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David Bowie

The Oral History

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On sale Sep 11, 2018 | 576 Pages | 978-0-451-49784-0
Dylan Jones’s engrossing, magisterial biography of David Bowie is unlike any Bowie story ever written. Drawn from over 180 interviews with friends, rivals, lovers, and collaborators, some of whom have never before spoken about their relationship with Bowie, this oral history weaves a hypnotic spell as it unfolds the story of a remarkable rise to stardom and an unparalleled artistic path.

Tracing Bowie’s life from the English suburbs to London to New York to Los Angeles, Berlin, and beyond, its collective voices describe a man profoundly shaped by his relationship with his schizophrenic half-brother Terry; an intuitive artist who could absorb influences through intense relationships and yet drop people cold when they were no longer of use; and a social creature equally comfortable partying with John Lennon and dining with Frank Sinatra.

By turns insightful and deliciously gossipy, David Bowie is as intimate a portrait as may ever be drawn. It sparks with admiration and grievances, lust and envy, as the speakers bring you into studios and bedrooms they shared with Bowie, and onto stages and film sets, opening corners of his mind and experience that transform our understanding of both artist and art. Including illuminating, never-before-seen material from Bowie himself, drawn from a series of Jones’s interviews with him across two decades, David Bowie is an epic, unforgettable cocktail-party conversation about a man whose enigmatic shapeshifting and irrepressible creativity produced one of the most sprawling, fascinating lives of our time.
“Jones’ Bowie opus serves as the ultimate oral history of the artist’s life and musical journey.”
Billboard

“Revelatory and surprising — perfect for the Ziggy completist.”
New York Magazine

“Beguiling… the fabulosity of Bowie’s life and times lends itself extraordinarily well to the oral history form."
San Francisco Chronicle

“Drawn from over 180 interviews with friends, rivals, lovers and collaborators, some of whom have never before spoken about their relationship with Bowie, this oral history weaves a hypnotic spell as it unfolds the story of a remarkable rise to stardom and an unparalleled artistic path.”
Parade

“There have been many books about David Bowie, both before and after his death, but GQ editor Dylan Jones’s is among the best, as well as the most revelatory… For any admirer of the great man, there is a smorgasbord of new information, mixed with well-judged analysis. But even for agnostics, there is no denying Jones’s flair and dedication in giving his hero the most comprehensive of eulogies.”
The Guardian

“Devour David Bowie: A Life, an oral history by Dylan Jones. It’s full of irresistible stories of art, music, and, of course, sex – this is rock’n’roll, after all.”
Men's Health

“[David Bowie] is alternately endearing, heartbreaking and remarkably retentive of the capacity to surprise even longtime fans.”
Arkansas Online
 
“This is a no-brainer. David Bowie: A Life, by Dylan Jones is a must for the Ziggy Stardust fan.”
South Coast Today

“Dylan Jones has excavated the cacophony of voices that make up a life and curated a phenomenal portrait of the artist from childhood to the final days. The witnesses who comprise this oral biography animate the pages like characters in a non-fiction novel. Damn nigh peerless.”
David Mitchell, author of Cloud Atlas

“A labor of love with many vivid voices and fresh insights.”
Jon Savage, author of England’s Dreaming and Teenage

“What a story—no screenwriter could have made it up. Dylan Jones tells the epic
tale of how David Bowie turned the world upside down, from his early scuffling
London days to his rock-and-roll golden years—a starman who kept reimagining
himself and his art in ways that transformed our whole culture.”
Rob Sheffield, author of Love Is a Mix Tape and On Bowie

“A must-read, incredibly diverse and detailed oral history of the rock god's entire existence. From the cradle to the grave. Best. Bowie book. Ever.”
Denis Leary, author of Why We Don’t Suck

“Dylan Jones elevates the art of oral biography to a cinematic level. Scene by scene, this is the movie of David Bowie's life.”
Robert Greenfield, author of S.T.P: A Journey Through America with the Rolling Stones

