Showing posts with label David Bowie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Bowie. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Solange Knowles, Questlove Among Musicians Celebrating Prince, David Bowie At Yale Conference


David Bowie - No Plan

If you attend only one, free multidisciplinary conference celebrating the legacies of David Bowie and Prince this year, make it this one: "Blackstar Rising & the Purple Reign" at Yale University in New Haven from Jan. 25 to 28.

VIP speakers include musicians Questlove, Solange Knowles, Kimbra, saxophonist Donny McCaslin and percussionist Sheila E.; acclaimed documentary filmmaker D.A. Pennebaker; critics Greil Marcus, Greg Tate, Ann Powers, Alan Light and Michaelangelo Matos; and many other scholars and thinkers.

Rock band TV On The Radio performs on Saturday at 8 p.m. (doors open at 7) at the new Stephen A. Schwarzman Center, 168 Grove St.; check thewebsite for free ticket availability.

Blackstar Rising arrives one year after the passing of Bowie, one of the most versatile and iconic pop stars of the last 50 years. His final album, "Blackstar," was released on Jan. 8, 2016 (his 69th birthday); Bowie died two days later, after an extended, private battle with cancer.

Prince similarly versatile, equally iconic died suddenly on April 21, 2016, at age 57, at his Paisley Park home near Minneapolis, of a reported fentanyl overdose. Unlike Bowie, there was no final musical statement, nothing to comfort fans in the ensuing weeks and months, just a vault of unreleased recordings that will likely trickle out over time.

Soon after Bowie"s death, curator and conference organizer Daphne A. Brooks professor of African American Studies, American Studies, Theater Studies and Women"s Gender and Sexuality Studies at Yale starting planning a tribute conference.

"It"s been a yearlong journey," Brooks says. "Like so many people, I was devastated by Bowie"s passing. ... It threw me for such a loop, not knowing how devastating 2016 was going to be in every way."

Brooks, one of the world"s leading popular music scholars, came to Yale in 2014, after teaching at Princeton University for 13 years. At Princeton, she organized a similar conference for James Brown, featuring appearances by Questlove, Public Enemy"s Chuck D and JB band members Fred Wesley and Pee Wee Ellis, in 2007.

"It was a wonderful, organic event," Brooks says. "I thought, "I"m going to do something like that again, I just don"t know what it"s going to be.""

Following Lady Gaga"s controversial Bowie tribute at the 2016 Grammy Awards, Brooks shared her vision with Susan Cahan, Yale"s dean for the arts, who suggested Brooks use the new Schwarzman Center, which is scheduled for completion by the spring of 2020.

"They were really generous with their funding," Brooks says. "They said, "Think big: You should have a concert." I thought, "This is amazing.""

At that point, Brooks floated an idea: Let"s invite Prince to the conference.

"You know how that ends," Brooks says.

From the end of April (when Prince died) to the beginning of summer, Brooks scrambled to reimagine the event as being for and about both musicians.

"Who are the best thinkers and writers on the past 50 years of popular music working today, people whose voices I love and whose ideas I admire? Let"s bring them together," Brooks says.

When we spoke, Brooks was still scrambling; many of the invited VIPs, including Questlove, Solange, McCaslin, Sheila E., Pennebaker and TV On the Radio, still hadn"t signed contracts.

Questlove and Kimbra are featured guests for the kickoff event on Wednesday night, a "critical deejay" discussion of favorite Prince and Bowie tracks (Schwarzman Center; doors open at 7:45 p.m.). Following a Thursday afternoon screening of his 1973 Bowie concert film "Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars" (Whitney Humanities Center, 4:30 p.m.), Pennebaker participates in Q&A session with Yale professor Charles Musser.

A keynote conversation between Brooks and Solange Knowles, whose 2016 "A Seat at the Table" topped a number of critics" year-end lists of best pop albums, takes place during "Everybody Still Wants To Fly: Activism from Prince to Solange," a Thursday-night round-table discussion (Yale Law School Levinson Auditorium, 9 p.m.), with critic Alan Light, musician Kandia Crazy Horse and artist Sherae Rimpsey.

All-day Friday and Saturday conference sessions start with conversations about the concept of utopia by critic Greil Marcus and black/queer/feminist theorist Kara Keeling, an associate professor of Cinema Arts at USC.

"Greil has been a mentor to me over the years," Brooks says. "We"re weirdly from the same town in California and went to practically all of the same schools, including UC Berkeley. He can talk about anything, really, but some might be surprised to hear him speak about Prince in particular."

Keeling, Brooks adds, "writes about utopia as well, as an academic and activist. I thought, "Wouldn"t it be great to have the both of them in conversation with each other about the different ways utopian possibilities would manifest themselves in these figures?""

