david bowie

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bowiesongs.wordpress.com

iago g., Saturday, 10 July 2010 00:48 (fifteen years ago)

jeez...
http://bowiesongs.wordpress.com/

iago g., Saturday, 10 July 2010 00:49 (fifteen years ago)

seven months pass...

Great blog.

Side two of "Heroes" sounded great walking to work in the sub-zero temperatures this morning.

one pretty obvious guy in the obvious (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 10 February 2011 15:17 (fifteen years ago)

http://bowiesongs.wordpress.com/2011/01/03/end-of-chapter-four-1973-1975/

He got a book deal!

sofatruck, Thursday, 10 February 2011 16:06 (fifteen years ago)

Very well deserved, that.

one pretty obvious guy in the obvious (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 10 February 2011 16:14 (fifteen years ago)

one month passes...

Apparently finally a new album on its way too:
Really surprised "Supper's Ready" made the list, but what the hell I vote that

Been strangely silent from the once so profilic act lately, but this is maybe finally some news.

You're Twistin' My Melody Man! (Geir Hongro), Wednesday, 16 March 2011 11:25 (fifteen years ago)

http://www.countdowncow.com/when/new-david-bowie-album-coming-out-first-half-2011
(Sorry wrong link above)

You're Twistin' My Melody Man! (Geir Hongro), Wednesday, 16 March 2011 11:25 (fifteen years ago)

I was all "wtf David Bowie's doing "Supper's Ready" on his new album?" for a moment there...

Mark G, Wednesday, 16 March 2011 13:01 (fifteen years ago)

"Hello i love david bowie is he coming on tour next year to holland? And how can i write him greatings tiziana"

Mark G, Wednesday, 16 March 2011 13:03 (fifteen years ago)

I was all "wtf David Bowie's doing "Supper's Ready" on his new album?" for a moment there...

Well he does have a habit of doing shit cover versions

Tom D (Tom D.), Wednesday, 16 March 2011 13:04 (fifteen years ago)

Here comes Geir to say "that would be great though, ;)" or some such...

Mark G, Wednesday, 16 March 2011 13:11 (fifteen years ago)

i guess i'm way behind the curve, but i guess need to track down Toys then ?

http://www.planetrock.com/newscentre/rock-news/unreleased-bowie-album-leaked-online-1671

mark e, Thursday, 24 March 2011 10:45 (fifteen years ago)

Toy, singular

Mark G, Thursday, 24 March 2011 11:18 (fifteen years ago)

nine months pass...

65 today.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mB9RSG-56wU

piscesx, Sunday, 8 January 2012 10:47 (fourteen years ago)

four months pass...

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/06/06/david-bowie-s-vanishing-act-and-looming-return.html

Busy being Dad

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 6 June 2012 16:08 (fourteen years ago)

I was just about to post that, curmudgeon...the bit that grabbed me was the drug/alcohol bit. was he really addicted to coke for ten years? i would've thought maybe 73-77 were the coke years...followed by a "massive bout of alcoholism". so he had an alcohol problem STARTING in let's say 1982 (if he did coke for the previous ten years). not sure why i care but it would be nice to know what he was addicted to and when.

Iago Galdston, Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:20 (fourteen years ago)

Awesome! Bowie will be making a rousing return with a ... coffee table book!

I'm glad I saw him on that Moby tour and later at MSG. He was great.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:26 (fourteen years ago)

according to Bowie in Berlin alcohol subbed for coke as early as '76. The other Bowie bios allude to a toot here and there (e.g. Kevin Armstrong, who played on "Absolute Beginners," bought a bag of coke for him for the sessions).

go down on you in a thyatrr (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:36 (fourteen years ago)

*a toot here and there after the seventies

go down on you in a thyatrr (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:36 (fourteen years ago)

yeah the story goes that he was often still 'bang at it' circa Let's Dance. just not as bad as in the 70s.

piscesx, Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:38 (fourteen years ago)

In the name of my never-abated fandom, I would gladly pass the hat around if it would persuade him to stay retired.

go down on you in a thyatrr (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:40 (fourteen years ago)

I'm still amused that the last new song he performed is that "funny little man" song for RGervais' "Extras"

I've still not actually heard it tho.

