Mr Rice's Secret Out On Region 1 Dvd Today

“Is your wife a goer, eh? Know what I mean,
know what I mean, nudge nudge, say no more?”

It’s just a one dollar secret*

‘Mr. Rice’s Secret’ is released on DVD in the US and Canada today. Regular visitors to this news page will be familiar with this enchanting story, (03/06/01 NEWS: MR RICE: WHY RENT WHEN YOU CAN WIN?) and if you weren’t one of the 40 lucky winners of the video, you may want to pick up the DVD instead…or even aswell. Anyway, here’s a brief synopsis for those of you that have just become aware of your surroundings…

It’s What You Do In Life That Counts.

On a dare, twelve-year old, terminally ill Owen Walters (Bill Switzer) sneaks into church and videotapes Mr. Rice’s (Bowie) funeral. Later, Owen and his friends break into Mr. Rice’s house to watch the tape on his video machine. While in the house they discover a sealed envelope addressed to Owen, a letter from Mr. Rice, written in a secret code. Owen soon discovers that Mr. Rice has left him a medieval code ring, a treasure map and a series of clues. Clues that will lead him on a surreal treasure hunt to find a magical “Potion of Life” that may save his life.

When I showed David the above DVD version of the cover of ‘Mr. Rice’s Secret’ he quipped: “I had no idea Eric Idle was also in it.” Hey hey…such a wag!

*You’ll most likely have to pay more than one dollar for the DVD actually.

Thanx to S King for the pointer.

Bowie's Music For Losers

And a loser I will be…

I’m sure you native New Yorkers are well aware of a local phenomenon known as ‘The Loser’s Lounge’. The name of the show belies the fact that it is a hugely popular live music performance that, since its conception in 1993, has been playing to sell-out crowds. Each show has a specific musical theme, and the theme for the very next run of six shows (starting this Thursday 27th) is David Bowie.

‘The Loser’s Lounge’ has a sort of Rocky Horror buzz about it, in that the audience of loyal fans of the production enter into the spirit by dressing up for the part, and those smart enough to get reservations know to show up early to ensure a good seat as a line usually starts forming at least an hour before the doors open. The shows tend to be quite long (from about 9 until midnight) and, with such a prolific back-catalogue as David’s to choose from, the cast should have no problem filling at least the normal running time for this unique performance of Bowie tunes.

The Loser’s Lounge is organised by session keyboardist Joe McGinty, whose credits include the Psychedelic Furs, Jewel, Space Hog, Ronnie Spector, and the Ramones. For each show, there is a “house band”, the Kustard Kings, and a cavalcade of guest singers. Though the emphasis is on fun and entertainment, the band (sometimes enhanced by strings, horns, and back-up singers), works hard to faithfully recreate the classic arrangements of the original songs.

At any given tribute night, you’ll hear well-known hits, overlooked gems, and long-lost rarities. The singers are a revolving cast of regulars that include up-and-coming performers from the east village music scene. The show has attracted its fair share of celebrity guest performers too including: Debbie Harry, Andy Richter, Cyndi Lauper, J. Mascis, Fountains of Wayne, They Might Be Giants, Bob Mould, Jules Shear, Fred Schneider, Billy Strych, Ronnie Spector and Space Hog.

‘The Loser’s Lounge’ is at the Westbeth Theater Center on September 27, 28, 29 and October 4, 5, 6. Go here for times and ticket details, and here for a bit of background history. Suddenly I feel perhaps those of us that won’t be going are the real losers here. 🙁

T-shirt Poll: Let The Voting Begin !

Fashion and Democracy?To celebrate the launch of our new BowieNet Store and to start things out right, we’d like you to help select the next shirt we add to the store. Choose one of the five fabulous t-shirt designs, all put together by BowieNet Members and Designer Extraordinaire REX RAY! (thanks Rex!). The winning design gets an all expense paid trip to the T-shirt pressing plant, and will emerge as the next, victorious, adorning David Bowie T-shirt, proper attire for any occasion where T-shirts are worn.

vote now

When A 'mullet' Isn't A Mullet At All

“Oh, I just can’t do a thing with it today!”

