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  • 7 months later...
  • 1 year later...

Have a listen to the lyrics on each track of his new (brilliant) album. Now sounds ever so haunting.


It feels like only he could've made a fantastic album about his own death while it was impending.


What a last act.


A tribute street party is being organised outside Brixton Ritzy from 7-ish this evening. Brixton saying farewell to it's most famous son.

Brian Eno


"David's death came as a complete surprise, as did nearly everything else about him. I feel a huge gap now.


"We knew each other for over 40 years, in a friendship that was always tinged by echoes of Pete and Dud. Over the last few years - with him living in New York and me in London - our connection was by email. We signed off with invented names: some of his were Mr Showbiz, Milton Keynes, Rhoda Borrocks and The Duke of Ear.


"About a year ago we started talking about Outside - the last album we worked on together. We both liked that album a lot and felt that it had fallen through the cracks. We talked about revisiting it, taking it somewhere new. I was looking forward to that.


"I received an email from him seven days ago. It was as funny as always, and as surreal, looping through word games and allusions and all the usual stuff we did. It ended with this sentence: 'Thank you for our good times, Brian. they will never rot'. And it was signed 'Dawn'.


"I realise now he was saying goodbye."

The OP




???? Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> This has been bothering me. (well a bit).

>

> I love this man's music...there was a pre-punk

> time when it was just him alone in my book,

> certainly in the UK. But, I'm acutely aware that

> lots of people who have similar tastes to me but

> are younger, just don't see it. Am I prisoner of

> my youth?...Is he in reality how I see Oasis, ie

> ok, but if you were 15 when Definitely Maybe was

> released you thought this was the best album ever

> rather than a Slade tribute. Discuss.



I can confirm that if you were born late 70s, your parents didn't listen to any popular music (and were older parents for the time), and the first thing you saw him do was "Dancing in the street" with Jagger, you probably felt a bit creeped out by him. I certainly did.


Bit grew to like him, just nowhere near on the level of those 10 - 20 years my senior.

Otta Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> The OP

>

>

>

> ???? Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > This has been bothering me. (well a bit).

> >

> > I love this man's music...there was a pre-punk

> > time when it was just him alone in my book,

> > certainly in the UK. But, I'm acutely aware

> that

> > lots of people who have similar tastes to me

> but

> > are younger, just don't see it. Am I prisoner

> of

> > my youth?...Is he in reality how I see Oasis,

> ie

> > ok, but if you were 15 when Definitely Maybe

> was

> > released you thought this was the best album

> ever

> > rather than a Slade tribute. Discuss.

>

>

> I can confirm that if you were born late 70s, your

> parents didn't listen to any popular music (and

> we're older parents for the time), and the first

> thing you saw him do was "Dancing in the street"

> with Jagger, you probably felt a bit creeped out

> by him. I certainly did.

>

> Bit grew to like him, just nowhere near on the

> level of those 10 - 20 years my senior.


I was born mid-60s, youngest of three. Never liked DB, was dragged to see him late 90s at Town & Country in Leeds (the tour when he refused to sign any old stuff); managed to stick it for about 20 minutes, then walked out (very obvious as there were only about 200 people) and sat in the car for the next hour or so, freezing my bits off... Just never got the hype, give me Steve Marriott any day...

LadyNorwood Wrote:


>

> I was born mid-60s, youngest of three. Never

> liked DB, was dragged to see him late 90s at Town

> & Country in Leeds (the tour when he refused to

> sign any old stuff); managed to stick it for about

> 20 minutes, then walked out (very obvious as there

> were only about 200 people) and sat in the car for

> the next hour or so, freezing my bits off... Just

> never got the hype, give me Steve Marriott any

> day...



I'll not get angry about you and feel sad with you, LadyN.


In no order, and why should it be?


Brixton boy, artist, dilettante, big feckin' ol' liar, Beckenham Arts Lab Proff, Tony Newley impersonator, Mott The Hoople saviour, Alien?, GLAM F@CKIN' GLAM 'N' GLAM AGAIN, Actor? Man Who Fell To Earth, Waffety-eyed long-haired div, Converter of me to Ziggy Stardust compulsive, Geezery sounding socialite, Discovering Life On Mars (FACT!), Best hairstyles, ever, just bloody ever, Berlin and all that, but not forgetting how to make a pop tune, Thin White Duke, William Burroughs, The Dame, being amused by being referred to as The Dame, Warhol, hole, hole, holes, The Elephant Man, Tin Machine, Marlboro Reds, Iggy saviour, still being a chum with George who hit him so hard he changed hs eye colour, the best mullet ever, The Laughing Gnome, Lodger Lazarus and I'll leave it there.


I just know the world was better with him in it, and there'll be a permanent Bowie-shaped hole.


See Ya.

Shocked as most were yesterday. But let others have their opinion. I didn't like the new Star Wars, and was probably the only one in the cinema. Please don't burn me at the stake for being a heretic.


