View Full Version : Legendary Singer/Musician David Bowie 1947-2016


Vahan
01-11-2016, 03:24 AM
The singer-songwriter and producer excelled at glam rock, art rock, soul, hard rock, dance pop, punk and electronica during an eclectic 40-plus-year career.

Link (http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/david-bowie-dead-legendary-artist-854364)

David Bowie has died after a battle with cancer, his rep confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter. He was 69.

"David Bowie died peacefully today surrounded by his family after a courageous 18-month battle with cancer. While many of you will share in this loss, we ask that you respect the family’s privacy during their time of grief," read a statement posted on the artist's official social media accounts.

The influential singer-songwriter and producer excelled at glam rock, art rock, soul, hard rock, dance pop, punk and electronica during his eclectic 40-plus-year career. He just released his 25th album, Blackstar, Jan. 8, which was his birthday.

Bowie’s artistic breakthrough came with 1972’s The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars, an album that fostered the notion of rock star as space alien. Fusing British mod with Japanese kabuki styles and rock with theater, Bowie created the flamboyant, androgynous alter ego Ziggy Stardust.


Three years later, Bowie achieved his first major American crossover success with the No. 1 single “Fame” off the top 10 album Young Americans, then followed with the 1976 avant-garde art rock LP Station to Station, which made it to No. 3 on the charts and featured top 10 hit “Golden Years.”

Other memorable songs included 1983’s “Let’s Dance” — his only other No. 1 U.S. hit — “Space Oddity,” “Heroes,” “Changes,” “Under Pressure,” “China Girl,” “Modern Love,” “Rebel, Rebel,” “All the Young Dudes,” “Panic in Detroit,” “Fashion,” “Life on Mars,” “Suffragette City” and a 1977 Christmas medley with Bing Crosby.

With his different-colored eyes (the result of a schoolyard fight) and needlelike frame, Bowie was a natural to segue from music into curious movie roles, and he starred as an alien seeking help for his dying planet in Nicolas Roeg’s surreal The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976). Critics later applauded his three-month Broadway stint as the misshapen lead in 1980’s The Elephant Man.

Bowie also starred in Marlene Dietrich’s last film, Just a Gigolo (1978), portrayed a World War II prisoner of war in Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence (1983), and played Pontius Pilate in Martin Scorsese’s The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). He also starred opposite Jennifer Connelly as Jareth the Goblin King in the 1986 cult favorite Labyrinth, directed by Jim Henson. And in another groundbreaking move, Bowie, who always embraced technology, became the first rock star to morph into an Internet Service Provider with the launch in September 1998 of BowieNet.

Born David Jones in London on Jan. 8, 1947, Bowie changed his name in 1966 after The Monkees’ Davy Jones achieved stardom. He played saxophone and started a mime company, and after stints in several bands, he signed with Mercury Records, which in 1969 released his album Man of Words/Man of Music. That featured “Space Oddity,” his poignant song about an astronaut, Major Tom, spiraling out of control.

In an attempt to stir interest in Ziggy Stardust, Bowie revealed in a January 1972 magazine interview that he was gay — though that might have been a publicity stunt — dyed his hair orange and began wearing women’s garb. The album became a sensation.

Wrote rock critic Robert Christgau: “This is audacious stuff right down to the stubborn wispiness of its sound, and Bowie's actorly intonations add humor and shades of meaning to the words, which are often witty and rarely precious, offering an unusually candid and detailed vantage on the rock star’s world.”

Bowie changed gears in 1975. Becoming obsessed with the dance/funk sounds of Philadelphia, his self-proclaimed “plastic soul”-infused Young Americans peaked at No. 9 with the single “Fame,” which he co-wrote with John Lennon and guitarist Carlos Alomar.


After the soulful but colder Station to Station, Bowie again confounded expectations after settling in Germany by recording the atmospheric 1977 album Low, the first of his “Berlin Trilogy” collaborations with Brian Eno.

In 1980, Bowie brought out Scary Monsters, which cast a nod to the Major Tom character from “Space Oddity” with the sequel “Ashes to Ashes.” He followed with Tonight in 1984 and Never Let Me Down in 1987 and collaborations with Queen, Mick Jagger, Tina Turner, The Pat Metheny Group and others. He formed the quartet Tin Machine, but the band didn’t garner much critical acclaim or commercial success with two albums.

