Duncan launches Bowie Book Club via Twitter

 

“Screaming above Central London”

 

Back in October 2013 we exclusively posted the complete list of “DAVID BOWIE’S TOP 100 BOOKS”.

 

In case you’ve not already seen it on Twitter, Duncan Jones has now kicked off what we’re calling the Bowie Book Club. Here’s what he said about the idea and his first selection.

 

 

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Duncan Jones @ManMadeMoon Dec 27

My dad was a beast of a reader. One of his true loves was Peter Ackroyd’s sojourns into the history of Britain & its cities. I’ve been feeling a building sense of duty to go on the same literary marathon in tribute to dad. Time allowing…

#Read-ItBig’nsTheBrain

 

Duncan Jones @ManMadeMoon Dec 27

Alright gang! Anyone who wants to join along, we are reading Peter Ackroyd’s “Hawksmoor,” as an amuse cerveau before we get into the heavy stuff. You have until Feb 1.

 

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Hawksmoor is in DAVID BOWIE’S TOP 100 BOOKS list, indeed it’s one of the books we illustrated in our montage back in 2013. It’s also a work we’ve loved for a long time here at DBHQ, since David first recommended it many years ago. We’ll leave you with the synopsis for this gripping and terrible tale of two Londons separated by two and a half centuries.

 

 

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‘There is no Light without Darknesse and no Substance without Shaddowe’

 

So proclaims Nicholas Dyer, assistant to Sir Christopher Wren and the man with a commission to build seven London churches to stand as beacons of the enlightenment. But Dyer plans to conceal a dark secret at the heart of each church – to create a forbidding architecture that will survive for eternity. Two hundred and fifty years later, London detective Nicholas Hawksmoor is investigating a series of gruesome murders on the sites of certain eighteenth-century churches – crimes that make no sense to the modern mind . . .

 

‘Chillingly brilliant . . . sinister and stunningly well executed’  – Independent on Sunday

 

Peter Ackroyd was born in London in 1949. A novelist, biographer and historian, he has been the literary editor of The Spectator and chief book reviewer for The Times, as well as writing several highly acclaimed books including a biography of Dickens and London: The Biography. He lives in London.

 

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#BowieBookClub  #ReadingIsBrainFood

Bowie at The Rainbow 45 years ago tonight

 

“Well the bitter comes out better on a Stollen guitar” *

 

David Bowie and The Spiders kicked off a short UK tour at the end of 1972 with a triumphant homecoming show at the Rainbow Theatre, on December 24th.

 

They were enjoying much greater chart recognition since previously being in the country and The Jean Genie had just entered the Top 20 on its way to #2 in the UK single chart.

 

David recalled this batch of shows and the Rainbow gig fondly in Mick Rock’s book, Moonage Daydream: “We put in a short tour of the UK between December and January 1972-73. It was always a great buzz to come back home and this was probably one of the best, highest energy jaunts of our short eighteen-month life. That’s all it was, 18 months.

 

We had another Rainbow show on Christmas Eve, so I asked the audience beforehand to bring a toy to be donated to Dr Barnardo’s childrens’ home (http://smarturl.it/Barnardos), the organisation for which my dad had worked all of his life. I think we filled an entire truck with them.“

 

Indeed they did, as Andy Barding of Cygnet Committee (http://smarturl.it/CygnetCommittee) points out in this excellent celebration of the night, with contributions from Woody Woodmansey.

 

 

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’Twas the night before Christmas, 1972

 

… and in a North London concert hall David Bowie was making it a night to remember. And not just for his fans.

 

When tickets for his Christmas Eve show at the Rainbow Theatre were put on sale, David made a public appeal for concertgoers to bring toys with them as a charity donation. The response was fantastic, as David’s drummer Woody Woodmansey remembers:

 

“David’s toy appeal created more response than we could have imagined. There was a huge truckload of stuff. We hadn’t done anything like that since the Save the Whale benefit concert much earlier on.” (Royal Festival Hall, London, July 8 1972)

 

The very next day, Christmas morning, the goodwill mountain of toys and games that had stacked up in the venue’s foyer was distributed to appreciative youngsters in children’s homes across London.

 

David was delighted. His father, who had passed away three years earlier, had been a public relations officer for Dr Barnardo Homes. So this was a cause close to his heart.

 

This sold-out Rainbow concert marked a triumphant homecoming for 25-year-old David and his band, the Spiders from Mars. They had just returned from nearly three months on the road in America and their absence from Britain had made homegrown hearts grow a lot, lot fonder.

 

NME writer and seasoned David Bowie concertgoer Charles Shaar Murray was taken aback by the frenzied audience reception.

 

“Just for the record, they’ve started screaming at David Bowie,” he wrote.

