spoke several times on the phone about various things. He wanted at one stage to do an interview with me. This was 10 years ago, maybe, something like that. I didn’t do it and I can’t remember why I didn’t do it. Every time I spoke to him he was very nice to me. He always was on my side. He would recommend people to listen to my records. He was really generous when it came to me and always was interested in what I was doing. It’s funny, every time I spoke to him on the phone, he’d say, ‘Here I am overlooking the park. It’s sort of snowing, it looks lovely.’ You know, he’d describe where he was. And I thought, ‘I’m sitting in the flat here,’ you know, wherever I was [laughs]. But I always remember that about him. But [his death] was such a shock to all of us.”

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Scott Walker 9th January, 1943 – 25th March, 2019

#BowieWalker

tags: 2019 March
Monday 03.25.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Thumbs up for STAK and CGD box sets in UNCUT

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“Tom, Tom she whispers low, don't forget my name” *

The May 2019 issue of UNCUT has a 4-page feature regarding both the Spying Through A Keyhole (STAK) and the David Bowie (with John 'Hutch' Hutchinson) - Clareville Grove Demos (CGD) 7” box sets.

Under the heading of “The right stuff! Ground control prepares for the lift-off of Major Tom, in demo form”, the feature by John Robinson awards STAK 7/10 and CGD 8/10

There’s also a reprint of an NME interview from November 1969 with Gordon Coxhill, following the success of the Space Oddity. Here’s a bit from it:

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It looked like a piece of master planning, but it wasn’t. It looked like a monster hit, and it was. David Bowie’s “Space Oddity”, inspired by a visit to the film 2001: A Space Odyssey, was released just as the world was staying up all night to watch the moon landing.

Like the modest, self-effacing young man he is, David passed the credit on to his record company, but as it was written last November, he can hardly disown his amazing foresight!

“Put it down to luck,” he said over the phone from Perth, where he was about to begin a short tour of the Haggisland. “I really am amazed at the success of the record, even though I had confidence in it. I’ve been the male equivalent of the dumb blonde for a few years, and I was beginning to despair of people accepting me for my music.

“It may be fine for a male model to be told that he’s a great-looking guy, but that doesn’t help a singer much, especially now that the pretty-boy personality cult seems to be on the  way out.”

Much as David takes his songwriting seriously, he is amused by pundits who examine his material looking for hidden meanings even he is unaware of. “My songs are all from the heart, and they are wholly personal to me and I would like people to accept them as such.”

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the new issue of Uncut is in shops now and available online here.

The 4 x 7" Spying Through A Keyhole box set  is released on 5th April

The 3 x 7" Clareville Grove Demos box set is released on 17th May

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The David Bowie Store has a limited T-shirt and box STAK set bundle:

US Webstore

EU Webstore

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*Today’s lyric quotation is from Angel Angel Grubby Face (version 2)

#BowieSTAK  #BowieCGD  #BowieUNCUT 

tags: 2019 March
Saturday 03.23.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Four star STAK review in MOJO

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“And let me kiss you like you’ve never been kissed before” *

The May 2019 issue of MOJO has a full-page, 4 star review by Mark Paytress of the Spying Through A Keyhole (STAK) 7” box set.

Headlined ‘Ignition Time’ the review is introduced thus: Space Oddity’s anniversary year lifts off with a candid peek into the difficult months before that first flush of fame, writes Mark Paytress.

Here are the first three paragraphs:

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DAVID BOWIE spent the months between 1967 and ‘69 cast in a role that now seems unthinkable: he was deeply unfashionable. It was a time of endless auditions, blind alleys and doubt. His record label dropped him. No agent would touch his one-man cabaret show. The Laughing Gnome had become a Threepenny Pierrot.

Still Bowie persevered. Early in 1969, with a love affair crumbling, he reached for his 12-string to strum out his despair. It was his salvation. In Space Oddity, melancholy folk­pop enriched with futuristic Stylophone and flyaway brothers Gibb vocal, Bowie flipped hopelessness into 'Pop’s Brightest Hope'.

