David Bowie RIP
- emilystrange
- Above the Chemist
- Posts: 9031
- Joined: 03 Nov 2003, 20:26
- Location: Lady Strange's boudoir.
listening to Shaun Keaveny this morning breaking the news was awful. he sounded like i felt. total shock and disbelief.
i was late this morning because i couldn't leave before space oddity finished.
i was late this morning because i couldn't leave before space oddity finished.
I don't wanna live like I don't mind
- eastmidswhizzkid
- Faster Than The Light Of Speed
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and still now, a whole day later, reading this is making me well-up again. all day he's been everywhere and everytime its been almost too much to bear. knowing the whole world is hurting with you is no comfort.
@EmmaPeelWannaBe- a lovely sentiment, and one it's true to extend to many things: The Sisters, all of us, so many things we're privileged to have co-existed with.
@Erika- yes, fuck cancer. you can do it.
@EmmaPeelWannaBe- a lovely sentiment, and one it's true to extend to many things: The Sisters, all of us, so many things we're privileged to have co-existed with.
@Erika- yes, fuck cancer. you can do it.
Well I was handsome and I was strong
And I knew the words to every song.
"Did my singing please you?"
"No! The words you sang were wrong!"
And I knew the words to every song.
"Did my singing please you?"
"No! The words you sang were wrong!"
-
- Gonzoid Amphetamine Filth
- Posts: 363
- Joined: 28 Oct 2015, 02:22
- Location: Dublin
What a shock this was this morning I heard it in the car on the way to work and both my husband and myself shouted "no!" at the radio. Watching the tributes tonight, what a unique talent he was, his music will endure. I saw him perform in Slane in the 80's what a performer he was.
Thanks for the music Ziggy Stardust xx
Thanks for the music Ziggy Stardust xx
I honestly can't think of the passing of any other musician that would make me feel the way I do today.
Been listening to 6Music & been very tearful at all the memories being shared.
Whether you liked every note he played, every stage he trod, every frame of celluloid he appeared on or not, there were moments that were so personal to everyone who loves music & he found them.
My head's still a total mess. I haven't been able to really focus on anything else today.
Uncomfortably numb.
Been listening to 6Music & been very tearful at all the memories being shared.
Whether you liked every note he played, every stage he trod, every frame of celluloid he appeared on or not, there were moments that were so personal to everyone who loves music & he found them.
My head's still a total mess. I haven't been able to really focus on anything else today.
Uncomfortably numb.
- Being645
- Wiki Wizard
- Posts: 15274
- Joined: 09 Apr 2009, 12:54
- Location: reconstruction status: whatever the f**k
Now that I've survived that horrible day of yesterday, I want to say:
Goodbye, David "Bluebird" Bowie ...
Thank you for all the wonderful music and dream and art and performance and style and inspiration and joy you've made available to us.
It was, is and will be such a pleasure to enjoy all of these.
Without you my life had been much less interesting and varied and far more heartless and dumb.
I'm very sad you're no longer with us, but I'm also entirely glad that at least the past 20 years of your life have been alright for you.
Goodbye, David "Bluebird" Bowie ...
Thank you for all the wonderful music and dream and art and performance and style and inspiration and joy you've made available to us.
It was, is and will be such a pleasure to enjoy all of these.
Without you my life had been much less interesting and varied and far more heartless and dumb.
I'm very sad you're no longer with us, but I'm also entirely glad that at least the past 20 years of your life have been alright for you.
- splintered thing
- Utterly Bastard Groovy Amphetamine Filth
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I have no words, he did that for us.
RIP David
RIP David
as the day is long,
rain from heaven
rain from heaven
- markfiend
- goriller of form 3b
- Posts: 21181
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- Contact:
I'm sorry but this sort of cr@p pseudo-medicine is more of a hindrance than a help. Cancer is not a fungus.ageofmaya wrote: http://www.curenaturalicancro.com/en/
An Italian oncologist who says cancer is actually a fungus. He cures it by spraying it with a 100% clean baking soda (not the one from supermarkets).
His reasoning seems logical to me;
I hope this can maybe help someone...
The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.
—Bertrand Russell
—Bertrand Russell
To quote Tim Minchin.markfiend wrote:I'm sorry but this sort of cr@p pseudo-medicine is more of a hindrance than a help. Cancer is not a fungus.ageofmaya wrote: http://www.curenaturalicancro.com/en/
An Italian oncologist who says cancer is actually a fungus. He cures it by spraying it with a 100% clean baking soda (not the one from supermarkets).
His reasoning seems logical to me;
I hope this can maybe help someone...
"Alternative medicine that works is called medicine"
- markfiend
- goriller of form 3b
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- Joined: 11 Nov 2003, 10:55
- Location: st custards
- Contact:
And Tullio Simoncini, the Italian oncologist concerned, has been convicted of fraud and manslaughter over his quack "cures".Pista wrote:To quote Tim Minchin.markfiend wrote:I'm sorry but this sort of cr@p pseudo-medicine is more of a hindrance than a help. Cancer is not a fungus.ageofmaya wrote: http://www.curenaturalicancro.com/en/
An Italian oncologist who says cancer is actually a fungus. He cures it by spraying it with a 100% clean baking soda (not the one from supermarkets).
His reasoning seems logical to me;
I hope this can maybe help someone...
"Alternative medicine that works is called medicine"
The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.
