Japanese The Next Day Extra Blu-spec CD2 out now

 

“Blue Blu-spec CD2”

 

As previously mentioned on this page, the Japanese version of The Next Day Extra was released in the Blu-spec CD2 format via Sony Music Japan this week (November 27th).

For those of you not familiar with the format, we’ll leave you with a description of it.

 

“Blu-spec CD2” is a term used to describe CDs manufactured by a new specific process. These new CDs are manufactured by blue laser light (generally used for Blu-ray discs), instead of the traditional red laser light, and is made of better material. Due to this, these new CDs have more precise pits, resulting to have lower jitter errors when played. Therefore, even if the master audio file is exactly the same, Blu-spec CD2s are said to be exploiting more of the potential data from the audio master. Audio files are in normal CD quality format (16bit 44.1kHz wav in DDP) and can be played in any CD player, because it is not high resolution.“Blu- spec CD2” is more of a “brand” indicating high manufacturing quality, rather than a “distinguishable spec”. However, “Anything can change sonic quality” is a common way of thinking for enthusiastic audiophiles, and many of them are supporting this new manufacturing process and brand. 

Japanese Sukita Sound & Vision Photo Exhibition

 

“Waiting for the gift of sound and vision”

 

The flyer here (scroll for reverse side) probably means more to the people likely to visit this Sukita exhibition (which opened in Japan on the 23rd) than anything we can say, so we’ll sshhh and leave you with more useful links.

‘Masayoshi Sukita Photo Exhibition SOUND&VISION + Kirei in Shinsaibashi’ at BIG STEP B1 GALLERY

2013 November 23rd (Sat) – 2014 February 2nd (Sun)

 

Venue:

Shinsaibashi BIG STEP

1-6-14 Nishishinsaibashi, Chuo-ku,

Osaka-shi, Osaka-fu 542-0086 Japan

TEL: 06-6258-5000

 

Facebook

BIGSTEP HP 

Masayoshi Sukita web 

YouTube promo

The Next Day in Best Album of 2013 lists

 

“Feels like something really happened this year”

 

With Rolling Stone, The Guardian and The Quietus all giving The Next Day a big thumbs up in their mid-year reports, the signs were promising for the release to do well in Best Album Of 2013 lists.

Now those lists have started coming through with three UK music monthlies favouring The Next Day (UNCUT #2, MOJO #3, and Q #3) and the online site, Ultimate Classic Rock, placing the album at the top of their list.

Here’s what each of them had to say about The Next Day

 

UNCUT #2 

 

Firstly, congratulations to Uncut on reaching 200 editions with this January 2014 issue. With eight covers, Bowie is their most featured cover star and that’s not including their excellent Ultimate Music Guide to David Bowie special and iPad app.

For their round-up of the year, Uncut decided to produce a Best Of 2013 supplement in which Bowie features prominently.

Using a Jimmy King still from the Love Is Lost (Halloween version) video, (they also use Jimmy’s DB salutes shot on the front) the feature kicks off thus…

 

“On January 8, 2013, the world woke up to a genuine surprise. For a decade, David Bowie had taken an unusually discrete leave of absence from the music business; an absence which, to most people, looked like that rarest of things – a rock retirement. The arrival of “Where Are We Now?”, though, signalled a comeback so graceful and potent that it only served to amplify Bowie’s cultural importance, his miraculously undiminished mystique.

 

The Next Day proved to be a brilliant album, but it also acted as a model for how to stage a comeback with style. Bowie and his team grasped that, handled with care, strategically managed leaks and online campaigns can generate a sense of event, a communal experience, that compares favourably to the frenzied release days of the pre-Internet era.”

 

And this is what they had to say about that #2 Album Of The Year…

 

“It’s hard to envisage how David Bowie could have handled his comeback year more elegantly, from the surprise manifestation of “Where Are We Now?” in January through to James Murphy’s stunning remix of “Love Is Lost” dropping in October. Key to it all, of course, was an authentically fine album, and one that mostly disavowed the frail nostalgia of that first single in favour of a hearteningly varied, often belligerent update of Bowie’s many modes. Best of all it felt less like a dignified farewell, more the opening of an intriguing next chapter… ”

 

Congratulations are due to both David Bowie and Jonathan Barnbrook as Uncut also awarded The Next Day with the Album Sleeve Of The Year. (Scroll pictures to see)

Still with Uncut, in the Best Of 2013 TELEVISION, Imagine: Bowie – Five Years grabbed the #1 slot in the Best music shows of the year section, and in the Best Of 2013 ARCHIVE, Aladdin Sane was voted #27.

