vineri, 30 decembrie 2011

10.Andy Warhol and America




   With hindsigh,1971 was the year in which Bowie became something of a pop-art agent provocateur.What really fired him was the desire to be different,radically different,to challenge and overturn both  dominant musical conventions and the moral and sexual codes of his day.
    Bowie did indeed tart up his art in a radical and shocking manner.Linsday Kemp and his 1960s absurdist mime-and-dance troupe was an influence,and Bowie took a special interest in the Warhol scene too.For a promotional visit to the States in January 1971,Bowie took to wearing a man's dress,as designed by London's Mr Fish,and was threatened by a gun-toting redneck less than chuffed with the cut of Bowie's jib.
     During August,Bowie went to see Andy Warhol's Pork  at the Roundhouse,and befriended the cast of starlets,inlcuding several people who sould become apparatchick in MainMan,Tony Defries' management company: Tony Zanetta ( who would become Bowie's personal assistant),Wayne County ,Cherry Vanilla ( Bowie's future press agent),Leee Black Childers (his tour photographer),and the future president of MainMan Jaime Andrews.
    Bowie initially disappointed the The Pork crowd.Jayne County said of seeing Bowie on his club tour in early 1971: " We'd heard that David Bowie was supposed to be androgynous and everything,but then he came out with long hair,folky clothes,and sat on a stool and played folk songs.We were so disappointed with him.We looked over to him and said: " Just look a that folky old hippy!".
     "David was disappointing",said Leee Childers,"but we loved his wife,Angela Bowie.Angie was loud,she was pregnant,she was crazy,she was grabbing our crotches laughing it up,and having a good time."
    However,back in the UK,Bowie's stage performances were certainly causing more of a stir.As 1971 progressed,Bowie's sound became harder and harder.Anyway,everybody recalls that in the late 60s and earlt 1970s,Bowie was thought of primarily as a sonwwriter,eather than a performer. "Although very talented,he ended up making a career of being unsuccessful",remembers David Stopps (manager of the Friars Aylesbury venue).Stopps was also incredibly impressed with Bowie : " Bowie was fantastic".
    Rock acts like Bowie were as interested in breaking into the American market as they were in the UK.Bowie however,was naturally drawn to the fringes of American cultures and the likes of Iggy Pop,Lou Reed and Andy Warhol.
   In the autumn of 1971,he made a trip to the Factorz in New York.Bowie remembers Warhol as possessing a rather unearthly hue,his skin a preternatural waxy.On a personal level,the meeting itself was far from a howling success.Warhol apparently hated Bowie's tribute to him on the Hunky Dory  album,presented to him in the form of an acetate during the meet-and-greet,and was more interested in Bowie's shoes.




     In the Factory,Warhol constructed fame and made 'talentless' people into movie stars.Anyone could be a star (in only for fifteen minutes).
     In fact,Warhol and Bowie may be said to have shared many psychological states.Both had a morbid fear of premature death.With Bowie this manifested itself in a fear of being shot on stage,and the final Ziggy Stardust shows were redolent with references to his own mortality ( Time,My Death,Rock And Roll Suicide).Warhol only narrowly escaped with his life after being shot by Valerie Solanas,a radical feminist,in 1968.Both had an abiding fear of flying.Both had a consuming passion for notoriety and fame.Even their careers followed certain similiarities in trajectory.
     Warhol also 'reinvented himself',donning a wig to cover his baldness,changing the manner in which he spoke,the way he carried himself and his art and type.Perhaps most importantly,both Warhol and Bowie were unshamedly ' commercial ' in their art.Despite both men's link with the avant-garde,they flaunted the consumerism of popular art and eventually became businessmen themselves.Another major influence on Bowie and Warhol at the time came from the camp aesthetic,and its playfulness.
    This sense of playfulness,married with a Warholian sense of pop art,was relatively new stance in the earlt 70s,and the antithesis of commanding rock ideology at the time.So singers and performers,sometimes unwittingly,followed standards of excellence and decorum which,until Bowie,had never been fundamentally challenged before.For some writers in the 1970s,who totally missed the point,Bowie was all glitz and show,with no substance.

marți, 27 decembrie 2011

9.Hunky Dory

Tony Defries and David Bowie


   Tony Defries may have put Visconti off,but without him it's arguable wheter Bowie would have ever attained superstar status.Once Defries realised what he had,he channelled all his energies into making Bowie big.
   Visconti remembers about his decision to leave Bowie: " I decided to concentrate on Marc's blossoming career instead.It seemed more stable and more positive.I can't remember what we said to each other,but David had a very hurt expression on his face and I just turned and left quickly.I didn't feel all that great,but I couldn't stand Defries and I couldn't get it across to David that Defries awas not all that he seemed."
   With Defries,a new phase in Bowie's career was about to begin.


Zowie Bowie

    1971 was an enormously disciplined and prolific year,productive in more ways than one.On 30 May 1971,Bowie's son,named Duncan Zowie Haywood Jones was born in Bromley Hospital.




     It was a painful birth for Angie,who cracked her pelvis during the thirty0hour labour.Bowie himself was at home when the news of the arrival of his son was relayed to him,listening to a Neil Young record.Trading on the vibe of wistful folkiness,Bowie wrote "Kooks" ,a pastiche of early-70s Neil Young and a present for his new son.
     For their part,the arrival of little Zowie had little discernible impact either on David and Angie as a couple,or on Bowie's muse.Bowie had always liked children.His friends and work associates often comment that he;s good with their sons and daughters and finds time to play with them.Therefore,Angie and David were part-time mum and dad.It was onlt in the late 70s that Bowie realised he was missing out,and that his son needed his dad around.


   Profesionally,things really kicked into gear during 1971.
   Bowie began this period more as a songwriter than performer.He also spent a week in the hospital after he got the starting handle of the car impaled in his thigh narrowly missing a main artery.He also had many separate projects during 70-71s,mainly as a songwriter for other bands.


Hunky Dory




   Hunky Dorry is many people's favourite David Bowie album.It is one of my favourite albums aswell,and I think this the album I have listened to the most.I was absolutely in love with this album,and for a long period,this was my favourite.You can check my last.fm account :D.
   The work for the album started in late May 1971,and completed in August.
   Ken Scott says about the album: " On The Man Who Sold The World" he was still more of a trend-follower than a trend setter and it wasn't until Hunky Dory  ,when it was "To hell with everyone.I'm gonna do what I want to do",that he began to hit his stride.'
   Along with its successor Ziggy Stardust and Let's Dance from the 80s  Hunky Dory  is the album most likely to be found in the non-Bowie fan record collection.

Content:

Side one
  1. "Changes" – 3:37
  2. "Oh! You Pretty Things" – 3:12
  3. "Eight Line Poem" – 2:55
  4. "Life on Mars?" – 3:53
  5. "Kooks" – 2:53
  6. "Quicksand" – 5:08
Side two
  1. "Fill Your Heart" (Biff RosePaul Williams) – 3:07
  2. "Andy Warhol" – 3:56
  3. "Song for Bob Dylan" – 4:12
  4. "Queen Bitch" – 3:18
  5. "The Bewlay Brothers" – 5:22

   Side two has 3 tribute songs : to Warhol (Andy Warhol),(Dylan Song for Bob Dylan ) and The Velvet Underground and Lou Reed ( Queen Bitch ).With these three ,bowie redefined the notion of pop star as fan,and  elided the boundaries between the two.Of the three homages,Queen Bitch  works the best.It's probably Bowie's poppiest song from the earlt 70s never to be released as the A-side of a single,and is made all the more interesting by Bowie's curious and quite wonderful,vocal accenting.
   For The Bewlay Brothers ,Bowie looked inawrd.Thematically,the song updates and improves The Man Who Sold The World 's central concern of familial dysfunction.A series of weird-angle snapshots concentrate firmly on the concept of identity,its mutability,and its eventual disintegration: "I was Stone and he was Wax / So he could scream,and still relax,unbelievable" . The Bewlay Brothers  remains one of Bowie;s most disquieting moments on tape,and encapsulation of some distant,indefinable quality of expressionistic terror.