Bowie returned to a solo career with 1993’s Black Tie White Noise, which saw him return to work with his Spiders From Mars guitarist Mick Ronson, then recorded 1995’s Outside with Eno and toured with Nine Inch Nails as his opening act. He returned to the studio in 1996 to record the techno-influenced Earthling. Two more albums, 1999’s 'Hours…' and 2002’s Heathen, followed.

Bowie also produced albums for, among others, Lou Reed, Iggy Pop and The Stooges and Mott the Hoople, for which he wrote the song “All the Young Dudes.” He earned a lifetime achievement Grammy Award in 2006 but never performed onstage again.

Bowie was relatively quiet between the years of 2004 and 2012, re-emerging in 2013 with the album The Next Day. Its arrival was met with a social media firestorm, which catapulted it to No. 2 on the Billboard 200, his highest-charting album.

While demand for a tour by the reclusive rock star has been relentless, Bowie kept a decidedly low profile, maintaining a residence in New York but rarely seen.

In December, Bowie opened the rock musical Lazarus in New York City, in which he revisits the character he played in The Man Who Fell to Earth. The project — directed by Ivo van Hove and starring Michael C. Hall — was initiated by Bowie, who long nurtured the idea of a return to the character he played onscreen in the Roeg film based on American writer Walter Tevis' 1963 sci-fi novel.

A video for the song "Lazarus," which is included on the album Blackstar, was released on Jan. 7.

Survivors include his wife, the model Iman, whom he married in 1992; his son, director Duncan Jones; and daughter Alexandria.

Zoneboy
01-11-2016, 05:00 AM
I tried for over a half-hour to post the news but was prevented from doing so by the Marine Corps banner ad which actually caused my computer to crash twice.

Penny Lane
01-11-2016, 01:29 PM
Sad news. May he rest in peace. :(

Bonniegirl
01-11-2016, 01:45 PM
Very sad!! I was shocked to hear!!! Damn Cancer, all the money that is spent on war and other BS ,they need to do more cancer research!

RIP David!!

OH Nuts!
01-11-2016, 03:05 PM
He was a major innovator and talented musician.. RIP David.

Marvo301
01-11-2016, 03:07 PM
:rip: David Bowie

MrCleveland
01-11-2016, 04:13 PM
This is VERY shocking...he had a birthday and an album release all in one week...

This is my favorite Bowie album...

tiLRsVPHUPU

May He Rest In Peace!

Bonniegirl
01-11-2016, 04:27 PM
Yeah it's sad, his birthday was Jan. 8! That's a shame passing away so close to your birthday!

My favorite Bowie songs are Young American, Ziggy Stardust, Little China girl, Space Oddity/Major Tom .

Zoneboy
01-11-2016, 05:03 PM
psYQMY69gLo
N4d7Wp9kKjA
A8u8mODGOlg
qf5ruT2jd5k
Tgcc5V9Hu3g

irehtman
01-11-2016, 05:38 PM
He's considered the legendary rocker than a legendary singer because he both sings and plays a guitar.

Zoneboy
01-11-2016, 06:52 PM
He's considered the legendary rocker than a legendary singer because he both sings and plays a guitar.

Bowie is known.more for his singing than his guitar playing.

ABlairican Pie
01-11-2016, 07:16 PM
This is VERY shocking...he had a birthday and an album release all in one week...

This is my favorite Bowie album...

tiLRsVPHUPU

May He Rest In Peace!
Very ironic, just like Lemmy, who had his 70th birthday on Christmas Eve, only to die from cancer a few days later after being diagnosed, David Bowie just died a few days after his birthday. :(

He was quite the performer and entertainer. He was such an innovator and set the trends for music and fashion since the 70's. I was very much into him in the early 80's.

Edison
01-12-2016, 12:51 AM
Going to miss the whole lot.

IllinoisTVFan
01-12-2016, 02:17 AM
I was on Facebook last night when the news exploded and at first I thought it was a hoax because there had been a hoax a few years ago. I turned on CNN and it was real. I have most of his CDs and he was really good. He was able to do anything and fit everywhere. Rappers liked him as did punk fans and headbangers and everyone else. He was perhaps the most influential artist since the 60's and he influenced every one who followed. Listen to alternative today and you will hear his sound.

