George Remembers Gilly And Lou Is Irritated In Mojo

That MOJO feature and George’s Gilly badge yesterday.

Jamming good with Weird and Gilly…

In a regular feature called The Buzz, in the Collections section of the current MOJO, the magazine considers George Underwood‘s Ziggy Collection set of enamel badges (10/06/02 NEWS: GEORGE UNDERWOOD ZIGGY SET AVAILABLE NOW) collectable enough to warrant a feature. After a brief bit of background history, George explained to MOJO how he may have been responsible for inspiring the inclusion of Gilly in Ziggy’s band:

My cousin introduced me to a bunch of bikers when I was 15 and one of them was called Gilly. He had these great sideburns down the side of his face, and the head said he’s expel him if he didn’t shave them off. He refused, so he was expelled. When I told David, he couldn’t believe that someone would have the guts to chuck in his academic career over some sideburns. He became a hero for David.

This sounds like a perfect description of real-life Spider Trevor Bolder who enjoyed highlighting his fine pair of 12″ sideburns by spraying them silver. It’s a shame George portrayed Gilly as a drummer, had Gilly been the bassist it would have seemed like it was all part of the master plan.

Mick ‘Woody’ Woodmansey & Trevor Bolder contemplate the
colour of Trev’s sideburns in a hotel on the 1972 US Tour.

Elsewhere in the magazine, Lou Reed is the subject of MOJO’s regular ’10 Questions for…’ feature. Considering there were only ten questions, interviewer Jaan Uhelszki wasted one of them thus: David Bowie appears on a song on The Raven, but all these years I think the world has thought you two don’t get along, particularly because there was all that hoopla about you punching him in a cafe in Chelsea.

And this was Lou’s understandably terse reply: Oh, that’s not true. No. That’s so stupid. That’s so stupid. That shit is so gossipy, stupid. I mean I played David’s 50th birthday thing at Madison Square Garden.

So there… Let that be an end to the matter.

Douglas Herrick, Father Of The Jackalope, Is Dead

Douglas Herrick, proudly displays two of
his creations hot off the production line.

Goodbye Mr Herrick…

Douglas Herrick, creator of the jackalope, died of bone and lung cancer on January 6th aged 82. The latter-day Frankenstein first hit upon the idea for what is possibly Wyoming’s most successful export as far back as 1932!

His brother, Ralph, explains how the pair first stumbled upon the idea when they had returned from hunting one day all those years ago: “We just throwed the dead jack rabbit in the shop when we come in and it slid on the floor right up against a pair of deer horns we had in there, It looked like that rabbit had horns on it.” Douglas must have seen the $ signs as he suggested: “Let’s mount that thing!”

‘Looking For Jackalopes Europe Fall 2002’ tour schedule.

Regular visitors to these news pages will know how the jackalope brought the Bowie touring band joy and sadness in equal measure on last year’s appropriately named ‘Looking For Jackalopes Europe Fall 2002’. Their original beast was stolen at a show in Bonn on Friday the 27th of September. (11/09/02 NEWS: WHO STOLE THE JACKALOPE?) Though a replacement was soon flown in, many of the Bowie band members are still traumatised by the theft.

Perhaps this would be the perfect opportunity to offer an amnesty to the cad who pilfered the original jackalope. If you are that light-fingered tea leaf, perhaps your guilt has the better of you… if so, please e-mail me at the usual address and we’ll arrange for the return of the bizarre little creature to its rightful owners.

Click on the picture of Douglas Herrick above to read a longer obit over at nytimes.com.

Tibet Tickets 4th Charity Auction Is Live

Two more seats with clearest views…

The penultimate of five auctions for five separate pairs of VIP tickets to the Tibet House Benefit Concert in New York City is now live on ebaY. The third pair went for $1,300.00 and this latest pair are already at $1,025.00.

As I said last week, these tickets obviously command higher prices with each new auction, so if your determined to get two of these very special tickets, this current pair are likely to go for less than the final pair next week… does any of that make sense?