   Oh You Pretty Things  is a sort of 70s update of McCartney's Martha My Dear .Seeing ' cracks in the sky',certainly qualifies the young Bowie for a course of psychoanalysis,and the 'homo superior' and 'the golden ones' are direct references to the teachings of occultist Aleister Crowley.



   Another perennial favourite is the twee Kooks ,written for the newly born Zowie




  Quicksand  is almost Buddhist in its spiritualism - "Knowledge comes with death;s release "



Song for Bob Dylan  is probably the weakest song on the album,but its lyric analyses the lack of a hero figure in rock.Bowie had been much enamoured with Dylan.



    One song,the opening track,Changes ,was Bowie's edict for the 1970s.Bowie sings: " So I turned myself to face me / But I've never caught a glimpe / Of how the others must see the faker / I'm much too fast to take the test".The lyric emphasises the themes of identity,the mutability of character,and a sense of play with first and third person,providing us an important anticipatory signal for the creation of Ziggy Stardust.In the 1970s he had an almost pathological fear for repeating himself,not just musically but visually too.Most important,Bowie gave himself the epitet ' faker'.He announced himself as a pop's fraud;the arch-dissembler.In the middle-eight section Bowie sings: " Strange fascination,fascinates me / Changes are taking the place I'm going thru".
     The line in the last verse "Look out you rock'n'rollers",is crucial.Bowie is not only throwing down the gauntlet to existing rockers,but putting a distance between himself and rock fraternity.



   Life on Mars,a soaring,cinematic ballad,was an intentional parody of the quintessential standard My way .In fact,in Life on Mars Bowie settled a little-known musical score.Back in February 1968,Bowie was asked to submit a set of English lyrics for a French song,Comme D'Habitude .Bowie version Even a Fool Learns to Love  was rejected,and lyrics by Paul Anka were used instead - the result being Frank Sinatra's My Way. In 1993 David Bowie says : There was a sense of revenge in that because I was so angry that Paul Anka has done My Way I thought I'd do my own version.There  are clutches of melody in that were definite parodies."




    As for me,I love almost all the songs on the album - Life on Mars is a legendary song,that I would listen to any time,The Bewlay Brothers is one of the most listened  songs in my playlist,Changes is the track I always recommend to my friends when it comes to David Bowie,Oh You Pretty Things  is one of my personal favourites,and it's also the song I'm always singing in class with one of  my friends - which I salute now - btw,you're famous now!All my readers would love to meet you (Oh,the irony..what readers?).Kooks sounds really happy,and Bowie sings it in a different way.Quicksand has been one of my favourites David Bowie tracks,esspecially the line "Don't believe in yourself / Don't deceit with belief/Knowledge comes.....".I'm not that much into Queen Bitch  but it sounds very interesting,and I enjoy listening to it.

   Released just before Chrstmas,Hunky Dory had failed to dent even the lower reaches of the charts,and single Changes,also failed to chart.By this time,however,Bowie had another trick up his sleeve.Another album was already in the can,and he knew it was his best yet.

sâmbătă, 24 decembrie 2011

8.The Man Who Sold the World

The follow-up singles to 'Space oditty' were all commercial failures - 'The Prettiest Star','Memory of a Free Festival' and 'Holy Holy'.
Bowie's musical influences continued to be bizarrely eclectic,as Tony Visconti remembers :"It's no secret that he was always into The Velvet Underground.He also liked Van Morrison...He also liked that writer of 'Buzz The Fuzz'(Biff Rose),Jacque Brel ( the Mort Shuman English versions aswell),Ken Nordine,Marc Bolan'
Howver,the sound Bowie was developing both live and in the studio was becoming heavier,more focused and theatrical.The Man Who Sold The World ( released in Nov 1970 in the US and April 1971 in the UK),was decidedly more bleak and forbidding than the progressive chic of Space Oddity era.It's his most autobiographical work to date,it was also of real quality,a haunted piece of Gothic rock'n'roll,all sinister sgadings and bleak presents.
In an interview in 1993,Bowie spoke openly for the first time about the fear of insanity which hung over him in the 1970s and influenced a large proportion of his work : " There were far too many suicides for my liking - and that was something I was terribly fearful of. [...] As long as I could put those psychological excesses into my music and into my work I could always be throwing it off".

Content:
The Width Of A Circle
All The Madmen
Black Country Rock
After All
Running Gun Blues
Saviour Machine
She Shook Me Cold
The Man Who Sold The World
The Supermen



Against this background,the album's signature song has to be 'All the Madmen',which directly references his stepbrother Terry's plight ( he lived in the local asylum until his suicide in 1985).It empathises with him and contrasts the derangement of the internees with the corrupt values of a society which institutionalises madness.Lyrically,this is one of Bowie's most disturbing songs.Musically,the descant recorder gives the song a childlike dementia,like a seven-year-old's first music lesson turned evil.



'All the Madmen',like 'The Supermen',shows that the young Bowie was hip to Nietsche.Nietsche makes his madman rant and drool in the market square in a parody of the ravings of a demented preacher.
'After all' is the hidden gem on the album,a gorgeous melody with a somtach-churning merry-go-round synthesised section is the middle eight in waltz time.'After all ' is the first of Bowie's mini-manifestations for his chosen children,depicting himself and his flock 'painting our faces and dressing in thoughts from the skies'.With the line in the final verse,'Live till your rebirth and do what you will',Bowie is echoing the occultist teachings of the 18th and 19th century diabolist Aleister Crowley,whose maxim was 'Do what thou wilt'.Bowie seems to be envisaging a fan base of star-child occultists.



The much-lauded title track is lyrically Bowie's boldest statement yet of his sense of psychic unease.'The Man Who Sold The World' has a lilting melody,an almost bossa-nova-style rythm section.It was also covered in 1993 by Nirvana for their Unplugged session for MTV. 'I thought you'd died alone,a long,long time ago'.
'The Width Of A Circle' shows Bowie at his most daring.It containts Mick Ronson's most explosive moments on a Bowie album,as his lead guitar Kafkaesque transmogrification : 'Then I ran across a monster who was sleeping by a tree/And I looked and frowned and the monster was me'.
The closing track,'The Supermen',is just as sinister.The song is all towering spirals of sound.
The Man Who Sold The World depicts a world of almost satanic,neo-occultist perversion('The Width of a Circle'),a future hell in which the interface between man and machine has corrupted the species ('Saviour Machine'),where lust and dsire replace the sort of cosy,cliched,heterosexualised monogamy peddled by the pure pop tunesmiths of the 60s ('She shook me cold'.Bowie is haunted by the real possibility of his own personality shattering into so many constituent parts ('The Width...','All the Madmen','The Man Who...').
The album cover,which portays Bowie with flowing golden locks and wearing a full-length dress,is now a classic collector's item.Contrary to popular belief,the dress cover was never withdrawn from the US market because it was never actually used there in the first place.
Another interesting fact about the album is that the title was changed very late on in the day.The original title was Metrobolist.
The Man Who Sold the World also sounds so oddly formed and dark.The seeds of cyborg space-pop,later developed by the likes of the Futurists John Foxx,Gary Nauman,Bill Nelson and Thomas Dolby,are to be found on songs such as 'Saviour Machine'.The sort of childlike paranoia found on 'After All' and 'All the madmen' was a new form of Gothic melodrama,and a direct influence on Siouxsie and The Cure in the 70s and 80s,and America's Nine Inch Nails in the 90s.
Key to this bleak soundscape was Visconti and Bowie's desire to harness the newly arrived musical possibilities of the synthesizer.Visconti remembers : 'The synth was a passion of mine at the time'.


