I too have been surprised by the coverage.
I remember being fascinated hearing Bowie's music, new to me, in a restaurant in the King's Road (West London) circa 1971. I immediately bought the LP and played it a lot for a while, at a time when my classical LPs outnumbered Pop and Rock. Bowie is two years my junior. Four years later, family life began, with long days and a long commute. For a couple of decades I lost touch with Pop and Rock, and probably haven't played my Ziggy LP for 25 years.
But Bowie was larger than 'Pop and Rock'. Calling him a Pop Star is like saying Mozart was an Austrian composer. Bowie was a formative influence, and integral to, a society that was changing rapidly, and with increasing acceleration, between the mid sixties and now. I'm not qualified to comment on the musical trends (e.g.'Glam Rock'), save to note that the diversification in itself was new.
Bowie was a pioneer of androgeneity when it was considered dodgy by the mainstream. Now sexual ambivalence is part of the mainstream. He was also a pioneer in the use of sexually ambivalent costume.
It has to be said that he was also a very beautiful man, and I have not noticed this being said on this thread or the tribute thread. Look at the pictures of him as a young man: he is stunning. It's still not widely acceptable for a man (which I am) to say that another man is beautiful, but I do consider that - and am able to write it in a public forum without shame partly because of Bowie's contribution to contemporary culture.
I remember being fascinated hearing Bowie's music, new to me, in a restaurant in the King's Road (West London) circa 1971. I immediately bought the LP and played it a lot for a while, at a time when my classical LPs outnumbered Pop and Rock. Bowie is two years my junior. Four years later, family life began, with long days and a long commute. For a couple of decades I lost touch with Pop and Rock, and probably haven't played my Ziggy LP for 25 years.
But Bowie was larger than 'Pop and Rock'. Calling him a Pop Star is like saying Mozart was an Austrian composer. Bowie was a formative influence, and integral to, a society that was changing rapidly, and with increasing acceleration, between the mid sixties and now. I'm not qualified to comment on the musical trends (e.g.'Glam Rock'), save to note that the diversification in itself was new.
Bowie was a pioneer of androgeneity when it was considered dodgy by the mainstream. Now sexual ambivalence is part of the mainstream. He was also a pioneer in the use of sexually ambivalent costume.
It has to be said that he was also a very beautiful man, and I have not noticed this being said on this thread or the tribute thread. Look at the pictures of him as a young man: he is stunning. It's still not widely acceptable for a man (which I am) to say that another man is beautiful, but I do consider that - and am able to write it in a public forum without shame partly because of Bowie's contribution to contemporary culture.
Comment