Two newly unearthed versions of the song feature on this nine-track, four-vinyl 45s set, comprising demos from 1968 and thereabouts. The first, a persuasive, 90-second segment, consists of two verses split by the 'tin can' chorus, fading out with “Can you hear me, Major Tom?” Boasting provisional lyrics (“Can I please get back inside/If I may”, “my time on Earth is nearly, through”), it’s Bowie committing it to tape before the moment goes.

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 If you want to read the remaining eight paragraphs, you can find MOJO digitally online or in stores right about now.

Go here for more information on Spying Through A Keyhole and pre-order links.

*Today’s lyric quotation is from Love All Around

#BowieSTAK #BowieMOJO

tags: 2019 March
Friday 03.22.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Uncensored China Girl video on Bowie YouTube

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“And when I get excited, My little China Girl says”

It’s hard to imagine in these times, just how much of an uproar the unedited version of David Bowie’s China Girl video created when it was first released in 1983.

The effect on ordinary folk was like that scene in Perfume, with folk ripping off each other's clothes and fornicating in the streets and the like.

OK, it wasn’t quite like that, but there was certainly a right brouhaha in the press and it was even banned by TV stations the world over.

The David Mallet directed video featured New Zealand model Geeling Ng, and the final moments of the video with her naked in the surf with Bowie (which got some a little hot under the collar), was a visual reference to the film From Here To Eternity.

Of course, this was all a bit of a distraction from the intended message of the video and possibly even Iggy Pop’s original lyric too.

Mainly shot in the Chinatown district of Sydney, the China Girl video (along with the previous Let’s Dance video), was a critique of racism with Bowie describing it as a “very simple, very direct” statement against racism.

Bowie said in Rolling Stone that same year:

“Let’s try to use the video format as a platform for some kind of social observation, and not just waste it on trotting out and trying to enhance the public image of the singer involved. I mean, these are little movies, and some movies can have a point, so why not try to make some point.”

And in another interview at the time, Bowie opined: “The message that they [the videos] have is very simple, it’s wrong to be racist!”

If you’ve never seen it, you can watch the full unedited version on the official David Bowie YouTube channel.

#BowieChinaGirl

tags: 2019 March
Saturday 03.09.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

View Bowie’s Memphis Group collection online

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“It's a very modern world”

Back in October 2017, the Modernism Museum in Mount Dora, Florida, launched one of the most comprehensive exhibitions of Memphis Group art and furniture ever assembled: SPACE ODDITIES: BOWIE | SOTTSASS | MEMPHIS.

Here’s a bit about the exhibition, which closes “early 2019”...

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DAVID BOWIE’S COLLECTION OF MEMPHIS GROUP ART by Karen LeBlanc

A rare look at pop icon David Bowie’s private collection of art and furniture by The Memphis Group on view at the Modernism Museum. Bowie was an avid collector of Memphis. After his death, his collection was auctioned off and for this exhibit, gathered together for one of the most comprehensive exhibitions of Memphis Group art and furniture. Learn about this movement in the 1980s that broke all the design rules to create its own unique, over-the-top aesthetic as The Design Tourist Karen LeBlanc takes you on a tour of works by Ettore Sottsass, the founder of the Memphis Group and his international group of artists and designers.

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Not everybody would have had the chance to visit either the exhibition or the Sotheby’s auction from whence the Bowie pieces came. However, The Design Tourist has just posted a tour of these incredible objects with some interesting history of The Memphis Group.

Watch the fifteen minute video here on you tube.

FOOTNOTE: Our montage shows David Bowie sitting on his Palm Springs table in New York in 2009, as later pictured in GQ magazine.

