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Showing posts with label David Bowie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Bowie. Show all posts

Monday, January 11, 2016

My Hero, Just for One (More) Day?



He was my hero, but just for one day.

The date was October 20, 2001 and I was entering my favorite place in the world, yet I didn’t know how to behave or what to do. None of the nineteen thousand, five hundred-plus people attending the Concert for New York knew what to expect as they settled into their seats at New York’s Madison Square Garden, a little more than a month and a lifetime after the dark day of September 11 that year. 

Were we supposed to enjoy ourselves again? Can we laugh and smile? Can we go back to the way it used to be?

As it turned out, the cue, that evening, came from a rock legend and his message was the same as it ever was. He performed and the underlying message was simply to be yourself and to be authentic with your emotions, your friends, your neighbors and those you were about to meet that night as we took a giant first step towards healing.

The show began with a single spotlight on a performer seated on the stage floor, legs criss-crossed in front of a small synthesizer which provided a rhythmic backbeat. That performer was David Bowie, dressed casually cool with his contemporary haircut framing his youthful good looks as he was only 53 years old at the time. The show’s organizers had decided to start the show with an old, familiar face. 

That face was on many of the albums I had purchased. In fact it was on some vinyl, some cassettes and some CDs. In a few cases, the same album was purchased for each of those now-ancient delivery systems for popular music. I guess I missed the 8-tracks he sold? The face sometimes had make-up, and it sometimes was adorned atop glamorous attire that pushed modern fashion further than the latest and most garish layout in the Sunday Times magazine section, whether the fashionistas hailed from Milan, London or New York. The face, while youthful, showed some mileage, too. That is what I loved about him. David Bowie was a rock’n roller who had withstood the test of time.

His music was not on my “Top 10” lists nor was his name the first that would come to mind when I would look at the list of touring bands for a summer treat. Yet, David Bowie was in a place in my musical tastes that felt safe and secure, despite the fact it was amazingly progressive. Bowie was alternative music before we even knew it existed.

A walk into a dive bar in New York, south of 14th Street, might prove to be stressful to the average man never mind one trying to find the courage it might take to drop a few bucks into an idle jukebox to the start the evening off with a few tunes. Your mind would be rushing with questions and trivial worries, "What artist and which song should I play?” "Everyone in this joint is going to know the song I’m choosing.”

You would twist the knobs, and flip the album covers, as the stress began to build. Then, an enlightenment. “Ahh, Bowie!”

It wasn’t too “Pop” (Top 40) and it wasn’t too safe (The Beatles). Bowie fit in with The Rolling Stones, or maybe Eric Clapton’s latest. It felt just right.

“Ashes-to-Ashes, Modern Love, China Girl, or Young Americans” would always work out nicely to start-up an evening of music and a few frosty cold ones.  If you wanted to go a little deeper, a little further, you might play something he passed along to another artist, and maybe play some more obscure stuff from the great Iggy Pop or Mott the Hoople. And, if the jukebox had “All the Young Dudes,” it was truly a sign of some music aficionados calling the shots on their music box and you'd found a place to return to at anytime.

Thinking back to that momentous night at The Garden, Bowie began his two-song set with the perfect entree, covering Simon and Garfunkel’s cinematic epic, “America,” which took on an entirely different meaning that night than its more uppity ‘60s origins. With film clips and images from New York City playing behind him, the great Bowie carved into the night while the fire-fighters and other first responders stood-up and applauded the selection, as crowd cut-aways on the big screens or a glance to your left or right proved it was okay to smile again. Three and a half minutes later, we began the process of recovery and we did it together with music, along with some smiles, some laughs (especially from Adam Sandler’s depiction of Opera Man), some tears and even some boo’s (Harrison Ford). It was okay to be ourselves.

Bowie’s second selection that night is probably more memorable to many. He played the very fitting “Heroes” from his 12th studio album, recorded in 1977, my senior year in high school. He performed with Paul Schaffer and his orchestra, which included Fab Faux fave, Will Lee, singing back-up vocals. While Ziggy Stardust, Space Oddity, Ch-Ch-Changes, or his Jagger-esque duet on “Dancin’ in the Street” will go down as all-time rock epics and fan favorites, I will always remember Bowie from that October evening, sitting in my favorite room, legs crossed, setting the mood, and blazing an important trail, yet again. 


Rest in Peace, David Bowie. You have earned the ultimate in terms of global respect. You have earned immortality, but I wish I could steal time. Just for one day.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Ch-Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes...




