The Man Who Sold the World (31 page)

To Bowie in January 1975, “fame” meant not only his own stardom, and the impending lawsuits sparked by the sudden ending of his relationship with manager Tony Defries; it also meant
Fame
, a painfully expensive musical theatre project masterminded by Defries, using money from MainMan, the company built around Bowie's fame. The show was an examination of another icon, Marilyn Monroe, and it closed after exactly one night on Broadway (having already flopped off-Broadway). For MainMan, this failure was near ruinous; for Bowie's faith in his manager, it was traumatic. Every time in “Fame” that Bowie snapped back with a cynical retort about its pitfalls, he had his manager and his manager's epic folly in mind: “bully for you, chilly for me,” as the most often quoted line had it.

In overall effect, “Fame” resembled Sly Stone's 1970 masterpiece “Thank You Falettinme Be Mice Elf Again,” another combination of danceable funk skeleton and viciously pointed lyrics. Like Sly's Family Stone, Bowie's record employed an array of vocal sounds—all his own, except for the occasional piped voice of Lennon. Most striking of all was the electronically mutated “fame” that ran down three octaves, from Yoko Ono soprano to Johnny Cash basso profundo. Fame, it seemed to suggest, was an all-enveloping, artificial construction, in which it was impossible to locate the authentic human being. Which is why Bowie must have relished the idea of achieving his pinnacle of fame with a record designed to expose the emptiness at its heart. As he said of stardom in a contemporary interview, “There's no gratification in it.”

By the time “Fame” was recorded, Bowie had already broken off relations with Tony Defries. While papers and writs went back and forth, Bowie was hiding out in a cheap apartment in New York, where (according to his girlfriend of the time, Ava Cherry) he claimed that he was being haunted by “psychic vampires.” She, in turn, described him as appearing “very upset and emotional and hysterical.” He automatically soothed himself with work, rekindling his teenage interest in art by painting dozens of canvases and penning three film scripts in less than two months.

It soon became apparent that, regardless of what he believed and how he felt, Bowie was legally signed to MainMan's management, and Defries had kept carefully to the terms of their original agreement. Bowie's only means of escape was to make a settlement, which effectively entailed doing what Defries wanted. Bowie cried when he read the final agreement but signed it anyway. It entitled MainMan to joint ownership with Bowie of all his work to date, allowing either party to exploit them as long as the proceeds were shared. In addition, MainMan would receive 16 percent of Bowie's gross income from records issued and songs written between the signing of the agreement and the end of September 1982, and 5 percent of his receipts from live appearances. The company would be entitled to those percentages in perpetuity, beyond Bowie's death.
*

So Bowie moved ahead without the manager who, he was forced to concede in later years, had contributed enormously to the impact of his work on a public who had shown a strong resistance to his activities (“Space Oddity” excepted) before Defries's reign began. Bowie considered himself scarred by the experience, but free. But every time over the next five years that he wrote a song, or made a record, he knew that one-sixth of what he had created was owned by a man and a company he had grown to despise. It was a dilemma that was bound to spark conflict in his heart: could he still be inspired when he knew that Defries was a beneficiary of his inspiration, or would the knowledge sour every song he composed?

YOUNG AMERICANS
LP

T
he cover of
Young Americans
—an airbrushed studio portrait that belonged in a thirties film annual—was as deceptive about the record's contents as the photograph of Bowie in his man's dress on the sleeve of
The Man Who Sold the World
. No wonder that critics assumed the entire exercise was a pose, an attitude that Bowie appeared to validate when he described the album in 1976 as “the definitive plastic soul record . . . the squashed remains of ethnic music as it survives in the age of Muzak rock, written and sung by a white limey.”

A year earlier, he had been more protective, claiming that
Young Americans
was the first of his records since
Hunky Dory
four years earlier that he actually enjoyed. “Basically, I haven't liked a lot of music I've been doing the past few years,” he said. “I forgot that I'm not a musician, and never have been. I've always wanted to be a film director, so unconsciously the two mediums got amalgamated. I was trying to put cinematic concepts into an audio staging. It doesn't work.”
*
Indeed, he almost callously dismissed the run of albums from
Aladdin Sane
to
David Live
: “It wasn't a matter of liking them, it was, ‘Did they work or not?' Yes, they worked. They kept the trip going. Now, I'm all through with rock'n'roll.”