Ironic that they showed the Lazarus video before the film started and we thought "my, he has aged" (not obviously realising his condition). That was Sat night and then on Sunday that Deutchland drama in Channel 4 finished with Modern Love. Spooky. Prior to this I'd posted on EDF that two of the most lame videos were the Bowie/Jagger and the Bowie/Crosby. They are.


Absolutely loved the V&A exhibition, Glass Spider tour was pants (as he admitted - too ambitious), and pissed off 32 years later that I couldn't get tickets for the Serious Moonlight tour. Loved that album but Scary Monsters grated at the time and still does now. Visage did it much better. Should have made an effort to see Tin Machine, they may have been lousy but I did like his green suit.


Had a funny chat with the big big big boss today, who said even he had heard the news, but (depsite being of my generation) did not like the music. Obviously must have been a Roxy fan!

Well what a shambles tonight's episode of Celebrity Big Brother was. David Bowie's estranged ex-wife was informed of his death and the aftermath was exposed for all to see in a shambolic hour long episode in which she confides in a fellow house mate Tiffany about the news (who I've never even heard of?), who in turn misunderstands Angie and assumes David Gest (another fellow housemate of Liza Minelli marriage fame) has died in the diary room. She runs and tells everyone else who goes crazy and to top it all off, Darren Day (famous for?) goes to check on David Gest (who was sleeping) to see if he is dead?


Louisa.

HonaloochieB Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> LadyNorwood Wrote:

>

> >

> > I was born mid-60s, youngest of three. Never

> > liked DB, was dragged to see him late 90s at

> Town

> > & Country in Leeds (the tour when he refused to

> > sign any old stuff); managed to stick it for

> about

> > 20 minutes, then walked out (very obvious as

> there

> > were only about 200 people) and sat in the car

> for

> > the next hour or so, freezing my bits off...

> Just

> > never got the hype, give me Steve Marriott any

> > day...

>

>

> I'll not get angry about you and feel sad with

> you, LadyN.

>

> In no order, and why should it be?

>

> Brixton boy, artist, dilettante, big feckin' ol'

> liar, Beckenham Arts Lab Proff, Tony Newley

> impersonator, Mott The Hoople saviour, Alien?,

> GLAM F@CKIN' GLAM 'N' GLAM AGAIN, Actor? Man Who

> Fell To Earth, Waffety-eyed long-haired div,

> Converter of me to Ziggy Stardust compulsive,

> Geezery sounding socialite, Discovering Life On

> Mars (FACT!), Best hairstyles, ever, just bloody

> ever, Berlin and all that, but not forgetting how

> to make a pop tune, Thin White Duke, William

> Burroughs, The Dame, being amused by being

> referred to as The Dame, Warhol, hole, hole,

> holes, The Elephant Man, Tin Machine, Marlboro

> Reds, Iggy saviour, still being a chum with George

> who hit him so hard he changed hs eye colour, the

> best mullet ever, The Laughing Gnome, Lodger

> Lazarus and I'll leave it there.

>

> I just know the world was better with him in it,

> and there'll be a permanent Bowie-shaped hole.

>

> See Ya.



"I'll not get angry about you and feel sad with you" - I have absolutely no idea what you mean by that - angry because I don't share your taste in music? Sad because, well I don't know really...


I'm sure your world was better with him in it, but not mine - to quote you, FACT...


Hey ho, each to their own, he didn't impact on my world, except to give me a memory of a freezing cold evening, sitting in a car in Leeds, hoping I didn't get frostbite... In fact, he made me cross so there we are - maybe he did impact my world after all, just not in the way most people would imagine... I'd forgotten all about that evening until this news surfaced, so maybe it wasn't that big a deal after all...


I'm off to listen to some Jake Thackray - witty, clever and understated...

Louisa Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Well what a shambles tonight's episode of

> Celebrity Big Brother was. David Bowie's estranged

> ex-wife was informed of his death and the

> aftermath was exposed for all to see in a

> shambolic hour long episode in which she confides

> in a fellow house mate Tiffany about the news (who

> I've never even heard of?), who in turn

> misunderstands Angie and assumes David Gest

> (another fellow housemate of Liza Minelli marriage

> fame) has died in the diary room. She runs and

> tells everyone else who goes crazy and to top it

> all off, Darren Day (famous for?) goes to check on

> David Gest (who was sleeping) to see if he is

> dead?

>

> Louisa.



I've just seen this. Worse than a car crash + a train crash + a 747 landing on the Palmeston

Everyone has a Bowie era they relate to strongest...Imine was actually that pop 80's stuff which was big with me as a kid. Let's Dance is a classic album. Loved that video shot in outback Australia. And Stevie Ray Vaughan playing on it before he became famous with Texas flood. Those songs still stand up as classics...and get regular airplay.

FJDGoose Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I'm so glad his final album was a return to form

> and not like all the poor stuff in the 80s when I

> feel he'd lost his way a bit.

>

>


I'm reliably informed that he was working furiously while he was ill and that Blackstar is far from the last of his albums. There may also be a book in the pipeline.


He will return

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