—Bertrand Russell
—Bertrand Russell
- Squeakymouse
- Road Kill
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- Joined: 12 Apr 2015, 14:57
- Location: The place in the side of our lives where nothing is ever put straight
- Contact:
F*ck cancer indeed. I won't claim to have been a huge Bowie fan throughout his career but Jean Genie was the first record I ever bought, I was about 6 or 7 years old and saved up my pocket money for several weeks. This started a lifelong interest in music that pushed the boundaries and made you think. Rest in peace and thank you for the music.
Some days I amaze myself. Other days I put the laundry in the oven.
- sultan2075
- Overbomber
- Posts: 2379
- Joined: 04 Mar 2005, 19:17
- Location: Washington, D. C.
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I'm just going to leave this here. Authenticity unknown (because I thought the interview never saw the light of day, but found this via the ol' Google, posted to a Bowie mailing list). I guess it's from an issue of UTR.
---------------
The Lad’s Insane
Tempted by another cheap holiday in nearby Las Vegas, Andrew Eldritch
recently accepted a commission to interview David Bowie for Rolling
Stone. The following article appears in the German edition of that
magazine, where it was badly translated and treacherously re-written by
the usual bastard suspects. In a UTR exclusive, we bring you Mr
Eldritch’s original version....
Everybody has an agenda here; it's so tiring." Except that Mr Bowie
looks as fresh as ever. He's one of those people who remind you of the
story of Dorian Gray: somewhere there must be a painting of him looking
f**king terrible. If the painting still has David Bowie's original
teeth, then I probably resemble the painting more than he does. But his
record company won't let us be photographed together, so there is only
way to prove the distinction: tell him his record's no good.
David Bowie is in Los Angeles to promote the new Bowie/Eno album,
'Outside' An exciting prospect for those of us who are old enough and
smart enough to remember previous Bowie/Eno albums.
As a very backhanded compliment, I suggest that since 'Low' or 'Heroes',
Bowie has been deliberately waiting for the rest of the world to catch
up. Bowie says "I don't know about that", and laughs a little
uncomfortably at the idea that it might have something to do with the
burden of responsibility.
"At one time I was floating alongside of myself. There was a period in
the eighties that I felt so redundant. Brian Eno and I went through
incredibly similar things. We both came to loggerheads with music. We
both felt that we were out of sync with the eighties, that we were doing
our worst work, and we both opted out to some degree. Between '86 and
'88 I virtually did nothing of any consequence at all in the studio. I
was painting more than ever, and sculpting. Brian went off to Malaysia
for a long time, to work out what he really wanted to do in life, and he
didn't do very much music. Then towards the end of the eighties he
buddied up with U2 and I met Reeves Gabrels. Both of us found that we
were suddenly excited about music again. It was almost like treading
water through the eighties. For both of us it seemed so inconsequential.
I've got a theory about this, from looking at my son and his friends and
what I know of youth generally. It seemed to me that the numbness which
was the face of youth in the eighties, that kind of opting-out which is
between indifference and lethargy, was in fact a generation learning to
adapt to a new way of life, a new kind of society, coming to terms with
chaos really being the structure of reality. It was almost like a
nurturing period for youth, and I think that it was very necessary. If
you'd asked somebody in the eighties if there was any decent music being
produced, that would be around in ten years time, I think they'd have
said, "You've got to be kidding" It was just disposable, it was Paula
Abdul." David Bowie had hits, along with Paula Abdul.
"Don't remind me. But I think in the nineties, there's a list of albums,
musicians and bands that people consider would be around in ten years'
time. Everything from Nirvana to Pearl Jam."
I'm reminded of the waitress who likes country AND western, but I decide
not to mention it.
"Kids don't see those things as disappearing. They see those things as
real milestones in their lives. They're actually getting involved in the
depth of music again."
Or are they just buying some ersatz hippy s**t? No, explains Mr
Bowie patiently, Woodstock 2 was very important to the people who
attended. He then attributes Nine Inch Nails' deep success to the fact
that they were suitably muddy. I point out that some people would say
they looked like an ephemeral eighties band of the most despicable kind.
"Those people would be wrong," he laughs. "I think it was the emergent
voice of a new direction."
Now, I hold myself personally responsible for Nine Inch Nails (among
others), but not for the fact that they look like Alien Sex Fiend. This
makes Mr Bowie laugh some more. "I liked Alien Sex Fiend. It's a f**king
great t-shirt."
So he likes the clothes, basically?
"No, it was the attitude and the tight trousers."
For whatever reason, Bowie has decided that Nine Inch Nails are a
nineties icon, and is about to collaborate with them. In a similar vein,
he is keen to stress his connection with Damien Hirst. This is much more
to the point, since the story behind 'Outside' is set in a world of art-
terrorism, where there is no longer a dividing line between shock-art,
mutilation and crime. The sleevenotes are brilliant. Unfortunately, I
can't see any of it reflected in the actual record. And because I don't
think the concept is conveyed at all without the accompanying background
material, I had to ask whether 'Outside' was really an album, or just an
unfinished CD Rom. Turns out it's an album.
"I don't think it will be a CD Rom, because Brian and I have got very
different ideas about what should be done with CD Roms." Bowie does
likes Myst, though. Did he ever play the old text-adventure computer
games, which are like Myst except that you have to imagine your own
pictures?
"No. Brian used to." We agree that providing the listener with pictures
is a problem. 'That's precisely the area that Brian and I have been
working on." He doesn't say what they've decided to do about it. For the
time being, we will have the sleevenotes instead. "I'm including the
sleevenotes because it's an identity thing. I'm treating the narrative
and its characters as the subject-matter, but not the content. The
content is the texture, the subtext and the atmosphere of this
particular year, 1995. We're trying to accomplish a series of albums
that would record musically what the last five years of the millenium
feels like. The characters are a device to lead you through it all."
