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Reply #180 posted 01/11/16 3:52pm

SeventeenDayze

EroticDreamer said:

Bowie is sold out on Amazon.

He is missed but never forgotten. music

Sold out? Of what? All physical copies of his music?

Trolls be gone!
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Reply #181 posted 01/11/16 3:59pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

EroticDreamer said:

Bowie is sold out on Amazon.

He is missed but never forgotten. music

eek You're right--looks like all of the albums are out of stock. I have 'em all though... Bought a long time ago...

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #182 posted 01/11/16 4:16pm

KCOOLMUZIQ

[Stay on topic, please do not derail thread snip - luv4u]

eye will ALWAYS think of prince like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. eye mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that prince wasn't of this earth, eye would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. prince
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Reply #183 posted 01/11/16 4:20pm

EroticDreamer

SeventeenDayze said:

EroticDreamer said:

Bowie is sold out on Amazon.

He is missed but never forgotten. music

Sold out? Of what? All physical copies of his music?

Yes, everything is gone, sold out.

I already purchased everything long ago and the physical copy of Blackstar will be delivered Wednesday.

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Reply #184 posted 01/11/16 4:21pm

rainbowchild

avatar

NoVideo said:



novabrkr said:


What Bowie song should Prince cover as a tribute?

Quicksand? razz





Prince on the piano doing "Life on Mars?" would be amazing




Prince singing a cover version of "Heroes" would be fantastic! Hope the Grammys do a wonderful tribute of his music.
"Just like the sun, the Rainbow Children rise."



"We had fun, didn't we?"
-Prince (1958-2016) 4ever in my life
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Reply #185 posted 01/11/16 4:37pm

SeventeenDayze

EroticDreamer said:

SeventeenDayze said:

Sold out? Of what? All physical copies of his music?

Yes, everything is gone, sold out.

I already purchased everything long ago and the physical copy of Blackstar will be delivered Wednesday.

That's amazing how when someone this huge passes away people scramble to get CDs and commemorative newspapers to have as keepsakes. I guess everything "digital" only goes so far.

Trolls be gone!
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Reply #186 posted 01/11/16 4:44pm

2020

avatar

WTF! After an 17 hour+ flight to Dubai I step off the plane exhausted and thrilled with Bowies new CD that I listened to on repeat for most of the flight just to have the first thing I see at the airport is a news channel reporting Bowie has passed. WOW! Shocked like so many, didn't even know he was fighting cancer and am in total shock

The music world has lost a legend. RIP DAVID BOWIE

Thanks for giving us one final and amazing piece of art Blackstar. After heavy rotation of the new CD it's now going be very hard to listen to it again fighting back the tears rose rose rose
The greatest live performer of our times was is and always will be Prince.

Remember there is only one destination and that place is U
All of it. Everything. Is U.
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Reply #187 posted 01/11/16 4:45pm

EroticDreamer

SeventeenDayze said:

EroticDreamer said:

Yes, everything is gone, sold out.

I already purchased everything long ago and the physical copy of Blackstar will be delivered Wednesday.

That's amazing how when someone this huge passes away people scramble to get CDs and commemorative newspapers to have as keepsakes. I guess everything "digital" only goes so far.

Indeed and on a related note, one of my brothers called me the day of Michael Jackson's passing telling me he was ordering several copies of each of his albums just so that he could sell them and make money in the future. doh!

That brother was under the influence, methinks.

-

TOPIC- You'll always be my favorite artist, Mr. Bowie. RIP.

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Reply #188 posted 01/11/16 4:47pm

728huey

avatar

I heard the news this morning just a I was heading out the door to go to work, and I didn't have any opportunity to chime in on his passing untill now, but this is a shock to me. omfg cry I wasn't even aware he was that seriously ill, but his "Lazarus" video looks incredibly foreboding in light of this tragic news.

He started out humbly but became Ziggy Stardust, the freaked out, androgynous, almost alien being who brought in the glam rock movement. But he did just about everything, from "Space Oddity," "Rebel Rebel," "Changes," "Young Americans" (which featured a young backup singer named Luther Vandross), "Heroes," "Fame" (considered one of the earliest funk/disco songs), "Fashion," "Ashes To Ashes" (which as the Thin White Duke was his way of putting Ziggy Strardust to rest), "Let's Dance," "China Girl," "Blue Jean," even his low points with Never Let Me Down and the Tin Machine albums, but bouncing back in a critically acclaimed way with "I'm Afraid of Americans." Just as you got used to one persona, he would suddenly change it to something else.