That might have been more apparent had Bowie elected to release his original track selection for the album, which was then known as
Fascination
. It would have included his disco remake of “John I'm Only Dancing (Again)” [117], alongside two epic soul ballads, “It's Gonna Be Me” [116] and “Who Can I Be Now?” [115]. By removing those songs in favor of his collaborations with John Lennon, Bowie not only gained a valuable publicity angle, but also distanced himself from the emotional extremities of those ballads, emerging with a record in which self-disclosure was masked by the stir caused by his daredevil mutation into a Philadelphia soul man.

SOUND AND VISION #2:
The Man Who Fell to Earth

B
owie's manager between 1970 and 1975, Tony Defries, has commonly been portrayed in a negative light by biographers. Yet he had a keen awareness of his client's potential, and how to exploit it. “I think he's very much a 70s artist,” Defries commented in 1972. “Bowie, to me, is going to be the major artist of the 70s. In 1975, he will be at his peak in music. What he does after that is going to depend on what his talents are in other fields. I want to see him in film.”

Aside from Bowie's endless ideas for movie versions of his albums, the most coherent plan for a film project during the early seventies was an adaptation of Robert Heinlein's science fiction epic
Stranger in a Strange Land
. Bowie would, of course, have played the messianic leading role. When that project foundered (if indeed it was ever more than a Defries negotiating lever), Bowie was open to further suggestions. In 1974, he met film director Nicolas Roeg, creator of three of the most compelling films of recent years:
Performance, Walkabout
, and
Don't Look Now
. He offered Bowie the leading role in a script that had originally been intended for TV, then as a pilot for a TV series, and as a feature film only when Roeg's prestigious services were secured. The screenplay was an adaptation of
The Man Who Fell to Earth
, a 1963 novel
*
by Walter Tevis, which treated a science fiction plot to the conventions and manners of literary fiction. Tevis's alien hero, Thomas Jerome Newton, travels to earth in search of the water that can keep his own planet alive. He is defeated not just by the bureaucracy and suspicion of the earth's people, but by his own Hamlet-like reticence and growing sense of futility. This was sci-fi as existentialism, with a main character who is six feet, six inches tall but otherwise strangely familiar: “His frame was impossibly slight, his features delicate. . . . He weighed very little, about ninety pounds.” Newton cannot comprehend the melodic complexity of classical music but relishes the simpler tonalities of the blues. Near the end of the novel, he records an album (condensed onto a small steel ball, in an eerie precognition of the digital age) called “poems from outer space, by ‘the visitor.' ”
*

Roeg certainly knew what he'd found in Bowie, whom he described as a “very strange and different kind of human being. He's a great charmer, also very cold. What is attractive about him is he has no sentiment at all.” The combination of charm and
froideur
was perfect for the role. “It required non-acting,” Bowie said of the film later, “because the character of Newton that I played is a very cold, unexpressive person.” Bowie and/or Newton exemplified what the radical psychiatrist R. D. Laing described as the “unembodied” self, “always at one remove” from the outside world. That was a stance that Bowie found hard to escape once the filming was completed.

The release of the film was shrouded in corporate intrigue: changes in distribution, enforced cuts, the employment of a psychiatrist by the film company to explain to them exactly what was happening on-screen. Eventually twenty-two minutes were cut from the US print, to remove the most graphic sexual sequences (including a shot of Bowie's penis) and impose an orthodox narrative technique on a film that quite deliberately concentrated on episodes in Newton's earthly progress, rather than a seamless transition of plot in keeping with Hollywood tradition.

Bowie had undertaken the project on the understanding—never solidified in his contract—that he would be providing the soundtrack for the film. There were reports that he would provide a title song, alongside other new compositions, while the film would also include “Space Oddity” and Elton John's “Rocket Man.” In fact, Bowie labored with Paul Buckmaster on a set of mostly instrumental recordings, only one of which [198] was ever released. When he discovered that he was only being asked to submit music for approval, he threw a tantrum and refused. Instead Roeg employed the equally mercurial John Phillips, the drug-obsessed former leader of the Mamas & the Papas. In an oblique pun, the closing credits were accompanied by Artie Shaw's recording of the standard tune “Stardust”: the sole concession in the film to Bowie's “real” identity. Freed from the responsibility for the soundtrack, Bowie could concentrate on his next album, while exploring the furthest limits of his own “unembodied” psyche.