Here’s the original caption:

“When I was five, I spent an awful lot of time reading and drawing on the living room table, just like this. I don’t want to follow this line of thought to the inevitable conclusion, but it does look as though all that I’m missing is a model train set. The table is by the peculiar Milanese design company Memphis and is probably made out of hardboard and old socks.”

 In fact the table is made of briar and plastic laminate. The piece on the left is called Casablanca, and both were designed by Ettore Sottsass

PALM SPRING – 1984 - Ettore Sottsass

Table in briar and plastic laminate

CASABLANCA – 1981 - Ettore Sottsass

Sideboard in plastic laminate with internal shelves

No old socks were harmed in the making of the table.

#BowieMemphisGroup

tags: 2019 March
Thursday 03.07.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

RIP Kenneth Pit

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Kenneth Cooper Pitt: 10 November 1922 – 25 February 2019

Kevin Cann has been in touch with the sad news that David Bowie’s former manager, Kenneth Pitt, has died at his home in Hertfordshire.

Ken passed on Monday, 25th February, following a short illness. He was 96.

tags: 2019 February
Wednesday 02.27.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Rebel Rebel 45 is forty five today

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“Hot tramp, I love you so”

Though the press adverts proclaimed that it was a Valentine's Day release, Rebel Rebel was actually issued forty five years ago today on the 15th of February, 1974. The release, which had already been put back two weeks (original printed release date on demo label is Feb 1st), was an edited version of the song and a first taste from the upcoming Diamond Dogs LP, though it was considered a bit of a curveball compared to much of the music on that album. The single was backed with Queen Bitch.

It was the first release since the dissolution of The Spiders From Mars, though stylistically it may have been more at home on Aladdin Sane, with its up-tempo, Stonesy feel and with an unmistakable and instantly recognisable riff played by Bowie. A riff that he was more than grateful to have conjured up, later saying of it: “It's a fabulous riff! Just fabulous! When I stumbled onto it, it was 'Oh, thank you!'”.

The track reached #5 on the UK singles chart (Bowie's sixth Top Five single in the UK), and even managed a placing in the US Billboard Hot 100, no doubt helped by the exclusive New York Mix, which was almost a minute and a half shorter than the regular single mix. The New York Mix was released in North America and Mexico in May 1974 backed with Lady Grinning Soul.

This second version was more urgent than the original, with a backward echo effect on the new la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la backing vocals, castanets and more general excitement all round...more akin to the live version that would be performed shortly on the US Diamond Dogs tour.

The main images in our montage show the music press adverts from the UK (left) and the Netherlands (on the right), where David’s performance of the song on the Dutch TV show, Top Pop, was broadcast on the 18th. Watch it here.

#BowieRebelRebel 

tags: 2019 February
Friday 02.15.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Loving the Alien Break-outs out now

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“Under the moonlight, this serious moonlight”

The five selected stand-alone albums from last year’s David Bowie: Loving the Alien (1983-1988) box set are released today (15th February) by Parlophone.

The break-outs include the three studio albums, Let’s Dance, Tonight and Never Let Me Down on vinyl LP, CD and various digital formats, plus the two live albums: Serious Moonlight (Live ’83) and Glass Spider (Live Montreal ’87) on CD and digital formats. In addition, the compilation album, Dance (which features twelve remixes), will be available on standard digital.

If you haven’t already, you can order here and go here for the full breakdown.

#LTABox

tags: 2019 February
Friday 02.15.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Boys Keep Swinging 40th anniversary picture disc

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“Boys always work it out”

2019 is the 40th anniversary of Lodger and 17th May sees the release of the latest limited 7" picture disc from Parlophone, Boys Keep Swinging.

While originally recording the song, Bowie had hoped to capture a garage band feel with the musicians swapping instruments after a deck of Brian Eno’s Oblique Strategies cards had suggested ‘reverse roles’. So guitarist Carlos Alomar played drums and drummer Dennis Davis played bass.

