Spot The Ball Before 2006

This is our last chance…

Just a reminder that you have but two hours to enter this one, if you haven’t already. See the original story for details. (12.24.2005 NEWS: SPOT THE BALL FOR A CHANCE TO WIN MOONAGE DAYDREAM)

Stay tuned tomorrow for the winners and part two of this Mick Rock contest…New Year hangover head permitting, of course!

Sixteen Bowie Songs In Virgin All Time Top 500

Commencing countdown…

The annual Virgin Radio All Time Top 500 Songs is here again with sixteen David Bowie songs voted in by 7,000 Virgin Radio listeners. Fourteen of the songs are actual Bowie recordings, including one with Queen, and the remaining two were recorded by Mott The Hoople and Iggy Pop. Here’s the breakdown:

#40 – “Heroes”
#57 – Space Oddity
#80 – Under Pressure
(With Queen)
#92 – Life On Mars?
#100 – All The Young Dudes
(Mott The Hoople)
#115 – Starman
#128 – The Jean Genie
#212 – Young Americans
#165 – Changes
#273 – Sound And Vision
#291 – Rebel Rebel
#364 – Let’s Dance
#398 – Sorrow
#432 – China Girl
#447 – Golden Years
#455 – Lust For Life
(Iggy Pop)

As you can see, the highest position for Bowie was #40. But, for what it’s worth, the Top 10 goes like this: :

01 Imagine ? John Lennon
02 Hey Jude ? Beatles
03 Let It Be ? Beatles
04 One ? U2
05 Angels ? Robbie Williams
06 Bohemian Rhapsody ? Queen
07 Stairway to Heaven ? Led Zeppelin
08 Every Breath You Take ? The Police
09 Hotel California ? The Eagles
10 You?re Beautiful ? James Blunt

The inclusion of newcomer James Blunt in the Top 10 is a very frightening development and further evidence that Virgin listeners are generally not to be trusted…apart from all the Bowie songs they voted in.

NB: Due to a technicality, there were no winners of the brief contest we ran on this. By technicality I mean word blindness and poor observation on my part…a bit!

Spot The Ball For A Chance To Win Moonage Daydream

But they think that we’re hiding a secretive ball…

OK – It’s been a long time coming, but it’s finally here. This is a two-part contest, with ten copies of the recent hardback of David Bowie and Mick Rock‘s Moonage Daydream up for grabs in the first part, and the chance to win a single copy of the beautifully produced original limited edition Genesis Publications version of the book (which retails at £295GBP/$511USD) in the second part.

All current BowieNet members are free to enter both contests…and so, without further ado, on to the first.

As I said, we have ten copies of the Cassell Illustrated 348 page hardback to give away, and each copy will contain a signed-and-personalised-by-Mick Rock postcard.

I’m sure you’ve already had a go at guessing the answer even before you got this far, and that’s how simple this one is.

In the above shot, David Bowie, in full Aladdin Sane clobber, is relaxing with a game of table tennis during the recording of Pin Ups in 1973. DB is frozen in time having just batted the ping-pong ball away.

In tribute to a popular game of that era (at least in the UK it was) what you have to do is pinpoint the original position of the expertly-removed ball using the grid reference.

For example, if you think the ball received such an uncontrolled and ferocious forehand smash, (if such a thing exists) that it shot up to the top left of the picture, then your answer would be A-11.

If, on the other hand, you think the ball was hit with an ineffectual limp-wristed swish, then you might choose A-1…and so on. It’s bloody spot-the-ball for goodness sake. You know what to do!

Send your answer to me here.

Usual rules apply: Only one entry per BowieNet account. Also, please remember you must enter using your BowieNet e-mail or at least supply your BowieNet user name.

The competition ends at midnight UK time on Saturday December 31st. We’ll announce the winners on the very first day of the New Year and launch the second part of the contest soon after that. Good luck, kidz!

December Edition Of The Voyeur Out Now

While colour lights up your face…

Those of you that subscribe to The Voyeur fan magazine are no doubt already frantically digging through an avalanche of Christmas Cards as they tumble through your letterbox, in search of the December issue.

Those of you that don’t subscribe should read on to see if the magazine’s very persuasive Peter Smit can convince you of your error…

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The December 2005 issue of ‘The Voyeur’ is out now!