 

MOJO #3 

 

“Awaiting us on that dark January morning without fanfare, Where Are We Now? suggested that David Bowie’s first album in a decade would be a legacy-enhancing exercise in spiritual stocktaking. The reality was far more fascinating than that. Echoes of Lodger and Scary Monsters abounded on the jackhammer art rock of If You Can See Me and the reptilian swagger of the title track. For all of that, though, The Next Day was as much a triumph of execution as content. Far from succumbing to playlist-friendly cosiness, this was an emphatic retreat from elder statesman orthodoxy of albums that intimate the onset of mortality – all delivered with a clenched-jawed zeal more customary to artists less than half Bowie’s age.”

 

There’s also a two page spread in MOJO under the heading of Story Of The Year titled: Bowie vs Daft Punk. It’s a piece by Dorian Lynskey regarding the innovative marketing campaigns behind both artists’ releases, but, as Dorian points out: “It would appear that the delicious shock achieved by Bowie and Daft Punk cannot be repeated and the process must be reinvented every time”

The magazine also has a full-page advert for The Next Day Extra, as does Q. (Scroll images to view ad)

 

Q #3 

 

“Proof that even in these days where everyone knows everything, some things can be kept secret: this was the album nobody saw coming. That this joyful and fearless outing ranks alongside Bowie’s best made it even more special.“

 

The magazine also uses this quotation from Elton John: “A terrific record and the most brilliantly conceived and marketed release I’ve ever seen.”

And, on Q’s monthly playlist page where they list the ten songs that have dominated the office stereo since the previous issue, Atomica, from The Next Day Extra gets the thumbs up…

 

“The pick of the new songs from the deluxe edition of The Next Day, Atomica is a snarling glam-rocker with Ziggy Stardust-style riffs and a bass thud. Even Bowie’s out-takes are astounding.”

 

UCR #1

 

“When Bowie announced his first album in a decade on his 66th birthday, nobody was expecting a new record by him, let alone his best work in 30 years. ‘The Next Day’ spins off Bowie’s landmark Berlin Trilogy and slips into ‘Scary Monsters’ territory, resulting in an album that’s almost as wild, ambitious and fulfilling as those late-’70s classics.”

 

Hopefully there will be a few more to join those first entries over the next few weeks, but either way, congratulations to David Bowie for another Golden Year.

He does seem to like a year with a three in it, doesn’t he?

Sony reissues David Bowie’s Peter and the Wolf

 

“Peter met wolf formed a dummy run gang”

 

David Bowie Narrates Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf is reissued via Sony Music Classical on CD today (issued digitally 22nd).

Originally released thirty five years ago in 1978 on the RCA Red Seal label, the music is performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Eugene Ormandy.

Bowie apparently recorded the Prokofiev favourite as a Christmas present for his seven-year-old son, Duncan, and this reissue comes just in time to brighten up the festive season for the Bowie-loving child in your life.

The release also includes Britten’s Young Person’s Guide To The Orchestra and Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite.

Wiig and Bowie Space Oddity segue In MITTY film

 

“Commencing countdown”

 

News.com.au has published a brief snippet of an interview with Kristen Wiig, star of the new Ben Stiller movie: The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.

Here’s an excerpt from the piece.

 

Wiig sings Bowie’s Space Oddity in the movie, but had no inkling when she recorded her rendition of the song at New York’s famed Electric Lady studio that it would be overlaid with Bowie’s original – creating the virtual duet.

“I just found that out a couple of weeks ago – I guess they talked to him and it’s now a duet on the soundtrack. It’s so weird. I have to pinch myself.

“It was really fun recording that. I can’t even describe it, just singing that song, it’s David Bowie and I’m such a huge Bowie fan, it was intimidating.

“I’ve caught the bug now. I want to go on tour!”

 

Strictly speaking this soundtrack version of Space Oddity is a segue as opposed to a true duet.

The track starts with Wiig’s new version up to the commencement of the countdown, when the original Bowie recording is faded in until it takes over at the lift-off sequence.

The film is a remake of the original which was released in the year of Bowie’s birth, 1947.

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty is due in cinemas on Chrsimas Day in the US. (Territorial variations apply) Visit the official site here

Love Is Lost white vinyl 12" due December

 

“The return of the thin white vinyl”

 

The vinyl junkies among you will be pleased to learn that a limited edition white vinyl, 33 1/3rd RPM 12″ of Love Is Lost will be issued on December 16th. (That’s the UK date, territorial variations apply)

The mock up shown here doesn’t do the beautiful die-cut sleeve justice, but we will have a pack shot of the Barnbrook sleeve proper for you shortly.