Hey babe, your hair’s alright…

Some of you UK BowieNetters may have caught a particularly amusing programme on Channel 4 a couple of days back entitled Bad Hair Day. Obviously, any serious discussion about hair would not be complete without the acknowledgement of David Bowie’s contribution to the pension funds’ of hairdressers around the world, via a trillion fans wanting to wear the latest Bowie style.

After a dusting off of that classic piece of footage of Davie Jones on the Tonight show back in 1964, (you know, the one where the young Manish Boy defends the rights of ‘The Society For The Prevention Of Cruelty To Long-Haired Men’) the broadcast shifted to the emotional matter of Ziggy’s mullet…or more importantly, how it didn’t count as a mullet on account of it being far too stylish, and because it belonged to David Bowie, the God of Cool Hair!

The evidence for the prosecution was the picture below of Ziggy sporting his crowning glory. Other “evidence” included an excerpt from Mick Rock’s ‘Space Oddity’ promo, and a clip from Ziggy’s retirement show at Hammersmith Odeon in 1973.

But the defence was too strong…a panel of experts included: Dylan Jones (Editor of GQ UK), Barney Hoskyns (Author of ‘Glam: Bowie, Bolan and the Glitter Rock Revolution’ and The Mullet: Hairstyle of the Gods), Steve Strange (The man who enjoyed a cameo in the ‘Ashes To Ashes’ video, and host of the infamous ‘Bowie Nights’ in London that witnessed the birth of the New Romantic movement), and other Bowie fans such as Toyah Willcox, Robert Elms and a gaggle of respected style gurus and hairdressers.

Michael Bolton it ain’t! – Ziggy applies his lippy.
© Mick Rock 1973

All pretty well agreed that the Ziggy cut transcends categorisation, and though it may have been the style that mutated into the mullet we all know and dislike, on Bowie it just didn’t count. Here are some of their comments:

Dylan Jones: “It was probably the most stylish hairstyle that any pop star’s ever had. But mullet’s a very pejorative word…and it wasn’t a mullet.

Barney Hoskyns: “The Ziggy Stardust cut is the only cool mullet that there’s ever been.”

Steve Strange: “I had bright orange hair cut in the Bowie style. It got me into a lot of trouble with the school authorities…I was banned from school.”

Toyah Willcox: “Bowie set a standard. Within weeks every boy under the age of twenty had that haircut.”

Of course none of this is news to David’s fans, simply put, Billy Ray Cyrus had (has?) a mullet, Ziggy Stardust didn’t.

Bowiephiles

Frank Auerbach – Head of Gerda, 1965. Collection David Bowie.

You got amazin’ head…

Art Collection : Guardian : 09/16/01 From a review of the current Royal Academy exhibition, Frank Auerbach: Paintings and Drawings 1954-2001. Some of his heads seem to be halfway to death. One, owned by David Bowie, is so reduced to its structure, worked in ridges of white pigment, that it appears less human than exoskeletal.

Music Man : The Times : 09/22/01 From an interview with the actor, Clive Owen. I was crazy about David Bowie in my teens and he is the biggest musical influence in my life. I don?t know why, but there has never been another figure that has had such an effect on me. I used to dye my hair different colours like he did. I didn?t have most of his work, I had everything. I even met him briefly at a concert in LA. My American agent, who also looks after Bowie?s acting career, asked me if I wanted tickets to see him in concert. I felt like a kid when I met him. For me, Bowie is The Man.

Ashes To Ashes : TV Road Safety Campaign : Current In both Northern Ireland and Eire, the ” No Seat Belt, No Excuse” advert features Samantha Mumba’s Body to Body, and in particular the sample of Ashes to Ashes. This is the second time that David’s music has featured in a road safety ad on Irish TV …last year ” All The Young Dudes” was used in an ad to get young drivers to slow down. (cg)

Pictures of David : Q : Oct 2001 From the “Q mail”, letters page. I’ve been a faithful reader for quite some time now, and not as you might think because of your excellent articles, interviews and reviews. No – it’s because of the certainty of seeing at least one picture of David Bowie in each issue. Imagine my horror and surprise as I went through the pages of Q180 searching in vain for my “stuff”! You people had better remedy the situation and put Bowie in the next issue, or you will have lost a reader. Grrrr. Catherine Gamst, Tordenskoldsgade, Denmark. Q replied with a very sweet picture, titled “This month’s David Bowie cameo”.