Like always in our December issue the centrefold contains rare full colour Bowie photographs.

In this issue of “The Voyeur”:

~ Watch out for “The Voyeur”
~ Welcome to “The Voyeur”
~ All fake?
(about genuine and fake David Bowie stamps)
~ About the cover (The man who sold the world)
~ ‘Outrageous’ (Part 2 of an interview by Playboy’s Cameron Crow)
~ Four page full colour David Bowie centrefold
~ Sigma Kids
(An inside story by Sigma kid Marla Kanevsky)
~ Speed Of Life (About David’s Borsalino hat from TMWFTE)

More details about the new edition and information on how to become a member can be found on the homepage at http://go.to/bowiefanclub.

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Some of you may recognise the name of Marla Kanevsky as the real name of one of BowieNet’s longest serving members and real-life original Sigma Kid, zelvis. Be prepared to be overwhelmed by waves of envy as Marla recounts her experience of thirty years ago in excitingly vivid detail.

It’s a story we’ve covered on these pages a couple of times, (07/25/02 NEWS: BOWIE PRESS BLITZ CONTINUES & 12.07.2003 NEWS: BOWIENETTER ZELVIS RECALLS HER 30 YEAR FANDOM) but it still makes for a great read.

Also, as Peter says above, look out for the seasonal four page colour pullout that contains big versions of those pictures of David taken by Fernando Aceves, (at the Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City) in 1997 that rockarcive.com has been selling.

Bowienet E-card With Exclusive Message From Db

Got a message from the action man…

It’s that time of year again, as if you hadn’t noticed…and the text and headline above pretty well negates any need for further waffle from me.

I should just mention that the theme for this year’s BowieNet e-card is a taster for the Moonage Daydream competition which starts the day after tomorrow here on BowieNet.

Whatever tradition you choose this time of year, hope you have a good one. Season’s greetings from everybody at BowieNet…and don’t forget to turn up the volume for that message from David before you click on the image above.

See you tomorrow, peoploids!

1970 Bowie Interview Reprinted In Jackie Hardback

And our talk was old and dust would flow…

Any Bowie fan of a certain age will remember how important the weekly magazines for girls were when it came to news snippets and up-to-date colour pics of our man.

Obviously, as a young self-conscious teen, it was hard not to pretend the frequent purchases of the likes of Jackie, Diane and Mirabelle were for one’s sister…the latter being an essential weekly buy for the My World column penned by David Bowie. (Not.)

Well now, as evidenced by the front-page blurb of today’s Daily Express, (above) a hardcover book compiled from the pages of Jackie is proving very popular in the UK.

Jackie and Diane were similar formats (not to mention also being a John Cougar Mellencamp song, almost) and are probably best remembered for servicing the teenybopper corner of the market with countless pin-ups of Donny, David Cassidy and The Rollers and their ilk in the Seventies.

But, for a while, their pop features seemed to be of a little more substance, and indeed, were certainly responsible for many of the very earliest Bowie features.

The proof of this, (apart from several articles I have in my own archives) is in a full-page reprint in aforementioned annual of an interview with David first published in Jackie over thirty five years ago on 10th May 1970.

The interview, headed Face To Face With DAVID BOWIE – The Secret of my lost year… was illustrated with the wonderful shot below, which I’m pretty sure I’ve not seen before.

I know pictures from this same session were published elsewhere, but I think Jackie had an exclusive with this particular shot, as these magazines very often did with many of their early Bowie pictures.

BowieNetter, dukebox, has kindly transcribed the piece for your reading pleasure and to give you a glimpse into the mind of this promising young singer/songwriter…

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Face To Face With DAVID BOWIE – The Secret of my lost year…

What interests do you have outside music?
People. Architecture. And painting ? I used to be a commercial artist six years ago. I spent just one year at it.

What?s the best advice you?ve ever received?
To try to make each moment of one?s life one of the happiest, and if it?s not, try to find out why. I was told that by a Tibetan friend of mine, Chimi Youngdon Rimpoche.

Why was his advice so important?
Because I?d reached a crucial point in my life. I was a terribly earnest Buddhist at that time, within a month of becoming a Buddhist monk. I had stayed in their monastery and was going through all their exams, and yet I had this feeling that it wasn?t right for me.