Mark G, Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:41 (fourteen years ago)

In the name of my never-abated fandom, I would gladly pass the hat around if it would persuade him to stay retired.

he's not going to make any new records. there is no longer any cultural cache in making records, and what he likes is being able to make a splash.

decrepit but free (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:42 (fourteen years ago)

He's going to dive into a swimming pool nude with Lexi?

go down on you in a thyatrr (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:44 (fourteen years ago)

who will love a dad insane

Word of Wisdom Robots (Abbbottt), Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:44 (fourteen years ago)

i assume given those stories that he won't ever tour again, huh? i saw him once, serious moonlight '81, hartford. was pretty good, but i'd rather have seen a show from the ill-fated diamond dogs tour (i was 6 then).

Iago Galdston, Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:52 (fourteen years ago)

Btw, thanks Alfred et all for the responses

Iago Galdston, Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:52 (fourteen years ago)

It would be great if he suddenly appeared starring in a great play, as he did with Elephant Man (did anyone see him in that on B'way? if so, how was he?)

Iago Galdston, Thursday, 7 June 2012 00:54 (fourteen years ago)

There are excerpts from it on Youtube... [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aEwJ3BEL72Q] it's pretty much what you'd expect.

Ò (Ówen P.), Thursday, 7 June 2012 02:15 (fourteen years ago)

three weeks pass...

Why does the line 'It's a crash course for the ravers' give me goosebumps?

calstars, Wednesday, 4 July 2012 01:29 (thirteen years ago)

I've been watching Tin Machine videos for the last couple of hours, then saw that Arcade Fire collab vid which was breath of foul air in comparison

Morrissey & Clunes: The Severed Alliance (PaulTMA), Wednesday, 4 July 2012 02:46 (thirteen years ago)

four weeks pass...

http://www.amazon.com/The-Man-Who-Sold-World/dp/0062024655/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1343782122&sr=8-1&keywords=the+man+who+sold+the+world+david+bowie+and+the+1970s

Anyone read this yet? I feel bad for the "Pushing Ahead of the Dame" blog guy, this is a song-by-song book so I hope the former's excellent work isn't upstaged.

Iago Galdston, Wednesday, 1 August 2012 00:50 (thirteen years ago)

Sorry, not "former," the blog guy--don't know his name (anyone else been very tired this summer?)

Iago Galdston, Wednesday, 1 August 2012 00:51 (thirteen years ago)

Ha, if anything this book will be upstaged by Pushing Ahead! Dissecting only the seventies is a sign of safety; the whole point of the bowiesongs blog is to do EVERYTHING. Two to one says Bowie himself 1) reads that blog and 2) approves of the fact that he's going whole hog.

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 1 August 2012 00:55 (thirteen years ago)

hear, hear!

Iago Galdston, Wednesday, 1 August 2012 02:04 (thirteen years ago)

cuz this other fellow doesn't dissect Tin Machine chord sequences like Pushing does

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 1 August 2012 02:07 (thirteen years ago)

Dogget's book was originally going to be by Ian Mcdonald supposedly; it was gonna be his follow up to Revolution In The Head.
the Dogget book's had relatively little coverage/hype but it's meant to be pretty good but yeah Pushing Ahead.. is gonna be amazing.

piscesx, Wednesday, 1 August 2012 05:38 (thirteen years ago)

Pushing Ahead is currently going through the backwaters of TMII. I don't think anyone else has bothered examining that period in any real detail.

Jeremy Clarkson Sex Face (snoball), Wednesday, 1 August 2012 07:35 (thirteen years ago)

I read a few entries from the Doggett book in Waterstone's and it didn't seem like much more than any other cheapo song-by-song hack job - i.e. anyone with an interest in Bowie could manage much the same off the top of their head. Meanwhile, Pushing Ahead of the Dame is often genuinely revelatory - this was true before he got to 1980, but even more so now. I hope when his book comes out he gets to include at least some of the images from the blog - they're always superbly chosen.