“Capturing the kaleidoscopic range of David Bowie's life and work seems like an impossible task. But through more than 150 interviews spanning the entirety of Bowie's extraordinary time on Earth, Dylan Jones thoroughly and seamlessly conveys the creativity, curiosity, and velocity of a visionary who transformed the very possibilities of pop music.”
Alan Light, author of The Holy and the Broken and Let’s Go Crazy

“One can never have enough books on David Bowie… [Jones] offers his own thoughtful and insightful commentary throughout, along with fascinating observations from the interviewees… The closing pages – with Bowie working on both his off-Broadway musical, Lazarus, and his last recording, Blackstar, even as he knows he is dying from liver cancer – are especially poignant. A singular addition to the Bowie bookshelf.”
Booklist (starred)

“Comprehensive… Jones delves deeply into the details of rock icon David Bowie’s fame, financial problems, drug use, sexuality, Buddhist practices, and romantic entanglements. But it’s Jones’s focus on Bowie’s friendships that truly shines… All these facets of Bowie’s personality and more are on display… [and] Jones incorporates honest, even biting, observations… [that] contribute to the well-roundedness of this remarkable volume.”
Publishers Weekly
 
“A sweeping, gossipy biography of the chameleonic pop star in the form of an oral history, with input from dozens of collaborators, lovers, and admirers. Bowie himself weighs in, too… Jones unearths quirky bits of Bowie-ana (he wanted to sing a duet with Mick Jagger from a space shuttle) and details his highly creative months preceding his death… Jones captures his subject’s transformations and the responses they provoked.”
—Kirkus Reviews
© Dave Benett
DYLAN JONES is the multi-award winning editor of GQ magazine. He has been an editor at i-D magazine, The Face, Arena, the Observer and the Sunday Times. He writes for the Mail on Sunday, is a Vice President of the Hay Festival and a board member of the Norman Mailer Foundation. He has written ten books and is currently working with U2 on a book celebrating their record-breaking 360° tour. View titles by Dylan Jones
Chapter 1

Living in Lies by the Railway Line

1947–1969

He was a postwar baby, born in London in 1947. He was part of the new world, two years after the end of the old. A London baby. He went to school in Brixton before being cast out to the suburbs. Even when he was young he knew he wanted to be bigger than he was, wanted to be a bigger man. When he started to work in advertising he thought he’d broken through, but he had no idea what was to come. In the beginning, he was feeling his way—he was in the Kon-Rads, the King Bees, the Mannish Boys, David Jones and the Buzz, Davey Jones and the Lower Third, Feathers, the Hype—but he had no idea who he was going to be when he’d finished.

David Jones was born on January 8, 1947, at 40 Stansfield Road, Brixton, the son of a cinema usherette and a promotions officer for Barnardo’s. He lived there until he was six, when his family moved farther out to Bromley in Kent. While his father was middle class, his mother came from a poor, working-class family. David used to say that there was a dark cloud over her side of the family, as it was full of mental instability. When he let his guard down, or when he wanted to amplify that side of his upbringing, he would say that “tragically” two or three of his aunts committed suicide. He would say that this seemed to be something he would hear constantly while growing up: How so-and-so has left us now. He said once, “I guess most of us have battled with reality and something else all of our lives. I think [my elder half-brother] Terry probably gave me the greatest, serviceable education that I ever could have had. He just introduced me to the outside things. The first real major event for me was when he passed Jack Kerouac’s On the Road on to me, which really changed my life. He also introduced me to people like John Coltrane, which was way above my head, but I saw the magic and I caught the enthusiasm for it because of his enthusiasm for it. And I kinda wanted to be like him.” Terry—the savant of cool jazz—would adumbrate his life as a sort of ticking clock of impending, accelerated mortality. As for his mother’s sisters, his aunt Vivienne was diagnosed with schizophrenia, his aunt Una died in her late thirties having experienced periods in a mental institution as well as electric shock treatment, while Aunt Nora actually had a lobotomy because of her “bad nerves.”