TMC
01-12-2016, 02:31 AM
The Viacom-owned channels will play tribute programming to the late musician, including programming blocks of all Bowie music videos and a playing of 'Ziggy Stardust.'


MTV and VH1 are celebrating the life of David Bowie.

Link (http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/mtv-vh1-air-iconic-david-854645)


Beginning Monday at 3 p.m. ET, both Viacom-owned channels will air tribute programming to honor the life and career of the legendary musician and artist, who died Sunday after an 18-month battle with cancer.

MTV will run interstitials on air, as well as on their social and digital channels, from some of Bowie’s biggest MTV moments, including his 1984 VMA performance of hit song "Blue Jean" and an archival interview with Iggy Pop.


At 10 p.m., Viacom's high-definition music channel Palladia will air David Bowie's VH1 Storytellers and Ziggy Stardust.

VH1 Classic will air an hour of Bowie music videos beginning tonight at 12 a.m. On Tuesday (Jan. 12), the "Totally 80’s" block (which airs from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.) and the "90’s Rocked" block (which airs from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m.) will air all Bowie music videos. Ziggy Stardust will air at 10:30 p.m., and additional archival content and iconic videos are set to run later this week.

The influential singer-songwriter and producer, who died at age 69, just released his 25th album, Blackstar, on Jan. 8, which was his birthday.

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Watch David Bowie's his performance of Blue Jean at the 1984 VMA's

1984 VMA's (http://www.mtv.com/news/2726395/david-bowie-first-vma-appearance/)

Watch David Bowie’s ‘80s-As-Hell Performance At The First VMAs
Nobody could take a jacket off more seductively.

When the MTV Video Music Awards began back in 1984, David Bowie was in a weird spot. He dressed in big jackets and kept his hair blondish and thin, which actually made him look comparatively normal — and for Bowie, normal was weird.

He was also making pretty normal-sounding music, at least for the ’80s. The first-ever VMAs aired on Sept. 14, 1984, two weeks after the release of Bowie’s 16th album, Tonight, and featured a pre-recorded performance of Bowie’s single, “Blue Jean.” And as the clip below demonstrates, it’s everything you knew he always was: dripping with charisma, grinning, acting equal parts matador and cocktail-club singer.


First of all, it’s not just me who think the sheer normality of this clip makes it infinitely weird, right? Like, it’s Bowie, but he’s so…together. This is all through the lens of 1984, of course, when “normal” actually did mean dudes in sport coats and sunglasses wailing on saxophones in the middle of pop-rock songs.
Even host Dan Aykroyd highlighted the video’s weirdness as he introduced it at the show: “In a departure from his usual work in conceptual video, here in a performance especially shot for tonight’s show, direct from London, England — you all know this man: David Bowie!”

There are wonderfully cheesy, wonderfully ’80s moments in this video, and you seriously have to watch it twice to take them all in. My favorite is Bowie’s understated jacket removal a minute and a half in, which most fully underscores his subversiveness. In an age where rockstars were wearing glam makeup and clamoring for your attention (which by then was totally passé for Bowie), he made you pay attention to his subtleties.

That’s Bowie’s charm. It’s part of his legacy.


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Link + Video (https://twitter.com/MTVNews/status/686608586194030592)

In our 1983 David Bowie interview, he criticizes MTV for not playing enough music videos by black artists.

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‘Slip Away,’ David Bowie’s Uncle Floyd tribute


Link + Video (http://www.njarts.net/350-jersey-songs/slip-away-david-bowies-uncle-floyd-tribute/)


A lot of strange characters have populated David Bowie’s songs over the years. But it was still a shock, in 2002, when Bowie released a song about New Jersey’s leading neo-vaudeville comedian/honky tonk piano player, “Uncle” Floyd Vivino.

The song was “Slip Away,” from Bowie’s “Heathen” album — a dreamy little number in which Bowie sings about Oogie and Bones Boy (puppet characters on Vivino’s long-running low-budget TV show, “The Uncle Floyd Show”) and croons, in the chorus: “Sailing over Coney Island/Twinkle, twinkle, Uncle Floyd/We were dumb but you were fun, boy/How I wonder where you are.”