Howver,the actual recording of the album was a nightmare for the young Visconti.Accoding to Visconti,Bowie appeared distracted and undiciplined,spending more time with Angie in the lobby of the recording studio kissing,cuddling and cooing. ( 'naughty Uncle Tony says I have to do a vocal now.Bye bye Angie-wangie').Much of the music was 'arranged ' by Visconti and the band.
The album's protagonist was time and again arriving in the studio in a lyricless state,further driving the smoach-churned producer into a state of mild apoplexy.Visconti remembers : " Bowie was writing at the last minuste because (one),he wanted to,and (two) he was preocupied in the lobby of the studio with his new-found love,Angie."
The tactic of writing in the studio and coming up with lyrics for songs at the 11th hour may have fazed his friends,but Bowie was learning a new technique,which involved almost spontaneous last-minute assembly of a song's lyrical content in the studio.Bowie has never really been a concentional craftsman and,as his career progressed,he turned expediency into a tactic,developping a spontaneous creative environment.
The Man Who Sold The World worked well in artistic terms.As a commercial product,however,it was another near-fiasco,selling moderately for a while in the States,but disastrosly in the UK.Ronson went back to Hull to lvie with his parents and to work as a gardener.Moreover,shortly after the recording of the album,Visconti departed the Bowie scene to concentrate on his production work with Bolan.There was a number of reasons for Visconti quitting,but the main one was Bowie's business relationship with Defries.

____________________________________________

The Man Who Sold The World is one of my favourite albums ( you will hear this a lot from me,though!).My personal favourites are : 'All the Madmen' - I think the lyrics are phenomenal.This is one of the songs I always sing in class and annoy my classmates.The Man Who Sold The World is,lyrically,one of Bowie best works.The lyrics attracted me in the first place,and this is also one of the first Bowie songs I have heard.'Saviour Machine','She Shook Me Cold' and 'Black Country Rock' are relatively new to my "Loved Songs" section.

marți, 20 decembrie 2011

7.Look out all you rock'n'rollers,1970-1972

" We never got off on all that revolution stuff
Such a drag - too many snags "

[Mott the Hoople,"All the Young Dudes",1972,words and music by David Bowie]

And here we are!Finally we are going to speak about glam,and we have finally arrived to David's 'golden age'.

How did Bowie start the decade?Not only with his first hit single under his belt,but also with a string of commercial and artistic failures to his name,too.In 1970,he made a number of important commercial and personal decisions which would dictate the course of his career for the first half of the decade.
First,he sacked his manager,Ken Pitt;second,he 'invented' glam rock;third,he hooked up with a inexperienced rock manager but very smart businessman-lawyer named Tony Defries;and last,he decided to get angaged to his girlfriend,Angela Barnett,who for a while basket in his limelight and joined his spangled journey to stardom.

A. The Marc Bolan - David Bowie dispute

The dispute is related to who has actually started the whole glam thing off.Marc Bolan was the first to have use glitter in his 1971 Top of the Pops show,and he claims being the godfather of glam.However,what mattered most to Bolan was stardom at any cost.Tony Visconti says: "Marc's weakness was his sense that he had 'arrived',and he never developed himself as a musician beyond the stage he was at during his hit-single years.He also got caught liying too many times - he felt he could sau anything to manipulate journalists.His tall tales were legend!David never shared any of Marc's weaknesses".Marc was less of a diplomat than Bowie,and tended to piss people off more easily.
In many respects,Bolan paved the way for Bowie.Bowie himself wrote in 1998: " The little imp opened the door".
Both had ploughed similar furrows in the late 1960s.Both were from a folk-pop base,but Bolan made the transition from minority acoustic elfin cult artist to mainstream - rogering pop god first.Bowie followed,doing it better,and taking it further,but Bolan had opened the door.



B. The Glam Era

Calling it a glam "movement" is a bit of a misnomer as it implies a sort of united front.There were far too few American bands to actually even form a glam-rock scene over there.A scene did exist centred around the Warhol crowd in New York in 1970/71,an absrudist movement concerned not so much with music,but with theatre and film.
Very broadly speaking,there were always two wings of glam,or "glitter" rock as it was more referred to at the time:

a)there was the arty,serious,more subversive end :
- David Bowie
- Roxy Music
- The New York Dolls
- Alice Cooper
- Lou Reed ( for a time )

b)then,there were the lads in silly trousers
- Gary Glitter
- Sweet
- Alvin Stardust


With the exception of Suzi Quatro( this girl is amazing,you should try some of her songs,esspecially Stumbulin' In,with Chrish Norman),glam was almost overwhelmingly male as well as overwhelmingly heterosexual.Despite all the limp-wristedness,few of the glam-rock acts were actually gay.Elton John 'came out' in 1976,well after the high-water mark of the glam-rock movement.For the first half of the 70s,Elton was at pains to hide his homosexuality from the media and his fans.Lou Reed,whose bisexuality was an obvious factor,stayed on the glam bandgagon for one album only.
No,UK glam rock was unremittigly male and laddish,despite the make-up and posing.Gary Glitter was the "leader of the gang".The Sweet,too,were all lads together,'hell raising' on a 'teenage rampage',while Slade ( this guys are also gorgeous,try 'Far Far Away')the boozing Midlands skinheads-turned-glitter-freaks,and probably the best of glam pop bands at the time,also demonstrated their impeccably laddish credentials by misspelling their half dozen hits ( Far Far Away is an amazing song,listen to it :D ).
But you had to have real nerve to be,or indeed even to look like,David Bowie.He soon had a community of fans who dared to be different and who ,as we shall see,were a ace apart from the rest of the glam-rock fans.
In general,Bowie was dismissive of most of the competition,although Alice Cooper (with School's Out for Summer),Elton John and Rod Stewart and The Faces were releasing very strong material in 1972 and 1973.Bowie's competition with Bolan was a feature of the 'glam wats' during the period.One of the few contemporary acts Bowie had any time for would appear to have been Roxy Music.Some critics consider Roxy Music and possibly Steve Harley and Cockney Rebel as the only true glam-rock bands in that they actually started their professional careers as glam or art-rock acts,rather than twiddly folkies.
The glam era was possibly the last big male-band era in UK pop:

- Gary Glitter ( 3 nr 1s,4 nr 2s) VS Sweet ( 1 nr 1, 4 nr 2s) VS Slade (6.1,3.2) VS T-Rex ( 4.1,4.2) VS Wizzard (2.1)

This was an intensely competitive period.That's why the Oasis VS Blur face-off in 1995,when the two Britpop acts schedueled their single relaes for the same day,was important.


So,what was glam rock all about?Was it simply,as John Lennon once put pit "just rock'n'roll with lipstick on'?
Glam rock definitely had a more show-business side,in form of the often fun Gary Glitter and the hardly ever fun Alvin Stardust.
The Bowie version of glam was as much to do with the floutinf of gender codes and injecting a certain artiness and detachement into popular music as with attempts to shock the masses in the era of hippy,joss-stick-tingled stupefaction.Its origins are to be found in figures such as Little Richard,whose stage persona was flamboyantly garish and androginous.
Syd Barrett,the first of the 60s psychedelic performers to wear make-up and an acknowledged influence on Bowie in particular.Before his collapse into mental illness,Barrett briefly promised an alarming future for pop,a future full of space-out tripping and flaunted convention.Barrett prefigured Bowie's space-age fascination wish songs such as 'Interstellar Overdrive','Astromine Domine','Arnold Layne'.Had Barrett continued,there might have been less room for Bowie to manoeuvre in the 1970s.But he didin't.By the earlt 1970s,he was,very sadly,a comatose wreck,pop's most famous acid casualty;an innovator destroyed before his prime.
In the hands of Bowie,glam challenged pop's masculine ethos.Bowie's version of glam was about gender violence.Lou Reed and Iggy Pop only started to wear obtrusive make-up on stage once Bowie and Bolan had begun to do so.
Soon,every self-respecting British teen band to have at least one of its members kitted out in a fake leopard-skin jumpsuit with assorted glittery attachements.Bowie,however,had very little to do with these glitter rockers.