THE UNMAKING OF A STAR #3: Cocaine and the Kabbalah

I JUST WISH DAVE WOULD GET HIMSELF SORTED FUCKING OUT. HE'S TOTALLY CONFUSED, THAT LAD. . . . I JUST WISH HE COULD BE IN THIS ROOM, RIGHT NOW, SAT HERE, SO I COULD KICK SOME SENSE INTO HIM.

 

—Mick Ronson, 1975

C
ocaine was the fuel of the music industry in the seventies. Audiences were still more likely to have smoked dope, or swallowed the “downers” known as Mandrax in Britain and Quaaludes in the United States. Rock stars in search of a cure for the burdening necessity of sleep could rely on the artificial energy of amphetamines (with the attendant risk of psychosis). Where casual sex and the dance floor collided, there was likely to be amyl nitrate or, in America, PCP (alias angel dust). But the drug that kept rock'n'roll buzzing—sealing deals, deadening sensibilities, and providing a false sense of bravado and creative achievement—was cocaine. Bowie's arrival in America in 1974 coincided neatly with the rapid growth of the cocaine-producing industry in Colombia, which within two years had corrupted that nation's political structure to such an extent that the most notorious traffickers (such as Pablo Escobar Gaviria) were effectively beyond prosecution. Like heroin at the start of the decade, cocaine flooded into America, despite the efforts of federal law enforcement agencies to stem the tide.

Bowie was, and has been, more candid about his drug use during this period than most of his contemporaries, and various associates have fleshed out the picture. “I've had short flirtations with smack and things,” he told Cameron Crowe in 1975, “but it was only for the mystery and the enigma. I like fast drugs. I hate anything that slows me down.” So open was his drug use that the normally bland British pop newspaper
Record Mirror
felt safe in 1975 to describe Bowie as “old vacuum-cleaner nose.” His girlfriend in 1974–75, Ava Cherry, recounted that “David has an extreme personality, so his capacity [for cocaine] was much greater than anyone else's.” “I'd found a soulmate in this drug,” Bowie told Paul Du Noyer in 2002. “Well, speed [amphetamines] as well, actually. The combination.” The drugs scarred his personal relationships, twisted his view of himself and the world, and sometimes delayed recording sessions, as Bowie waited for his dealer to arrive. As live tapes from 1974 demonstrated, it also had a profound effect on his vocal range. Yet the effect on his creativity was minimal: cocaine took its toll on his internal logic, not his abilities to make music.

“Give cocaine to a man already wise,” wrote occultist Aleister Crowley in 1917, “[and] if he be really master of himself, it will do him no harm. Alas! the power of the drug diminishes with fearful pace. The doses wax; the pleasures wane. Side-issues, invisible at first, arise; they are like devils with flaming pitchforks in their hands.”

Bowie's “side-issues” were rooted in his unsteady sense of identity; he talked later of being haunted by his various characters, who were threatening him with psychological oblivion. When he described the Thin White Duke of “Station to Station,” he was effectively condemning himself: “A very Aryan, fascist-type; a would-be romantic with absolutely no emotion at all but who spouted a lot of neo-romance.” Michael Lippman, Bowie's manager during 1975, said his client “can be very charming and friendly, and at the same time he can be very cold and self-centred.” Bowie, he added, wanted to rule the world.

It was not entirely helpful that a man who was bordering on cocaine psychosis should choose to immerse himself in the occult inquiries that had exerted a more intellectual fascination over him five years earlier. The sense that his soul was at stake was exacerbated by the company he kept in New York at the start of 1975: Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page, a fellow Crowley aficionado, and occult filmmaker Kenneth Anger. In March that year, he moved to Los Angeles, where he was reported to be drawing pentagrams on the wall, experimenting with the pack of tarot cards that Crowley had created, chanting spells, making hexes, and testing and investigating the powers of the devil against those of the Jewish mystical system the Kabbalah. He managed to survive the filming of
The Man Who Fell to Earth
by assuming the emotionally removed traits of his character in the movie. But back in California, as he tried to assemble a soundtrack for the film and also create the
Station to Station
album, he slipped back into a state of extreme instability. Lippman remembered “dramatically erratic behaviour” on Bowie's behalf. “Everywhere I looked,” the singer explained to Angus MacKinnon in 1980, “demons of the future [were] on the battlegrounds of one's emotional plane.”