Other conference sessions at Yale University Art Gallery, 1111 Chapel St.: spirituality and "(im)mortal imaginaries" (Friday, 10:30 a.m.); traversing cities and borders (Friday, 2:15 p.m.); 1970s funk (Friday, 3:45 p.m.); art and film (Saturday, 9 a.m.); sonic experimentation (Saturday, 10:30 a.m.); theater, performance and spectacle (Saturday, 1:30 p.m.); race, gender and sexuality (Saturday, 3 p.m.); and several other roundtable and "critical karaoke" sessions.

McCaslin, a jazz musician whose terrific band backed Bowie on "Blackstar," and percussionist Sheila E., who worked extensively with Prince throughout the 1980s, engage in a roundtable conversation about artistic collaboration (Friday, 8:30 p.m.) at William L. Harkness Hall, 100 Wall St.

From the beginning, Brooks wanted "Blackstar Rising" to happen as close as possible to the anniversary of bowie"s passing. as it happens, the conference also takes place one week after the inauguration of Donald J. Trump.

"What I"m hearing from so many people is that this is cathartic, this is necessary," Brooks says. "It"s a different way to come together, to think about solidarity and inclusion, to think about what"s possible through the arts.

"If we think about both Bowie and Prince and their evolution, running along the axis of the rise of right-wing movements in this country and globally, to think about how they evolved with their aesthetic practices in context of what was happening, in terms of governmentality, that"s heartening. It"s really amazing to imagine what"s possible through popular music culture in times of trial."

Blackstar Rising & the Purple Reign: Celebrating the Legacies of David Bowie and Prince takes place at Yale University in New Haven on Jan. 25 to 28. All events are free and open to the community. Tickets are not required unless otherwise noted. Visit the conference website for the full schedule of events.

Source: http://www.courant.com/entertainment/music/hc-prince-david-bowie-conference-yale-0119-20170118-story.html

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Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Petition to put David Bowie on new 20 note gains 40000 supporters


David Bowie - Lazarus

A petition calling for music icon David Bowie to be featured on the next 20 banknote has won the support of more than 40,000 people.

Simon Mitchell, who set up the change.org campaign following the singer"s death last month said he believed there was "no better way to honour David Bowie".

As well as adding their signatures Bowie fans have also used the petition to pay tribute to the British star who died aged 69 on January 10, just two days after the release of his final album "Lazarus".

Source: http://www.itv.com/news/2016-02-16/petition-to-have-david-bowie-on-new-20-note-gains-40-000-supporters/

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Monday, January 11, 2016

Farewell Starman: World mourns the loss of David Bowie


LIVE from David Bowie’s Brixton mural as fans pay tribute

Bowie passed away in his home on Sunday after an 18-month battle with cancer, his agent confirmed to CNN.

"David Bowie died peacefully today surrounded by his family after a courageous 18 month battle with cancer. While many of you will share in this loss, we ask that you respect the family"s privacy during their time of grief," said a statement posted on his official social media accounts.

"David Bowie was one of my most important inspirations, so fearless, so creative, he gave us magic for a lifetime," wrote Kanye West on Twitter.

The star will also be remembered fo his contribution to history.

"I wish he could have stayed on earth longer. RIP," wrote author J.K. Rowling.

Comedian Ricky Gervais, fresh from hosting the Golden Globes on Sunday night, said that David Bowie was a "hero" of his.

"My condolences to the family of The Legendary artist David Bowie may he he rest in peace," posted Whoopi Goldberg on Instagram.

Britain"s Prime Minister, David Cameron, said Bowie provided the soundtrack to the lives of his generation.

Rocker Gene Simmons said that Bowie would be "sorely missed."

Actor Will Arnett said that Bowie was "the greatest."

Tim Peake, the first British European Space Agency astronaut to arrive at the International Space Station, said that Bowie"s music "was an inspiration to many." One of the late musician"s most famous songs, "Space Oddity", chronicles the launch of fictional astronaut Major Tom.

Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield is famous for performing Bowie"s "Space Oddity" while floating around the space station. And his tribute was spot on.

The European Space Agency"s Rosetta probe also made it its mission to commemorate the loss.

Even one of the world"s busiest airports expressed their gratitude.

The Ritzy cinema in Brixton in the south of London where Bowie was born felt there was only one announcement worth making, bringing the legend back home.

Source: http://www.cnn.com/2016/01/11/entertainment/david-bowie-dies-celebrity-reax/

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Saturday, January 9, 2016

Happy Birthday, Bowie: Tracing the Icon"s Runway Impact


David Bowie - Heroes

David Bowie is perhaps everything fashion would aspire to be, everything it is at its best: chameleonlike, slipping easily from one singular identity to another at the drop of a hat. So its little wonder that hes been a perennial reference for the industrys biggest names. Consider some of his most ardent fans: Raf Simons, Hedi Slimane, Jean Paul Gaultier, Dries Van Noten . . . this list goes on. Ziggy Stardust is undeniably the icons most famous persona but far from the only to come to life on the catwalks. The Thin White Duke has been evoked by both Van Noten and Alber Elbaz (in the same season, no less), while a dead ringer for the striped Freddie Burretti jacket Bowie can be seen wearing over lunch on a train with Mick Ronson turned up at Givenchy Spring 10. And who could forget, in an ultimate confluence of fashion and the Starman himself, when Kate Moss donned one of his 1972 tour jumpsuits for her turn as a presenter at the Brit Awards?