Hype

The origins of glam,Bowie-style,can be traced back to the very first months of the 70s.At the Roundhouse in London,in February 1970,Bowie and his band,Hype,played one of the most significant and most indifferently received concerts in rock history.
Hype were intended as a cartoonesque caper,a sort of rock'n'roll pantomime for the new decade,and the name was intended to run counter hippy-era notions of an anti-commercialistic rock community.Bowie was Rainbow Man,wearing a cape of many colours and lots of diaphanous scarves.Drummer John Cambridge was Cowboy Man,Mick Ronson on lead guitar was Gangster Man,wearing a borrowed gold lame suit from Bowie,and bassist Tony Visconti was Hype Man,a kind of comic-book superhero.
Bowie is in no doubt that this was the first British glam-rock gig.Marc Bolan-in an attempt to get into the theatricality of the project- stood at the foot of the stage wearing a child's plastic Roman breastplate.
Tony Visconti,about the concert: " I think that is the night that the germ of glam rock was born "



David Bowie and Mick Ronson



















Ronson was a very important musical component in the Bowie sound at the time.
Visconti remembers him as charming,but adds: "He always looked a bit lost;he hardly had an ambitious bone in his body."
Gus Dungeon also remembers Ronno with great affection: "He was also an utterly charming fellow,I mean,just a total sweetheart and desperately embarassed at having to pull all those stunts every night during the Ziggy period.He hated doing it.He was very shy."


David Bowie and Angela

Bowie was also by now a married man.On 20 March 1970,he and Angie were wed at Beckenham Registry Office.Angie was dressed in a second hand,purple and pink,floral silk dress bought the day before.David wore tight leather trousers,black satin shirt and Afghan coat,cut something of an unconventional dash for the wedding day.Instead of rings they exchaned Peruvian bangles during the brief ceremony.The night before their wedding was spent in bed with a mutual friend.The night after was spent down the pub getting blasted.

 Angela acted as a behind-the-scenes promoter of her husband's talents,persuading and pressurising record companies and pluggers,helping with the costumes,making phone calls,suggesting ideas,entertaining friends,listening to Bowie's work-in-progress.
 She was also into outrage and bisexuality in a big way;her hair was often shorter,spikier and punkier than her husband's.
 Many contemporaries are at pains to poit out that Bowie only really weirdified his image after living with Angie.Before the Angie years,Bowie was actually fairly quiet as an individual and had not yet discovered the flair for sartorial flamboyance we now assosicate with him.
 Angiw would constantly encourage Bowie to try on new,and ever weider,designs.



 Bowie and Angie always had a love\hate relationship.Manager Ken Pitt apparently strongly disliked her.Gud Dudgeon didin't get Angie either : " I thought she was just a typical groupie.I just thought she was really loud and full of crap and I still do."
Ken Scott says about her: "She was very flamboyant.When she walked into a room,you knew it.Musically she had no influence whatsoever.She would stop by the studio once in a while with a 'Hello,dahlings!Oh,that's lovely,yes!' and then go out and so some more shopping or something.But she was fine.I had no problems with her"

According to Angie's second biography,Bowie was quite upfront about his feelings.He told her back in 1969 that he didn't really love her,and if they married it would be something of a marriage of convenience.'Their relationship,though,was weird;supposedly an "open relationship"' says Scott 'But every time I've heard of that,it always ends up with someone jealous,and that's what eventually happened.'

Tony Visconti says about Angie: "She was there for him in a difficult transitional period.But I could see when this wasn't enough for her.At one concert David was surrounded by fans and Angie was next to him dressed even more outrageously than he was (her breasts were visible).Since all the attention was on him,she feigned fainting (something she did often) and suddently she created an emergency drama around herself,taking the limelight away from David."

For a while tough,everyone was a big happy family.Bowie and Angie had soon turned their home into something of a sex-and-style laboratory,picking up blokes and girls from venues such as gay disco The Sombrero,a nigh-spot frequented by Bowie mainly as a way to get a hit of the flamboyance of gay style.
Visconti remembers moving in with his wife Liz,at Bowie and Angie's place. " Bowie was the only one among us who had any money.[...] As for wild sex - it only happened occasionally.David and Angela never tried to invove us in their sexcapades"

The Haddon Hall (their house) was apparently haunted,and Bowie spent some of the most creative years of his life there,tapping into the eerie vibe of this rambling Victorian mansion.
It was in this spooky mansion that Bowie and Angie set about starting a family of their own.By the end of the summer of 1970,Angie was pregnant.

6.Space Oddity (1969)

For Bowie,the first part of 1969 ran much as 1968 and 1967 had done : plenty of ideas,plenty of energy,but no commercial success.
His apprenticeship had to draw a close soon,and it did with his first hit single,'Space Oditty',written as a response to Stanley Kubrick's 2001:A space Odyssey.Commonly regarded as one of the best singles of his career,'Space Oditty' came in at Number 14 in a 2005 Virgin Radio poll of the Top 500 singles of all time.
'Space Oditty' remains a beautifully haunting,if dated,masterpiece,a tale of alientaion which thematically prefigured much of Bowie's work in the decade to come,telling the tale of astronaut Major Tom,destined to roam the universe for ever: 'Planet Earth is blue\And there's nothing I can do'.
Interestingly for a pop song from that era,'Space Oditty' has no chorus.It's a seamless dialogue,a perfectly paced unravelling of events,and is the possessor of an instantly memorable melody,a superlative acoustic guitar riff and echoey hand clap for the middle-eight,and a lyric which burned its way in all its childlike beauty into the public consciousness.
The BBC didn't allow it to be played until the guys got back from the moon. ( Apollo 11 ).As soon as they got back it started being played again,and subsequently charted and continued up.The single was given its first public airing on 6 July 1969,and it took three months to actually hit the Top 40.He collaborated for the single with Gus Dudgeon.
Tragically,Gus and his wife,Sheila were killed in a car crash on 21 July 2002.Dudgeon was 59.Before the fatal accident,Dudgeon's lawyers had initiated a legal action against David Bowie for unpaid royalties.Bowie sent flowers to his funeral,with the message: " Farewell to the Laughing Gnome".
Far from being simply a cash-in single,'Space Oditty' was the first indication of Bowie's interest in outer space as a metaphor for inner space.Paul Buckmaster remembers Bowie as being very taken with the whole sci-fi vibe at the time.
Tony Visconti also remembers Bowie being very bookish.He also remembers Bowie as a UFO-spotter,though Bowie has given the impression that it was a passing phase.
Given the comic-book nature of Bowie's interests at the time,as a piece of sci-fi writing 'Space oditty' is remarkably,perhaps deliberately,naive.Rather than dealing with the correct terminology,Bowie's lyrics are childlike and auaint.So we get 'ground control' for 'mission control','space ship' for 'rocket','Major Tom' instead of ,perhaps, 'Commander Tom'. The result is that Major Tom is a puppet,a Mr Punch launched into space in a atoilet-roll rocket covered in tin foil,slying around in the nursery ceiling rather than the cosmos.In this respect,'Space Oditty' is merely just another 'Laughing Gnome'.
Intentionally or not,the single 'Space Oditty' acted as a requiem for the flower power age "Planet Earth is blue\And there's nothing I can do".
'Space Oditty' was Bowie's first 'classic; single,and has also entered the ranks of the rock mondegreens,or famously misheard lyrics,with the line 'Ground control to Mao Tse-tung' ( :D ) . It has been followed up not only by Bowie's own 'Ashes to Ashes ' 1980 but also by Pete Schiling's Euro hit of 1984,'Major Tom (coming home)'.And ,of course,three years after 'Space Oditty' was recorded,producer Gud Dudgeon went on the cut the thematically very similar 'Rocket Man' with Elton John.
Sadly for Bowie,the single became a hit just a matter of weeks after the sudden death of his father from lobar pneumonia in August 1969.Without the support of his dad,Bowie increasingly turned to others for professional and emotional succour.Angie was the most important of these but other workmates such as Tony Visconti were by now very close to Bowie,too.After the death of his father,Bowie had only sporadic contact with his mum throughout the 70s,and she complained bitterly that her son had abandoned her,and Terry,during the period of his greatest fame.She did,however,attend her son's perfomance as the elephant man on Broadway in 1980,and his marriage to Iman in 1992,and,according to reports,the two became close again during the 90s.Peggy later moved into a private residential old people's home near Watford,where she lived until her death in April 2001.