David Bowie: I had a very happy childhood, seriously nothing wrong with it. I was lonely but I never really wanted and certainly never went hungry, but I obviously saw people deprived around me and kids going to school with their shoes falling apart and kids looking like urchins. It left an impression on me that I never ever wanted to be hungry, or at the wrong end of society.

Kristina Amadeus (David’s cousin): David’s parents, especially his father, “John” Jones, encouraged him from the time he was a toddler. His mother, Peggy, spoke often of our deceased grandfather, who was a bandmaster in the army and played many wind instruments. David’s first instruments, a plastic saxophone, a tin guitar, and a xylophone, were given to him before he was an adolescent. He also owned a record player when few children had one. When he was eleven we danced like possessed elves to the records of Bill Haley, Fats Domino, and Elvis Presley. David’s father took him to meet singers and other performers preparing for the Royal Variety Performance. I remember one afternoon in the late ’50s when David was introduced to Dave King, Alma Cogan, and Tommy Steele. “My son is going to be an entertainer too,” he said. “Aren’t you, David?” “Yes, Daddy,” David squeaked in his childish high-pitched voice, his face flushed and beaming with pride. Although Uncle John never lived to see David’s huge success, he was convinced it would become a reality.

Wendy Leigh (biographer): David grew up petted and privileged. He wasn’t a working-class hero by any stretch. It was actually quite a suburban life, even though it was in south London, in Brixton. His father was the number-one PR at Dr. Barnardo’s, so David was immersed in the idea of presentation from a very young age. He was taken to all the shows by his father, introduced to celebrities, and he learned how to promote, how to sell himself. No one ever talks about the fact that he was incredibly influenced by his father, who had access to this exciting outside world. Every performer needs to be a great seducer, and David learned that from an early age. His father showed him a lot of love. He showed him how to get on, how to charm, and how to practice the art of being nice.

George Underwood (childhood friend): His dad was lovely, a really nice gentle man. His mum, well, even David didn’t like his mum. She wasn’t an easy person to get on with. She was very cold. Very insular. I think that’s why he liked coming round to my house, because my parents were totally different. “Hello, David, want a cup of tea, David?” My parents were very welcoming, but this wasn’t what would happen round at his house. Mrs. Jones would hardly ever say anything to me. I’m not sure what it was, but she was never happy. She always gave David such a hard time.

Don Arden (manager): I was brought up in Brixton around the same time as David Bowie, and everyone thinks it was a tough place, but it was actually rather nice and full of variety artists. Half the houses were owned by [Trinidadian pianist] Winifred Atwell, who had bought them for investment purposes, and she used to rent them out to music-hall acts and light entertainers. John Major lived a few streets away from me, and his dad was an acrobat and juggler. It later turned into a rougher neighborhood, but at the time we were brought up there it was very arty-crafty. If you were an artist in London, in music hall or variety, or in showbiz of one kind or another, that’s where you lived. So Bowie was surrounded by this extremely artistic community. It was vibrant in that way. He wasn’t just a performer, wasn’t just a singer-songwriter, he was an artist, and he got that because of where he was brought up. I’d go into the arcade in Brixton, under the railway arches, and buy my reggae and jazz records there, and David would do the same thing. We had local people round to dinner all the time, and they were all in the business, people like Dickie Henderson. There were also lots of places to go and see acts too, as the area fed off the people who lived there. So it’s no surprise he turned out the way he did.

Anne Briggs (neighbor): For a time as children we lived at Clapham in South London and were regular visitors to Brixton Market. There were all manner of traders, hawkers, stalls selling anything—Technicolor clothing which only the new residents of Brixton would wear, fruit piled up on shiny green fake grass cloths, vegetables of all kinds, and barrow boys with such constant and witty sales patter that people would gather round to listen and heckle. There were the West Indian traders with their Caribbean vegetables and lilting speech encouraging passersby to try their vegetables and fruit. Then there were buskers, always with their promoters, either providing music or awe-inspiring feats of physical flexibility, juggling or occasionally sword swallowers, all with their constant conversation attracting the crowd. Tanks of writhing eels in slightly murky water alongside stalls shrouded in white selling the little pots of jellied eels—no doubt to emphasize their freshness . . . ​Cockles, winkles and shrimps were measured in old half pint and pint tankards. Pills and potions offering miracle cures of some sort or another—if we hovered to try and read the packets we were whisked away.