In honor of the legends 69th birthday (and the debut of his new album, Blackstar), were revisiting 14 of the best runway homages to the man who fell to earth.

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Christophe Decarnin conjures up Bowies Stardust-era Kansai Yamamoto jumpsuits, Fall 2011.

Photo: Monica Feudi / Feudiguaineri.com

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An Aladdin Saneworthy blazer spotted at Walter Van Beirendonck Fall 2013.

Photo: Courtesy of Walter Van Beirendonck

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Photo: Yannis Vlamos / GoRunway.com

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Photo: Yannis Vlamos / InDigitalteam I GoRunway

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Photo: Monica Feudi / Feudiguaineri.com

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See more photos of:No one rocks a wide-brimmed fedora like Bowiethough Lanvins Fall 2011 models come in a close second.

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Photo: Yannis Vlamos / GoRunway.com

See more photos of:While John Galliano didnt name-check Aladdin Sane, the persona was more than palpable in Maison Margielas glam, gender-bending Spring 2016 lineup.

Photo: Kim Weston Arnold / Indigitalimages.com

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Source: http://www.vogue.com/13385366/david-bowie-fashion-influence-runway-birthday/

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David Bowie turns 69: A journey through the iconic singer"s ever changing personas


David Bowie - Girl Loves Me (Audio)

The chameleon of pop has changed his colours immeasurable times. In a perpetual state of reinvention, David Bowie has never failed to keep his fans guessing. So much so that sometimes it can be hard to keep track of whom the real Bowie is.

With Bowie celebrating his 69th Birthday today, we look back at the different personas, which make Bowie the most enigmatic, unpredictable performer of his generation.

The Innocent Days

Born in Brixton in 1947 and bred in the leafy suburbs of Bromley, Bowie was the son of a waitress and a Barnardos charity promoter. A sandy-haired, cherub-cheeked teenager, Bowie considered becoming a monk and spent an entire year studying under a Tibetan lama. Eventually growing bored of Buddhism, Bowie went on to study music and take up jazz on his plastic saxophone. Nevertheless, a series of unsuccessful post-rocknroll bands left the aspiring star a little disheartened.

Ziggy Stardust: A Gay Icon Is Born

After releasing Space Oddity in 1969, Bowie established himself as a solo artist to be reckoned with. Just a few years later, Bowie finally broke through with Ziggy Stardust. His first and arguably greatest alter ego was born. Face daubed with a lightening bolt and mullet hairstyle dyed crimson red, Ziggy Stardust was a bisexual rock star alien who acted as a messenger for extra-terrestrial beings. Dressed in a multi-coloured Lycra jumpsuit, Bowies androgynous, wafer-thin doppelganger came to redefine an entire era of rocknroll. Widely considered one of the greatest albums of all time, it went on to sell an estimated 7.5 million copies worldwide.

Its worth noting that Ziggy Stardusts arrival on the scene coincided with Bowies coming out. In an interview in the 1972 issue of Melody Maker, Bowie declared himself gay. Later, he announced he was bisexual in an interview with Playboy in 1976.

The Conventional Man

By the time it reached the 80s, Bowie had taken something of a U-turn on both his sexual and musical forays. In a 1983 interview with Rolling Stone, Bowie announced that he was always a closet heterosexual and his public declaration of bisexuality was the biggest mistake I ever made. Seeing his sexuality as a by-product of the hedonistic atmosphere of the 70s, he also distanced himself from the alter ego of Ziggy Stardust. In his words, That was just a lie. They gave me that image.

Musically Bowie reached his lowest point in the mid-eighties. The public seemed to lose interest and he found himself performing to what he describes as a Phil Collins kind of audience.

21st Century Bowie

In true Bowie spirit, the superstar has continued to reinvent himself. This can be seen with his latest album Blackstar, which has been released today on his 69th birthday. Distancing itself from the rocknroll most of us associate with Bowie, Blackstar embraces jazzy improvisations and funk fusions. With most tracks between five and ten minutes long, they are nothing like the three-minute pop songs we are used to. Although its been a decade since Bowie performed live and the singer announced that he would never tour again last October, it is clear that he hasnt given up on making music yet.

Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/david-bowie-turns-69-a-journey-through-the-iconic-singers-different-personas-a6802446.html

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