Here’s how the bidding has been so far:

1st Pair: $760.00
2nd Pair: $1,100.00
3rd Pair: $1,300.00
4th Pair: $1,025.00
(Current bid with six days left to go)

Don’t forget, this is what each auction package includes:

Two adjacent tickets within rows A-101 thru A-110
Access to an exclusive buffet dinner the night of the show for both ticket holders

All proceeds from these auctions will benefit the Tibet House. You can reach the current auction by clicking on the image above.

Bowiephiles

David Bowie rehearsing for the Michael Parkinson show at the BBC. Picture by Total Blam Blam.

Where there’s trouble there’s poetry…

More than four months after the show was originally broadcast in the UK, USA viewers are finally to have the chance to see David Bowie’s interview and performance on popular UK TV chat show Parkinson. (09/21/02 NEWS: BOWIE INTERVIEW AND PERFORMANCE ON PARKY TONIGHT). The show airs on BBCA at 8.00PM ET on Saturday 1st February. To whet your appetite, do take the time to check out Blammo’s original piece which contains a couple of his excellent and exclusive rehearsal shots and this quote:-

As most of you know, David performed Life On Mars? as well as Everyone Says ‘Hi’, and they were really quite emotional versions of both. The interview itself was absolutely fascinating, and David talked quite freely about his formative years and early musical influences. Without giving too much away, subjects lurched from parental effects on the psyche, Little Richard, Tubby the Tuba, Earnest Luft – the boy soprano, Philip Larkin and much more.

Set your programme reminders now, and don’t miss this!

—————————————————————————————————————————–

In the port of Amsterdamthere’s a sailor who sings…

An article in The Guardian highlights a series of exhibitions, collectively known as ‘Brel Brussels 2003’. Most of you will be aware of David’s interest in singer/songwriter Jacques Brel, whose songs Amsterdam and My Death he has covered.

(Blammo notes: The soundtrack to Brel’s 60’s off-Broadway show, Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living in Paris which contained both Amsterdam and My Death, was most likely the trigger for the punch line in this quote from David in 1977 regarding David Live : “God, that album…I’ve never played it. The tension it must contain must be like vampire’s teeth coming down on you. And that photo on the cover. My god, it looks as if I’ve just stepped out of the grave. That’s actually how I felt. That record should have been called ‘David Bowie is alive and well and living only in theory.'”)

At just one of these exhibitions you can:-

…find yourself backstage in a scene from many decades ago: an evening with Brel on tour. The first stop is the changing room; on the dressing table lie train tickets, song sheets, a half-eaten baguette and all the paraphernalia of a life spent on the road. As if in the mirrors of the dressing table, a video of Brel in interview recounts his opinions.

Through the dressing room you arrive in the wings, where the silhouette of Brel in the spotlight falls on the heavy curtains. It’s cleverly combined with grainy black-and-white footage of the man himself in concert, playing on the other side of the drapes: a distinctively contoured face, all teeth and ears, and his shortish figure straining forward in his suit, arms flying out as if battling against some centrifugal force.

Beyond, there’s further footage of a sweat-soaked Brel coming offstage, straight into an interview and a cigarette. The final port of call is a recreated station bar where you can play all your own favourite Brel tracks on the jukebox.

If you are planning a summer in Europe, this sounds to me like an amazing addition to your tour itinerary.

—————————————————————————————————————————–

I’ll dance my little dance till it makes you smile…

The December/January 2003 issue of German music magazine Eclipsed has several pages devoted to an excellent review and photographs of David Bowie’s September 2002 show at Munich’s Olympic Hall. They say:-

The sound is very clear and very dynamic from the beginning of the show. The choice of songs is quite excellent – a bit ‘best of’ mixed with many Heathen songs and also a pretty good selection of his exquisite experimental songs. At the very beginning David gives us Ashes to Ashes and with this it becomes clear that the variety of songs David has to choose from is more than full. He doesn’t need to save this classic song till the end.

