New Search

If you are not happy with the results below please do another search

32 search results for: David Bowie

1

David Bowie- Let’s Dance

“Let’s Dance”  was nominated for the Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 1983, and if David could have moonwalked like Michael Jackson, Bowie probably would have won. it was no surprise that multi-media maven David Bowie, who seemed tailor-made then for the dawn of the MTV era in America when “Let’s Dance”  was released, would later be among the first to embrace computer-generated gaming and virtual reality, which David discussed at length here, reprised on the album’s fortieth anniversary.

2

David Bowie- China Girl- New York City 1999

Did you know that the late David Bowie pioneered the art and technology “livestreaming” even before the new millennium? I was there in New York City when the Album Network teamed with David’s bowie.net to live stream his show from the Kit Kat Klub November 19, 1999. Here’s “China Girl” from that show.

4

David Bowie- Life on Mars?- NYC 11-19-99

The electricity in the room was palpable that crisp November night 1999 in Manhattan when David Bowie took the stage of the Kit Kat Klub and opened his show ( historic in that it was among the first ever live-streamed on the internet by a major Artist ) with this stunning rendition of “Life on Mars?”.

5

David Bowie- Toy

The late David Bowie was already sowing the seeds of the fabled “Toy” project, which would remain unreleased until 2022, even as I watched him perform live at New York City’s Kit Kat Klub on November 19, 1999 and then sit with me In the Studio for this in-depth interview. -Redbeard

6

David Bowie- Hunky Dory- David Bowie, Mick Ronson

“Hunky Dory”, David Bowie’s December 1971 fourth album, hard to believe when reading all of the revisionist raves now, that “Hunky Dory”  was a commercial flop, so much so that it failed to even make the Billboard Top 200 sales chart. The late great David Bowie joined me here In the Studio  for the tale, as did his original wingman, guitarist Mick Ronson, for the scoop on “Changes”,”Andy Warhol”, and “Life on Mars?”

7

David Bowie- Changes- Los Angeles 1974

When David Bowie performed “Changes” in Los Angeles in 1974, now with historical hindsight we can see that David Bowie gave us hints of a musical left turn even that night.

8

David Bowie- Station to Station 45th Anniversary

“The way you change Music is by changing the music,” David Bowie told me, without any hint of irony whatsoever, as we discussed  1976’s Station to Station. Songs include “Golden Years”,”Stay” ,”TVC 1-5″ ( Bowie said that the unused tune for the Man…Earth soundtrack was about a girl and her relationship with her television),”Wild is the Wind” , and the title song, often cited by post-punk bands including The Cars, Talking Heads, and Gary Numan as a major influence.

10

David Bowie- Young Americans

By 1975 David Bowie had abandoned the Glam Rock he had virtually invented in the guise of the ego-tripping tragicomic Fallen Rock Star, Ziggy Stardust. Bowie’s mid-decade “Young Americans” album with the #1 hit “Fame” pointed directly toward Disco’s dominance a mere two years later…