Tag Archives: Bowies

David Bowie’s official photographer, Mick Rock, dead at 72

Photographer Mick Rock, whose iconic portraits of rock stars including David Bowie, Lou Reed and Debbie Harry saw him dubbed “the man who shot the 70s,” has died. He was 72.

A statement posted Friday on Rock’s official social media accounts said: “It is with the heaviest of hearts that we share our beloved psychedelic renegade Mick Rock has made the Jungian journey to the other side.” No cause of death was given.

Born in London in 1948, Rock studied at Cambridge University, where he met Syd Barrett, a founding member of Pink Floyd, who became one of his first subjects.

He was Bowie’s official photographer in the early 1970s, helping to make the singer’s alter ego, androgynous alien superstar Ziggy Stardust, a sensation.

DAVID BOWIE WAS ‘A CHEERFUL SOUL,’ PHOTOGRAPHER SAYS

Rock went on to take some of the most famous music photos of the era: a topless Iggy Pop on the cover of the “Raw Power” album; a spectral Lou Reed on “Transformer”; the members of Queen, their faces part-shadowed, for the cover of “Queen II.”

Photographer Mick Rock, whose iconic portraits of rock stars saw him dubbed “the man who shot the 70s,” has died. He was 72. A statement posted Friday on Rock’s official social media accounts said “it is with the heaviest of hearts that we share our beloved psychedelic renegade Mick Rock has made the Jungian journey to the other side.” No cause of death was given.
(AP Photo )

“People say, ‘Man, how did you get all these pictures? Well, because no one else was interested,” Rock told the Associated Press in 2002. “It wasn’t like I was battling other photographers to get the pictures.”

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Rock had heart bypass surgery and a kidney transplant in the 1990s after years of rock ‘n’ roll excess.

“I lived the life,” he said later. “As well as taking the pictures, I lived the life.”

A general view of atmosphere during Mick Rock exhibition StarMan at Foto Museo Cuatro Caminos on March 28, 2018 in Mexico City, Mexico.
(Victor Chavez/Getty Images)

He gave up cigarettes and drugs and carried on working, taking images of musicians including Pharrell Williams, Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus.

“Those who had the pleasure of existing in his orbit, know that Mick was always so much more than ‘The Man Who Shot The 70s,‘” the statement announcing his death said. “He was a photographic poet — a true force of nature who spent his days doing exactly what he loved, always in his own delightfully outrageous way.”

Photographer Mick Rock attends the TASCHEN Gallery opening reception for “Mick Rock: Shooting For Stardust – The Rise Of David Bowie & Co.”  at TASCHEN Gallery on September 9, 2015 in Los Angeles, California. 
(Angela Weiss/Getty Images)

Sharon Osbourne tweeted: “We lost a legend, a true artist Mick Rock.”

Queen guitarist Brian May said he was “sad and shocked to hear of the passing of our friend, photographer Mick Rock.”

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He said the “Queen II” cover picture “gave us an enduring image, inspired part of the ‘look’ of our Bohemian Rhapsody video a couple of years later, and has been widely imitated by others over the years since then.”

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David Bowie’s widow, Iman, explains why she’ll never remarry: ‘My love lives’

Iman has no plans to ever remarry after losing her husband David Bowie.

The legendary artist passed away in 2016 at age 69 after fighting cancer for 18 months.

“There are days that are harder than others but the memories are not all sad of why the person isn’t here,” the supermodel and entrepreneur told People magazine on Wednesday. “… Sometimes I have to remind myself that I had 26 years. So I have that to sustain me.”

The couple’s daughter, Alexandria “Lexi” Jones, 21, has asked the 66-year-old if she saw herself saying “I do” once more in the future. But for the matriarch, the answer is clear.