The version featured on the A side is the 2017 mix by Tony Visconti from Lodger, undertaken for the A New Career In A New Town box set, as both Tony and Bowie felt they never had the opportunity to give Lodger the mix it deserved in 1979, due to time and studio constraints.

The AA side features I Pray, Ole which was apparently recorded during the Lodger sessions, but remained unreleased until mixed by David and David Richards for inclusion as an extra track on the 1991 reissue of the Lodger album. The track has been commercially unavailable since then.

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DAVID BOWIE - BOYS KEEP SWINGING LIMITED EDITION 40th ANNIVERSARY 7" PICTURE DISC

Side A

Boys Keep Swinging (2017 Tony Visconti mix)

(David Bowie, Brian Eno)

Produced by David Bowie & Tony Visconti

Mixed by Tony Visconti at Human Studios, NYC, 2017

 

Side AA

I Pray, Ole

(David Bowie)

Produced by David Bowie & Tony Visconti

Mixed by David Bowie & David Richards, 1991

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Boys Keep Swinging limited 40th anniversary 7" picture disc is released by Parlophone on 17th May.

#DBBKS40  #BowieVinyl 

tags: 2019 February
Thursday 02.14.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Bowie collects Edison Award in Amsterdam 45 years ago

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“It’s made out of old fisherman”

On this day in 1974 (13th February), David Bowie attended a press reception at the Amstel Hotel in Amsterdam, where Ad Visser (host of Dutch music show Top Pop), presented him with the Edison Award and a certificate for the Most Popular Male Vocalist, with particular recognition given to Ziggy Stardust and The Spiders From Mars.

Recalling an earlier trip to London to visit David, Visser poured two glasses of an “old fisherman drink”, Schelvispekel*, to toast David’s win.

Check out a brief excerpt from the conference on YouTube to make sense of today’s ‘lyric quotation’:

* Schelvispekel is a spicy Dutch liqueur produced using brandy and a secret blend of spices. The name translates as 'haddock brine', not a nod to the ingredients, rather that the drink is reminiscent of one early-20th century haddock fishermen would drink to keep them warm on their days at sea.

FOOTNOTE: The Edison Award is an annual Dutch music prize awarded for outstanding achievements in the music industry. It is one of the oldest music awards in the world, having been presented since 1960.

#DavidBowieNL

tags: 2019 February
Wednesday 02.13.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Clareville Grove Demos box due

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“I recall how we lived, On the corner of a bed”

DAVID BOWIE - CLAREVILLE GROVE DEMOS

3 x 7" VINYL SINGLES BOX SET FEATURING PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED DAVID BOWIE RECORDINGS

Following the recent Spying Through A Keyhole announcement, Parlophone is set to further commemorate the 50th anniversary of David Bowie’s first hit, Space Oddity, with a 7" vinyl singles box set of six home demos, four of which are previously unreleased recordings. This set further documents the earliest stages of David’s journey and development as an artist and songwriter.

Recorded early in 1969 in David’s flat in Clareville Grove, London, this live to tape demo session features David performing as a duo with John ‘Hutch’ Hutchinson following the end of the Feathers trio, which featured David’s then girlfriend Hermione Farthingale.

The photography featured on the box front and the print inside, is by Bowie’s then manager, Ken Pitt, and was taken in the Clareville Grove flat that David shared with Hermione. His military haircut was due to the very brief appearance he had in the movie The Virgin Soldiers.

As with the Spying Through A Keyhole vinyl singles box set, the design of each single label is presented to reflect the way David sent many of his demos to publishers and record companies, featuring his own handwritten song titles on EMIDISC acetate labels. The singles themselves are all mono and play at 45 rpm.