He was legendary in his own right, radically changing the face of pop and rock and roll, but he was literally a major influence in generations of artists, particularly Prince, Madonna, and even Michael Jackson, but his incfluence was found in artists like Iggy Pop and the Stooges, Elton John, new wave bands like Culture Club and Duran Duran, 90's acts like Nirvana and Nine Inch Nails, and even Lady GaGa.









RIP Mr. Bowie. You will be dearly missed, but I'm sure you found Major Tom by now.

cry sad pray rose dove guitar typing

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Reply #189 posted 01/11/16 5:06pm

free2bfreeda

rose

“Transracial is a term that has long since been defined as the adoption of a child that is of a different race than the adoptive parents,” : https://thinkprogress.org...fb6e18544a
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Reply #190 posted 01/11/16 5:27pm

luvsexy4all

this interesting.....very diverse read....

David Bowie's Top 100 Reads:

  1. Interviews With Francis Bacon by David Sylvester
  2. Billy Liar by Keith Waterhouse
  3. Room At The Top by John Braine
  4. On Having No Head by Douglass Harding
  5. Kafka Was The Rage by Anatole Broyard
  6. A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
  7. City Of Night by John Rechy
  8. The Brief Wondrous Life Of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz
  9. Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
  10. Iliad by Homer
  11. As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner
  12. Tadanori Yokoo by Tadanori Yokoo
  13. Berlin Alexanderplatz by Alfred Döblin
  14. Inside The Whale And Other Essays by George Orwell
  15. Mr. Norris Changes Trains by Christopher Isherwood
  16. Halls Dictionary Of Subjects And Symbols In Art by James A. Hall
  17. David Bomberg by Richard Cork
  18. Blast by Wyndham Lewis
  19. Passing by Nella Larson
  20. Beyond The Brillo Box by Arthur C. Danto
  21. The Origin Of Consciousness In The Breakdown Of The Bicameral Mind by Julian Jaynes
  22. In Bluebeard’s Castle by George Steiner
  23. Hawksmoor by Peter Ackroyd
  24. The Divided Self by R. D. Laing
  25. The Stranger by Albert Camus
  26. Infants Of The Spring by Wallace Thurman
  27. The Quest For Christa T by Christa Wolf
  28. The Songlines by Bruce Chatwin
  29. Nights At The Circus by Angela Carter
  30. The Master And Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov
  31. The Prime Of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark
  32. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
  33. Herzog by Saul Bellow
  34. Puckoon by Spike Milligan
  35. Black Boy by Richard Wright
  36. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
  37. The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea by Yukio Mishima
  38. Darkness At Noon by Arthur Koestler
  39. The Waste Land by T.S. Elliot
  40. McTeague by Frank Norris
  41. Money by Martin Amis
  42. The Outsider by Colin Wilson
  43. Strange People by Frank Edwards
  44. English Journey by J.B. Priestley
  45. A Confederacy Of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole
  46. The Day Of The Locust by Nathanael West
  47. 1984 by George Orwell
  48. The Life And Times Of Little Richard by Charles White
  49. Awopbopaloobop Alopbamboom: The Golden Age of Rock by Nik Cohn
  50. Mystery Train by Greil Marcus
  51. Beano (comic, ’50s)
  52. Raw (comic, ’80s)
  53. White Noise by Don DeLillo
  54. Sweet Soul Music: Rhythm And Blues And The Southern Dream Of Freedom by Peter Guralnick
  55. Silence: Lectures And Writing by John Cage
  56. Writers At Work: The Paris Review Interviews edited by Malcolm Cowley
  57. The Sound Of The City: The Rise Of Rock And Roll by Charlie Gillete
  58. Octobriana And The Russian Underground by Peter Sadecky
  59. The Street by Ann Petry
  60. Wonder Boys by Michael Chabon
  61. Last Exit To Brooklyn By Hubert Selby, Jr.
  62. A People’s History Of The United States by Howard Zinn
  63. The Age Of American Unreason by Susan Jacoby
  64. Metropolitan Life by Fran Lebowitz
  65. The Coast Of Utopia by Tom Stoppard
  66. The Bridge by Hart Crane
  67. All The Emperor’s Horses by David Kidd
  68. Fingersmith by Sarah Waters
  69. Earthly Powers by Anthony Burgess
  70. The 42nd Parallel by John Dos Passos
  71. Tales Of Beatnik Glory by Ed Saunders
  72. The Bird Artist by Howard Norman
  73. Nowhere To Run The Story Of Soul Music by Gerri Hirshey
  74. Before The Deluge by Otto Friedrich
  75. Sexual Personae: Art And Decadence From Nefertiti To Emily Dickinson by Camille Paglia
  76. The American Way Of Death by Jessica Mitford
  77. In Cold Blood by Truman Capote
  78. Lady Chatterly’s Lover by D.H. Lawrence
  79. Teenage by Jon Savage
  80. Vile Bodies by Evelyn Waugh
  81. The Hidden Persuaders by Vance Packard
  82. The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin
  83. Viz (comic, early ’80s)
  84. Private Eye (satirical magazine, ’60s – ’80s)
  85. Selected Poems by Frank O’Hara
  86. The Trial Of Henry Kissinger by Christopher Hitchens
  87. Flaubert’s Parrot by Julian Barnes
  88. Maldoror by Comte de Lautréamont
  89. On The Road by Jack Kerouac
  90. Mr. Wilson’s Cabinet of Wonder by Lawrence Weschler
  91. Zanoni by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
  92. Transcendental Magic, Its Doctrine and Ritual by Eliphas Lévi
  93. The Gnostic Gospels by Elaine Pagels
  94. The Leopard by Giusseppe Di Lampedusa