Are you still a Buddhist?
No, though a lot of the basic ideas are still with me. But I don?t believe it?s suitable for the West in its Eastern format.

What attracted you to Buddhism in the first place?
I was very interested in Tibet while I was still at school, and wrote a thesis on it. That made me interested in the country, and I started reading about its history and its religion.
I suppose I would still like to go there, but it?s been impossible to get into the country since the Communists took over.

How did you get it all out of your system?
I suddenly realised how close it all was: another month and my head would have been shaved ? so I decided that as I wasn?t happy, I would get right away from it all. I vanished completely for a year. No-one knew where I was.
Actually, I had joined the Lindsay Kemp Mime Company. I spent a year with them and learned from Lindsay that people are much more important to me than ideas.

Have you continued this interest in theatre?
With a couple of other people, I started an Arts Laboratory down in Beckenham which is still thriving. It meets at a pub down there. We have about 600 people attached to it now ? all pursuing their own ideas: art, poetry, music, mime, writing.
We?ve done a marvellous puppet show with 7ft high puppets, and I?m trying to get them a TV series at the moment.

Are you superstitious?
I never whistle in theatre dressing rooms, because that?s something you?re told not to do as soon as you start in the theatre ? but that?s more of a habit. I?m not superstitious about it or anything else.

Who has influenced you most?
My brother, Terry. He?s seven years older than I am ? I?m 22 now, he?s 29. He was very keen on jazz when I was at a very impressionable age, and that led me into it.
I idolised John Coltrane and Eric Dolphy, and learned to play the clarinet and tenor saxophone when I was 12. When I first came into the business six years ago it was as a jazz musician.
Terry was very Bohemian and introduced me to the writers that meant a lot to him ? like Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg. And all this led me into songwriting.

Do you write your own material still?
I?ve always written all my own songs. I?ve had 137 published so far and my latest L.P. is all my own. I also did another one years ago when I was the first singer to record an L.P. before doing a single.
My stage act consists entirely of my own material, apart from one or two songs that I like very much ? ?Port of Amsterdam? by Jacques Brel and ?Buzz the Fuzz? by Biff Rose.

Do your fans expect this when they come to see you?
I think most of them are a bit astonished, but they sit and listen. I?m always getting really nice letters from people saying the like what I do.

What has been your most embarrassing moment?
When I was singing with a group called The Buzz four or five years ago. I forgot the words to three songs in a row. That was dreadful.

Have you been surprised by fan reaction? I stand bemused by it all. I would never have believed in a million years that people would scream at me. I?m really incredulous.
The first night it happened to me was in Perth ? as I was singing a number called ?Wide Eyed boy from Free Cloud?. I suddenly heard three or four screams from a corner of the theatre!
Now I?m always getting presents, gonky things with big eyes, and funny little love letters.

What is your most treasured possession?
There?s no one possession that I couldn?t part with quite easily. I?ve never attached too much importance to material things.

Do you expect to stay in pop music for a long time?
I don?t know. I never plan ahead, and I?m very fickle. I?m always changing my mind about things. If I thought another media would mean more to me, I would move into it.
I never expected ?Space Oddity? to be the success it was, and it?s all rather overwhelmed me. I couldn?t tell you what I?ll be doing this time next year, but I?m quite happy at the moment.

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Well, BowieNetters, I have to admit that the last answer is a little worrying, let’s hope he decides to stick with music for a while.

Db And Ac Make Rs Top Ten Downloads Of 2005

You better look out below!

Rolling Stone magazine has published it’s best-of-the-year-stuff in the current issue with further accolades for David Bowie and Arcade Fire‘s performance of Wake Up.

I don’t need to say much more than you can read above, but yes, I did notice the Fashion Rocks caption illustrated with a SummerStage picture.

Anyway, #2 in a year of absolutely gazillions of available downloads is very cool indeed, even if Rolling Stone did get it wrong by one place! };-)

Db And Ac Make Ny Post Top Ten Gigs Of 2005


“Win, is The Duke’s suit white or lilac?” “I’m not sure, check BNet on Sep 17th”

The children of the SummerStage…

The New York Post has just published its ‘Plugged In’ list of best concerts of 2005.