That was the emotional landscape against which he wrote the songs on
Station to Station
: in retrospect, it is surprising that the results were not more extreme. By the time the album was completed, Bowie was suffering severe, sometimes nearly continuous hallucinations, which ensured (perhaps fortunately) that his memories of this period remain sketchy. The impact on those around him was more immediate; when the singer left the Lippmans' residence at the end of December (and quickly launched a lawsuit against his recent protector), his traumatized manager could only express relief, coupled with fear at what might happen next. Bowie attributed his survival to an unnamed friend
*
who “pulled me off the settee one day, stood me in front of the mirror and said, ‘I'm walking out of your life because you're not worth the effort.' ” This jolted Bowie enough to propel him through a major tour, still flirting with the worst of his curses, before he chose quite deliberately to crash-land in Berlin, and offload all his burdens, nightmare by painful nightmare.

 

[126] STATION TO STATION

(Bowie)

Recorded September–November 1975;
Station to Station
LP

Much of
The Man Who Fell to Earth
was filmed in Albuquerque—the so-called Duke City, having been named for the Spanish duke of Alburquerque, Spain. And it was there that David Bowie, who was unmistakably thin, and white, began to write a book of short stories titled
The Return of the Thin White Duke
. It was, he explained, “partly autobiographical, mostly fiction, with a deal of magic in it.” Simultaneously, he was telling journalist Cameron Crowe: “I've decided to write my autobiography as a way of life. It may be a series of books.” Or it might be a song—or, as printed in
Rolling Stone
magazine at the time, the briefest and most compressed of autobiographical fragments, which suggested he would have struggled to extend the entire narrative of his life beyond a thousand words.

Instead the Thin White Duke returned in this song, which it would be easy to assume must therefore have been autobiographical. But Bowie's landscape was more oblique than that: not least because, in the tradition of “The Bewlay Brothers,” this was a song with lyrics that suggested more than they revealed, as if they had been written in a strictly personal code—an occult language, then, in every sense of the adjective.

Even if Bowie saw himself as the Thin White Duke, another duke was at the heart of the action: Prospero, the rightful duke of Milan, exiled on an island in Shakespeare's
The Tempest
. It is Prospero whom Bowie misquotes in the song, Shakespeare's original line being: “We are such stuff as dreams are made on.” (The same speech refers, as does Bowie, to “thin air.”) Prospero, like Bowie's Duke, is a master of magic, who can command the elements while “lost in my [magic] circle.” And Prospero can also cast a spell—throwing darts,
*
perhaps—over lovers' eyes, as he does with his daughter Miranda and her paramour, Ferdinand, during the course of the play.

Shakespeare, however, was only one source for a song rich in borrowed imagery. This ranged from the vaguely ridiculous (compare Bowie's drinking stanza to the chorus from
The Student Prince
made famous by Mario Lanza) to the deliberately hidden (or occult). Only the keenest of occult scholars would have recognized
White Stains
as the title of a slim volume of verse by Aleister Crowley (Bowie may have owned a copy as early as 1969, as there were apparent allusions to Crowley's poem “Contra Conjugium TTB” in “Cygnet Committee” [8]). Likewise, few among Bowie's audience in 1976 would have been familiar with the Jewish mystical system of the Kabbalah, with its sephiroth (or stations, if you like) separating Kether (the realm of spiritual transcendence; the Crown of Creation, as the Jefferson Airplane put it) from Malkuth (the conduit for divine revelation to reach the physical world). “All the references within the piece are to do with the Kabbalah,” Bowie claimed in 1997, not entirely accurately. Then there was the strange reference to the European canon (or, at a stretch, “cannon”), which was a pretentious way of summarizing Bowie's interest in Brechtian theatre and Kraftwerk, and the final choruses of the song, which (canon aside) seemed to offer an account of all-powerful love (nature unknown).