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Reply #191 posted 01/11/16 5:29pm

seanski

avatar

RIP Mr. Bowie pray

And the stars look very different today!!!!!!

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Reply #192 posted 01/11/16 5:42pm

purplepolitici
an

avatar

Am a casual fan n love what i've heard by him n was quite bothered hearing this first thing this morn. I feel for Iman his children n the world. He will be missed rose.
For all time I am with you, you are with me.
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Reply #193 posted 01/11/16 6:18pm

KingSausage

avatar

NoVideo said:



Phishanga said:




NoVideo said:


Incredibly heartbreaking.



Here are a few of my thoughts about the passing of a legend.



There's a Starman Waiting in the Sky


Remembering David Bowie








Beautifully written.





Thank you.




Wait, you wrote that Starman piece in Popmatters? That was amazing.
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
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Reply #194 posted 01/11/16 6:40pm

SPYZFAN1

Didn't want to believe it when I heard it...FUCK!! Truly sad and devastated. Going on a Bowie CD listening binge this weekend. RIP DB. Org'ers...Tell your families and friends you love them..time is short and valuable.

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Reply #195 posted 01/11/16 6:59pm

JoeBala

Lorde
4 hrs ·

When a hero dies, everyone wants a quote. I woke up this morning with a tender head from tears and that big red cup of Japanese whiskey, gulped last night just after the news came. People were already asking me what I thought. It feels kind of garish to talk about oneself at a time like this, when the thing that has happened is so distinctly world-sized. But everything I’ve read or seen since the news has been deeply intrinsic in tone, almost selfish, like therapy. That’s who he was to all of us. He was a piece of bright pleated silk we could stretch out or fold up small inside ourselves when we needed to.
Mr. Bowie, I guess right now we have to hang this thing up for a minute.

The night I met him I played at an expensive Vogue benefit with a lot of fresh flowers, honouring Tilda. I was not quite seventeen, America was very new to me, and I was distinctly uneasy and distrustful toward everything happening in my life that was putting me in these flat-voiced, narrow-eyed, champagneish rooms. I played my three songs, thrashing and twitching in platform boots. Afterward, Anna clasped my hand and said “David wants to meet you,” and led me through people and round tables with candles and glasses and louder and louder talk, and he was there.

I've never met a hero of mine and liked it. It just sucks, the pressure is too huge, you can't enjoy it. David was different. I'll never forget the caressing of our hands as we spoke, or the light in his eyes. That night something changed in me - i felt a calmness grow, a sureness. I think in those brief moments, he heralded me into my next new life, an old rock and roll alien angel in a perfect grey suit. I realized everything I’d ever done, or would do from then on, would be done like maybe he was watching. I realized I was proud of my spiky strangeness because he had been proud of his. And I know I'm never going to stop learning dances, brand new dances.

It's not going to change, how we feel about him. For the rest of our lives, we'll always be crashing in that same car.