 

“At the Rainbow on Christmas Eve young girls were reaching out for our hero’s supple limbs and squealing in the customary manner. Whether it’s Bowiemania or Ziggymania or a combination of the two is not yet apparent.”

 

Rival music paper Melody Maker hit the newsstands with a David Bowie-dominated Christmas issue that same week. David was crowned their ‘main man of 1972’, and voted Top Vocalist in the end of year poll. The ‘Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars’ album, which sold close to 200,000 copies in the UK and US during 1972, was declared the MM critics’ choice.

 

Those who attended the Rainbow were treated to a spectacular new live set kicked off by ‘Let’s Spend the Night Together’ (featuring David playing his new VCS3 Moog synthesizer). And as a bonus attraction they were the first in Britain to hear new boy Mike Garson on piano.

 

This was quickly followed by a “razor-edged” ‘Hang On To Yourself’, which Charles Shaar Murray enthusiastically reported was “played better than I’ve ever heard it.” And this in spite of David having only just got over a bout of Asian flu.

 

In a radical break from the regular Ziggy show format, this festive concert did away with the half-time acoustic section in favour of an all-out electric experience.

 

“We had worked hard in the US,” said Woody, “and I think it had evolved into a rockier show. It was nice to get back to the UK, and a perfect way to end the year with a new set.”

 

Charles Shaar Murray agreed: “That American tour has really honed the Spiders to perfection. The show is tougher, flashier and more manic than it’s ever been before.”

 

Let’s hope it was all worth the £2.50 ticket price (£1.50 for a cheap seat in the Circle). The concert ended late and, this being Christmas Eve AND the early seventies, night buses and trains were few and far between. By the time the gig ended with ‘Rock ’n’ Roll Suicide’, all underground train services had stopped. Most Bowie freaks had to either walk home or shell out for taxis. At least one silver lame-clad fan spent the night curled up in a Finsbury Park shop doorway. It’s worth clarifying that this was the only London concert by David and the Spiders in December 1972. When Christmas Eve tickets sold out pretty much instantly, efforts were made to book the venue for an extra show on the previous day, December 23. But ultimately it could not be done.

 

There were dramatic scenes at the stage door, as the band made their way out that night.

 

Woody: “I do remember the fans outside the stage door when we exited. We had to actually push one over-enthusiastic fan who was brandishing a pair of scissors.

 

“As we came out she lunged forward and attempted to secure a lock of Mick Ronson’s hair and narrowly missed his left eye by a fraction of an inch.”

 

Afterwards, David headed for his South London home (where six Royal Mail sacks full of Christmas cards were waiting for him) and the Spiders were driven home to Yorkshire in a limo – though not by MainMan bodyguard Stuey George, as has been previously documented, says Woody.

 

“It snowed all the way and we arrived at my mum’s in the early hours and surprised them,” he said.

 

And on Christmas Day, as hundreds of London kids unwrapped surprise presents from those generous David Bowie fans, the rest of the country settled down in front of their tellies to watch the traditional Christmas Top of the Pops – and a repeat showing of that now-legendary ‘Starman’ performance.

 

1972 had been a super-stellar year for David and the Spiders. And that Christmas, for a lot of reasons, can be considered the icing on the cake.

 

 

David Bowie at the Rainbow Theatre, December 24, 1972, Setlist

 

Let’s Spend The Night Together

Hang On To Yourself

Ziggy Stardust

Changes

The Supermen

Life On Mars?

Five Years

The Width Of A Circle

John, I’m Only Dancing

Moonage Daydream

The Jean Genie

Suffragette City

Rock ’n’ Roll Suicide

 

 

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Thanks Andy and Woody, much appreciated.

 

*Of course, the original lyric is stolen, but it seemed somehow appropriate to tweak it to Stollen, a traditional German bread usually eaten during the Christmas season.

 

 

#BowieRainbow  #ZiggyStardustLive

 

15-Page Bowie cover feature in Electronic Sound

 

“A New Career In A New Town”

 

The current issue of the superb Electronic Sound magazine @electronicmagazine  has 15 pages (including the front cover), devoted to David Bowie’s superhuman 1977 output.

 

If you purchase directly online you also get a free 7″ vinyl single from that bloke off of Devo, Mark Mothersbaugh, who is also a part of Bowie’s 1977 story.

 

Here’s an edited version of the blurb:

 

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ISSUE 36 MAG & VINYL BUNDLE

 

For one that started with him in a somewhat perilous state thanks to a rampant cocaine addiction, 1977 turned out to be quite the year for David Bowie. One that saw the release of two albums that would go on to influence an abundance of musicians and artists alike. To round off 2017, we turn the clock back 40 years in our cover feature and speak to some of the people that worked the ex-Thin White Duke over the course of 1977, and chronicle the encounters (both significant and trivial) that helped shaped Bowie and what would come next.