CLAREVILLE GROVE DEMOS (3 X 7” SINGLE BOX SET)

DAVID BOWIE (WITH JOHN ‘HUTCH’ HUTCHINSON)

3 x 7" SET TRACKLISTING

 

Single 1

Side A

Space Oddity

Now featuring the final lyrics, this version of the demo first appeared on the long deleted Space Oddity 40th Anniversary 2 CD release, and is now making its debut on vinyl. It predates the 2nd February Morgan Studios recording that featured in the Love You Till Tuesday television film.

Side B

Lover To The Dawn

This song aimed at a former lover would eventually morph into Cygnet Committee recorded for the David Bowie (aka Space Oddity) album later in the year.

 

Single 2

Side A

Ching-a-Ling

Previously recorded in October 1968 by the trio Turquoise featuring David, Hermione and Tony Hill (who became Feathers when Hutch replaced Hill). David and Hutch continued to perform the song as a duo following Hermione’s departure.

Side B

An Occasional Dream

Slightly different lyrically to the later album version, this version of the demo also first appeared on the deleted Space Oddity 40th Anniversary release.

 

Single 3

Side A

Let Me Sleep Beside You

A studio version was first recorded in September 1967 but remained unreleased until The World Of David Bowie album in 1970. The song was later recorded in session for the BBC in October 1969 and was a song David clearly believed in, recording it once more for the unreleased Toy album 30 years later. That version finally saw the light of day on the Nothing Has Changed 3 CD set in 2014.

Side B

Life Is A Circus

A cover of an obscure song written by Roger Bunn recorded by vocal/instrumental quartet Djinn. Vocals are shared Simon and Garfunkel style by David and Hutch.

 

Musicians

David Bowie – vocals, guitar and Stylophone

John ‘Hutch’ Hutchinson – vocals and guitar

Photography by Ken Pitt © Ken Pitt

Further details and release date to follow.

#BowieCGD

tags: 2019 February
Tuesday 02.12.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Pin Ups picture disc for RSD 2019

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“Singing old songs he loved”

Parlophone will be issuing David Bowie’s 1973 album of cover versions as a picture disc for Record Store Day 2019 on Saturday, 13th April.

When originally released, the David Bowie/Ken Scott produced album was preceded by the only single from Pin Ups, Sorrow, which reached #3 on the UK chart. Pin Ups itself entered the UK album chart at #1 on the strength of pre-orders alone.

Joining Bowie on the sleeve for Justin de Villeneuve’s extraordinary photograph with Bowie is Twiggy, name-checked earlier the same year on Aladdin Sane for Drive-In Saturday: “She’d sigh like Twig the Wonder Kid”.

The photo session was shot in Paris for Vogue magazine, but at Bowie's request was used for the album instead. This same image is used for Side 1 of the picture disc.

Originally, the back cover and insert featured Mick Rock photographs and Side 2 of the picture disc uses one of his artworks which utilised images from that session.

The picture disc includes a reproduction of the insert, and the back cover is as the original with the following note from Bowie:

 

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These songs are among my favourites from the '64–67' period of London.

Most of the groups were playing the Ricky-Tick (was it a 'y' or an 'i'?) - Scene club circuit (Marquee, eel pie island la-la)

Some are still with us.  Pretty Things, Them, Yardbirds, Syd's Pink Floyd, Mojos, Who, Easybeats, Merseys, Kinks.

Love-on ya!

Bowie x

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David Bowie Pin Ups RSD 2019 picture disc

Released via Parlophone on 13th April.

Cat #: DB69736P

UPC: 0190295511289

 

Side 1

01 - Rosalyn (Duncan/Farley)

02 - Here Comes the Night (Berns)

03 - I Wish You Would (Arnold)

04 - See Emily Play (Barrett)

05 - Everything's Alright (Crouch/Konrad/Stavely/Stuart)

06 - I Can't Explain (Townshend)

Side 2

01 - Friday On My Mind (Young/Vanda)

02 - Sorrow (Feldman/Goldstein/Gottehrer)

03 - Don't Bring Me Down (Dee)

04 - Shapes of Things (Samwell-Smith/McCarty/Relf)