I tell him that he might have made the album's background concept
clearer if the characters appeared in the music, and although he "would
have been quite keen to hybridise character and real life", Bowie
insists that "we were trying to leave as much space as possible for a
multiplicity of interpretation". Given his respect for the shamanistic,
doesn't he know that his audience misses the kind of impact which he
could make if he incorporated one or more of the characters, as he used
to do in the old days?
"I'm not sure it's an impact that I want to have."
Doesn't it bother him that certain other people have usurped his
role(s), some of them using almost exactly the same characters which he
used to incorporate?
"I think for my own sanity and my own artistic life I have to be almost
indifferent to those kinds of situations. I decided emphatically to
remain a pluralistic creature and that all interpretation lies with the
audience and culture, not with me. I'm merely the author. I'm quite
content with that situation, playing author."
Yeah?
"Yeah."
Like many right-thinking people, I was blown away by seeing "Starman" on
English TV. If I was David Bowie, I would be even more annoyed to see
Suede repeating the character.
"It can't be the same character."
It is.
"No it's not. Once you play something in another context it cannot be
the same creature, by virtue of the fact that it's being
recontextualised."
Even to people who are seeing it for the first time?
"No, because they bring different luggage to it. Their interpretation is
incredibly different to the way that the parallel generation were
interpreting it in 1973, because they are not informed by the same sets
of circumstances. They're informed by an entirely different world, where
contradictions - the idea of putting contradictions together - is
virtually the network that we exist in. There are so many contradictions
now, that contradiction almost simply ceases to exist anymore."
Seems to me that contradiction is alive and well, and easy enough to
spot when somebody is trying on a little situationism where it's
convenient. Bowie continues.
"In 1973 we still had an idea of absolutes, that there were real rules
through everything: through every science, through every religion,
politics, art. Picasso was the god of the twentieth century. Everything
was a known quantity. All Starman was in '73 was a shock. Presented now,
it's merely another colour in this incredibly tangled-network of
information that we exist in now. And it's read only at surface value.
It's very rarely read with any depth."
Aren't these the same kids who are "getting involved in the depth of
music again"? Would he like to point out what they're missing?
"No. It's merely my interpretation, which is really invalid in the long
term. It comes from an archaic stance. It's not applicable to them."
Assuming that Bowie aspires to depth (and hopefully more of it than
Nirvana and Pearl Jam), then he's got two big problems: album and
audience.
Why did he decide to make this album by putting half a dozen musicians
in a room and then improvising for fifty hours before Brian Eno chose
which sections to work on?
"It's about trust Brian is one of the few people who can tell me what
the f**k it is I'm doing. Often he'll contextualise things for me when I
don't actually see what the framework is. He's an excellent framemaker.
Brian used a wonderful allegory which I keep coming back to. He said "Ad
is one of the few aspects of life where you can take the plane and crash
it and walk away from it. Never be scared of going too far, because it's
a safe zone." On the albums before 'Low', things like 'Diamond Dogs' and
'Station To Station', I would get involved in areas that weren't
coherent, and there was an atmosphere which made up for the lack of
coherence. But I would only go so far."
Doesn't David Bowie feel the urge to sit down and write some David Bowie
songs before going into the studio?
"Brian would never put himself in that situation. He has no time to do
that, he couldn't be bothered. That's why it's so essentially freeing to
work with him."
Is music the right medium to express that kind of incoherence?
Bowie pauses for a long time. "It is our chosen one."
While claiming to be less interested in the end result than in the
process of making the record, he says "We're at our best when we may be
a little bit out of our depth... in an area where you're out of
control."
I tell him that when I think of Reeves Gabrels and improvisation, the
term 'jazz-wank' springs to mind. On this album there are five musicians
out of control. Is that such a good idea?
"It's good when you've got Brian there. He'll just scan it all and say
"That bit is an essentially interesting piece of work. The rest is
superfluous rubbish." He's very good at that."
I remain unconvinced. Besides, will anybody understand the record?
"They'll certainly pick up on the atmosphere of it all, and realise that
what I'm doing is extrapolating the idea of what can become of ritual
art, in a far-out situation which isn't so far-out any more. There won't
be a broad understanding, no. I don't believe it could happen, and I
don't think it's actually very necessary. Art being an event on TV is
precisely my understanding of how culture now works. There is virtually
no difference between OJ's trial and Christo's building. They're both
taken totally at surface value... But any more than that is not required
in this age. You scan through it all and make a new network of
understanding for yourself. There is no time to analyse anything. Events
are tumbling out of our screens and from newspapers, gossip and rumour
at such a vast proliferation that one almost questions the idea of
having a history at all. If history changes so radically and is being
revised so continually, if historians barely have time to revise it (and
are misunderstanding and questioning it anyway), we as laymen certainly
don't have time to plough through their books and get a further
understanding of what history is. We don't therefore have time to
acknowledge history per se. History is fast disappearing, and if that's
true, then so is the future. You cannot have one thing without the
other. We're creating, possibly, this almost synthetic Buddhistic
situation of nowness, we're cramping ourselves into this bottleneck of
now, in which all happens only at the moment, which is quite an
interesting prospect, because it's virtually a parallel to Buddhistic
thought, but we've contrived to create it by all these mutant and
deviant devices of mass-communication. It's our kharma of the tv."
Well put. A good idea for the next album. But surely that means that
this album can't make any impact, because it's never going to come
storming out of the TV screen?