As the 15th song David Bowie plays the fantastic 5.15 The Angels Have Gone. And Bowie doesn’t stop smiling. “You know, it’s only a show, not life threatening. So smile!”

In Absolute Beginners he performs a wonderful duet with his brilliant bassist Gail Ann Dorsey.

Totally surprisingly he shows us more facets of his art by performing Brecht’s Alabama Song.

But David Bowie hasn’t finished yet. A full 8 encores follow! This Is Not America, Moonage Daydream, A New Career In A New Town (instrumental), the new single Everyone Says ‘Hi’ , a magic version of Sound and Vision, a technotronic Hallo Spaceboy, a nearly acoustic version of Let’s Dance and at the end Ziggy Stardust.

(Thanks to Bianca for the translation and scan)

—————————————————————————————————————————–

My reputation swept back home…

Last Sunday’s Observer carried an evocative review of Moonage Daydream – the book which is currently dropping through BowieNetters’ letter boxes at a rate of knots. Here are a couple of quotes:-

In a moment of utter reinvention, the erstwhile mime artist and folkie swept aside the hippie trappings that had defined rock music since the mid-Sixties, and underwent the first of many persona changes whose collective impact still resounds 30 years later.

Bowie was nothing if not a disseminator: of styles, sounds, ideas. Everything he borrowed, though, he transcended.

These photographs trace the birth of one of the biggest, most influential pop ideas ever.

For all its futuristic trappings, though, it looks like an impossibly distant time and place. It looks like another planet.

Click on the image for the whole review. As you all know, the book is available via Genesis Publications.

:))

Ziggy Motion Picture Dvd, Cd And Vinyl Out In March

Just turn on with me and you’re not alone…

EMI Catalogue are to release the long-awaited remastered Ziggy Stardust and The Spiders From Mars ? The Motion Picture on 24th March 2003. This new version will be available on double CD, double vinyl and DVD. (DVD and CD pictured above) Available for the first time on CD are the concert introductions along with David?s own between-song chat. The famous farewell speech is included in its entirety, as is the full length version of The Width Of A Circle.

The DVD includes a new 5.1 surround sound and stereo mix by Tony Visconti and it also includes a new commentary by Tony and director D. A. Pennebaker. The film print has been cleaned and digitally remastered and looks better than ever. Other DVD extras include a DVD ROM section which features a calendar, screen saver, desktop pictures & icons and weblinks.

The CD is packaged in a clamshell box, (Remember the Bowie at the Beeb promo box? That type of thing) with pull out poster, 12-page ?fanzine? booklet and mock ticket from the original July 3rd show. The limited edition double LP is on red vinyl, each individually numbered, with a gloss varnished gatefold sleeve and pull out poster. Here follows the tracklising for both the audio and DVD releases.

CD & Vinyl tracklisting:

CD1 (start of side 1 of the LP)
01. Intro
02. Hang On To Yourself
03. Ziggy Stardust
04. Watch That Man
05. Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud
06. All The Young Dudes
07. Oh! You Pretty Things
08. Moonage Daydream
(start of side 2 of the LP)
09. Changes
10. Space Oddity
11. My Death

CD2 (start of side 3 of the LP)
01. Cracked Actor
02. Time
03. The Width Of A Circle
04. Let?s Spend The Night Together
(start of side 4 of the LP)
05. Suffragette City
06. White Light / White Heat
07. Farewell Speech
08. Rock ?n? Roll Suicide

DVD tracklisting:
01. Opening Credits/Intro
02. Hang On To Yourself
03. Ziggy Stardust
04. Watch That Man
05. Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud
06. All The Young Dudes
07. Oh! You Pretty Things
08. Moonage Daydream
09. Changes
10. Space Oddity
11. My Death
12. Cracked Actor
13. Time
14. The Width Of A Circle
15. Band Introduction
16. Let?s Spend The Night Together
17. Suffragette City
18. White Light / White Heat
19. Farewell Speech
20. Rock ?n? Roll Suicide
21. End Credits

You’ll notice that The Jean Genie/Love Me Do and Round and Round are still conspicuous by their absence. I’m afraid that old blues meanie, Jeff Beck, still has issues with these tracks, which is a shame as it means we may never see a complete version of this important piece of rock history. Oh well, at least he can’t blame the flares now… they’re back in!