 

Meanwhile, we’ll leave you with the tracklisting.

 

12″ – Side A

1 – Love Is Lost (Hello Steve Reich Mix by James Murphy for the DFA)   

 

12″ – Side B

1 – I’d Rather Be High (Venetian Mix)   

2 – Love Is Lost (Hello Steve Reich Mix by James Murphy for the DFA – Edit)

Blah Blah Blah at The ICA on Friday

 

“Buy it right now, Blah blah blah”

 

Former Bowie associates Kevin Armstrong and Erdal Kizilcay are among the musicians who make up The Passengers.

This coming Friday (November 22nd) sees the outfit’s live performance of Iggy Pop’s seminal 1986 electronica/rock crossover album Blah Blah Blah, which was co-written with David Bowie and produced by David Bowie and David Richards.

The show is just one of several events taking place at the ICA’s IggyFest in London this weekend. 

Book tickets and read more about The Passengers’ show here.  FB page here.

 

#IggyFest

 

FOOTNOTE: For the record (and in case the 1986 picture here of Bowie and Iggy gave you the wrong impression), David Bowie and Iggy Pop are not members of The Passengers.

It should also be noted that The Passengers have no connection with U2 and Brian Eno’s project, Passengers, who scored a hit with Miss Sarajevo.

TND nominated in South Bank Sky Arts Awards 2014

 

“South Bank Horizon”

 

The nominations for the South Bank Sky Arts Awards 2014 have been announced.

David Bowie, Broadchurch , and Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa are amongst the nominees which is the only awards ceremony to celebrate the UK’s achievements across all genres of the arts.

David Bowie’s The Next Day is nominated in the Pop Music category along with AM by Arctic Monkeys and Settle by Disclosure.

As usual, Melyvn Bragg will act as master of ceremonies at the event on Monday 27 January at the Dorchester Hotel in London and the award itself will be designed by the legendary pop artist Sir Peter Blake.

Melvyn Bragg had this to say about the nominations: “Once again, the list of nominees for the South Bank Sky Arts Awards shows that the UK arts landscape is as vibrant as ever. It’s vital to honour the excellence of artists, performers, musicians and authors especially at this time, and we’re very glad that we can do this”.

The awards will be broadcast on Sky Arts 1 on Thursday 30 January 2014 at 9.30pm.

See the full list of nominations here.

The 1980 Floor Show Broadcast 40 years ago today

 

“And lo it was midnight”

 

Today marks the 40th anniversary of the broadcast of David Bowie’s The 1980 Floor Show, which was used as both a promotional tool for Pin Ups and to further break into the American market.

It would be Bowie’s last performance as the Ziggy Stardust persona with The Spiders From Mars, though drummer Woody Woodmansey was no longer a part of the band line up. 

The 1980 Floor Show was a lavish stage production filmed over three days at The Marquee Club in London’s Soho, in front of members of Bowie’s fan club, exclusively for the American NBC TV late night show, The Midnight Special.

The show was heavily advertised in the US press in the run up to the broadcast but has never been shown outside of the US or officially released.

Only one track, Space Oddity, has ever received an official DVD release and though many fans have found their own way of finding the complete show, many still hanker after a full official release.

 

Read more about The 1980 Floor Show over at 5years.com

 

Meanwhile, don’t forget the Pin Ups Radio Show on Spotify with exclusive recollections from Bowie made in 1973. 

Barnaby Roper’s Love Is Lost Visual On Vice.com

 

“Your house and even your eyes are new”

 

VICE.com is exclusively hosting Barnaby Roper’s new visual for the full 10:24 Version of David Bowie’s Love Is Lost (Hello Steve Reich Mix By James Murphy For The DFA). Here’s a bit from Vice.

 

This morning, VICE is pleased to present the new video from our number-one mega music crush of all time, David Bowie. This is the part of the article where we usually write something like “if you’re not familiar with Bowie, he’s a…” but you do know exactly who he is, and if you don’t, you should reconsider a few things about your life and how you got to where you are without being aware of this national treasure… or at least rewatch Labyrinth.

 

It’s a mesmerising film with Busby Berkeley-esque kaleidoscopic clapping hands via texture mapping, 3D lovers, eyeballs and a couple of Bowie blipverts. Well, that’s our take on it, but you can see for yourself on VICE.com now

 

UPDATE: You can now view the video on YouTube.