One of the most original voices in rock & roll for nearly fifty years. Bowie championed mystery, rebellion and curiosity in his music. Ever unpredictable, the mercurial artist and fashion icon wore many guises throughout his life.
Beginning life as a disside
nt folk-rock spaceman, he would become an androgynous, orange-haired, glam-rock alien (Ziggy Stardust), a well-dressed, blue-eyed funk maestro (the Thin White Duke), a drug-loving art rocker (the Berlin albums), a new-wave hit-maker, a hard rocker, a techno enthusiast and a jazz impressionist. His flair for theatricality won him a legion of fans.
Accordingly, his impact on the music world has been immeasurable. Artists who have covered Bowie’s songs include Nirvana, Joan Jett, Duran Duran, Smashing Pumpkins, Marilyn Manson, Arcade Fire, Oasis, Ozzy Osbourne, Morrissey, Beck, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Bauhaus, Nine Inch Nails and let’s not get into the sampling of his work!
Bowie was born David Robert Jones on January 8th, 1947 in a working-class London suburb. His father, Heywood Jones, worked in promotions for a charity that benefitted children and his mother, Margaret Mary Jones, was a waitress. A fight with a classmate when he was young left the singer with a permanently dilated left pupil. He began learning saxophone at age 13, and he attended a high school that would prepare him for a career as a commercial artist. He spent time at a Buddhist monastery in Scotland and dabbled in theatrical troupes around the time he turned 20.
In August 1964, the young vocalist and saxophone player played his first gig with the group Davie Jones and the Manish Boys (who one recorded with Jimmy Page) on Eel Pie Island. Throughout 1964, the group, whose name was taken from a Muddy Waters’ song, performed re
gularly on the island. A year later, to avoid confusion with Davy Jones of The Monkees, the lead singer duly changed his name to David Bowie.
He played with other groups with names like the King Bees, Davey Jones and the Lower Third. He put out a folky self titled album in 1967 but it charted poorly in the U.K. and not at all in the U.S. That would change with his next release….
With 1969’s Space Oddity, whose dramatic title track told the story of ill-fated astronaut Major T
om, he had a hit. His friend Marc Bolan of T. Rex had introduced Bowie to producer Tony Visconti, leading to one of the most fruitful and longest-lasting producer-artist relationships in music. The song “Space Oddity” hit Number One in the U.K. and Number 15 in the States, and the album made it to the Top 20 in both countries. Each album he released thereafter offered a new glimpse at his genius. On the following year’s The Man Who Stole The World, he experimented with psychedelia, and in 1971, he fused pop-rock with art pretense and experimentalism. A year later, he put out Hunky Dory his first significant album. It contained the hit “Changes” and its threat/promise “Look out you rock & rollers/ One of these days you’re gonna get older,” as well as the fan favorites “Oh! You Pretty Things” and “Life on Mars” along with songs about Bob Dylan and Andy Warhol.
It was on 1972’s The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars, though, where he hit his stride. In the role of the titular rock-star also-ran, he innovated a glammy look for himself which he amplified in his highly theatrical live shows where he’d tussle with guitarist Mick Ronson. A far cry from the Sixties hippie idealism he’d come up with, Ziggy was brazen and arrogant, and the character worked since Bowie presented it in a way that let his fans in on the joke. In addition to the title track, “Starman,” “Suffragette City” and “Five Years” became audience favorites. The album would be certified gold in the U.S. in 1974.
Around this period, Bowie began working behind the scenes for some of his friends. In 1972, he produced and pl
ayed saxophone on Mott the Hoople’s All the Young Dudes album, and he wrote its hit title song. That year, he resuscitated former Velvet Underground frontman Lou Reed’s career by giving him a glam makeover onTransformer. And in 1973, he mixed Iggy and the Stooges’ Raw Power. A few years later, during his Berlin period, Bowie would also work on Iggy Pop’s solo breakthrough LPs The Idiot and Lust for Life, and toured with Pop as his pianist to support the records.
Ziggy Stardust was a persona he’d keep its follow-up, 1973’s Aladdin Sane, which contained “The Jean Genie,” “Drive-In Saturday” and a rag-tag cover of the Rolling Stones’ “Let’s Spend the Night Together,” and on that year’s covers album Pin Ups. He’d attempted to retire Ziggy for 1974’s cabaret-ready Diamond Dogs, but the overwhelming glamminess of “Rebel Rebel” suggested otherwise.