Five Years : Old Grey Whistle Test : 09/17/01 Intro from Bob Harris : This was JUST fantastic to watch. I was a viewer seeing this at home and I hope you enjoy it as much as I did when I first watched it. David Bowie and Five Years. Those irritating captions : The Whistle Test was the brainchild of BBC Producer, Mike Appleton, who wanted to make a programme for the bands who weren?t in the singles chart, and so couldn?t get on Top Of The Pops. Here?s a great example of how good he was at spotting talent….

Influence : Record Collector : Sept 2001 From the editorial comment on this month’s front cover feature – The Velvet Underground. …they sold very few records during their active career. It was only when David Bowie (himself recently voted the most influential artist of all time) started namechecking them and covering WhiteLight/White Heat in his Ziggy Stardust era that they finally began to pick up a mass audience.

(contributors : Chris Gaffney, spaceface)

:))

Win Training Day Soundtrack

Hey Denzel, can you believe the language on this thing?

And I could have the faintest idea…

As you are all fully aware, ‘American Dream’ by P. Diddy and the Bad Boy Family featuring David Bowie has now been released on the ‘Training Day’ soundtrack all around the world. At least you should be aware seeing as we have mentioned it almost weekly since the end of July. (07/30/01 NEWS: BOWIE AND P DIDDY – DID THEY, DIDN’T THEY?)

As promised, we have ten copies of the ‘explicit’ version to give away to ten of the clever BowieNetters that answer the following question correctly:

‘American Dream’ isn’t the first time that Sean and David have graced the same recording. Yep, you’ve already guessed it, for your chance to win a copy of the ‘Training Day’ soundtrack, simply name the Puff Daddy & The Family recording that featured a sample of ‘Let’s Dance’.

Send your answer to me at MrTotalBlamBlam@AOL.Com with a subject heading of: ‘Training Day’ soundtrack competition. The contest will close a week from now, and we’ll announce the ten winners as randomly selected by TRS on the following Friday morning. Please note that this is the version that has “explicit content”, so please check with your mum before entering.

Bowiephiles

Art Collection : Guardian : 09/16/01 From a review of the current Royal Academy exhibition, Frank Auerbach: Paintings and Drawings 1954-2001. Some of his heads seem to be halfway to death. One, owned by David Bowie, is so reduced to its structure, worked in ridges of white pigment, that it appears less human than exoskeletal.

Music Man : The Times : 09/22/01 From an interview with the actor, Clive Owen. I was crazy about David Bowie in my teens and he is the biggest musical influence in my life. I don?t know why, but there has never been another figure that has had such an effect on me. I used to dye my hair different colours like he did. I didn?t have most of his work, I had everything. I even met him briefly at a concert in LA. My American agent, who also looks after Bowie?s acting career, asked me if I wanted tickets to see him in concert. I felt like a kid when I met him. For me, Bowie is The Man.

Ashes To Ashes : TV Road Safety Campaign : Current In both Northern Ireland and Eire, the ” No Seat Belt, No Excuse” advert features Samantha Mumba’s Body to Body, and in particular the sample of Ashes to Ashes. This is the second time that David’s music has featured in a road safety ad on Irish TV …last year ” All The Young Dudes” was used in an ad to get young drivers to slow down. (cg)

Pictures of David : Q : Oct 2001 From the “Q mail”, letters page. I’ve been a faithful reader for quite some time now, and not as you might think because of your excellent articles, interviews and reviews. No – it’s because of the certainty of seeing at least one picture of David Bowie in each issue. Imagine my horror and surprise as I went through the pages of Q180 searching in vain for my “stuff”! You people had better remedy the situation and put Bowie in the next issue, or you will have lost a reader. Grrrr. Catherine Gamst, Tordenskoldsgade, Denmark. Q replied with a very sweet picture, titled “This month’s David Bowie cameo”.

Five Years : Old Grey Whistle Test : 09/17/01 Intro from Bob Harris : This was JUST fantastic to watch. I was a viewer seeing this at home and I hope you enjoy it as much as I did when I first watched it. David Bowie and Five Years. Those irritating captions : The Whistle Test was the brainchild of BBC Producer, Mike Appleton, who wanted to make a programme for the bands who weren?t in the singles chart, and so couldn?t get on Top Of The Pops. Here?s a great example of how good he was at spotting talent….

