5 Feet of Fury

‘Oh no, don’t say it’s true…’ When we were teenagers, we used to say, ‘When David Bowie dies, won’t that be weird?’

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And it is. I’m not sad; it’s more like the “Awwww!” you make when you’re told you have to get out of the pool and go home. What is saddening is knowing this means people I really do care about will start dying soon, too.

UPDATERick McGinnis has photos he took; writes (Read the whole thing:)

I never thought he would die. It’s a ridiculous thing to say, I know, but as far as I was concerned David Bowie was always there and, based on precedent, always would be.

UPDATE: Via AllDylan.comDavid Bowie, Song by Song; some pretty good writing there.

UPDATE: Rock’s Backpages is lowering the paywall this week for a 1999 career-review audio interview.

“Here’s what David Bowie was doing at your age to make you feel like a failure.”

Bowie-ology 1

He came close to taking his vows as a Buddhist monk, and seriously studied mime, at one point actually opening for rock band Tyrannosaurus Rex in that capacity, with a wordless one-man play about China’s invasion of Tibet. He worked as an advertising illustrator and ran a community arts center; appeared in an ice cream commercial and an independent film; and experimented with both straight and gay lifestyles. He marketed himself as an R&B saxophonist, a mod rocker, and a music-hall-inspired mainstream entertainer, first in a string of undistinguished bands and then as a solo act. He would also incarnate as a hippie folksinger and a principal in a psychedelic performance troupe (Feathers) before emerging as an innovative and controversial mass-media personality, in what must have seemed an overnight ascent to the many who hadn’t been watching closely until then.

“Kevin the Sex Owl”

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