He did an about-face on 1975’s Young Americans, incorporating soul, funk and disco into songs like the title cut and “Fame,” and he co-wrote “Fascination” with Luther Vandross. It was a risky move, but it reached Number Two in the U.K. and Number Nine in the U.S. He delved deeper into funk on the following year’s Station to Station, picking up a well-documented cocaine habit along the way, and scored a hit with the buoyant “Golden Years.” The album as a whole, though, signaled a newfound interest in the avant-garde.
It was to be a short-lived transformation, though, as Bowie wo
uld disappear to Berlin and dive deeper into experimenting with music and with drugs. Beginning with 1977’s Low, which combined art-rock with ambient minimalism, the singer stumbled on an acidic, epic sound, bolstered by collaborating with Brian Eno. The LP contained the U.K. hit “Sound and Vision” and set the tone for his next two records, that year’s “Heroes,” with its iconic song “Heroes,” and 1979’s Lodger, which contained the hit “Boys Keep Swinging.” Minimalist composer Philip Glass would later write a symphony using music from Low.
He quit drugs in the Seventies and emerged in the Eighties with a renewed interest in more radio-friendly music, scoring a Number One hit in the U.K. with “Ashes to Ashes,” which continued the story of Major Tom, and the hit “Fashion.” Both appeared on 1980’s Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps). In 1981, he recorded the duet “Under Pressure” with Queen, weaving his voice with Freddie Mercury’s for another Number One in the U.K. and a Top 30 single in the U.S.
In 1983, he put out Let’s Dance, which he co-produced with Chic mastermind Nile Rodgers. The collaboration, which included lead guitar work by Stevie Ray Vaughan, proffered the singles “Let’s Dance,” “China Girl” and “Modern Love.” He’d follow these with the hit “Blue Jean,” off Tonight the following year. And he notched his final Number One in the U.K. in 1985 with a cover of Martha and the Vandella
’s feel-good hit “Dancing in the Street,” a duet with Mick Jagger.
With the exception of the Beatlesesque 1986 single “Absolute Beginners,” the rest of the Eighties were less fruitful for Bowie musically. He put out Never Let Me Down in 1987, and closed out the decade as a member of the hard-rock group Tin Machine, which would put out another record in 1991.
Bowie changed his musical output again in 1993 and put out the electronic-influenced Black Tie White Noise, another co-production with Nile Rodgers that proved less commercially successful in the U.S. He flirted with industrial on 1995’s Outside, and the following year he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996 by former Talking Heads frontman David Byrne.
In 1997, he celebrated his 50th birthday with an all-star concert at New York City’s Madison Square Garden; Lou Reed, the Cure’s Robert Smith, Smashing Pumpkins’ Billy Corgan, Pixies’ Black Francis, Foo Fighters and Sonic Youth all joined him onstage. He pioneered “Bowie Bonds,” a way in which people could invest in him, that year earning him $55 million. Also, that year, he collaborated with Trent Reznor on the Brian Eno co-produced Earthling, and returned to rock on 1999’s Hours…. It’s a sound he’d improve-upon on 2002’s Heathen and the following year’s Reality, both of which found him working again with producer Tony Visconti.
The singer suffered a heart attack in 2004 and subsequently retired from touring, though he’d make occasional appearances, singing with Arcade
Fire and David Gilmour, among others. He made his last singing appearance onstage in 2006, where he dueted with Alicia Keys. During this time, he also sang on records by TV on the Radio, Scarlett Johansson and Arcade Fire.
In 2013, Bowie put out his first album in a decade, The Next Day, which went to Number One on the U.K. chart and Number Two in the States. He had re
corded the LP in secret and announced its existence on his birthday that year.
Two days before his death, the singer put ★ (pronounced Blackstar), this time on his birthday. The record reflected the ever-evolving, chameleonic artist’s interest in jazz and hip-hop. “We were listening to a lot of Kendrick Lamar,” producer Tony Visconti said of the recording sessions. “We wound up with nothing like that, but we loved the fact Kendrick was so open-minded and he didn’t do a straight-up hip-hop record. He threw everything on there, and that’s exactly what we wanted to do. The goal, in many, many ways, was to avoid rock & roll.”
A testament to his chameleon artistic nature and ability to be a vessel for consistent innovative and great pioneering art.
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