Thankyou, David Bowie.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #196 posted 01/11/16 7:01pm

hifidelity67

David Bowie A Reality Tour (2004) with opening

http://www.tudou.com/prog...jLwOROCCM/

[Edited 1/11/16 19:02pm]

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Reply #197 posted 01/11/16 7:06pm

Marrk

avatar


Like a gazillion other people, I feel stunned by the news that David Bowie has departed this earth.
At the loss of someone who has impacted and influenced your life, you can hardly begin to measure the shape of what’s left behind.
Our personal and collective inner landscape has shifted and we’re trying to come to terms with it.
No one exists forever and it seems our elegant gentleman was well aware that his last mortal chapter was about to reach it's conclusion.
"Blackstar" was his parting gift.
Provocative and nightmarishly “otherworldly”… we are jolted towards the twilight realms of epileptic seizures and voodoo scarecrows.
The bejewelled remains of Major Tom lie dormant in a dust coated space suit…
It leaves me breathless.
You must see it to believe it…
He knew…
He could see through it all.
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Reply #198 posted 01/11/16 7:08pm

Identity

[img:$uid]http://i.imgur.com/e3fqFLA.png?2[/img:$uid]


Article

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Reply #199 posted 01/11/16 7:14pm

EroticDreamer

NoVideo said:

Incredibly heartbreaking.

Here are a few of my thoughts about the passing of a legend.

There's a Starman Waiting in the Sky

Remembering David Bowie

In the "Remembering David Bowie piece there's an error:

"Bowie had a heart scare while on tour to support his 2013 album Reality..."

That should be corrected to 2003.


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Reply #200 posted 01/11/16 8:08pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #201 posted 01/11/16 8:13pm

EroticDreamer

The world is missing him and every physical copy of his albums are sold out on Amazon, including the recently released 12 CD box set of his first 5 albums that was going for the low 100's.

I don't believe any artists legacy could be more revered than Mr. Bowie's and here's an example of his character:

https://www.youtube.com/w...ZGiVzIr8Qg

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Reply #202 posted 01/11/16 8:21pm

EddieC

Unlike many of you, I haven't listened to Blackstar yet, even though I have it. I started on Friday night, but then had to stop to take care of some other matters. And I never got back to it this weekend... and now, I kind of dread it. I wish I'd gotten in at least one innocent listen before he died. I did play Changes for some reason Sunday--just an impulse, made my wife and daughter wait till it was done before we left the house. But I didn't have a Bowie weekend. I'd planned to get to the album tonight.

So today, my wife's looking at Facebook and says to me, "Did you hear anything about David Bowie?" I say, "Well, there's the new release" (she doesn't always pay attention when I'm talking about music, so I didn't know if she even knew anything about the album), and I walk over to the computer screen when she doesn't immediately say, "Oh, okay." And I see the beginning of a post her brother-in-law linked to starting out with something along the lines of "David Bowie knew he was dying for 18 months" and there was just this emptiness. It really is difficult to believe.

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Reply #203 posted 01/11/16 8:40pm

SeventeenDayze

I found this on Twitter....it's a website where you can type in your age and see what David Bowie was up to when he was your age:

http://supbowie.com/

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Reply #204 posted 01/11/16 8:52pm

SeventeenDayze

Interesting article here on MTV about Bowie's significant impact on hip-hop (yes, it also mentions Vanilla Ice but there are many others influenced)

http://www.mtv.com/news/2726615/david-bowie-rap-samples/?utm=share_twitter

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Reply #205 posted 01/11/16 9:02pm

free2bfreeda

rose

Washington Post

Streamed live 7 hours ago

A makeshift memorial grows at David Bowie’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

[Edited 1/11/16 21:07pm]

“Transracial is a term that has long since been defined as the adoption of a child that is of a different race than the adoptive parents,” : https://thinkprogress.org...fb6e18544a
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Reply #206 posted 01/11/16 9:12pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

Paul Young, Iggy Pop, Rick James

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #207 posted 01/11/16 9:15pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #208 posted 01/11/16 9:23pm

beatz01

He left like the boss that he was.

R.I.P.

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Reply #209 posted 01/11/16 9:37pm

SeventeenDayze

I saw someone on social media call David Bowie "Sir David Bowie" and that seemed really out of place for some reason. Later, I saw this article here about how Bowie refused being knighted. This guy was really in a league of his own for saying no to the Queen.

http://www.mirror.co.uk/3am/celebrity-news/david-bowie-turned-down-chance-7161447#ICID=sharebar_twitter

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