Bowie's second album came out in the autumn of 1969.It was certainly more coherent and less scatty than his first Deram effort,but 'Space Oditty' aside,there was little to suggest the greatness to come.


Space Oditty ( 1969) content:
1.Space oditty
2. Unwashed And Somewhat Slightly Dazed
3.(Don't Sit Down)
4.Letter to Hermione
5. Cygnet Committee
6.Janine
7.An Occasional Dream
8.Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud 1
9.God Know's I'm Good
10. Memory Of A Free Festival ( part 1 and part 2)
11.Conversation Piece

My personal favourites are,besides Space Oditty,Letter to Hermione,Cygnet Committee and An Occasional Dream.
'Unwashed And Somewhat Slightly Dazed' is a country-meets-prog-rock collision of ideas.Lirically,however,the most important song is also the most direct - 'Janine'.On 'An Occasional Dream' and "Letter to Hermione",which concerns his first real love,Bowie is as vulnerable and quavering,almost feminised,as the love he sings about.'Space Oditty' itself was an exceptional song,and a deserved hit single in the UK,staying in the UK charts for fourteen weeks.
Despite the hit single,the new album flopped badly,as did the follow-up to 'Space Oditty','The Prettiest Star' ( ironically,while I'm writing this,my winamp is playing 'The Prettiest Star,from his 1973 album,Aladdin Sane :D ; anyway,this has nothing to do with the 60s.)
By 1970,Bowie had become skilful at communicating with music journalists: charming,good-looking and intelligent,he had already learned the art of keeping the caption-writers in the weekly music press fully employed.



5.In the late 60s : Visconti,Bolan,Kemp,Hermione,Angela

By the middle of 1967,Bowie's career had reached something of an impasse.He had received some good reviews,but had negligible sales.It was at this time that he met one of the most important figures in his career,Brooklyn-born would-be producer Tony Visconti.
Here's a pic with both of them ( though it's form the 70s).


In Visconti,Bowie had found a friend who shared similar interests and who was,very importantly,an American,and therefore by definition rather cool.However,the change of producer from Vernon to Visconti had no immediate impact on Bowie's fortunes.
David Bowie was a natural convention-breaker.Personal style,and its articulation through dress,was central to this revolt.In 1997 he said: " And outfit is an entire life experience.An outfit is much more than just something to wear.It's about who you are ,it's a badge and it becomes a symbol".Even at school Bowie was a stylishly rebellious dresser,then,as now,something of a shoe fetishist : he was one of the first to wear what have now become known as winkle-pickers.


During the late '60s,he developed a rather uneasy friendship with Marc Bolan,that was a mixture of mutual respect and bitchy rivalry.



They were both often at Visconti's flat in Earls Court for many musical soirees.Marc Bolan,who was married,used his apartment about three nights a week to bath,and so did his wife.Bowie often used his flat as a place to bring girlfriends back.
Mod fashion was very important to both Bolan and Bowie.The first mods in the early 1960s were dangerous modernists: they wore expensice suits,lipstick,blusher,and eye shadow.They were yet another scion of gay subculture and sartorially part of glam's forbears.
Both Bowie and Bolan would hang around the chich joints of swinging London,raigind the dustbins of Carnaby Street for any discarded seconds which could be salvaged for nigh-time clobber.
Here you can listen to David Bowie's story about meeting Marc Bolan:

In terms of personal style in the 1960s,Bowie for the most part followed,rather than set,fashion trends,although he was one of the first teenagers in Britain to have long hair.On 12 November 1964 he appeared as the president of the Society for The Prevention Of Cruelty To Long-Haired Men on the Tonight programme and told an amused Cliff Michelmore how members were being taunted for their sartorial excess.



The young Bowie lved all this taboo-breaking and flaunting of moral codes.He wanted attention,he wanted to be known,and,back in 1964,to be a man and to have long hair was one way of achieving this aim.


In 1965,Bowie was a mod,in 1966 and in 1967 a hippy,but by 1968 he had begun developing his own post-hippy,slightly feminised cool.In performance,Bowie demonstrated a theatricality that was,for the time,certainly out of the ordinary for British pop.
Under the tutelage of dancer Linsday Kemp,Bowie's innate love of the bizarre flourished widly.
Kemp's influence had less to do with the fact that Bowie attented some of his dance classes,and more with the fact that,by his very being,he increased Bowie's awareness of the bizzare.In 1997 Bowie said of Kemp: he lived on his emotions,he was a wonderful influence.His day to day life was the most theatrical thing I had ever seen,ever.It was everything I thought
Bohemia probably was.I joined the circus."
Bowie's first performance with Kemp and his partner Jack Brikett,came in Pierrot in Turquoise,at the OXford New Theatre on 28 December 1967.
Bowie went to mix rock and mime in the late 1960s,touring in early 1969 with Tyrannosaurus Rex (T-Rex) as an opening act and performing a mime called Yet-San And The Eagle,with 'Silly Boy Blue' as his backing track.
Visconti,about the friendship between Marc Bolan ( the lead singer of T-Rex) and David Bowie: " David was open to friendship but Marc was quite cruel about David's as yet unproven musical career.I think it was with great sadistic delight that Marc hired David to open for Tyrannosauurus Rex,not as a musical act,but as a mime."


Bowie had,undoubtedly,more false starts than any other superstar in pop,and his early work provides us with not even a glimpse of the greatness to come.However,in the 60s you were allowed to fail.Bowie would probably not have made it if he had started out today - record companies and managers would not stick with a consistently unsucessful,if talented,artist ( here we must give Ken Pitt the credit fot sticking with "his boy",despite year after year of commercial disappointments).
Bowie interested himself in Buddhism,befriended the Buddhist priest,Chime Youngdong Rimpoche,and,according to some sources,come close to becoming a monk himself.However,Tony Visconti,himself curious about Buddhism at the time,doubts Bowie took his own interest too seriously.

By mid 1967,Bowie had finally flown the parental nest,to lodge with Ken Pitt, taking the spare room upstairs in Ken's flat and coming and going when he wanted.Terry's mental ilness and schizophrenic episodes were becoming more harrowing,the general domestic situation was confininf,and Bowie needed space.During his residence chez Pitt,Bowie recorded a prototype rock musical,Ernie Johnson ,about a character who throwns a party to mark his intended suicide,planned for the next day.
Then as now,Bowie was a huge fan of new music.He was one of Britain's first Velvet Underground fans.
There are numerous unrealised,unflinished,unreleased and unreleasable tracks from this era,including a remarkable song recorded with The Riot Squat in April 1967 called "Little Toy Soldier" (Sadie's song) ,which tells the story of Sadie,who has a clockwork toy soldier who comes to life and whips her when he is wound up.One day the girl winds it up too much and it beats her to death.The song itself is basically The Velvet Underground's 'Venus in Furs',with some changes.

By 1968,so dire were his financial circumstances that Bowie was forced,on an occasional basis,into operating a photocopier at Legastar,and also to raise some cash,was forced into appearing a telvision ad for Lyons Maid 'Luv' ice creams,incidentally made by future Alien and Bladerunner director Ridley Scott.He then acted in a short silent film,The Image ,directed by Michael Armstrong,but with little impact.

Hermione Farthingal

In early 1968,Linsday Kemp was asked by the BBC to choreograph The Pistol Shot , a play by Pushkin.For the production ,Kemp chose Bowie and a beautiful red-haired dancer,Hermione Farthingale,to dace a poetic minuet.Very soon an item,the pair lived together.



Bowie's next project would be Feathers.
By the summer of 1968,the 21-year-old Bowie had set up home in a flat in Clareville Grove,London,with hermione.
His relationship with the classic "English rose",with long strawberry-blonde hair,high cheeckbones and 'Clodagh Rodgers' wispy folk vocal,and its abrupt termination in early 1969,apears to have had something of a devastating effect on Bowie.Farthingale ran off with a dancer and later lived abroad after marrying an anthropologist.
After the split,Bowie returned to live briefly at the parental home in Bromley.Later,he met Mary Finnigan,a divorcee with two children of her own to look after and she mothered Bowie too,during their brief affair.
Bowie moved in with Finnigan in the first half of 1969 and,much to her horrified amusement,took over the entire flat - a bass amp there,a twelve-string guitar there.A freelance journalist,Mary Finnigan was at the time working regularly for the Sunday Times as well for the underground newspaper IT.She therefore supported him financially for three months.Altough nominally her lodger,Bowie paid no rent or household bills.