With that, the lyrics came full circle, from the Duke's command over lovers to the lovers' loss of control over themselves. In a song this esoteric, it may or may not be significant that Aleister Crowley's pack of tarot cards represented Art and Lovers as complementary icons; that a dart, or arrow, was a symbol of direction revealing the dynamic of the True Will; that the Kabbalistic Tree of Life referred to a “heavenly bow and arrow” . . . almost every line could be glossed and interpreted, without coming a step closer to Bowie's intentions.

Take a step back and consider the basic themes: magic, and the arts of legendary magicians, fictional and otherwise; the Kabbalah's mystical account of progress from Kether to Malkuth; love; cocaine. Just as “Quicksand” [50] offered a catalogue
*
of avenues open to the inquisitive imagination of David Bowie circa 1971, so “Station to Station” presented a more confused (because Bowie was more confused) medley of the themes that were haunting his nightmares in the final weeks of 1975. Yet he could surely not have expected his fans to deduce more from the lyrics than that Bowie had invented a new character, called the Thin White Duke, who took cocaine.

What rescued “Station to Station” from utter obscurity and his audience from alienation was the music. The song comprised a complex arrangement of fragments in the vein of a progressive rock suite (imagine something by early seventies Genesis or mid-seventies Jethro Tull), connected by the sonic impact of Bowie's remarkable 1975–76 band, and the mannered flexibility of his voice. Like the howls of wind that opened Van Der Graaf Generator's “Darkness (11/11)” a few years earlier, the eerie train effects that signaled the beginning of the
Station to Station
album were both symbolic and visceral. The train (created by guitar with flangers/phaser and delay effects) ran from right to left across the stereo divide before disappearing into a tunnel with a howl of feedback. Gradually, the band awoke: percussion knocking, a keyboard stabbing repeated chords in and out of key, bass, drums, a second keyboard, and finally a gargantuan, atonal guitar riff (played by Bowie and Earl Slick with syncopated accents across three bars in 4/4 and one in 2/4). This train was no express, bound for glory; its lumbering progress suggested a force too evil to stop.

More than three minutes after the album began, Bowie finally made his entrance alongside the Duke, still unwilling to settle comfortably into a recognizable key signature. The uneasy relationship between the two identities was mirrored by the way in which their voices were sometimes in orthodox harmony, sometimes in unison, sometimes (as when surveying the track from Kether to Malkuth) a whole octave apart. Bowie announced his arrival in double voice, one echoed and tired, the other almost hysterical, as if under attack from the wicked one's fiery darts.

A thud of drums signaled a change, of tempo, key (now strictly orthodox), and intentions: Bowie had entered the landscape of mountains and sunbirds, prodded by a burbling electric guitar. After three lines (accompanying the drinking episode) built around the slowest of turnarounds (like a train that had reached the end of its journey), there was finally the joyous relief of cocaine, and love. Here was Bowie's first nod of recognition to the so-called
motorik
sound of Krautrock, as the ominous, Wagnerian strains of the early segments of the song were succeeded by the propulsive dance rhythms of the finale. Only a churl would have worried that the theme of this cathartic moment was that it was too late—suggesting that the spiritual journey might be only just beginning.

 

[127] GOLDEN YEARS

(Bowie)

Recorded September–November 1975; single and
Station to Station
LP

In isolation, this was Bowie's most perfect exhibition of disco music as an art form—a tightly controlled, intensely hypnotic weave of electronic certainty and human vulnerability. At its heart was a simple two-chord
*
(F#-E) groove reminiscent, in very different circumstances, of “Aladdin Sane” [70]. In keeping with the restlessness of the lyric, however, the song was actually set in the key of B major, never actually arriving at its root chord—although one of the two guitar riffs that shaped the groove was solidly based there. The magical ingredients were percussive: the rattling of sticks against the hi-hat cymbal from the start, the startling clack of woodblocks, the sudden drum fills. Bowie straddled all these elements with consummate ease, channeling the spirit of Elvis Presley (to whom he sent a tape of the song) in the verses, then touching a haughtier, more strident tone in the chorus.

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