I still don't know what I was waiting for
And my time was running wild
A million dead-end streets
Every time I thought I'd got it made
It seemed the taste was not so sweet
So I turned myself to face me
But I've never caught a glimpse
Of how the others must see the faker
I'm much too fast to take that test

Ch-ch-ch-ch-Changes
(Turn and face the stranger)
Ch-ch-Changes
Don't want to be a richer man
Ch-ch-ch-ch-Changes
(Turn and face the stranger)
Ch-ch-Changes
Just gonna have to be a different man
Time may change me
But I can't trace time

I watch the ripples change their size
But never leave the stream
Of warm impermanence and
So the days float through my eyes
But still the days seem the same
And these children that you spit on
As they try to change their worlds
Are immune to your consultations
They're quite aware of what they're going through

Ch-ch-ch-ch-Changes
(Turn and face the stranger)
Ch-ch-Changes
Don't tell them to grow up and out of it
Ch-ch-ch-ch-Changes
(Turn and face the stranger)
Ch-ch-Changes
Where's your shame
You've left us up to our necks in it
Time may change me
But you can't trace time

Strange fascination, fascinating me
Changes are taking the pace I'm going through

Ch-ch-ch-ch-Changes
(Turn and face the stranger)
Ch-ch-Changes
Oh, look out you rock 'n rollers
Ch-ch-ch-ch-Changes
(Turn and face the stranger)
Ch-ch-Changes
Pretty soon you're gonna get a little older
Time may change me
But I can't trace time
I said that time may change me
But I can't trace time


Lyrics by David Bowie


The times, they are a changin' and by High Noon today the hope and optimism of a new administration will be a reality. Then, it's time to get to work.

I truly wish President Obama would set the tone by heading right to the Oval Office rather than the full schedule of inaugural balls. That would send the message that there is indeed a leader who will make changes.

One thing is for sure, this Inauguration Day is the most anticipated in my lifetime. It comes after the most important Presidential campaign and Election Day in my lifetime.

Today marks a day of opportunity for a new United States of America. Different from the bungled administrative term of Bush and Chaney and their misfit nominees that brought disgrace to the US of A.

The Inauguration Day ceremonies will be the most talked about, shared, televised, broadcast, blogged, IM'd, SMS'd, Flickr'd, Tumblr'd and everything else in communications history. That is a good thing. The opportunity is upon us.


***
NYT:


The Inauguration Will Be Televised–and Tweeted and Flickr’d

By Jenna Wortham

Barack Obama’s inauguration will be televised. It will also be tweeted, live-streamed and simulated in virtual worlds.

This bodes well for those eager to participate in Tuesday’s festivities without risking frostbite or braving the troubling ratio of port-a-potties available for the millions of political party-goers expected to descend on the nation’s capital Tuesday.

Here at Bits, we’ve compiled a list of some of the inaugural happenings around the Web. Let us know which events we missed in the comments below.

Live Streams: The New York Times will be live-streaming Mr. Obama’s speech from its home page; video Web sites Hulu and Joost are among the other sites broadcasting Tuesday’s events.

Live Tweeting: Similar to its coverage of the presidential debates, Current TV is partnering with micro-blogging site Twitter to showcase inaugural day musings from the Twitter universe, in 140 characters of less. Beginning at 11:30 a.m. E.S.T., the indie media company will hand-pick selected messages, or “tweets,” and integrate the updates into the channel’s broadcast. To prevent network outages, Twitter CEO Biz Stone told The Times that the company is doubling its capacity to gear up for the event.

Flickr: The photo-sharing social network, owned by Yahoo, will be hosting a respite from the packed event at a nearby wine bar. Local and visiting Flickeristas can drop in for a coffee or a glass of wine and check out photographs from election night alongside recently snapped images from the induction ceremony displayed in an exhibition of digital frames.

3-D Panorama: Microsoft is partnering with CNN to release a digital panorama of the event using Photosynth, software that morphs a series photographs into a digital, 3-D panorama. The company is soliciting professional photographs from news outlets as well as user-generated content, snapped from cellphones and digital cameras, for the final product.

DIY Inaugural Balls: Still waiting for an invite to one of Washington’s lavish parties to celebrate the new president? On the off-chance you don’t make it onto a VIP list, you can still attend a party online. Gussy up your avatars and port them into one of the balls happening in Second Life and Wee World. If virtual alter egos aren’t your thing, try your luck finding a nearby shindig using the official Presidential Inaugural Committee’s handy Web tool.

Mobile Applications: UStream.tv, a streaming video site that lets anyone put up a broadcast, like the wriggling brood of Shiba Inu puppies that made headlines late last year. The company recently unveiled plans for an iPhone application that will port any of its streaming broadcasts to the Apple device -– including the inauguration. The service also supplements live streams with a chat function so Ustreamers can chit-chat during the festivities.

In the event that you are traveling to the nation’s capital for the event, the free 2009 Presidential Inauguration Guide iPhone application is a must-have for out-of-towners. The application serves up public transit schedules and details, locations of parking garages, free Wi-Fi zones and a Zagat guide for the Washington area. The nifty application will also map the current distance between the phone’s owner and the steps of the Capitol building.

***

May God Bless President Barack Obama and the talented people he chooses to help lead the United States of America.

To the rest of the world... Please give the United States a chance to redeem itself as a world leader with hopes of peace and better days ahead.

It will take time.

TL