The Arts Lab


He soon opened the Arts Lab,and gave it a suitably hippy-dippy name - Growth,and became moderately successful locally. Tony Visconti says: " What I liked about David's relationship with his Arts Lab was that it gave him a purpose...I admired his healthy attitude he had then."
Although committed to this grass-roots populism,Bowie never really fitted into the hippy underground.While the rest of his peers were into dope and LSD,Bowie was more into drinking bottles of barley wine and falling over outside the pub.In fact,on occasion,Bowie wouls lecture his audience at the Arts Lab about the dangers of hard drugs.Apart from cannabis tincture,which seemed to be particularly fond of at the time,Bowie was into alcohol.

Mary Angela Barnett

But life in Beckenham was far from uneventful.Following a trip away,Mary Finnigan returned to her flat to fint it,quite remarkably,spotlessly clean and well ordered. (According to Finnigan,the young Bowie was incredibly untidy).She had been usurped by a certain Mary Angela Barnett.
Mary Barnett,or Angie as she was known,was born in 1950 in Xeros,Cyprus,of American parentage.She met David while bot were dating the same lover,Calvin Mark Lee,who was working as an A&R man for Bowie's new record company,Mercury records.
Angie was attractive,actively bisexual,extravagant,prone to huge self-dramatisation and scene-stealing faints,tantrums and collapses.She also had aspirations of becoming an actress and a movie star.
http://www.5years.com/angie11.jpg



4.David Bowie (1967)


Bowie's first album was released on 1 June 1967,and it's undoubtely,the most bizzare album of his entire musical career.
Completely unloved by the public and seemingly a source of some mbarrassement to Bowie himself,David has never included it in any of the subsequent official reissure campaigns.Despite this,amazingly,it has,in a minor way,been an influence on the work of Britpop bands in the mid- 1990s,particularly Blur.
In this albm,Bowie showed a predilection for writing three-minute narrative vignettes,depicting the worlds of a succession of 'little men' ( and women ),set in a bygone age,suning in a style which owned little to the traditions of rock'n'roll or the blues.

Content:
Uncle Arthur
Sell me a Coat
Rubber Band
Love you Till Tuesday
There is a Happy End
We are Hungy Men
When I Live my Dream
Little Bombarider
Silly Boy Blue
Come and Buy My Toys
Join the Gang
She's Got Medals
Maid of Bond Street
Please Mr. Gravedigger

After reading the content of the album,I'm sure you noticed the childish titles,and I'm not amazed that Bowie isn't too proud of it!
When I have firstly listened to this album,I wasn't too impressed either,it sounded rather boring and,as I said before,childish.Now,after many listenings,I find it quite interesting and well..still childish.It is very musical,it has a lot of folk influences ( it may sound a bit like some Simon and Garfunkel).He used a juxtaposition of instruments traditionally associated with pop - acoustic guitar,piano,bass guitar and drums - with those from music hall and classical music,such as tuba and trumpet.
And why all these references to wartime heroes and failed love affairs set in a bygone era of penny-chews,threepenny suibs,Scotch Emulsion and ringworm in the clasroom?Other Bowie biographers have said that Bowie was haunted by the tales of derring-do the part of mentally unstable ancestors in the Jones faimly.
All in one,the album sounds very happy,and my personal favourites are: Silly Boy Blue,Sell me a Coat,She's Got Medals,We are Hungy Men,Little Bombardier..and well..I guess I like all of them.
She's Got medals is Bowie's first song about cross-dressing and sexual ambivalence .
In Join the Gang he combines a further attack on drug use;the city is viewed as a corrupting influence :it has lost its innocent charm in a sho =w of conspicuous consumption and excess. " This is what to do now that you're here/Sit down doing nothing altogether very fast"
This Bowie album is already peopled by starlets - the idea of life as theatre and of the cinematic qulity of everyday life,a theme that was later to become central to Bowie,was also beginning to manifest itself (Maid of Bond Street)
The album's looniest moment is saved for the end.Just when you think you've survived an all-out attack of the barking mad,and just when you think Bowie couldn't actually get any sillier,the last two and a half minutes or so rereoute his weirdeness on to a new plane of daftness."Please Mr Gravedigger" is Bowie's very own 'death disc' . Bowie narrates the story of a child-murderer,who watched the gravedigger at his work and who plans the latter's death so that he won't tell the police of the murders.

David Bowie's first recordings demonstrates a particular fascination with modifying his basic singing voice through the use of multi-track octave doubling ( a second voice part,an octave above the first,recorded and often harmonised with the original vocal line) and a variety of studio tricks to disort the timbre of the vocal or to alter the speed of vocal delivery ( The Laughing Gnome,for instance).

Bowie's first album and singles,although now adored by some, ( :D ) were all commercial failures.Had he been starting out today,he would almost certainly never have become a rock superstar,and would quite possibly never have had a career in music.He would probably have been dropped well before he'd had time to develop his act,find his voice,and set out his agenda.Today,the likes of David Bowie are simply not allowed to exist.






3.The Laughing Gnome

So,on 16 September 1965,Davie Jones became David Bowie,and it was the singer's first alter ego.
The most remarkable thing about Bowie's 1960s recorded output is that,with only one or two exceptions,it gives not the slightest hint of the greatness to come,save for one very important aspect: his innate sense of theatre.
A flop single in 1967,but a UK number 6 when re-released ( without Bowie's permission ) in 1973,'The Laughing Gnome' is a supremely catchy children's song.despite selling around a quarter of million copies in the UK alone,it has never appeared on any officially sanctioned collection or greatest hits.Bowie appears embarrassed by it,yet he should be proud.It's a lovely little song and,despite Bowie's reputation for cool,arty,more serious songs,it's surely time now for it to be reappraised.According to some sources,it's Bowie's tenth-biggest-selling UK single.The fact that in a recent poll Channel Four viewers voted it the 78th worst pop song ever,is likely to prolong its status as a banushed Bowie song.
The 'Laughing Gnome' is not the only song showing affinity for childhood.'When I'm Five' recorded in 1968 and inclued on the Love you Till Tuesday promo soundtrack is another song which sows a quite well-honed affinity with the quiddities of childhood;another is 'Rupert the Riley'.
Dungeon ( with whom Bowie collaborated on The Laughing Gnome): "I mean,it was pathetic,really.Technically it worked,but it's bloody embarrassing"

Here's a sample of the wit and widsom of Dungeon/Bowie:

Bowie: 'Ere,where do you come from?
Gnome: Gnome-man's land.
Bowie: Oh,really?

Or try this:

Bowie: 'Ere,what;s that clickin' noise?
Gnome: That's Fred - he's a metro-gnome!