Geoff MacCormack (childhood friend): I first met David when I was seven, at Burnt Ash Primary School, when he moved to Bromley—we had little brown uniforms. I’d already met George Underwood when I was four, at the local church school, St. Mary’s. I was in the cubs with David, in the choir together. We bonded over music, and both loved rock and roll, and as we grew older loved Little Richard. The Britain we grew up in was really quite grubby. There were still rations until the ’50s, and you’d walk to school via bomb sites. The music was bad, there was no decent food, and everything was gray, so when American music came along it completely changed everything. David’s father used to fund-raise with the stars of the day, people like Dickie Henderson and Tommy Steele.

I initially thought David was an only child, as he was only ever the only child in the house. I only found out much later that he had a brother. We never discussed it. I think it was a mutual understanding, as I had a brother who left home early to join the forces. He moved abroad and he wasn’t in my life either. So it was almost a mirror thing. David had a good relationship with his father, and he was always quite generous. He would always buy him records, and he got a lot of records through work. His father used to get American music that we’d never heard before and most of the country have never heard before. Most of the rock and roll we heard in this country was rerecorded by British artists for labels like Embassy that we used to buy in Woolworths. So to hear the real thing was quite rare and a real treat. David had Fats Domino’s “Blueberry Hill” when that came out, “Hound Dog” by Elvis Presley. He also had “I Put a Spell on You” by Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, although David’s mother wouldn’t let him play it in the house as she thought it was the devil’s music, which I suppose it was in a way. Our favorite was Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers, “I’m Not a Juvenile Delinquent.” When he did The Next Day, I told him I loved it, and he actually said, “It’s not ‘I’m Not a Juvenile Delinquent,’ but it’ll do.” I remember him lending me a couple of records and I left them on the windowsill in the breakfast room at home, and they melted in the sun. It was really upsetting to him when I gave them back to him. About seven years ago I came across a bunch of 78s, including Frankie Lymon and “Hound Dog,” and I had a case made and sent them to him.

We had an upbeat relationship that was based around stupidity and silliness. It was always like that, and that’s what we provided, fun in each other’s lives. So it never occurred to me to ask questions about his family, as it seemed intrusive. And not what we were about. He never asked me about family life either. Everything was at face value. But David was a born performer. That was the drive, the ambition. He wanted to express himself. We drifted apart for a while when we went to different schools. George and David were art school boys, whereas I went to a secondary modern. I was a mod. I would go up to the West End, get some purple hearts, go to the Scene, the Flamingo, Discotheque. Whereas George and David were on the fringes, going to jazz clubs. We always stayed in contact but then reconnected when we were living in the same area around South Kensington in the ’60s. I suppose we were pseudo-French then, trousers with turn-ups, brogues, and bikes with an engine on the front wheel.

David Bowie: My cousin Kristina was a huge Fats Domino fan and had “Blueberry Hill” and I had Elvis Presley’s “Hound Dog” and we did a trade because I preferred the sound of that. What I liked about it was that I couldn’t understand the lyrics and that really made an impression on me—there was some secret information there that I didn’t have. I think that’s been something that’s been important to me ever since. It was [Little Richard’s] sax lineup he had behind him that impressed me more than anything else, because I’d only heard the saxophone through my brother’s records as being a jazz thing and that was too complicated for me. I was always very vain. I always liked clothes a lot, I guess it was my way of confirming I had a personality, not really being sure if I did or didn’t. If you wore clothes of a certain nature you automatically were a personality because clothes maketh men, but going up [to London] on the train there was a guy with makeup on and he was a mod. He wore eye shadow and he looked rather peculiar and I thought he looked rather good. One of my keenest memories of the Marquee club in the mid-’60s is having a permanent erection because there were so many fantastic girls coming over from Europe. All these Swedish girls were flocking to London to come and get an R&B star, so you grew your hair really long and hoped that they recognized you as [the Yardbirds’] Keith Relf—I made a better Keith Relf than Brian Jones. Anyway I hung out with Jonesy a few times and he was too short and fat.