DAVID BOWIE WAS ‘A CHEERFUL SOUL,’ PHOTOGRAPHER SAYS: ‘HE CAME TO PLAY’

The two-time Grammy Award winner, seen here with his wife Iman, was remembered by The Recording Academy as a “Renaissance man and visionary artist.”
(Photo by Will Ragozzino/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)

“I said, ‘No, I will not,’” said Iman. “I still feel married. Someone a few years ago referred to David as my late husband and I said, ‘No, he’s not my late husband. He’s my husband.”

“I definitely feel his presence, especially when I look out over the glorious sunsets at our home because David loves sunsets,” she continued. “So in that way he is ever-present. Through my memory, my love lives.”

According to the outlet, Bowie and Iman first met on a blind date set up by a mutual friend. The life-changing meeting took place after Iman moved briefly to Los Angeles in 1990.

“I had never intended to move there,” she said. “it’s not one of my favorite places. It’s so vast but I personally believe now that was my destiny. My destiny was calling me to get there so I could meet David.”

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David Bowie and Iman met on a blind date in Los Angeles.
(Photo by Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)

“David said it was love at first sight,” she shared. “It took me a few months but I got there.”

Iman revealed that Bowie took his time to court her. But there was one moment that made Iman realize that they were meant for each other.

“Early on, we were walking down the street and my shoelace came undone and he got on his knees to tie it for me and I thought, ‘He’s the one,’” she said.

The couple tied the knot in 1992 and lived a private life in New York City with their daughter.

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Iman said she still feels David Bowie’s presence.
(Reuters)

“I knew him as the man, David Jones, his real name,” said Iman. “And not the rock star.”

And the love they had for each other, she said, will always endure.

“I felt cherished,” she said. “Cherished and safe.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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David Bowie’s Unreleased Album Toy Set for Release

David Bowie’s 2001 album Toy, which was shelved amid problems with his record label, will receive its first official release as part of the late singer’s latest reissue campaign. A mix of new songs and re-recordings of lesser-known tracks from 1964-71, Toy was recorded live in the studio shortly after Bowie’s 2000 Glastonbury performance. He planned to surprise release it almost immediately, but EMI/Virgin stalled, which some say led to Bowie’s switch to Columbia Records. After a leak in 2011, Toy’s official release is set for November 26. Listen to the re-recording of his third single, “You’ve Got a Habit of Leaving,” below.

Toy is like a moment in time captured in an amber of joy, fire and energy,” said co-producer Mark Plati of the album, which he recorded alongside Sterling Campbell, Gail Ann Dorsey, Earl Slick, Mike Garson, Holly Palmer, Emm Gryner, Lisa Germano, Gerry Leonard, and Cuong Vu. “It’s the sound of people happy to be playing music. David revisited and re-examined his work from decades prior through prisms of experience and fresh perspective—a parallel not lost on me as I now revisit it twenty years later. From time to time, he used to say ‘Mark, this is our album’—I think because he knew I was so deeply in the trenches with him on that journey. I’m happy to finally be able to say it now belongs to all of us.”

Bonus discs in a Toy box set will feature alternative versions, proposed B-sides, and the “Tibet Version” of “Silly Boy Blue” recorded in 2001 with Philip Glass on piano and Moby on guitar. A third disc comprises “Unplugged & Somewhat Slightly Electric” mixes of 13 Toy tracks. Toy also features in a box set out the same day called David Bowie 5: Brilliant Adventure (1992–2001), alongside remasters of Black Tie White Noise, The Buddha of Suburbia, Outside, Earthling, Hours, the rarities compilation Re:Call 5, and a live album recorded at BBC Radio Theatre in 2000.

Toy:

01 I Dig Everything
02 You’ve Got a Habit of Leaving
03 The London Boys
04 Karma Man
05 Conversation Piece
06 Shadow Man
07 Let Me Sleep Beside You
08 Hole in the Ground
09 Baby Loves That Way
10 Can’t Help Thinking About Me
11 Silly Boy Blue
12 Toy (Your Turn to Drive)

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