"I had experience of a similar situation, with 'Low'. It influenced
certain people in interesting ways, and so it insidiously worked itself
into the culture. I think that's what one counts on, if you're not going
to make the Michael Jackson kind of explosion. I hate to keep using this
analogy, but it's the one I know best: if you have white paint, you only
need to add a few drops of red to it. If you stir enough, it's going to
give it an irridescent kind of pink quality eventually. You know? And
that's kind of what one presumes will happen with one's work."
I ask if this album going to push the envelope the way 'Low' did. There
is a very long pause. Does Bowie at least hope it would?
"No, I don't think so."
Then why put it out?
"I tell you what, I'm fairly strong in my resolve to enjoy the quality
of my life and therefore the process of what I do. That has really
become a priority in day-to-day life, because of certain personal
aspects of my life, you know? This is a personal agenda, and because of
that I don't have expectations for the album or its impact. I just want
to continually feel that what I'm endeavouring to do is put out the best
possible artistic output that I have available to me. That's really,
really very central to me, as I get older, and I have less and less days
to live, and it becomes increasingly obvious to me that I should not
f**k about and do crappy things."
So why doesn't he do the art-crime instead of making an album about it?
"Well, it had occurred to me to knock off a couple of minotaurs. In fact
Damien and I have this project that we intend doing. I told him the
minotaur myth, and he really loved it. He's got a fan who's left him his
body as long as it's included in an art work, and so I said maybe we
could take his body - when this fella pops off, so to speak - and that
of a bull, and make a minotaur. I could buy a tiny bit of rock in the
Outer Hebrides or somewhere, and we could Christo it: build a small
labyrinth on the island and put the minotaur in the middle. The entire
island would then become the artwork."
According to much of the art philosophy which we've been discussing for
an hour, it's already done, because the idea has now been communicated.
'Virtually, yes. Absolutely right. To be a true conceptualist one would
just have to do the drawings. We should take it to Brian and he could
type it up and articulate it and - "
- and sell it to people in Dusseldorf?
"Absolutely."
========================================================================
The following is a letter (from Clenshaw, the editor of UTR) in the
same issue of Underneath The Rock (issue 14). Included here because
Eldritch speaks further of his interview with Bowie.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear Andrew,
I have received and read your article on David Bowie, which was
marvellous. You are a snide bastard, though.
Ian Clenshaw Reptile HQ
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Er, thank you. Jury's out on the "bastard' charge. Not guilty on the
other count. For the benefit of the public gallery here's my case...
My only aside (about C&W) was flagged as such. What I find snide about
journalists is their tendency to rewrite or even insert questions after
the event, and to unveil an agenda with presumptions and musings which
one couldn't address at the time. All my doubts, questions and
propositions were put to the man himself. They were posed in _exactly_
the same terms as the text. Most of it is verbatim, although i decided
against two sets of inverted commas for the sake of readability.
Likewise my criticisms of his current methodology where I paraphrased
his own characterisation of the recording process. If I wrote 'Jazz-
wank", that's because it's the word I used in the conversation.
I think the album sucks. Mr Bowie wasn't phased to be told that, and
come pretty close to admitting it himself on those occasions when the
situationist defence started to slip. (You should have heard his sorry
verdict on Tin Machine.) In the limited space available I concentrated
on letting him explain why 'Outside' had to be the way it is. There are
two fundamental issues: "What are the means, and can they justify the
end?' (which is a matter of art theory) and "Do the means justify the
end?' (at which point I unfortunately have to ask myself whether I think
the album’s any good). Bowie gets to address the first question, and
uses that answer to dismiss the second question, on the grounds that
it’s superfluous. Fair enough, but we all know that Rolling Stone
expects an answer from both of us. At least I had the decency to explain
my opinion to him be explaining it to the world at large. He chose not
to challenge it in the normal fashion.
I guess from your comment that I didn't sufficiently reflect the playful
nature of the whole exchange. Still, the poor sod actually told me how
nice it was to do an interview which didn't ask after his ex-wife, so I
reckon he's not going to be too unhappy.
I have great sympathy for his immediate concern: it's not so important
that I say the album's wonderful (or even, as it happens, that I refrain
from being a snide bastard). It's important that the discussion take
place on his (or his album's) chosen ground, ie. art philosophy. If not
the theory which he claims is the subject of the album, then at least
the theory behind the construction of the album. I'll bet I did the only
interview which bothered much with either.
Paradoxically, I could have adopted the some theories as Bowie himself,
and written an article which was completely useless to him and to
Rolling Stone, if not to you. Such an article could have resembled this
very letter (without including any of the actual interview). I could
have cobbled together a post-structuralist stream-of-consciousness from
peripheral experiences in Bowie's hotel. In the music press of the
eighties, typically unencumbered by any justifying philosophy other than
a deep unwillingness to report, an inability to investigate anything on
its own terms, and the overweening egotism of those without ct life, I
should have dwelt at length on peripheral experiences in my own hotel In
the even-moreignorant music press of the nineties I should have referred
constantly to Blur's hotel, regardless of which artist I was ostensibly
talking about.. chez Blur/Oasis/Elastica/Suede/etc, depending on whose
fifteen minutes it is. Apart from the shining beacon which is your own
fine publication, I note that journalism is a damn sad profession.
For what it's worth, I told David Bowie that I think he's a genius. I
told him his sleevenotes for "Outside" are as brilliant as the album
itself is disappointing. And I tried hard to tell him why. Hard but
fair.
I see the jury’s just absolved me of the "bastard' charge. You can
release their children now.