Kristina Amadeus: I don’t remember him being worried about being lower middle class. His father was from a very affluent family who were partners in the Public Benefit Boot Company. He went to a good public school and inherited money when he came of age. David’s grandfather was killed at the end of WWI and his wife died the following year, so John inherited from both his parents and his own grandfather. But David did, like Jagger, adopt an almost Cockney accent for a while because it was trendy.

David Bowie: Elvis had the choreography, he had a way of looking at the world that was totally original, totally naïve, and totally available as a blueprint. Who wouldn’t want to copy Elvis? Elvis had it all. It wasn’t just the music that was interesting, it was everything else. And he had a lot of everything else. (There was once talk between our offices that I should be introduced to Elvis and maybe start working with him in a production-writer capacity, but it never came to pass. I would have loved working with him. God, I would have adored it. He did send me a note once: “All the best and have a great tour.”)

About

Dylan Jones’s engrossing, magisterial biography of David Bowie is unlike any Bowie story ever written. Drawn from over 180 interviews with friends, rivals, lovers, and collaborators, some of whom have never before spoken about their relationship with Bowie, this oral history weaves a hypnotic spell as it unfolds the story of a remarkable rise to stardom and an unparalleled artistic path.

Tracing Bowie’s life from the English suburbs to London to New York to Los Angeles, Berlin, and beyond, its collective voices describe a man profoundly shaped by his relationship with his schizophrenic half-brother Terry; an intuitive artist who could absorb influences through intense relationships and yet drop people cold when they were no longer of use; and a social creature equally comfortable partying with John Lennon and dining with Frank Sinatra.

By turns insightful and deliciously gossipy, David Bowie is as intimate a portrait as may ever be drawn. It sparks with admiration and grievances, lust and envy, as the speakers bring you into studios and bedrooms they shared with Bowie, and onto stages and film sets, opening corners of his mind and experience that transform our understanding of both artist and art. Including illuminating, never-before-seen material from Bowie himself, drawn from a series of Jones’s interviews with him across two decades, David Bowie is an epic, unforgettable cocktail-party conversation about a man whose enigmatic shapeshifting and irrepressible creativity produced one of the most sprawling, fascinating lives of our time.

Praise

“Jones’ Bowie opus serves as the ultimate oral history of the artist’s life and musical journey.”
Billboard

“Revelatory and surprising — perfect for the Ziggy completist.”
New York Magazine

“Beguiling… the fabulosity of Bowie’s life and times lends itself extraordinarily well to the oral history form."
San Francisco Chronicle

“Drawn from over 180 interviews with friends, rivals, lovers and collaborators, some of whom have never before spoken about their relationship with Bowie, this oral history weaves a hypnotic spell as it unfolds the story of a remarkable rise to stardom and an unparalleled artistic path.”
Parade

“There have been many books about David Bowie, both before and after his death, but GQ editor Dylan Jones’s is among the best, as well as the most revelatory… For any admirer of the great man, there is a smorgasbord of new information, mixed with well-judged analysis. But even for agnostics, there is no denying Jones’s flair and dedication in giving his hero the most comprehensive of eulogies.”
The Guardian

“Devour David Bowie: A Life, an oral history by Dylan Jones. It’s full of irresistible stories of art, music, and, of course, sex – this is rock’n’roll, after all.”
Men's Health

“[David Bowie] is alternately endearing, heartbreaking and remarkably retentive of the capacity to surprise even longtime fans.”
Arkansas Online
 
“This is a no-brainer. David Bowie: A Life, by Dylan Jones is a must for the Ziggy Stardust fan.”
South Coast Today