05 - Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere (Daltrey/Townshend)

06 - Where Have All the Good Times Gone? (Davies)

 

Originally released on RCA on 19th October 1973

Produced by David Bowie and Ken Scott

Musicians:

David Bowie – vocals, guitar, tenor and alto saxophone, harmonica, arrangements, backing vocals, Moog synthesiser

Mick Ronson – guitar, piano, vocals, arrangements

Trevor Bolder – bass guitar

Aynsley Dunbar – drums

Mike Garson – piano, organ, harpsichord, electric piano

Ken Fordham – baritone saxophone

G.A. MacCormack – backing vocals

 

Original Pin Ups Design:

Justin de Villeneuve - front cover photograph

Twiggy - Twig the Wonderkid on front cover

Pierre Laroche - front cover makeup masks for Twig and Bowie

Mick Rock - back cover photography/design

Ray Campbell - front cover lettering

#BowieRSD #RSD2019 #BowieVinyl #BowiePinUps

tags: 2019 February
Monday 02.11.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Space Oddity filmed fifty years ago today

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“You’ve really made the grade”

On Sunday, 2nd February 1969, David Bowie entered Morgan Studios in London’s Willesden to record the soundtrack version of Space Oddity for the proposed television special and promotional vehicle, Love You Till Tuesday.

Four days later and fifty years ago today, the Space Oddity segment was filmed for the special and it was clear from this first ‘public’ outing of the song that David Bowie had composed something extraordinary.

Here’s Ken Pitt (David’s manager at the time), from his book Bowie The Pitt Report:

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The next day, February 6, proved to be an important landmark in David’s career for it was then that he was filmed performing the new song Space Oddity.

That this was an unusually clever song was apparent from the first hearing, but it was only during the course of the day’s shooting that its wide appeal became evident. During the break for lunch, freed from the silence imposed on them on the set, people were laughing, chattering and singing about the unconventional hero Major Tom. When David came through a doorway someone said “Well, if it isn’t Major Tom.“

After lunch he walked onto the set and rehearsed the final scene where the astronaut, resigned to his chosen fate, is caressed by two seductive sirens, played by Samantha Bond and the production assistant Suzanne Mercer. Admiration was now coupled with envy, perhaps two important ingredients for the hit that had so long eluded us.

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The Love You Till Tuesday film was not broadcast at the time and the Space Oddity segment didn’t surface for another six years, when the BBC showed it on TOTPs to accompany the reissue of the song that topped the charts in 1975. But that’s a whole other story.

The original Love You Till Tuesday film was finally released on video in 1984 and on DVD in 2005.

Watch the original Space Oddity segment here.

#SpaceOddity50 

tags: 2019 February
Wednesday 02.06.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

STAK release date and pre-order links

“...spying through a keyhole from the other room...”

We posted the press release for Spying Through A Keyhole (STAK) on what would have been David Bowie’s 72nd birthday, with the promise to follow up with the release date and pre-order links. So here they are:

 

DAVID BOWIE - SPYING THROUGH A KEYHOLE (DEMOS AND UNRELEASED SONGS) * 4 x 7" vinyl box set

RELEASED ON PARLOPHONE 5th APRIL 2019

Single 1

Side 1

Mother Grey (demo)

Side 2

In The Heat Of The Morning (demo)

 

Single 2

Side 1

Goodbye 3d (Threepenny) Joe (demo)

Side 2

Love All Around (demo)

 

Single 3

Side 1

London Bye, Ta-Ta (demo)

Side 2

Angel Angel Grubby Face (demo version 1)

 

Single 4

Side 1

1.Angel Angel Grubby Face (demo version 2)

2. Space Oddity (demo excerpt)

Side 2

Space Oddity (demo) with John ‘Hutch’ Hutchinson

The photography that adorns the box front and the print inside is by Ray Stevenson and was taken in Tony Visconti’s flat in the summer of 1968.