Andrew Eldritch
PS I received and read your article on Andrew Eldritch (UTR13), which
was marvellous. You are a mischievous bastard, though.
I jumped the first time because I was holding hands with people I
trusted. I soon learned that their ropes were considerably shorter than
mine. I've since spent a great deal of my life at the end of that
metaphorical bungee: I’d like to draw your attention (as if you didn't
know) to the steel plate on my forehead and the serious headache behind
it.
I never wished myself onto the platform. I found myself there by
accident, without any of the usual training on the air guitar This is as
it should be. At the moment I am merely trying to get some of the ever-
sharper spikes removed from Ground Zero. This is also as it should be.
---------------
The Lad’s Insane
Tempted by another cheap holiday in nearby Las Vegas, Andrew Eldritch
recently accepted a commission to interview David Bowie for Rolling
Stone. The following article appears in the German edition of that
magazine, where it was badly translated and treacherously re-written by
the usual bastard suspects. In a UTR exclusive, we bring you Mr
Eldritch’s original version....
Everybody has an agenda here; it's so tiring." Except that Mr Bowie
looks as fresh as ever. He's one of those people who remind you of the
story of Dorian Gray: somewhere there must be a painting of him looking
f**king terrible. If the painting still has David Bowie's original
teeth, then I probably resemble the painting more than he does. But his
record company won't let us be photographed together, so there is only
way to prove the distinction: tell him his record's no good.
David Bowie is in Los Angeles to promote the new Bowie/Eno album,
'Outside' An exciting prospect for those of us who are old enough and
smart enough to remember previous Bowie/Eno albums.
As a very backhanded compliment, I suggest that since 'Low' or 'Heroes',
Bowie has been deliberately waiting for the rest of the world to catch
up. Bowie says "I don't know about that", and laughs a little
uncomfortably at the idea that it might have something to do with the
burden of responsibility.
"At one time I was floating alongside of myself. There was a period in
the eighties that I felt so redundant. Brian Eno and I went through
incredibly similar things. We both came to loggerheads with music. We
both felt that we were out of sync with the eighties, that we were doing
our worst work, and we both opted out to some degree. Between '86 and
'88 I virtually did nothing of any consequence at all in the studio. I
was painting more than ever, and sculpting. Brian went off to Malaysia
for a long time, to work out what he really wanted to do in life, and he
didn't do very much music. Then towards the end of the eighties he
buddied up with U2 and I met Reeves Gabrels. Both of us found that we
were suddenly excited about music again. It was almost like treading
water through the eighties. For both of us it seemed so inconsequential.
I've got a theory about this, from looking at my son and his friends and
what I know of youth generally. It seemed to me that the numbness which
was the face of youth in the eighties, that kind of opting-out which is
between indifference and lethargy, was in fact a generation learning to
adapt to a new way of life, a new kind of society, coming to terms with
chaos really being the structure of reality. It was almost like a
nurturing period for youth, and I think that it was very necessary. If
you'd asked somebody in the eighties if there was any decent music being
produced, that would be around in ten years time, I think they'd have
said, "You've got to be kidding" It was just disposable, it was Paula
Abdul." David Bowie had hits, along with Paula Abdul.
"Don't remind me. But I think in the nineties, there's a list of albums,
musicians and bands that people consider would be around in ten years'
time. Everything from Nirvana to Pearl Jam."
I'm reminded of the waitress who likes country AND western, but I decide
not to mention it.
"Kids don't see those things as disappearing. They see those things as
real milestones in their lives. They're actually getting involved in the
depth of music again."
Or are they just buying some ersatz hippy s**t? No, explains Mr
Bowie patiently, Woodstock 2 was very important to the people who
attended. He then attributes Nine Inch Nails' deep success to the fact
that they were suitably muddy. I point out that some people would say
they looked like an ephemeral eighties band of the most despicable kind.
"Those people would be wrong," he laughs. "I think it was the emergent
voice of a new direction."
Now, I hold myself personally responsible for Nine Inch Nails (among
others), but not for the fact that they look like Alien Sex Fiend. This
makes Mr Bowie laugh some more. "I liked Alien Sex Fiend. It's a f**king
great t-shirt."
So he likes the clothes, basically?
"No, it was the attitude and the tight trousers."
For whatever reason, Bowie has decided that Nine Inch Nails are a
nineties icon, and is about to collaborate with them. In a similar vein,
he is keen to stress his connection with Damien Hirst. This is much more
to the point, since the story behind 'Outside' is set in a world of art-
terrorism, where there is no longer a dividing line between shock-art,
mutilation and crime. The sleevenotes are brilliant. Unfortunately, I
can't see any of it reflected in the actual record. And because I don't
think the concept is conveyed at all without the accompanying background
material, I had to ask whether 'Outside' was really an album, or just an
unfinished CD Rom. Turns out it's an album.
"I don't think it will be a CD Rom, because Brian and I have got very
different ideas about what should be done with CD Roms." Bowie does
likes Myst, though. Did he ever play the old text-adventure computer
games, which are like Myst except that you have to imagine your own
pictures?
"No. Brian used to." We agree that providing the listener with pictures
is a problem. 'That's precisely the area that Brian and I have been
working on." He doesn't say what they've decided to do about it. For the
time being, we will have the sleevenotes instead. "I'm including the
sleevenotes because it's an identity thing. I'm treating the narrative
and its characters as the subject-matter, but not the content. The
content is the texture, the subtext and the atmosphere of this
particular year, 1995. We're trying to accomplish a series of albums
that would record musically what the last five years of the millenium
feels like. The characters are a device to lead you through it all."