David Bowie and Arcade Fire‘s set at SummerStage in Central Park, ( 09.16.05 NEWS: BOWIE JOINS ARCADE FIRE IN CENTRAL PARK) made it in to the top ten and their entry was accompanied by this comment:

“The Canadian art-pop septet were a thrill just by their own exuberant selves, but when the Thin White Duke stepped up to sing his “Queen Bitch” and Arcade Fire’s “Wake Up,” the crowd went wild.”

Here follows the complete list:

PLUGGED IN: BEST CONCERTS 2005 – By MARY HUHN
Here are the most riveting pop performances of 2005, in chronological order.

1 Luna: Bowery Ballroom, Feb. 25-28
2 Gris Gris: Kingsland Tavern, Brooklyn, April 9
3 Allen Oldies Band: Maxwell’s, May 7
4 Gang of Four: Irving Plaza, May 18
5 Kaiser Chiefs: Webster Hall, July 21
6 Bettye LaVette: Joe’s Pub, Sept. 8
7 The Arcade Fire with David Bowie: Central Park SummerStage, Sept. 15
8 Allen Toussaint: Joe’s Pub, Sept. 25
9 Black Rebel Motorcycle Club: Irving Plaza, Sept. 26
10 Lee Ann Womack: Cipriani’s, Oct. 4 & Bowery Ballroom, Nov. 11

Well done to both artists. What a winning team they make.

James Franco R.i.p.

James Franco 1986 – 2005.

But now I lay me down to sleep, And now I close my eyes…

Following a post yesterday from his friends and family that BowieNetter James Franco was in intensive care following a motor vehicle accident, it is with much sadness that we have to report that he passed away yesterday.

Though I had no personal contact with James, it’s clear from the posts on the MBs that he was loved by a great many BowieNet members and he will be dearly missed.

Our thoughts are with his friends and family at this terrible time.

Described by many of you as beautiful, the 19-year-old was passionate about music and art and was a prolific poster to The Gallery with almost 200 contributions since 2003!

Here’s one of his pieces, a portrait of David Bowie…

David Bowie by James Franco 2003.

James also had a band called TWIN EFFECT who he had just started to enthusiastically plug on myspace.com.

I’ll leave you with a quote from James’ profile page.

“Beauty is a form of Genius — is higher, indeed, than Genius, as it needs no explanation.” – Oscar Wilde

Ziggy's Band Nominated For Curtain Call Awards

And the legendary curtain call awards…

We reported on the work of Mark Wheeller back at the start of the year when he launched his play Ziggy’s Band. (01.29.2005 NEWS: ZIGGY’S BAND TAKES TO THE STAGE NEXT WEEK & 02.03.2005 REMINDER: SEE ZIGGY’S BAND LIVE IN THE UK TONIGHT)

It seems from published reviews and from BowieNetters who made it along at the time, that the play was a resounding success and it was quickly followed by Mark’s next play, the equally popular Sequinned Suits and Platform Boots.

Mark has been in touch to tell us that both plays have been nominated for some awards, more of which I’ll hand over to Mark himself to tell you about…

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Blam… am really pleased to let you know that our productions have been nominated in the South Of England CURTAIN CALL AWARDS.

Anthony Jennings for Shakey Threwer (Best male Youth performer) SEQUINNED
Alex Chalk for Norman Threwer (Best supporting Youth Actor) ZIGGY’S BAND
Charlotte Wells for Doris Threwer (Best Supporting Youth Actor (female) SEQUINNED
Georgina Mattack for Gilly Threwer (Best newcomer) ZIGGY’S BAND

Over 100 productions are up for these awards, so Oaklands Youth Theatre have done particularly well. I’m well chuffed. We’ve only ever had two nominations in one year before, and only twice before had any nominations at all!!!The awards are dished out on the 27th Jan… I’ll let you know if we’re successful.

The new one act play (SEQUINNED SUITS AND PLATFORM BOOTS which is a tribute to the glam rock years but still includes references and general genuflections to the MainMan) is going to be presented at various Festivals in the South Of England next March/April and then will be performed, all being well, at Edinburgh Festival week two Aug 2006. – Mark Wheeller

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For details of other plays by Mark Wheeller please visit: www.amdram.co.uk/wheellerplays