Each single label is designed to reflect the way David presented many of his demos to publishers and record companies, featuring his own handwritten song titles and originally cut on EMIDISC acetates. The singles themselves are all mono and play at 45 rpm.

The Official David Bowie Store has a limited T-shirt and box set bundle:

US Webstore

EU Webstore

Go here for more details regarding the set.

*Although this will be the first physical release of these tracks, Parlophone did make them available on streaming services for a limited period only in December.

#BowieSTAK

tags: 2019 January
Wednesday 01.30.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Will Starman return in time for transmission?

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“Five, Four, Three, Two, One, Lift Off”

The latest Radio Times (dated 2nd-8th February), has a five-page Bowie cover feature in celebration of Francis Whately’s David Bowie: Finding Fame. (Was David Bowie: The First Five Years)

Here’s an edited excerpt with exciting news from the piece...

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Francis Whately is nervously excited. While he sweats, an incredibly rare piece of TV footage is being slowly “baked” – the moisture tentatively extracted from a degraded recording containing a performance by David Bowie not seen in nearly 50 years. The footage in question reveals Ziggy Stardust’s “birth” on TV, a moment in broadcast and music history long considered lost. “For fans, it is something of a Holy Grail,” says Whately.

It was broadcast on 15 June 1972, on an ITV children’s pop show called Lift Off with Ayshea, but was wiped from the official archives and has long been regarded as missing presumed extinct. Then, a few months ago, professional “tape diggers” found a fragile recording of it made by the owner off his TV.

“It would fall apart if we played it, so it’s had to be very carefully restored,” says Whately. “It will be a real coup if it comes off.”

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Well, even if Starman isn't ready in time for broadcast, you can rest assured that the content of David Bowie: Finding Fame will still leave you feeling satisfied.

Aside from other promised surprises, here are a few of the contributors...

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Kristina Amadeus - Bowie’s close cousin from south London and New York resident in the early 1970s: Whately has encouraged Kristina to talk for the first time on camera about the restlessly creative boy she knew back then.

Hermione Farthingale - all singing all dancing girlfriend: Whately says it “took months” to persuade the deeply private Farthingale to finally talk to him.

Phil Lancaster - Drummer in the Lower Third: “We talked about books – we loved Jack Kerouac – and had the same sense of humour.”

Geoff MacCormack - Lifelong friend and photographer: “David’s dad bought him lots of records, and we both loved a [1957 doo-wop] song called I’m Not a Juvenile Delinquent by Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers. When David released his 2013 album The Next Day, I sent him an email saying, “Lovely album, well done, young man,” or something equally silly. And he replied, all those years later: “It’s not I’m Not a Juvenile Delinquent, but it’s something!”.”

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Due to the down to the wire edits and Starman baking times, it's possible that the advertised broadcast date and time could change. We'll update you here as soon as we have the final confirmed details.

Read more about David Bowie: Finding Fame here.

The Radio Times is out now.

#BowieTheFirstFiveYears  #DavidBowieFindingFame

tags: 2019 January
Tuesday 01.29.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Duncan Jones’ MOON is ten today

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“You are my moon, you are my son” *

Crikey, already ten years since MOON received its first showing. Here’s a piece reflecting that fact from our good friend, Unkle Rupert.

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MOON Celebrates 10th Anniversary - by @Unklerupert

It’s 10 years to the day that Duncan Jones’ debut feature MOON premiered at the Sundance Festival in Utah screening at the Eccles Theatre in Park City on Friday 23rd January 2009.

In attendance were cast and crew including; Writer / Director - Duncan Jones, Producers - Trudie Styler & Stuart Fenegan, Star - Sam Rockwell, Writer - Nathan Parker, and special guests Sting and Duncan’s proud father - David Bowie.

MOON was very well received by film critics in attendance, here’s a sample of those first reactions. 