I tell him that he might have made the album's background concept
clearer if the characters appeared in the music, and although he "would
have been quite keen to hybridise character and real life", Bowie
insists that "we were trying to leave as much space as possible for a
multiplicity of interpretation". Given his respect for the shamanistic,
doesn't he know that his audience misses the kind of impact which he
could make if he incorporated one or more of the characters, as he used
to do in the old days?
"I'm not sure it's an impact that I want to have."
Doesn't it bother him that certain other people have usurped his
role(s), some of them using almost exactly the same characters which he
used to incorporate?
"I think for my own sanity and my own artistic life I have to be almost
indifferent to those kinds of situations. I decided emphatically to
remain a pluralistic creature and that all interpretation lies with the
audience and culture, not with me. I'm merely the author. I'm quite
content with that situation, playing author."
Yeah?
"Yeah."
Like many right-thinking people, I was blown away by seeing "Starman" on
English TV. If I was David Bowie, I would be even more annoyed to see
Suede repeating the character.
"It can't be the same character."
It is.
"No it's not. Once you play something in another context it cannot be
the same creature, by virtue of the fact that it's being
recontextualised."
Even to people who are seeing it for the first time?
"No, because they bring different luggage to it. Their interpretation is
incredibly different to the way that the parallel generation were
interpreting it in 1973, because they are not informed by the same sets
of circumstances. They're informed by an entirely different world, where
contradictions - the idea of putting contradictions together - is
virtually the network that we exist in. There are so many contradictions
now, that contradiction almost simply ceases to exist anymore."
Seems to me that contradiction is alive and well, and easy enough to
spot when somebody is trying on a little situationism where it's
convenient. Bowie continues.
"In 1973 we still had an idea of absolutes, that there were real rules
through everything: through every science, through every religion,
politics, art. Picasso was the god of the twentieth century. Everything
was a known quantity. All Starman was in '73 was a shock. Presented now,
it's merely another colour in this incredibly tangled-network of
information that we exist in now. And it's read only at surface value.
It's very rarely read with any depth."
Aren't these the same kids who are "getting involved in the depth of
music again"? Would he like to point out what they're missing?
"No. It's merely my interpretation, which is really invalid in the long
term. It comes from an archaic stance. It's not applicable to them."
Assuming that Bowie aspires to depth (and hopefully more of it than
Nirvana and Pearl Jam), then he's got two big problems: album and
audience.
Why did he decide to make this album by putting half a dozen musicians
in a room and then improvising for fifty hours before Brian Eno chose
which sections to work on?
"It's about trust Brian is one of the few people who can tell me what
the f**k it is I'm doing. Often he'll contextualise things for me when I
don't actually see what the framework is. He's an excellent framemaker.
Brian used a wonderful allegory which I keep coming back to. He said "Ad
is one of the few aspects of life where you can take the plane and crash
it and walk away from it. Never be scared of going too far, because it's
a safe zone." On the albums before 'Low', things like 'Diamond Dogs' and
'Station To Station', I would get involved in areas that weren't
coherent, and there was an atmosphere which made up for the lack of
coherence. But I would only go so far."
Doesn't David Bowie feel the urge to sit down and write some David Bowie
songs before going into the studio?
"Brian would never put himself in that situation. He has no time to do
that, he couldn't be bothered. That's why it's so essentially freeing to
work with him."
Is music the right medium to express that kind of incoherence?
Bowie pauses for a long time. "It is our chosen one."
While claiming to be less interested in the end result than in the
process of making the record, he says "We're at our best when we may be
a little bit out of our depth... in an area where you're out of
control."
I tell him that when I think of Reeves Gabrels and improvisation, the
term 'jazz-wank' springs to mind. On this album there are five musicians
out of control. Is that such a good idea?
"It's good when you've got Brian there. He'll just scan it all and say
"That bit is an essentially interesting piece of work. The rest is
superfluous rubbish." He's very good at that."
I remain unconvinced. Besides, will anybody understand the record?
"They'll certainly pick up on the atmosphere of it all, and realise that
what I'm doing is extrapolating the idea of what can become of ritual
art, in a far-out situation which isn't so far-out any more. There won't
be a broad understanding, no. I don't believe it could happen, and I
don't think it's actually very necessary. Art being an event on TV is
precisely my understanding of how culture now works. There is virtually
no difference between OJ's trial and Christo's building. They're both
taken totally at surface value... But any more than that is not required
in this age. You scan through it all and make a new network of
understanding for yourself. There is no time to analyse anything. Events
are tumbling out of our screens and from newspapers, gossip and rumour
at such a vast proliferation that one almost questions the idea of
having a history at all. If history changes so radically and is being
revised so continually, if historians barely have time to revise it (and
are misunderstanding and questioning it anyway), we as laymen certainly
don't have time to plough through their books and get a further
understanding of what history is. We don't therefore have time to
acknowledge history per se. History is fast disappearing, and if that's
true, then so is the future. You cannot have one thing without the
other. We're creating, possibly, this almost synthetic Buddhistic
situation of nowness, we're cramping ourselves into this bottleneck of
now, in which all happens only at the moment, which is quite an
interesting prospect, because it's virtually a parallel to Buddhistic
thought, but we've contrived to create it by all these mutant and
deviant devices of mass-communication. It's our kharma of the tv."
Well put. A good idea for the next album. But surely that means that
this album can't make any impact, because it's never going to come
storming out of the TV screen?