Eyeball Kicks, Wednesday, 1 August 2012 11:53 (thirteen years ago)

Oh great. I just got that Doggett book...opened it and read an entry and thought the exact same thing, Eyeball.

Iago Galdston, Wednesday, 1 August 2012 13:44 (thirteen years ago)

Wazzabout this other book, Starman, by Paul Trynka, the guy that wrote the Iggy Pop bio that was pretty good?

Bowie also obviously appears in the new memoir Abbey Road to Ziggy Stardust, by Ken Scott.

Like Monk Never Happened (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 1 August 2012 15:12 (thirteen years ago)

Wazzabout this other book, Starman, by Paul Trynka, the guy that wrote the Iggy Pop bio that was pretty good?

Some of the reporting.

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 1 August 2012 15:16 (thirteen years ago)

Some of the reporting what?

Like Monk Never Happened (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 1 August 2012 15:18 (thirteen years ago)

Some of the reporting was pretty good.

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 1 August 2012 15:22 (thirteen years ago)

I'm sorry – the sentence construction confused me.

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 1 August 2012 15:23 (thirteen years ago)

I could not imagine in a million years any book coming close to that Pushing Ahead Of The Dame blog. And if there were a book like that in the future, you'd bet your fucking ass I'd snap it up immediately!

The Jupiter 8 (Turrican), Friday, 3 August 2012 20:52 (thirteen years ago)

There is, he's confirmed a book deal.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 3 August 2012 20:54 (thirteen years ago)

Oh right, that's great news! I'll be definitely be picking up a copy.

The Jupiter 8 (Turrican), Friday, 3 August 2012 21:02 (thirteen years ago)

two weeks pass...

I'd like to take back my advance skepticism about Man Who Sold The World: DB and the 1970s...it's not bad! Nothing earthshattering, but he's a good writer and I enjoyed it alot!

Iago Galdston, Friday, 17 August 2012 23:04 (thirteen years ago)

phew.

welcome to the club.

(ps. u r wrong re his stuff not being earthshattering .. but hey, small steps etc ..)

mark e, Saturday, 18 August 2012 00:27 (thirteen years ago)

Genuinely the most charismatic person I’ve ever encountered and it’s not even close.

It's good to know I'm second to Bowie.

The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 11 January 2026 16:55 (five months ago)

I’ve been meaning for some time to dive into Bowie’s 90s and 00s catalog. I haven’t heard much beyond Never Let Me Down, which unfortunately did at the time. So this thread revive, and Alfred’s display name, seem like a good prompt.

cinematic hobo hip-hop rock ‘n’ roll blues-jazz soul-review (Dan Peterson), Sunday, 11 January 2026 17:27 (five months ago)

I’ve been exploring Toy today. There’s some really great songs on there. I haven’t listened to him much in the last decade, and certainly not explored the ‘new’ stuff. Not sure why.

On Friday at work I asked my team to post their favourite five Bowie ‘things’ (there are four of us and I suspected we’d have BIG Bowie crossover: I was spectacularly correct). These were mine:

5. The fact that he basically "quiet quit" celebrity for ten years and lived low-key in Manhattan so he could walk his daughter to school and watch Spongebob. I love that.
 
4. Station To Station; 6 songs, all of them absolute BANGERS and really different to each other, yet somehow absolutely possessed of gestalt. His best album qua album, I reckon, with maybe one exception. And apparently he had no recollection whatsoever of making it because he was on a strict diet of cocaine, milk, and red peppers, and thus out of his mind the whole time.
 
3. Strangers When We Meet; maybe my favourite song, alongside "Heroes", this was originally on Buddha of Suburbia in 1993, but then he re-recorded it for Outside in 1995, and it's just amazing, an unsung gem in his ouevre.
 
