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15 January 2016

Bowie

David Bowie RIP.

A very specific selection of links this week, as you can see. There's been so much written on and around Bowie in the last few days, I thought it'd be useful to gather all the best bits together.

  1. Cracked Actor – Interview with May Routh, costume designer for The Man Who Fell To Earth. 

  2. Future Legend – David Bowie, internet service provider – interview with Ron Roy, the guy who ran BowieNet ISP. 

  3. Black Out – That time Bowie criticised MTV for not playing music by black artists. Of course, things are more equal now: MTV don't play music by anyone. 

  4. Always Crashing in the Same Car – Bowie in Berlin, purging demons and crashing cars – Rory MacLean remembers the good old days.  

  5. Dancing in the street … without music. 

  6. Hallo Spaceboy – A tribute from Chris Hadfield – the only person to actually perform Bowie's music in space. So far. 

  7. Where are we now? – Playful, profound and pretentious – Bowie answers the Proust Questionnaire for Vanity Fair in 1998. 

  8. Outside – Design Week looks at a life in album covers, highlighting a few mysteries. Credits for several iconic pieces don't seem to exist anywhere – who designed the sleeves for Station to Station, Heroes, Low?

  9. Magic Dance – Rehearsing the Labyrinth ballroom scene (choreographed by Star Trek's Gates McFadden it turns out). Five minutes of heaven. 

  10. Sound and Vision – Long-time Bowie collaborator Jonathan Barnbrook talks to Creative Review about designing the artwork and visual language for The Next Day and Blackstar. 

  11. DJ – In 1979, David Bowie took over BBC Radio One for a 2-hour DJ set. Have a listen.

  12. Fashion – David Bowie vs Alexander McQueen — Dazed and Confused, 1996. 

  13. Kooks – Memories of growing up to Bowie — Ruth and Martin's Album Club. 

  14. Changes – David Bowie Is, published to coincide with the V&A's recent show, is a fantastic collection of essays, costumes and archive material from his entire wonderful career. Well worth clearing a little space on your coffee table for.  

  15. Art Decade – If the Beatles captured a 60s of optimism and love, Bowie was the signature artist of the 70s, distilling paranoia and confusion into pop both euphoric and terrifying — Dorian Lynskey

  16. I Can't Read – David Bowie's 100 favourite books. 

  17. Everyone Says Hi – Eno, Visconti, Pop et al pay tribute.

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