We’ll be running some sort of competition nearer the release date in which we’ll hopefully be offering all three formats. You will be able to view the complete press release from tomorrow in the BowieNet press release section.

Bowie In Q's 100 Songs That Changed The World

He’s told us not to blow it, ‘Cos he knows it’s all worthwhile…

Well it may be number 19 by Q’s reckoning, but for many of us 40-year-olds (and the rest!) Starman is nearer to the number one song that changed our worlds. This Q Special Edition is now on the shelves, and it’s the kind of list that’s guaranteed to provoke heated debate among music lovers the world over.

A double-page spread is given up to David Bowie’s classic 1972 hit, and one of those pages is a beautiful black and white still taken at the TOTPs recording. Here’s a little of what Mark Paytress has to say about Starman in his opening paragraph:

Publicised by a series of startling appearances on Top Of The Pops in spring 1972, Starman seemed to be, on the surface at least, a triumph of style over sound. But visual splendour was just one facet of David Bowie’s achievement, for the song also introduced us to the alien showmanship of his Ziggy Stardust alter-ego, after which popular music never looked, sounded, or even felt quite the same again.

Hear! Hear! The rest of the piece is worth looking at if you can get your hands on a copy, and whatever your opinion of the recordings that populate this list, the magazine does make for an interesting historical read. Here’s the whole of the Top 20:

The Top 20

01. That’s Alright – Elvis Presley (1954)
02. I Wanna Hold Your Hand – the Beatles (1963)
03. God Save the Queen – Sex Pistols (1977)
04. Rapper’s Delight – Sugarhill Gang (1979)
05. Smells Like Teen Spirit – Nirvana (1991)
06. Strange Fruit – Billie Holiday (1939)
07. Like a Rolling Stone – Bob Dylan (1965)
08. Walk This Way – Run DMC (1986)
09. Blue Monday – New Order (1983)
10. Do They Know It’s Christmas? – Band Aid (1985)
11. Good Vibrations – the Beach Boys (1966)
12. Rock Around The Clock – Bill Hayley and His Comets (1954)
13. Helter Skelter – the Beatles (1968)
14. The Message – Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, (1982)
15. You Really Got Me – the Kinks (1964)
16. Autobahn – Kraftwerk (1975)
17. Stayin’ Alive – the Bee Gees (1977)
18. Telstar – The Tornados (1962)
19. Starman – David Bowie (1972)
20. Think – Aretha Franklin (1968)

100 Songs That Changed The World is available now at £4.99.

Wayne Coyne Chooses Bowie For Nme's Burn It

Wayne Coyne, singer of of The Flaming Lips, looking a bit off colour yesterday.

We can be Heroes, for ever and ever…

The foul-mouthed, but supremely talented Wayne Coyne of The Flaming Lips is the subject of this week’s ‘Burn It’ feature in NME. (Issue dated 18th January 2003) Wayne, (who is over here on tour with his band promoting the brilliant right now) has attempted to choose ten songs that somehow, albeit very tenuously, fit in with his compilation CD’s title of ‘Fucking and Fighting’.

The Bowie song he has chosen to fit in with his theme is “Heroes”. Wayne explains how this song so obviously meets his criteria:

“Even though I’ve listened to it a million times, I don’t know what he’s getting at. But it’s an uplift either way and at the end you feel satisfied, either with fighting the fight or fucking the fuck.”

I’m sure Wayne knows what he means, but it may be worth remembering that this is a man responsible for a car stereo concerto, and a portable radio concerto, where 20 to 30 members of the public were encouraged to “play their instruments” all together while Wayne conducted.

His band, The Flaming Lips, were also responsible for a four-CD set called Zaireeka. Nothing that unusual in that you may think, but when you consider that all four discs had to be played simultaneously to fully enjoy the recordings, you begin to understand where Wayne’s head is at… frankly, it seems like a very exciting place to be.

