Fifty years ago, a spontaneous studio collaboration produced one of the most recognizable rock songs of the 1970s—thanks to a surprising co-writer.
David Bowie collaborator and dear friend Tony Visconti once said, “he loves what he does," then he moves on. After 'Young ...
Fifty years ago, the United States had never seen anything quite like David Bowie. In the early ’70s, the Londoner gained fame in his home country with his flamboyant alter ego Ziggy Stardust, an ...
David Bowie's Always Crashing in the Same Car is inspired by his real-life driving incident involving a drug dealer.
Two of the classic rock icons who defined the 1970s were David Bowie and The Rolling Stones. In some ways, the two couldn’t have been more different, but the “Fame” star once put his own spin on a ...
During his lifetime, David Bowie managed to score Number One hits in two different genres: the sleazy glam of “Fame” reached the top in 1975, followed by the dance-pop of “Let’s Dance” eight years ...
I won’t belabor this point. If David Bowie isn’t the most influential artist in the history of post-war pop music, he is at least on Mount Rushmore, along with Chuck Berry, Elvis, Lennon/McCartney, ...
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