2. That interview where he tells Paxman that no one has any idea how seismic the internet is going to be, and Paxman looks at him like he's a madman, and Bowie was absolutely right.
 
1. Blackstar, the whole recording, release, death affair. Just an absolutely incredible way to go, an extraordinary record recorded and released in an extraordinary way. On a weekend when Exeter City were playing a premiership team in the FA Cup, just like this year, exactly a decade later...

Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Sunday, 11 January 2026 18:39 (five months ago)

There was a time when I put "Strangers When We Meet" (the Outside version) on every mixtape I recorded for people; I was convinced it was the era's grand ballad.

The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 11 January 2026 18:57 (five months ago)

Catching the Outside tour show I did was gratifying because he did both "Strangers" and "Nite Flights." Full setlist:

https://www.setlist.fm/setlist/david-bowie/1995/great-western-forum-inglewood-ca-4bd62bba.html

As I said in my Patreon piece, this was only one of two shows I ever saw him do and the other was a Tin Machine promo, and for a Bowie show where he was still steering away from the obvious back catalog choices the results were amazing (especially since both "Andy Warhol" and "Man Who Sold" were heavily reworked for that tour in particular -- a smart decision, in the case of the latter song, to not simply seem like he was riding off Nirvana's take).

Ned Raggett, Sunday, 11 January 2026 19:18 (five months ago)

There was a time when I put "Strangers When We Meet" (the _Outside_ version) on every mixtape I recorded for people; I was convinced it was the era's grand ballad.

I think it was you who turned me onto it.

Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Sunday, 11 January 2026 19:43 (five months ago)

i broke down and bought the I Can’t Give… box set and was delighted at the comprehensive book, and was not delighted by the tiny typeface

ICE = Tonton Macoute (Boring, Maryland), Sunday, 11 January 2026 22:07 (five months ago)

I was talking to my partner on the bus on the way to a massage - and out of nowhere she just said "oh David Bowie is dead" having read it on a headline - I told her that was clearly bullshit as it was there had been a few hoax-y death rumours, I remember Jeff Goldblum was one

anyway I finally accepted it was true and had to get off the phone, then I was lying on the massage table with my mind racing and I could hear my phone going buzz buzz buzz with pals messaging to tell me that bowie was dead

I was shocked by how upset I was, it was a really hot night in Sydney and my family was away and everything just felt fucked, the next day I drove to the beach and had a swim at sunrise and listened to Fantastic Voyage and the instrumental side of Low

that evening a friend came over and we listened to the classics, and talked about Bowie things - then I couldn't listen to Bowie for ages and ages - still haven't played Blackstar since my second spin (the day before he died)

I don't really get sad about people I don't know dying but with Bowie I felt like I needed to apologise to all those people who got sad about Princess Diana who I had thoroughly mocked at the time

Cod:Shellfish (emsworth), Sunday, 11 January 2026 23:32 (five months ago)

oh yes I remember my young son being out and seeing a David Bowie Dead newspaper headline and telling his partner with surprise "look other people like David Bowie, it isn't just dad!"

Cod:Shellfish (emsworth), Sunday, 11 January 2026 23:34 (five months ago)

*telling my partner!

Cod:Shellfish (emsworth), Sunday, 11 January 2026 23:35 (five months ago)

I didn't cry when Bowie died but it was just so shocking -- the last thing I expected to read about that day, especially considering that he'd released an album two days earlier -- that I felt a dark cloud hanging over me for a few days afterward. I had assumed he was retired from the music business after 2005 or so, and had come to accept that. Then he returned out of nowhere and was gone a few short years later.

My favourite Bowie "thing": the possibility that Bowie inspired the sleng teng riddim.

NoTimeBeforeTime, Monday, 12 January 2026 08:31 (four months ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eIaESzQ1X9w

seu being great

My homies buttthole surfers' record sounds like a f (Western® with Bacon Flavor), Saturday, 24 January 2026 05:19 (four months ago)


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