 

One of the people that Bowie crossed paths with that year is Mark Mothersbaugh, who incidentally features as this month’s seven-inch single. We were ecstatic when Mark agreed to Electronic Sound releasing a pair of his warped and mutated Christmas songs and here you can get them for the first time on limited edition vinyl. He also revealed to us what Devo’s first few days with Bowie were like back in 1977.

 

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More information and order link here.

 

 

#ElectronicSound  #Bowie1977  #ANCIANTbox  

Seeds of Let’s Dance sown 35 years ago today

 

“And Mountain magic heavy hung”

 

Here’s a celebratory graphic utilising a hazy 35-year-old snapshot of, from left to right, David Bowie, Erdal Kızılçay, David Richards and Nile Rodgers at Montreux’s famed Mountain Studios in Switzerland during the recording of demos for Let’s Dance, on this very day in 1982.

 

We all know what happened next.

 

 

#BowieLetsDance

David Bowie: Glamour Issue 3

 

“You better not mess with Major Tom”

 

Here’s an exclusive first look at Helen Green’s delicious fold-out cover for issue 3  of Andy Jones and Nick Smart’s David Bowie: Glamour fanzine. (Animation here)

 

The fanzine is beautifully designed by Milky Cereal and Issue 3 is available for pre-order now.

 

The publication boasts exclusive and original content contributed by Bowie fans and collaborators…

 

 

Issue 3 includes these alphabetically listed contributors:

 

 

Jimmy C

Robin Clark

Ian Hunter

Paul Cuddeford

Terry O’Neill

Nicholas Pegg

Mark Plati

Catherine Russell

Tony Sales

Morgan Visconti

 

 

Visit the David Bowie: Glamour fanzine site to submit contributions for Issue 4 and to pre-order Issue 3.

 

 

*We are duty-bound to point out that David Bowie: Glamour is not an official publication.

 

 

 

#DavidBowieGlamourFanzine

Bowie’s Lennon tribute 34 years ago tonight

 

“Imagine all the people”

 

David Bowie’s Serious Moonlight World Tour climaxed with a performance of John Lennon’s Imagine in Hong Kong on December 8th, 1983.

 

It was David’s tribute to his friend who had been shot and killed on the same day in New York in 1980.

 

You can watch a visibly emotional Bowie singing the song to the sell-out audience at Hong Kong Coliseum here.

 

As you know, photographer Denis O’Regan was along for the ride for every date of the tour, as recorded in the upcoming Ricochet : David Bowie 1983.

 

Both of the pictures here were taken by Denis in Hong Kong on that very day.

 

If you’ve not already stumbled upon it, here’s a great little film of Mr O’Regan talking about working with DB: 

 

 

#BowieLennon  #DavidBowieRicochet

U2’s tribute to David Bowie

 

“When I Live My Dream…”

 

Bono and the boys have nodded in Bowie’s direction a few times over the years, the latest being a dedication on their new album, Songs Of Experience:

 

“This album is dedicated to the lives and times of Dennis Sheehan, Jack Heaslip and the teenage dreams of David Bowie.”

 

A sweet thing to do and the perfect excuse to post a previously unpublished picture of Bowie and Bono backstage at Bowie’s Meltdown in June 2002.

 

Our reporter on the spot on the night reckons that Bono was probably whispering a ‘Knock Knock’ joke to Bowie that included the line: “Europe who?”. It’s possible.

 

 

#BowieBono 

Terry O’Neill four day December Deal

 

“I like the T-shirts”

 

For a limited time only, buy any T-shirt from the David Bowie Collection AND a copy of When Ziggy Played The Marquee SIGNED by Terry O’Neill for only £100.00.

 

That’s a very generous saving of nearly £50.00 with the shipping guaranteed before Christmas.

 

There are only 200 bundles available, offer ends Monday 4th December or whilst stocks last.

 

Bundle

• Only 200 bundles available

• Whilst stocks last

• Includes Limited edition T-Shirt from new collection & When Ziggy Played The Marquee, signed by Terry O’Neill for just £100.00

• Offer runs from Friday 1st December to Monday 4th December

• Save nearly £50.00 on purchase

 

T-Shirts

• Presented by Terry O’Neill & The David Bowie Archive

• Only 100 of each design created

• Sizes from X-Small to XX-Large

• Packaged in a beautiful gift box

• Celebrating some of Bowie’s most iconic moments as captured by Terry O’Neill

 

Go here for more.

 

 

#BOWIEbyONEILL  #BowieAtTheMarquee