“Dylan Jones has excavated the cacophony of voices that make up a life and curated a phenomenal portrait of the artist from childhood to the final days. The witnesses who comprise this oral biography animate the pages like characters in a non-fiction novel. Damn nigh peerless.”
David Mitchell, author of Cloud Atlas

“A labor of love with many vivid voices and fresh insights.”
Jon Savage, author of England’s Dreaming and Teenage

“What a story—no screenwriter could have made it up. Dylan Jones tells the epic
tale of how David Bowie turned the world upside down, from his early scuffling
London days to his rock-and-roll golden years—a starman who kept reimagining
himself and his art in ways that transformed our whole culture.”
Rob Sheffield, author of Love Is a Mix Tape and On Bowie

“A must-read, incredibly diverse and detailed oral history of the rock god's entire existence. From the cradle to the grave. Best. Bowie book. Ever.”
Denis Leary, author of Why We Don’t Suck

“Dylan Jones elevates the art of oral biography to a cinematic level. Scene by scene, this is the movie of David Bowie's life.”
Robert Greenfield, author of S.T.P: A Journey Through America with the Rolling Stones

“Capturing the kaleidoscopic range of David Bowie's life and work seems like an impossible task. But through more than 150 interviews spanning the entirety of Bowie's extraordinary time on Earth, Dylan Jones thoroughly and seamlessly conveys the creativity, curiosity, and velocity of a visionary who transformed the very possibilities of pop music.”
Alan Light, author of The Holy and the Broken and Let’s Go Crazy

“One can never have enough books on David Bowie… [Jones] offers his own thoughtful and insightful commentary throughout, along with fascinating observations from the interviewees… The closing pages – with Bowie working on both his off-Broadway musical, Lazarus, and his last recording, Blackstar, even as he knows he is dying from liver cancer – are especially poignant. A singular addition to the Bowie bookshelf.”
Booklist (starred)

“Comprehensive… Jones delves deeply into the details of rock icon David Bowie’s fame, financial problems, drug use, sexuality, Buddhist practices, and romantic entanglements. But it’s Jones’s focus on Bowie’s friendships that truly shines… All these facets of Bowie’s personality and more are on display… [and] Jones incorporates honest, even biting, observations… [that] contribute to the well-roundedness of this remarkable volume.”
Publishers Weekly
 
“A sweeping, gossipy biography of the chameleonic pop star in the form of an oral history, with input from dozens of collaborators, lovers, and admirers. Bowie himself weighs in, too… Jones unearths quirky bits of Bowie-ana (he wanted to sing a duet with Mick Jagger from a space shuttle) and details his highly creative months preceding his death… Jones captures his subject’s transformations and the responses they provoked.”
—Kirkus Reviews

Author

© Dave Benett
DYLAN JONES is the multi-award winning editor of GQ magazine. He has been an editor at i-D magazine, The Face, Arena, the Observer and the Sunday Times. He writes for the Mail on Sunday, is a Vice President of the Hay Festival and a board member of the Norman Mailer Foundation. He has written ten books and is currently working with U2 on a book celebrating their record-breaking 360° tour. View titles by Dylan Jones

Excerpt

Chapter 1

Living in Lies by the Railway Line

1947–1969

He was a postwar baby, born in London in 1947. He was part of the new world, two years after the end of the old. A London baby. He went to school in Brixton before being cast out to the suburbs. Even when he was young he knew he wanted to be bigger than he was, wanted to be a bigger man. When he started to work in advertising he thought he’d broken through, but he had no idea what was to come. In the beginning, he was feeling his way—he was in the Kon-Rads, the King Bees, the Mannish Boys, David Jones and the Buzz, Davey Jones and the Lower Third, Feathers, the Hype—but he had no idea who he was going to be when he’d finished.