How did Bowie end up writing about Floyd? Well, Bowie spent a lot of time in New York in the late ’70s and early ’80s, when Vivino’s show was most popular. Vivino (who is now 63 and still performs frequently in the Garden Stage) told me, in a 2002 interview for The Star-Ledger, that Bowie once told him John Lennon had introduced him to the show.

Here’s Bowie’s explanation, as posted on his web site, davidbowie.com, in 2002:

“Back in the late ’70s, everyone that I knew would rush home at a certain point in the afternoon to catch the Uncle Floyd show. He was on UHF Ch. 68 and the show looked like it was done out of his living room in New Jersey. All his pals were involved and it was a hoot. It had that Soupy Sales kind of appeal and though ostensibly aimed at kids, I knew so many people of my age who just wouldn’t miss it. We would be on the floor it was so funny. Two of the regulars on the show were Oogie and Bones Boy, ridiculous puppets made out of ping-pong balls or somesuch … I just loved that show.”

Below is footage of Bowie performing the song at the Tommy Hilfiger at Jones Beach Theatre in Wantagh, N.Y., in 2004, with some help from members of the group, the Polyphonic Spree.

Be sure to check out Bowie’s comments about Floyd in the clip, and the classic Floyd footage he incorporates into his stage show.

New Jersey is celebrating its 350th birthday this year. And in the 350 Jersey Songs series, we are marking the occasion by posting 350 songs — one a day, for almost a year — that have something to do with the state, its musical history, or both.

If you would like to suggest any songs to be included, please let me know in the comments section underneath the video.

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Why David Bowie Was Too Weird For '70s TV

Link + Video (http://gawker.com/david-bowie-was-too-weird-for-70s-tv-1752307016)

David Bowie’s perpetual stylistic reinvention (don’t call him a chameleon) became a standard many pop stars would come to adopt. To put his visionary genius in perspective, we assembled a reel of ‘70s and ‘80s TV clips, highlighting the ways in which Bowie’s shape-shifting tendencies were marveled at, questioned, and explained by the man himself.

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David Bowie Made The World a Safer Place for the Alien in Us All


Link + Video (http://io9.gizmodo.com/rip-david-bowie-the-musician-who-changed-science-ficti-1752187018)


David Bowie, who just died of cancer aged 69, had an incalculable impact on pop culture throughout his shape-shifting career. But perhaps more than any other musician, he also had a tremendous impact on science fiction. He changed the way we thought about the alien, the uncanny, and the familiar.

Bowie’s first hit single, “Space Oddity,” established him not just as an artist who sang about science-fictional topics like space travel, but also as someone who embraced the discomfort of humanity juxtaposed against the cosmos. The song’s churning guitar riffs and psychedelic noises convey something of the disorientation of floating in a tin can, far from home. Over the years that followed, Bowie produced some of the most poignant representations ever of alien visitors, doomed grandeur and tormented supermen. I recently listened to his song “The Man Who Sold the World” on a loop while writing, and it reveals more and more layers of pathos, remorse and arrogance the more you hear it.

Bowie’s greatest gift to science fiction was that combination of pathos and dissocation, which comes across in a lot of his best songs. His album Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, a rock opera about a band led by a mysterious figure, encapsulates the apocalypse, androgyny and rockstar excess with the same bohemian drama. (Click here to read Bowie explaining to William S. Burroughs the whole fascinating backstory of Ziggy Stardust.) Ziggy Stardust was just one of many personas that Bowie created over the years, including the zombie-like Thin White Duke.

Here’s more of Bowie talking about Ziggy Stardust, with animation:



Bowie also starred in the film The Man Who Fell to Earth, playing one of the most stark, disturbing and psychologically complex representations of an alien ever captured on screen. This film was an important precursor to recent experimental aliens-among-us films like Under the Skin, and if you ever get a chance to see the restored uncut version, you should drop everything.

Edited to add: Bowie also played an unforgettable vampire in The Hunger, and one of the most iconic fantasy characters, Jareth the Goblin King in Labyrinth.

Tilda Swinton wrote a beautiful tribute to Bowie in her speech at the opening of his exhibition at the Victoria & Albert Museum, and talked about what his image and his music meant to her growing up. And how great it is to realize that “the freak becomes the great unifier.”