"I had experience of a similar situation, with 'Low'. It influenced
certain people in interesting ways, and so it insidiously worked itself
into the culture. I think that's what one counts on, if you're not going
to make the Michael Jackson kind of explosion. I hate to keep using this
analogy, but it's the one I know best: if you have white paint, you only
need to add a few drops of red to it. If you stir enough, it's going to
give it an irridescent kind of pink quality eventually. You know? And
that's kind of what one presumes will happen with one's work."
I ask if this album going to push the envelope the way 'Low' did. There
is a very long pause. Does Bowie at least hope it would?
"No, I don't think so."
Then why put it out?
"I tell you what, I'm fairly strong in my resolve to enjoy the quality
of my life and therefore the process of what I do. That has really
become a priority in day-to-day life, because of certain personal
aspects of my life, you know? This is a personal agenda, and because of
that I don't have expectations for the album or its impact. I just want
to continually feel that what I'm endeavouring to do is put out the best
possible artistic output that I have available to me. That's really,
really very central to me, as I get older, and I have less and less days
to live, and it becomes increasingly obvious to me that I should not
f**k about and do crappy things."
So why doesn't he do the art-crime instead of making an album about it?
"Well, it had occurred to me to knock off a couple of minotaurs. In fact
Damien and I have this project that we intend doing. I told him the
minotaur myth, and he really loved it. He's got a fan who's left him his
body as long as it's included in an art work, and so I said maybe we
could take his body - when this fella pops off, so to speak - and that
of a bull, and make a minotaur. I could buy a tiny bit of rock in the
Outer Hebrides or somewhere, and we could Christo it: build a small
labyrinth on the island and put the minotaur in the middle. The entire
island would then become the artwork."
According to much of the art philosophy which we've been discussing for
an hour, it's already done, because the idea has now been communicated.
'Virtually, yes. Absolutely right. To be a true conceptualist one would
just have to do the drawings. We should take it to Brian and he could
type it up and articulate it and - "
- and sell it to people in Dusseldorf?
"Absolutely."
========================================================================
The following is a letter (from Clenshaw, the editor of UTR) in the
same issue of Underneath The Rock (issue 14). Included here because
Eldritch speaks further of his interview with Bowie.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear Andrew,
I have received and read your article on David Bowie, which was
marvellous. You are a snide bastard, though.
Ian Clenshaw Reptile HQ
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Er, thank you. Jury's out on the "bastard' charge. Not guilty on the
other count. For the benefit of the public gallery here's my case...
My only aside (about C&W) was flagged as such. What I find snide about
journalists is their tendency to rewrite or even insert questions after
the event, and to unveil an agenda with presumptions and musings which
one couldn't address at the time. All my doubts, questions and
propositions were put to the man himself. They were posed in _exactly_
the same terms as the text. Most of it is verbatim, although i decided
against two sets of inverted commas for the sake of readability.
Likewise my criticisms of his current methodology where I paraphrased
his own characterisation of the recording process. If I wrote 'Jazz-
wank", that's because it's the word I used in the conversation.
I think the album sucks. Mr Bowie wasn't phased to be told that, and
come pretty close to admitting it himself on those occasions when the
situationist defence started to slip. (You should have heard his sorry
verdict on Tin Machine.) In the limited space available I concentrated
on letting him explain why 'Outside' had to be the way it is. There are
two fundamental issues: "What are the means, and can they justify the
end?' (which is a matter of art theory) and "Do the means justify the
end?' (at which point I unfortunately have to ask myself whether I think
the album’s any good). Bowie gets to address the first question, and
uses that answer to dismiss the second question, on the grounds that
it’s superfluous. Fair enough, but we all know that Rolling Stone
expects an answer from both of us. At least I had the decency to explain
my opinion to him be explaining it to the world at large. He chose not
to challenge it in the normal fashion.
I guess from your comment that I didn't sufficiently reflect the playful
nature of the whole exchange. Still, the poor sod actually told me how
nice it was to do an interview which didn't ask after his ex-wife, so I
reckon he's not going to be too unhappy.
I have great sympathy for his immediate concern: it's not so important
that I say the album's wonderful (or even, as it happens, that I refrain
from being a snide bastard). It's important that the discussion take
place on his (or his album's) chosen ground, ie. art philosophy. If not
the theory which he claims is the subject of the album, then at least
the theory behind the construction of the album. I'll bet I did the only
interview which bothered much with either.
Paradoxically, I could have adopted the some theories as Bowie himself,
and written an article which was completely useless to him and to
Rolling Stone, if not to you. Such an article could have resembled this
very letter (without including any of the actual interview). I could
have cobbled together a post-structuralist stream-of-consciousness from
peripheral experiences in Bowie's hotel. In the music press of the
eighties, typically unencumbered by any justifying philosophy other than
a deep unwillingness to report, an inability to investigate anything on
its own terms, and the overweening egotism of those without ct life, I
should have dwelt at length on peripheral experiences in my own hotel In
the even-moreignorant music press of the nineties I should have referred
constantly to Blur's hotel, regardless of which artist I was ostensibly
talking about.. chez Blur/Oasis/Elastica/Suede/etc, depending on whose
fifteen minutes it is. Apart from the shining beacon which is your own
fine publication, I note that journalism is a damn sad profession.
For what it's worth, I told David Bowie that I think he's a genius. I
told him his sleevenotes for "Outside" are as brilliant as the album
itself is disappointing. And I tried hard to tell him why. Hard but
fair.
I see the jury’s just absolved me of the "bastard' charge. You can
release their children now.