2.Elvis is English,1947-1967



"Elvis is English and climbs the hills "
('The Buddha of Suburbia',David Bowie,1993)

Bowie was born David Robert Jones at 9.00 a.m. on Wednesday

The unmarried status of his parents was still sufficient to have the neighbours tut-tutting into their cuppas.His father,Haywood Stenton Jones was the son of a shoemaker and his mother was Margaret Mary Burns (known as Peggy) .They had both been married in the past and had each a son,but David was to be their only child together.John Jones worked for Dr Barnardo's as a promotions officer (he also took part in the WWI) and his mother was a ushurette at a local cinema.esday,8 January 1947,by a quirk of fate twelve years to the day after one of his early heroes,Elvis Preasley.
Little David Jones soon developed a taste for exotica - at the age of three,Peggy found her son plastered in powder and eyeliner.
The austere,non-physical nature of his relationship of Terry ( his half-brother) with his parents may have left Bowie somewhat scarred.Terry was forever rowing with his mum;his dad was often in a state of quizzical,melancholic withdrawal.
Until well into the middle age,Bowie would admit that he was,underneath all the war paint and glitter,painfulli shy,and that he found it very difficult to relate to people and enter into meaningful relationsh
ips with individuals.The cheeky,urbane chatterbox of today is ,in fact,the direct antithesis of the young Bowie,who spent his first forty years on the planet acting like a man from the Andromeda galaxy.Both the public David Bowie and the private David Jones were strugglig yo make some sort of useful connection - for the most of the 70s,it was virtually impossible for us,and for him,to disentangle the two facets of his personality in the first place.
Like most cultural incons,Bowie is supremely 'mythogenic'.Like all great names,whether from film ( orson Welles or Greta Garbo,for instance),sport ( Muhammad Ali) or indeed politics (JFK),Bowie's appeal has lain in the generation of myths.
Bowie was also something of a past master at simply lying and getting away with it.In one interview he mythologised his early years,a la Andy Warhol,at time claiming to have been brought up in an ''ouse full of blacks',and at other times to have been lived up for a while with relatives in far-off Yorkshire (untrue).
The geography of the situation is crucial: living in the suburbs so close to London provided the perfect paradigm for escape.London represented exotica,freedom and change for youngsters driven near-disperation by the blandness of the capital's environs.Thoustands of teenagers could acces the naughtin
ess and release represented by the clubs ,pubs,shops and scandals of London and yet remain inside the dominant parent cultures.This was a life of respectability and rebelion.
Much of the impetus behind British popular music since the mid-1950s has come from these artistic,dreamy,bed-sit musicians.British pop has been dominated by the white,middle-class autodidacts,from Pete Townshend,Jagger and Richards and the Ray Davies in 60s through to Suede's Brett Anderson,Blur's Damon Albarn and Pullp's Jarvis Cocker in the 90s.
Rather than being being a source of embarrassment or restraint,this elite has produced some of the most wonderful moments in popular culture.David Bowie is,and remains,the finest product of this sensibility.All the shock,all the outrage,all the outreach which has dominated his music,comes from the preicament of his liminality;from not fitting it,from wanting to be different,from being brought up in a climate of suburban conformity,and wanting to belong to a community of urban hipness.Bowie's whole career is a macrocosmos of this search to be other,married to the desire to be part of a scene.
Another fact
or was crucial in shaping teenage suburban rebelion:America,an alien culture which,for a time,was the epitome of cool.The tension between British and American popular culture was absolutely crucial.
Bowie had always loved listening to music.Peggy was a drama queen,John naturally nonconfrontational.In part it might be said that Bowie would inherit this complicated and unfortunate mix of character traits from his parents,often being frightened of confrontation yet supremely theatrical and show-stealing.
John Jones was nothing if not on the cutting edge of new technology.A television had been purchased in 1953,then a gramophone,and in 1956,Dad came in with a stack of new fangled 45s - The Moonglows,Frankie Lymon And The Teenagers,The Platters,Fats Domino.

'Then I hit gold."Tutti Frutti" by Little Richard.My heart nearly burst with excitement.I'd never heard anything even resembling this.It filled the room with energy and colour and outr
ageous defiance.I had heard God.Now I wanted to see him " [ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ElwgN8ah4po - the song ]

Like many other of his generation,Bowie loved American music and American culture ( he was a keen baseball follower as a youngster,and even played for the local team).When he first heard Little Richard,at the age of eight or nine,it was an almost epiphanic moment : it made him want to be a star.According to Bowie's testimony,in the late 1950s he knew there was nothing else he wanted to do in life other than make music.In his early teens Bowie was not just listening to R&B and rock n roll,but the hep jazz of Charlie Mingus too.
His half-brother,Terry,was a crucial influence here.Therry would talk to his kid brother about his love for the Beat poets,Kerouac and Ginsberg,and would frequent jazz cellars of an evening and tell tales of the thrill and excitement of modern jazz in the metropolis.
Good-looking and with an agile mind,Terry was also prone to bouts of gloomy depression and would later be diagnosed as a schizophrenic.The taint of 'madness' in the Jones family terrified the young Bowie: not only Terry was profoundly disturbed but many of his extended family on the B
urns side had psychological or mental problems,too.Auntie Una,a schizophrenic,died in her late thirties after enduring electric shock treatment and internment in a mental institution.Auntie Vivienne also had schizophrenic episodes.Auntie Nora had been lobotomised in order to treat her nervous disposition.Peggy's mum was a self-confessed 'mad-woman'.
However,throughout his teenage years David and Terry remained very close.One episode during this time would haunt Bowie for years to come.Like many schizophrenics - and some epileptics - Terry would often hear ' voices from God.This example of someone so close being possessed was horrifying for Bowie,and he became ever more fearful of and distant form his brother.
Bowie's first public appereance as a musician was back in the late 1950s when he went to the Isle of Wight with the Bromley Cubs.He and his lifelong mate George Underwood performed a few Lonnie Donegan skiffle songs using a makeshift double bass,made from a tea chest and a broom handle,and a ukulele.From that moment on,there was no turning back.
Whilist still at school he played in a band called The Konrads with his mate George Underwood.


To finance his musical interests,he took a couple of part-time jobs,one,so legend has it,as a butcher's boy cycling round Bromley delivering meat,the other at the local record shop owned by a guy called Vic Furlong.Bowie was fired from the latter for daydreaming,but not before he had bought himself a saxophone.Bowie took sax lessons with Ronnie Ross,a top British saxophonist.
At school,Bowie was far from conventionally gifted.Having failed his 11-plus,he attended Bromley Technical High School.He left school in 1963 after getting an 0 level in just one subject - Art.
Indeed,with hindsight,the most important thing that happened to him at school was the sudden,and excruciating,acquisition of the weirdest eyes in showbiz.During an argument with his then best mate ( and still bosom-buddy) George Underwood over a girl,Carol Goldsmith,george's knuckle caught David's left eye.At Farnborough Hospital,it was found that the sphincter muscles in the eye were damaged,requiring David to have two operations.After a lenghty time off school,he was left with a paralysed and permanently dilated pupil ( a condition known as aniscora) and retarded vision.Just to kill off one particularly prevalent media 'myth',Bowie does not,in fact,have miscoloured eyes - the effect of enlarged pupil on the iris only gives the appearence of different colours.He was born blueish eyes but because of the paralysed pupil his left eye is unable to dilate or contract,appearing brown or green depending on the ambient light.The origins of his Tehnicolor eyes have been top,or at least near the top,of virtually every 'revelatory' tabloid article on David Bowie for the past 30 years.
Anecdote after anecdote has been piled up to mythologize the whole event,including news stories playing up the origins of Bowie's impeccable alien physiognomy.The whole affair is an index of the media fascination with a near sixty-perfect bone structure,a full head of hair,a tiny waist ( at an age when most men's gusts have well and truly flabbed over their belts) and an amazingly reconstructed set og gnashers.Bowie said in 2005: " I have had nothing done really but to my teeth,and that helped prop up the visage".
Bowie may not have covered himself in glory in terms of academic wualifications,but he did prosses a vivid,unusual,imaginative flait for composition.Although his spelling and grammar were weak,he could write better stories than any of his classmates.Bowie is largely a self-taught.
He wanted to be an Elight Little Richard,an English Elvis.And that's exactly what he became - the first British solo superstar of the art-school era.
Despite claims in a press release for his 1966 single,"The London Boys",that he had studied at Bromley Art School,Bowie never actually atended art school.His introduction to art came from Owen Frampton,who ataught at Bromley Technical High School,which Bowie attented from 1958 to 1963.The list of pop musicians who went to art school in the late 50s and early 60s is like a roll call of the most important pop artists of their day: John Lennon,Eric Burdon,Keith Richards,Pete Townsend,Eric Clapton,Syd Barrett,Freddie Mercury,Charlie Watts,Bryan Ferry,Brian Eno,and many more.
In 1992 he told Life magazine: " From a very early age I was always fascinated by those who transgressed the norm,who defied convention,whether in painting or music or anything.Those were my heroes - the artists Marcel Duchamp and Salvador Dali,and,in rock,Little Richard...First it was John Lennon,some of the Stones and Kinks,and then it got hammered in with guys like [Roxy's Music]Bryan Ferry,King Crimson,Pink Floyd.....I would like to believe it that I and a number of others in the early 70s changed the fabric of pop,made it a wider receiver."
Certainly he never implied that he wanted to be a rock'n'roll star.
His first ever band was the R&B group,The Konrads
So confident was he in his own talent that he sent a letter to John Bloom,a wealthy entrepreneur,asking him to cough up some dough for the new Beatles,Rather than consmuminf the letter to the waterpaper bin,Bloom passed on the request to Leslie Conn,a music person who ran Doris Day's music publishing and who was a talent scout for the Dick James Organisation.
Throughout the mid 60s,Davie Jones was just one of many teenage wannabes on the London pop scene.Bowie then progressed though Who-sounding mod music with his next band,The Lower Third ( 'Can't Help Thinking About Me' is the best example) to the extraordinary exxentricity of his first Dream record in 1967,the acoustic folk\pop of Feathers in 1968,and that jumble of pop balladry and country rock found on David Bowie in 1969.