David Jones was born on January 8, 1947, at 40 Stansfield Road, Brixton, the son of a cinema usherette and a promotions officer for Barnardo’s. He lived there until he was six, when his family moved farther out to Bromley in Kent. While his father was middle class, his mother came from a poor, working-class family. David used to say that there was a dark cloud over her side of the family, as it was full of mental instability. When he let his guard down, or when he wanted to amplify that side of his upbringing, he would say that “tragically” two or three of his aunts committed suicide. He would say that this seemed to be something he would hear constantly while growing up: How so-and-so has left us now. He said once, “I guess most of us have battled with reality and something else all of our lives. I think [my elder half-brother] Terry probably gave me the greatest, serviceable education that I ever could have had. He just introduced me to the outside things. The first real major event for me was when he passed Jack Kerouac’s On the Road on to me, which really changed my life. He also introduced me to people like John Coltrane, which was way above my head, but I saw the magic and I caught the enthusiasm for it because of his enthusiasm for it. And I kinda wanted to be like him.” Terry—the savant of cool jazz—would adumbrate his life as a sort of ticking clock of impending, accelerated mortality. As for his mother’s sisters, his aunt Vivienne was diagnosed with schizophrenia, his aunt Una died in her late thirties having experienced periods in a mental institution as well as electric shock treatment, while Aunt Nora actually had a lobotomy because of her “bad nerves.”

David Bowie: I had a very happy childhood, seriously nothing wrong with it. I was lonely but I never really wanted and certainly never went hungry, but I obviously saw people deprived around me and kids going to school with their shoes falling apart and kids looking like urchins. It left an impression on me that I never ever wanted to be hungry, or at the wrong end of society.

Kristina Amadeus (David’s cousin): David’s parents, especially his father, “John” Jones, encouraged him from the time he was a toddler. His mother, Peggy, spoke often of our deceased grandfather, who was a bandmaster in the army and played many wind instruments. David’s first instruments, a plastic saxophone, a tin guitar, and a xylophone, were given to him before he was an adolescent. He also owned a record player when few children had one. When he was eleven we danced like possessed elves to the records of Bill Haley, Fats Domino, and Elvis Presley. David’s father took him to meet singers and other performers preparing for the Royal Variety Performance. I remember one afternoon in the late ’50s when David was introduced to Dave King, Alma Cogan, and Tommy Steele. “My son is going to be an entertainer too,” he said. “Aren’t you, David?” “Yes, Daddy,” David squeaked in his childish high-pitched voice, his face flushed and beaming with pride. Although Uncle John never lived to see David’s huge success, he was convinced it would become a reality.

Wendy Leigh (biographer): David grew up petted and privileged. He wasn’t a working-class hero by any stretch. It was actually quite a suburban life, even though it was in south London, in Brixton. His father was the number-one PR at Dr. Barnardo’s, so David was immersed in the idea of presentation from a very young age. He was taken to all the shows by his father, introduced to celebrities, and he learned how to promote, how to sell himself. No one ever talks about the fact that he was incredibly influenced by his father, who had access to this exciting outside world. Every performer needs to be a great seducer, and David learned that from an early age. His father showed him a lot of love. He showed him how to get on, how to charm, and how to practice the art of being nice.

George Underwood (childhood friend): His dad was lovely, a really nice gentle man. His mum, well, even David didn’t like his mum. She wasn’t an easy person to get on with. She was very cold. Very insular. I think that’s why he liked coming round to my house, because my parents were totally different. “Hello, David, want a cup of tea, David?” My parents were very welcoming, but this wasn’t what would happen round at his house. Mrs. Jones would hardly ever say anything to me. I’m not sure what it was, but she was never happy. She always gave David such a hard time.

Don Arden (manager): I was brought up in Brixton around the same time as David Bowie, and everyone thinks it was a tough place, but it was actually rather nice and full of variety artists. Half the houses were owned by [Trinidadian pianist] Winifred Atwell, who had bought them for investment purposes, and she used to rent them out to music-hall acts and light entertainers. John Major lived a few streets away from me, and his dad was an acrobat and juggler. It later turned into a rougher neighborhood, but at the time we were brought up there it was very arty-crafty. If you were an artist in London, in music hall or variety, or in showbiz of one kind or another, that’s where you lived. So Bowie was surrounded by this extremely artistic community. It was vibrant in that way. He wasn’t just a performer, wasn’t just a singer-songwriter, he was an artist, and he got that because of where he was brought up. I’d go into the arcade in Brixton, under the railway arches, and buy my reggae and jazz records there, and David would do the same thing. We had local people round to dinner all the time, and they were all in the business, people like Dickie Henderson. There were also lots of places to go and see acts too, as the area fed off the people who lived there. So it’s no surprise he turned out the way he did.