Over time, Bowie seemed to be at war with his own rock stardom. After the Let’s Dance album reached a huge audience that was new to his music, there are lots of accounts of Bowie struggling with what to do with that new kind of pop stardom. The idea of being a “rock star” often seemed more foreign and bizarre than the notion of a glam-rock visitor from another planet.

And he never stopped making awesome music—he just released a new album, Blackstar.

Bowie provided us with a soundtrack for our alienation—the song “Life on Mars” doesn’t just give that brilliant TV show its title, but provides a crucial piece of emotional texture during the show’s most important moment. And he helped us to imagine that our own feelings of strangeness and dislocation were bigger and more wonderful than we had possibly imagined.

He’ll be missed, but his music will keep reshaping reality as we know it.

irehtman
01-12-2016, 09:00 AM
Even if he sings more than playing a guitar, he will still be remembered as legendary rocker than just legendary singer.

Zoneboy
01-12-2016, 09:31 AM
Even if he sings more than playing a guitar, he will still be remembered as legendary rocker than just legendary singer.

There was a clip from an interview Bowie did that was shown on FOX News and he stated that he never considered himself to be a musician. If I can find it online I'll post the link.

MrCleveland
01-12-2016, 02:15 PM
I was on Facebook last night when the news exploded and at first I thought it was a hoax because there had been a hoax a few years ago. I turned on CNN and it was real. I have most of his CDs and he was really good. He was able to do anything and fit everywhere. Rappers liked him as did punk fans and headbangers and everyone else. He was perhaps the most influential artist since the 60's and he influenced every one who followed. Listen to alternative today and you will hear his sound.

When I heard about his death, it was almost like the time Robin Williams passed on...I thought the radio was ****ting me, but it was true...like Robin Williams, David Bowie WILL be missed...

AB
01-12-2016, 04:54 PM
Rest in peace David Bowie.

Dude111
01-13-2016, 07:10 AM
Thank you Vahan!!!!

I listenend to my only David Bowie Record when I heard this yesterday! (Young americans)

yasdnil
01-27-2016, 06:30 PM
http://i.imgur.com/ynTGevR.jpg?1 (http://bowiexplicit.tumblr.com/post/137942295927)

Hawkee
01-28-2016, 02:42 AM
I remember when I heard about David Bowie's death that I couldn't believe the news that a popular singer was gone and the next day I rushed to my room and turned on my MP3 player where I had some of my favorite David Bowie songs and a favorite David Bowie song of my dad and me is Space Oddity then I played my favorite David Bowie song Young Americans because those are the only David Bowie songs I have on my MP3 player so far. And you can bet that for my birthday my birthday list will be filled with some David Bowie cds as well,
Bestie

James28
01-28-2016, 05:01 AM
I am quickly realizing that we are losing the good celebrities very, very fast. :crying:

:rip: David Bowie.

yasdnil
01-28-2016, 01:25 PM
:crying:

David Bowie's Producer on How the Icon Kept Cancer Secret: He Took His 'Hat Off and He Was Completely Bald'
By Simon Perry
01/27/2016 AT 11:20 AM EST

Snipped:

Bowie's cancer went into remission at one point, only to return in November – but throughout the creative process, the singer never lost hope and the "sparkle" in his eyes, writes Visconti.

http://www.people.com/article/david-bowie-cancer-how-secret-tony-visconti

Will Dockery
02-01-2016, 04:23 PM
psYQMY69gLo
N4d7Wp9kKjA
A8u8mODGOlg
qf5ruT2jd5k
Tgcc5V9Hu3g

Great collection, a fitting tribute.

I'm listening to 1966: a collection of his three Pye Records singles from 1966, made the year before his first album.

Good 1960s style rockers, comparable to real early Beratles and Rolling Stones, David Bowie had a great talent from the very start.

Will Dockery
02-01-2016, 04:25 PM
http://i.imgur.com/ynTGevR.jpg?1 (http://bowiexplicit.tumblr.com/post/137942295927)

Nice painting, who is the artist?

Will Dockery
02-01-2016, 04:33 PM
Thank you Vahan!!!!

I listenend to my only David Bowie Record when I heard this yesterday! (Young americans)

Loved Young Americans... here is the first Bowie album I ever bought with my own money, in 1974.

Diamond Dogs.

Ohio8
02-07-2016, 06:12 PM
:rip: