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Direct Link To This Post Topic: David Bowie Appreciation Thread
    Posted: February 07 2017 at 15:39
my first instinct called out the name of late Nelson Roger Prince, hes very eclectic, genious  and  awe inspiring,  also artist known as Joe Jackson should be sought out and Elvis Costello, Kate Bush, Joni Mitchell, and Tom Waitz
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 07 2017 at 06:13
Thanks, @Guldbamsen!

I realize it's a tall order, but I very much appreciate an actual music lover's take on this rather than relying on one of (for instance) Amazon's algorithms. I will certainly check out the music you mention. The names are somewhat familiar, but I've never delved into them.

I'm afraid that Dutch football has rather gone downhill since Johan Cruyff and Ruud Gullit Wink
Musically, very little of value is produced here in my opinion. So I'm grateful we can listen to music from all over the world.

Cheers,
Sandokanfirst
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 06 2017 at 12:46
That is quite a tall order
Welcome to PA btw! Always cool to see folks from Holland chiming in (been an orange fan ever since Ruud Gullit).

High standards of innovation and emotional value? ...and it doesn't have to sound like Bowie but rather show the same fondness for the music's many different opportunities?

Try Animal Collective. Strawberry Jam or Merriweather Pavillion.
Kayo Dot's two most recent albums (Coffins on Io and Plastic House On Base Of Sky) may also be of interest. Both share this dystopian 80s production - sounding like something David Bowie and David Sylvian could've cooked up during a wild peyote trip.
Speaking of whom, if you haven't already checked out Sylvian, then you probably should. He's always reminded me of Bowie (in a good way). The same can be said about Brendan Perry from Dead Can Dance, although he has more of a Jim Morrison boom to his voice. Either way, Dead Can Dance. Try out their masterpiece Within The Realm Of A Dying Sun.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 06 2017 at 08:35
Bowie's music has been my main inspiration for the last 25 years, to such an extent that not much else has found favour with me. Lots of fans abandoned his music when he released 1. Outside, which I considered brilliant. I've been to his musical Lazarus in November of last year, but now new era has begun in which we can no longer depend on Bowie coming up with fantastic new ideas?

So I wonder: what next? Is there any recent music out there which can measure against Bowie's genius? I am aware of some of Bowie's preferences and have made some of them my own (Lou Reed, Velvet Underground, Suede, Arcade Fire, The Pixies, Kraftwerk, Jacques Brel).

Does anybody have any tips for a musically lost soul? I'm not so much looking for similarity of sound, but rather for high standards of innovation and emotional value.

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Sando
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 05 2017 at 03:06
I bought Ziggy Stardust when I was 13 years old and I was blown away!
Today, after almost 35 years is still one of my most beloved albums.
Ziggy's period was a blast!

If anybody wants please visit: http://www.gfreedomathina.blogspot.com/

This is my Blog mostly about Rock music, but also a few other things as well.

You are most welcome!

Thank you. :)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 22 2016 at 06:07
http://www.nme.com/news/david-bowie/95188

Copy that link for details. I'm not on any Bowie newsletters. The 1984-1988 box set would have to have some serious stuff on there!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2016 at 18:20
Okay, we now know what the follow up box set to Five Years (1969-1973) will be: Who Can I Be Now? (1974-1976). It will presumably include Diamond Dogs, Young Americans, and Station To Station, but what we do know so far is that a previously unreleased album, at least of sorts, will be included, called The Gouster. Said album is essentially a proto-Young Americans.

More information should come next week. For now, here's the link:

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 04 2016 at 15:28
Visconti says that he's in talks to try and get previously unreleased Bowie stuff out.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 15 2016 at 06:31
Heard a funny story yesterday. During the Young americans sessions, Bowie was searching for Lyrics on the Carlos Alomar's riff of Fame. Lennon was in the studio and did not stop shouting : "Ame Ame Ame ..." Bowie did not have more than to add F. Big smile 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 14 2016 at 17:32
your welcome
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 14 2016 at 04:25
Great post. Clap I'm not a musician anymore, but a writer. I still feel Bowie's influence.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 13 2016 at 18:58
sorry for this long tekst, but i want everyone to read Chris Cornells kind words to Bowie

SIDEBAR
david bowie David Bowie: 30 Essential Songs »
I remember seeing the Ziggy Stardust album everywhere when I was a kid. People used to have all their vinyl in their living rooms, like part of the decor. You would see Let It Be and the faces of the Beatles everywhere, in a corner. At some point, I'd seen Ziggy enough that it piqued my interest, so I probably stole it from somebody.

Listening to that record was a bit like going to college, like the Beatles. The songwriting is incredible. I didn't know anything about him, and it was a bit past when that album was a moment in pop culture, but I didn't care. I was interested in the songs and loved every single song on the album.

When Scary Monsters came out, I saw him performing on a talk show, and I saw the "Ashes to Ashes" video where he dressed in some strange European clown costume. That had a huge impact on me. Because my first interpretation of him was the red-haired, androgynous Ziggy Stardust character, and seeing him like this made me think, "Oh, you can be whoever you want. You can live a hundred lives. You can create you and you can recreate you, and it's viable." He was the one that proved that that works.

I finally got to see him live on the Serious Moonlight Tour, around Let's Dance, in 1983. I was a huge fan by then and I really didn't want to go to that show, because it was at the Tacoma Dome, and I didn't like big crowds. But I went anyway. It was somewhat uncomfortable for me, but the show and the sound and everything about the set and the songs were incredible.

The theatrics stood out to me. The Simms brothers were on that tour as backing vocalists, and I remember when they weren't singing, they would stay onstage and sit in the corner at a table and play cards. Nobody ever left the stage. It was an atmosphere where it was theatrical, but relaxed. When you're a kid from Seattle, you've never seen anything like that before, and it was in the context of a pop record, so he didn't have to do that. He could have done anything he wanted. I saw the Police at the same dome, and they just came out and played Police songs and that was that. He didn't leave it like that. I was super impressed.

"He was an incredible guy, super inclusive and warm."
He was like one of those actors that fully embodies the character that he's creating. He was extremely transformative during different periods of his career. There was something about it that was very European and very not American. American rock bands would walk out like, "This is us and this is who we are and that's what we do," which I think is great, but Bowie was not like that.

Later in my life, I was part of a Vanity Fair music issue, where there were a lot of pretty amazing people there for a photo shoot. He was one of them. That was the first time I met him. I'd almost rather not meet someone I'm a fan of because I'm afraid that they're gonna say or do something that's going to then change how I feel when I listen to their music. But he was an incredible guy, super inclusive and warm. I'm always uncomfortable in most situations, and he made everybody comfortable. He was this bright light.

Our conversation was very much, "How are you doing?" and "Isn't this fun? Isn't it exciting to be in the same room with Stevie Wonder and Joni Mitchell at the same time?" It was just normal conversations. It's like he saw I was uncomfortable and went out of his way to alleviate that discomfort and make me feel happy about it. It was a compassionate moment for a guy that didn't necessarily have to be that way. Despite my worries, I walked out more excited to listen to his music.



I've played his song "Lady Stardust," from Ziggy Stardust, live in my solo shows over the years because I always loved it on the album, and, for some reason, it reminds me of Andy Wood. I wanted to play it in tribute to him, but then I ended up writing a bunch of songs for Temple of the Dog and those took precedence. When Soundgarden split up in '98, I came across that song, and I remember sitting in my car in the driveway listening to it, and there's that lyric, "He was all right, the band was all together," and it's so hopeful. My band had just broken up. And it really gutted me. So that was when I started doing it. I haven't played it more than a couple times live, but it's like the one song of his that I've always been drawn to. I just really love it.

When I woke up yesterday, I was already thinking about David Bowie. I was checking out his new record a couple of days ago; I was reading about it, I'd listened to a few songs. Then I saw the news. Hearing he'd died was just a really sad thing. I was very happy with Blackstar. I was really happy with his last album, The Next Day, too. Both albums show an ongoing evolution. I need people like David Bowie, people who are always moving on and not in a frustrating or slovenly way. It encourages me because I want to be able to write music and create albums until I drop dead.

I'd heard about him being ill over the last couple of years, so it wasn't a huge surprise, but just reading about his album a couple of days ago, I'd been thinking, "Oh, he's better. He's fine." It was sad to feel like that's not going to happen and we're not gonna see him again.

You don't know how important someone is to you as an artistic influence until suddenly they're gone. I've certainly been having that experience. It's kind of equal parts sad and celebratory to think, "Awesome. What an amazing career he had and what an amazing legacy he's left for everybody."



Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/chris-cornell-on-david-bowies-evolution-he-was-an-inspiration-20160112#ixzz3xBCs7cOx
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 13 2016 at 13:36
The whole album release on/near his 69th b'day, then his passing immediately after is 100% Bowie....you could never tell where Bowie was heading next....still can't. 
I like to feel the suspense when you're certain you know I am there.....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 12 2016 at 23:38
The timing reminds me a little of Lennon's death, with a new, very appealing album just out in the midst of the tragic and sudden passing of one of the most important songwriters in history, if under far different circumstances.

"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 12 2016 at 23:02
as i already said in another thread - i saw him live at an amazing concert in Yugoslavia in 1990 - that was his Sound & Vision The Greatest Hits Tour - and i can say that he was the greatest art-pop singer-songwriter of our time. Bowie was on the top of everything re art-pop since 1970.

Edited by Komandant Shamal - January 12 2016 at 23:16
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 12 2016 at 17:33






Edited by kenmartree - January 13 2016 at 07:24
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2016 at 13:34
In many ways, music is my religion and my country. Bowie was a confidant and a continent. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2016 at 13:13
When I was a teenager in the early 80s, into Iron Maiden and the likes, Bowie was in his Let's Dance period. That was not my style of music, so I ignored him mostly afterwards. Just over a year ago I was discussing music with a good friend, and she let me listen to the Ziggy Stardust album. An album I knew of, but never listened to. Five Years caught me, then the rest of the album as well. It took me less than two months to get his first 14 albums on LP, and I bought the last two as well. Love every single one of them, with Ziggy Stardust being #1 if I have to choose, and the new Blackstar an easy #2. He left us on a high note, for sure, I'll miss him as much as any fan.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2016 at 13:12
Hi Greg good to see you round these parts. I've missed seeing Sean Connery in leather. Hope you're doing good.

As for Bowie: I'm a little lost for words at the moment. I got my copy of Blackstar yesterday and immediately loved it. Waking up to this has been utterly surreal and heartbreaking. Think I'll put on Lodger. 'Red Sails' will certainly sparkle up my evening.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 11 2016 at 12:43
Originally posted by Flowerpunkchip Flowerpunkchip wrote:

We're going to miss him for many many years!!

Hunky Dory is my favourite I think, not sure.

I had no idea he was ill.



Hunky Dory is my favourite, I think. Adore that album. Very sad news.
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