“Not only does it look wonderful, but Sam Rockwell is flawless yet again.” - Alex Billington - First Showing

“Moon is yet another impressive work of independent science fiction. In which we have a young director with an ambitious vision, a perfectly cast lead and the creativity to bring it to life without having to work on a Michael Bay-sized budget.” - Neil Miller - Film School Rejects

“I’m convinced that Moon is at the beginning of a new renaissance of indie sci-fi feature films which will challenge Hollywood’s big budget computer generated spectacles.” - Peter Sciretta - Film

MOON continued to garner high praise from the film community and wider film going audiences around the World as further festival screenings occurred and upon general release starting in the US on the 10th July 2009, it also picked up many award nominations and awards including a BAFTA for Duncan Jones for Outstanding Debut by a British Director. Over the last 10 years MOON has become a much loved Sci-fi classic with regular screenings still occurring around the World and of course through home release on DVD, Blu-ray, and streaming services. High praise has come from all quarters, but none more so than from one of Duncan’s Directorial heroes, Terry Gilliam, during a Little White Lies interview published in April 2011

“I think MOON is a really brilliant example of contemporary Sci-fi because it has a message, it has strong visuals but it also has a proper science-fiction core. It’s the closest thing to a modern-day 2001 I have seen.”

This day though, this was the day that MOON received its premiere. A premiere attended by a first time feature Director, and his proud Father. Happy 10th Anniversary, MOON x

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If you’ve yet to see MOON for some insane reason, it’s probably best to correct that situation, pronto.

*Yes, we know it’s sun, not son. But that wouldn’t have really worked.

#MOONfilm  #ManMadeMOON

tags: 2019 January
Wednesday 01.23.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Japanese Loving the Alien CD box and CROSSBEAT special

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“You can't say no to the beauty from the East” *

For those of you who collect such things, the Japanese version of the David Bowie: Loving the Alien (1983-1988) CD box set, was released last month (12th December).

Extras include a 148-page book containing Japanese language notes and interviews from the LTA book with English/Japanese lyrics thrown in. There’s also a 24-page booklet of 1983 Japanese press conference pictures and Serious Moonlight live shots by Masashi Kuwamoto.

The folks at CROSSBEAT in Japan were very quick off the mark when they published a 1983-1988 special in celebration of the box set last month too.

Fourth in the series, It's a thorough look at the releases of the period, including the films Bowie starred in, with the usual wealth of pictorial content and Bowie interviews we’ve come to expect from their series of Parlophone box set specials, albeit in Japanese.

The magazine also focuses on all of the other 2018 Bowie releases, right up to Glastonbury 2000.

If you’ve been bitten by the Bowie collecting bug, stay tuned for another instalment in our occasional Bowie Collector series tomorrow.

* Sorry

#BowieJapan  #LTAbox  #BowieCollector 

tags: 2019 January
Sunday 01.20.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

Thankyou for voting Bowie Best Entertainer

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“In the world of today, for tomorrow's man...”

No doubt you all know that David Bowie was voted the winner of the Entertainment category of BBC TWO’s ICONS poll yesterday.

Many thanks to everybody who voted for our man, it’s really very much appreciated.

David Bowie joins Alan Turing (Scientists), Ernest Shackleton (Explorers) Nelson Mandela (Leaders) and three other category winners (yet to be decided), for a place in the final on Tuesday 5th February at 9:00pm on BBC Two.

Find everything you need to know about the poll and how to vote in the final, here.

FOOTNOTE: Today’s lyric quotation was triggered by the BBC’s Bowie tagline: “David Bowie’s cutting-edge music gave the world the sound of the future, today.”

(Main image by TotalBlamBlam@DavidBowie.com)

#BBCIcons

tags: 2019 January
Thursday 01.17.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 

David Bowie: January 8th 1947 - January 10th 2016

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#BowieForever

tags: 2019 January
Thursday 01.10.19
Posted by Mark Adams
 
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