Andrew Eldritch
PS I received and read your article on Andrew Eldritch (UTR13), which
was marvellous. You are a mischievous bastard, though.
I jumped the first time because I was holding hands with people I
trusted. I soon learned that their ropes were considerably shorter than
mine. I've since spent a great deal of my life at the end of that
metaphorical bungee: I’d like to draw your attention (as if you didn't
know) to the steel plate on my forehead and the serious headache behind
it.
I never wished myself onto the platform. I found myself there by
accident, without any of the usual training on the air guitar This is as
it should be. At the moment I am merely trying to get some of the ever-
sharper spikes removed from Ground Zero. This is also as it should be.
--
The most successful tyranny is not the one that uses force to assure uniformity but the one that removes the awareness of other possibilities, that makes it seem inconceivable that other ways are viable, that removes the sense that there is an outside.
The most successful tyranny is not the one that uses force to assure uniformity but the one that removes the awareness of other possibilities, that makes it seem inconceivable that other ways are viable, that removes the sense that there is an outside.
- million voices
- Slight Overbomber
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Fascinating interview
I love the way Bowie dismisses all 80s music and therefore Eldo's creative output as crap - he probably had no idea who Eldo was
The bit where he is wittering about whether it is going to be better than "Low" and if not why bother probably says far more about Eldo than Bowie
Personal opinion is "Outside" is one of Bowie's best and it's a great pity he didn't do "Contamination" and "Afrikaans"
I love the way Bowie dismisses all 80s music and therefore Eldo's creative output as crap - he probably had no idea who Eldo was
The bit where he is wittering about whether it is going to be better than "Low" and if not why bother probably says far more about Eldo than Bowie
Personal opinion is "Outside" is one of Bowie's best and it's a great pity he didn't do "Contamination" and "Afrikaans"
Well you must know something
'Cos we're dying of admiration here
Mastering obscure alternatives
'Cos we're dying of admiration here
Mastering obscure alternatives
- headcleaner2k
- Road Kill
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- Location: Canada
I have a scan of the original article from Under the Rock - where can I post it?
- EvilBastard
- Overbomber
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This interview rings some bells - wasn't there an allusion to it somewhere, referring to the fact that Damien Hirst wasn't familiar with the minotaur myth before Bowie mentioned it to him, suggesting that an artist of Hirst's apparent stature that hadn't heard of it was a bit intellectually moribund?
"I won't go down in history, but I probably will go down on your sister."
Hank Moody
Hank Moody
- Being645
- Wiki Wizard
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Yes, it's been in UTR #14, pages 5 - 7 ... you find it in the Photo Gallery ...headcleaner2k wrote:I have a scan of the original article from Under the Rock - where can I post it?
http://www.myheartland.co.uk/gallery/de ... ge_id=1369
http://www.myheartland.co.uk/gallery/de ... ge_id=1370
http://www.myheartland.co.uk/gallery/de ... ge_id=1371
There's also another old topic on it here:
https://www.myheartland.co.uk/viewtopic ... 42&start=0
- Guedzilla
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- Contact:
EvilBastard wrote:This interview rings some bells - wasn't there an allusion to it somewhere, referring to the fact that Damien Hirst wasn't familiar with the minotaur myth before Bowie mentioned it to him, suggesting that an artist of Hirst's apparent stature that hadn't heard of it was a bit intellectually moribund?
I remember this as well...
Introducing....Gothzilla?!?
I'd say there's some giving and taking going on.czuczu wrote:He is pretty snide in that interview - there's an unnecessary amount of Partridge "Needless to say, I had the last laugh" going on.
It's not a display of great respect to tell a musician, who published 99% of his work during the eighties, that all music published in the eighties was crap.
It's an "Engarde!" a dedicated fencer won't ignore.
I get the impression that both had their fun in that hassle. As Andrew said, it was something else than having to tell a journalist what the wife was doing. A bit more of a challenge, less of boredom. I'm sure this was more up Bowie's street than small talk.
"These are my principles! And if you don't like the just says so, I have others, too!"
~Rufus T. Firefly
~Rufus T. Firefly
I wonder if at any point Andrew reflected on the likelihood that No Bowie = No Eldritch. I should imagine it coloured every word in the piece, as a reaction or an anti-reaction. Bowie was always good at knowing who was doing good work... at the very least I would have thought someone would have steered him towards 'Temple' at some point.
- markfiend
- goriller of form 3b
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It's it here: www.the-sisters-of-mercy.com/gen/vnettext/vnettext.htmEvilBastard wrote: referring to the fact that Damien Hirst wasn't familiar with the minotaur myth before Bowie mentioned it to him
David Bowie was telling me recently how great Damien Hirst is, and how Damien was very excited when told about the minotaur myth. I was shocked that Damien didn't already know it. Sorry David, but how can Hirst be such a great artist if he lacks a basic knowledge of history/myth/symbolism, if he lacks the vocabulary, the ability to insert visual shorthand like a hypertext link? And how much less rich an experience is it for the viewer who lacks the ability to recognise and follow such links?
The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.
—Bertrand Russell
—Bertrand Russell
- sultan2075
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Those were the days - when the band looked like it was going to DO something (like release some singles, a record, and complete a website). Sunny, optimistic days.
--
The most successful tyranny is not the one that uses force to assure uniformity but the one that removes the awareness of other possibilities, that makes it seem inconceivable that other ways are viable, that removes the sense that there is an outside.
The most successful tyranny is not the one that uses force to assure uniformity but the one that removes the awareness of other possibilities, that makes it seem inconceivable that other ways are viable, that removes the sense that there is an outside.