I’m off to see the band on Tuesday, and hopefully I’ll get to wear one of the animal costumes for the evening… oh, I’ll explain that another time. David hasn’t gotten back to me about working with you just yet Wayne (11/22/02 NEWS: BOWIEPHILES), but you’ll be the first to know when he does.

Gad Gig Information And Exclusive Queen News

“Your money or your lives!?” Dandy Highwaywoman Gail Ann Dorsey
at the Meltdown festival in London last year. Photo by Total Blam Blam.

Pray tomorrow takes me higher…

Gail Ann Dorsey has sent in details of some more NY shows, and some exciting news of a show with her favourite band, Queen. The Goddess of Bass is playing both this Friday 17th and Saturday 18th and the following Friday 24th and Saturday 25th at The Hudson River Theater and Joe’s Pub @ The Public Theater respectively. Here’s the full doo dah:

——————————————————————————————————————————

GAIL ANN DORSEY will be performing with fellow Hudson Valley neighbours Kate Pierson of The B-52’s and Maggie Moore of Headwig And The Angry Inch as part of the serenading songstress revue THE CHANTEUSE CLUB!

Friday and Saturday, January 17th and 18th at The Hudson River Theater521 Warren Street, Hudson, NY 12534Showtime: 9:00 PMReservations: phone 518.822.8189 Website Information: www.hudsonrivertheater.com

——————————————————————————————————————————

Friday and Saturday, January 24th and 25th at Joe’s Pub @ The Public Theater425 Lafayette (between East 4th Street and Astor Place), New York City2 Shows: 7:00PM and 9:30 PM Reservations: phone 212.539.8777Website: www.joespub.comFirst chance to see the charm, wit, and unplugged elegance of The Chanteuse Club in New York City!!! Don’t miss it at one of New York’s coolest concert venues!

——————————————————————————————————————————

Gail also sent me these snippets and news about her invitation to play with Queen:

I am working on a little EP/CD of some new and revamped tunes at my home studio that will be for sale at my gigs in the very near future. I will also have the long awaited GAD Official website in operation within the next couple of months!

Oh, and how about THIS exciting scoop!… I am booked to stand in for John Deacon on a couple of performances with the remaining members of my favourite band ever, QUEEN!!! They are scheduled to play an AIDS benefit and one other concert event in South Africa on February 2nd! How excited do you think I am?!? Back with details when I have them…

When I spoke to Gail last week she seemed even more excited about the prospect of this gig than you would gather from her words above. She is also getting the packages together for our recent GAD competition winners, and believe me, they will be well worth the wait.

Last Night's Scorchio Quartet Tv Report

The very colourful Scorchio Electric String Quartet last night. Picture by Tony Visconti.

Saddening glissando strings…

Our good friend Tony Visconti has very kindly sent in a small piece about last night’s World Premiere of his ‘Heroes Variations’ by the Scorchio Quartet that we told you about on Saturday. (01/11/03 NEWS: TV’s ‘HEROES VARIATIONS’ WORLD PREMIERE IN NY TOMORROW) And so, without further ado, here it is:

Hi Blam,

It was a lovely little concert. Only trouble being it was in a cabaret theatre. There was a two drink minimum and the waitress kept coming to our table to remind us of the fact during the concert. But Scorchio was wonderful. They played an eclectic selection of difficult pieces, from George Crumb’s Dark Angel (where the players are required to make mouth noises, play a gong with a bow, shake marachas and aggressively hiss at each other), to a piece from Orlando Gibbons, an English composer from the 16th century.

They played the Heroes Variations I wrote with such feeling, my eyes got a little misty at one point. I will try and get an MP3 of this to post on Bowienet. The audience applauded most appreciatively. I’m going to continue to write for this group, they are really exceptional players.

Please find attached a picture I took last night. Best, Tony

What a lovely man. Hopefully that MP3 will materialise shortly so that we can all get to hear this intriguing composition. Thanx again Tony.