Bowie disliked heavy music,calling it a "fairly primitive form".For Bowie,rock was bloghted by false standards of musicianship and technique:' I look for sensation rather than quality,and heavy music seems to be full of musicians who have quality rather than musicians who for some reason can chill your spine'.So,stop referring to Bowie as a 'rock' musician.Bowie's musical palette is in fact far broader,and this is what makes him specially intersting.
A crucial influence on the young Bowie was that of his thirdt manager,Ken Pitt.Back in the 1960s,Pitt was a major-league player,having worked with Frankie Laine,Louis Armstrong,Duke Ellington,Frank Sinatra and Mel Torme.

"My own impression,having observed Bowie and Pitt together at Manchester Street [ where Pitt had his London flat] " says biographer George Tremlett, " is that they probably did have a sexual relationship - but one that was never as important to Bowie as it was to Pitt"

Pitt was also the first to recognise that Bowie was a musician/actor with a wide range of interests both low and high cultural.Bowie's interest in these two levels of artistic endeavour has constantly played itself out in his work.he took from high art and brought it down to street level.
Pitt's first recommendation on meeting his young charge was that he should change his name.In fact,this was not to be the first name change for the fledgling singer.Back in the 1963,in his first band,The Konrads,Davie Jones went under the stage name of dave Jay.
'Bowie',pronounced by the man himself and all his die-hard fans to rhyme with 'slowie',as opposed to 'wowie!' as used by most casual fans and chart show presenters,was chosen for its connection with the Bowie knife.Jim Bowie (pronnounced to rhyme with 'phooey') was a Texan adventurer who died at the Alamo in 1836,and carried a single-bladed hunting knife.Bowie's description of why he chose the name is typically highly ambiguous.In the 70s,Bowie proclaimed that the knife signalled a desire to cut through lies to reveal hidden truths ( a highly ironic comment,give Bowie's capacity for deceit),while in a recent Radio1 interview he said that he liked the connotations of a blade being sharpened on both sides,a signifier for all sorts of ambiguities.In fact,the Bowie knife has only one cutting edge,and is not double-handed. ( hahaha).Like all successful 'artificial' names,it now feels,in the light of Bowie's succes,completely natural. [ The Beatles for example is one of the silliest names in rock history,but,as Frith points out,succesful groups names always feel right;unsuccessful groups names remain silly.

1.Uncage the colours

"Bowie was never meant to be.He's like a Lego kit.I'm convinced I wouldn't like him,because he's too vacuous and undisciplined.There is no definitive David Bowie"
( David Bowie on David Bowie,1976)

This is how the books starts.It seems that the real David Robert Jones is very different from his artistic ego,thing that I'm about to find out in this book.
David Bowie is one of the most photographed,adored,imitated,admired and talked-about rock star of the post-Beatles period.He is the one that invented character-playing in pop,marrying theatre and popular music in one seamless,powerful whole.He virtually defined the ways in which pop and video could be combined,with a series of stunningle inventive videos.
In the UK he was perhaps the most written-about pop star of his age.He was serios and trashy,manipulative and manipulated,and ( for a time at least) both man and woman.

Bowie had a great hold on young people's lives in the UK arguably for longer than any other pop star living or dead,longer even than The Beatless.Between 1972 and 1983,Bowie wasn't simply liked or admired - in the UK at least,he was almost worshipped.For every teenager who considered him or herself unfinished,who was not quite happy with his or her lot,who didn't like the way the society worked but couldn't articulate that sense of disquiet,Bowie was the perfect foil.It's no wonder that so many punks were originally Bowie fans.For those unsure about their sexuality or who were in agonies about "coming out",Bowie at least let them know that someone was listening : " You got your mother in a whirl\She's not sure if you're a boy or a girl" - 'Rebel Rebel',1974 .
Through such simple words,Bowie changed people's lives.For all those who felt lost,disenfranchised,alone or sad,Bowie acted out pop therapy: " Your not alone..Give me your hands,'Cos you're wonderful: - 'Rock'n'Roll Suicide,1972.

Singers and bands influenced by David Bowie:
  • had a powerful impact on punk : Siouxsie Sioux,Billy Idol were David Bowie fans. Johnny Rotten,who hated David Bowie,borrowed his haircut,while Sid Vicious was a Bowie casualty first,rock casualty second
  • Bunnyman Ian McCulloch
  • Holly Johnson
  • Boy George
  • Morrisey
  • Kate Bush (who borrowed his mime tutor,Linsday Kemp)
  • Gary Numan ( who borrowed Bowie's light show,sang froid and sneer)
  • the whole new romantic scene,the slicked back soulsters of the New Pop era ( ABC,Associates,Spandau Ballet)
  • the synth-pop duos ( Soft Cell,Pet Shop Boys,The Eurythmics)
  • in America,the 3 biggest pop icons of the 1980 : Madonna,Prince and Michael Jackson were hugely indebted to Bowie's sly shape-chnaging (Madonna dates her conversion to actually wanting to be a star to a Ziggy concert she attended at the age of fifteen)
  • in the 90s,UK groups as Suede (a neat rearticulation of Ziggy-era kitchen-sink gender-bending)
  • American bands such as Nine Inch Nails,Nirvana,The Smashing Pumpkins and Marylin Manson
  • Oasis ( in 1997,Oasis enjoyed a UK Top 3 hit - Stand by me - with a chours which echoes Bowie's ' All the Young Dudes '
  • Blur (Bowie parody/homepage,M.O.R.)
  • Supergrass ('Pumping On Your Stereo' - is a slice of 'Rebel Rebel' dosed riff rock)
  • U2
In the Noughties,it's now cool to say you love David Bowie,and everyone and his dog claims to be at least partly desended from the original Diamond Dog.

That Bowie had such an effect on fellow musicians is hardly surprising.His recordings amount to a stunning body of work: rich,exciting,fun,mysterious and deeply moving,encompassing pop,ambient,rock,soul,jazz,folk,techno,jungle ( in 1997 he even performed a country-and-western version of ' Scary Monsters ' in the States).Bowie offered the paradigmatic proof that fleet-footed changes of image and music,packaged well and presented impeccably,were the perfect receipe for career longevity.Smart,shrewd,sexy and immensely talented,Bowie prooved that to stay ahead,to stay vital,it was necessary to change.
Bowie wasn't quite original to be a true academic or intellectual (like Eno),he wasn't somehow authentic enough to be an all-out rocker (like Jagger)and he was too masculine to be an all-out drag queen ( like Wayne County).He was ,and remains,the perfect liminal pop star,an utterly convincing media re-enactment of our times,deep and serious yet frivolous and lightweight.

Though,the middle-aged dad,the everyday sleeping,eating,breathing,living David Robert Jones,is known by very,very few.David Bowie himself is largely a media monster,the greatest rock persona ever created,and only tangentially part of the personality of David Jones himself.Bowie has made camouflage and misinformation part of his actual art.





*I'd like to mention that this is my first post written in English.I hope I did it well.