Influence : Record Collector : Sept 2001 From the editorial comment on this month’s front cover feature – The Velvet Underground. …they sold very few records during their active career. It was only when David Bowie (himself recently voted the most influential artist of all time) started namechecking them and covering WhiteLight/White Heat in his Ziggy Stardust era that they finally began to pick up a mass audience.

(contributors : Chris Gaffney, spaceface)

:))

David And Lou, The First Meeting

“Hey white boy, what you doing uptown?”
David Bowie in America around the time he met ‘Lou’.

White light makes me sound like Lou Reed…

The current edition of Record Collector (September 2001) has an excellent feature on the Velvet Underground, including that meeting between David and Lou as remembered by Lou look-a-like, Doug Yule:

Is it true that David Bowie came to one of the shows on your 1971 UK tour, and started talking to you under the assumption you were Lou Reed?

“That was actually in New York, at the Electric Circus, upstairs at the Dom. I remember the incident well. England was one of the prime sources of rock’n’roll back then, of course, and we were all Anglophiles to some degree. So I remember this English kid coming backstage, and I was holding forth as if I was somebody, feeling very self-important as the leader of this band. He came in, and obviously assumed I was Lou Reed, and so I had to explain that Lou wasn’t there. It was only a few years ago that I heard the story back from someone else, and realised that the English kid was David Bowie. In 1971, I’d never heard of him!”

Here is David’s original quote regarding the meeting:

“I?d come back from New York, having caught one of the last performances of The Velvet Underground, a band I had admired tremendously since around 66/67. One of that tiny bastion of Velvet Underground fans in London at the time, before they were generally known. And I?d gotten into the Electric Circus to see the gig. I watched the entire show, and there were not that many people in the audience because their star had begun to dim in New York. The whole band were there with Lou Reed singing the songs and I thought it was just tremendous.

“I was singing along with the band, stuck right there at the apron of the stage. ‘Waiting For The Man’, ‘White Light/ White Heat’, ‘Heroin’…All that kind of stuff. And then after the show, I went back stage and I knocked on the door, and I said “Is Lou Reed in? I?d love to talk to him, I?m from England, cos I?m in music too, and he?s a bit of a hero to me.” This guy said “Wait here”. And Lou comes out and we sat talking on the bench for about quarter of an hour about writing songs, and what it?s like to be Lou Reed, and all that…and afterwards I was floating on a cloud, and went back to my hotel room.

“I said to this guy that I knew in New York: “Ive just seen the Velvet Underground and I got to talk with Lou Reed for fifteen minutes”, and he said, “Yeah? Lou Reed left the band last year, I think you?ve been done.” I said, “It looked like Lou Reed” and he said “Thats Doug Yule, he?s the guy that took over from Lou Reed.” I thought what an impostor, wow, that?s incredible. It doesn?t matter really, cos I still talked to Lou Reed as far as I was concerned. Coming back to England, one of the memories I brought back with me, was all that. So I wrote Queen Bitch as a sort of homage to Lou Reed.”

Thanx to the fast-fingered Spaceface for typing up the quotes! };-)

The New Bowiestore Launches Today!

The virtual shelves are stocked and we’re ready to launch withBowie Goodies that you will not find anywhere else. Here is a sampling of what you can now get your hands on:*Limited edition Ziggy 2002 prints signed by Bowie and Rex Ray. There are only 2002 of these in existence!*Ziggy 2002 full-size posters*Album Art T-Shirts from Aladdin Sane, Ziggy Stardust and Hunky Dory* and more?In addition, we will be adding fresh new shirts that you will select!! In the next few days, we will be allowing BowieNet members to vote on and select which shirt should be created next. We have several new designs from Rex Ray to choose from. Keep your eyes on BowieNews for more details. Yes, the new store does ship Internationally! You can also place an order by phone by calling 1-877-MUSIC-77. Music Today powers this store.From now till the end of September, BowieNet will be donating a portion of the proceeds towards Disaster Relief funds.