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Screen Rant on MSNHow Let’s Dance Nearly Derailed David Bowie’s Career
David Bowie’s Let’s Dance made him a superstar, but it also sparked a creative slump he wouldn’t overcome until decades later ...
Peter Doggett's "The Man Who Sold the World" is not so much a book as it is a project - meticulously documenting the whole of David Bowie's oeuvre during the 1970s, when his star burned brightest.
In 1973, David Bowie traveled via train through the Soviet Union on the Trans-Siberian Express. A friend, Geoff MacCormack, documented the journey — and it's now on view, for the first time in ...
BBC Radio 6 Music have announced new programmes, with Kate Moss hosting Music Uncovered, David Bowie: Changeling, an ...
David Bowie is famous for being an iconic rock 'n' roll star, but he also had an era where he chose to adopt a very bizarre (and dangerous) diet. Here's why.
David Bowie’s legacy spans two very different shows: the new 1970s music industry drama ‘Vinyl’ and this year’s Grammys.
David Bowie redefined what it meant to be a rockstar, particularly with his 1970 album “ The Man Who Sold the World.” That album’s cover featured Bowie in a floor length dress, long curly hair, and ...
While he rarely wrote tunes for other artists in the 1970s, John Lennon co-wrote David Bowie's "Fame." The tune's other writer said that it was inspired by a doo-wop classic.
David Bowie’s experience with drug use in the 1970s Bowie was a drug user at the time and was addicted to cocaine throughout the late 1970s.
Mick Rock's iconic portraits of rock stars such as David Bowie, Lou Reed and Debbie Harry saw him dubbed 'the man who shot the ’70s.' He was 72.
David Bowie is famous for being an iconic rock 'n' roll star, but he also had an era where he chose to adopt a very bizarre (and dangerous) diet. Here's why.
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