Anne Briggs (neighbor): For a time as children we lived at Clapham in South London and were regular visitors to Brixton Market. There were all manner of traders, hawkers, stalls selling anything—Technicolor clothing which only the new residents of Brixton would wear, fruit piled up on shiny green fake grass cloths, vegetables of all kinds, and barrow boys with such constant and witty sales patter that people would gather round to listen and heckle. There were the West Indian traders with their Caribbean vegetables and lilting speech encouraging passersby to try their vegetables and fruit. Then there were buskers, always with their promoters, either providing music or awe-inspiring feats of physical flexibility, juggling or occasionally sword swallowers, all with their constant conversation attracting the crowd. Tanks of writhing eels in slightly murky water alongside stalls shrouded in white selling the little pots of jellied eels—no doubt to emphasize their freshness . . . ​Cockles, winkles and shrimps were measured in old half pint and pint tankards. Pills and potions offering miracle cures of some sort or another—if we hovered to try and read the packets we were whisked away.

Geoff MacCormack (childhood friend): I first met David when I was seven, at Burnt Ash Primary School, when he moved to Bromley—we had little brown uniforms. I’d already met George Underwood when I was four, at the local church school, St. Mary’s. I was in the cubs with David, in the choir together. We bonded over music, and both loved rock and roll, and as we grew older loved Little Richard. The Britain we grew up in was really quite grubby. There were still rations until the ’50s, and you’d walk to school via bomb sites. The music was bad, there was no decent food, and everything was gray, so when American music came along it completely changed everything. David’s father used to fund-raise with the stars of the day, people like Dickie Henderson and Tommy Steele.

I initially thought David was an only child, as he was only ever the only child in the house. I only found out much later that he had a brother. We never discussed it. I think it was a mutual understanding, as I had a brother who left home early to join the forces. He moved abroad and he wasn’t in my life either. So it was almost a mirror thing. David had a good relationship with his father, and he was always quite generous. He would always buy him records, and he got a lot of records through work. His father used to get American music that we’d never heard before and most of the country have never heard before. Most of the rock and roll we heard in this country was rerecorded by British artists for labels like Embassy that we used to buy in Woolworths. So to hear the real thing was quite rare and a real treat. David had Fats Domino’s “Blueberry Hill” when that came out, “Hound Dog” by Elvis Presley. He also had “I Put a Spell on You” by Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, although David’s mother wouldn’t let him play it in the house as she thought it was the devil’s music, which I suppose it was in a way. Our favorite was Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers, “I’m Not a Juvenile Delinquent.” When he did The Next Day, I told him I loved it, and he actually said, “It’s not ‘I’m Not a Juvenile Delinquent,’ but it’ll do.” I remember him lending me a couple of records and I left them on the windowsill in the breakfast room at home, and they melted in the sun. It was really upsetting to him when I gave them back to him. About seven years ago I came across a bunch of 78s, including Frankie Lymon and “Hound Dog,” and I had a case made and sent them to him.

We had an upbeat relationship that was based around stupidity and silliness. It was always like that, and that’s what we provided, fun in each other’s lives. So it never occurred to me to ask questions about his family, as it seemed intrusive. And not what we were about. He never asked me about family life either. Everything was at face value. But David was a born performer. That was the drive, the ambition. He wanted to express himself. We drifted apart for a while when we went to different schools. George and David were art school boys, whereas I went to a secondary modern. I was a mod. I would go up to the West End, get some purple hearts, go to the Scene, the Flamingo, Discotheque. Whereas George and David were on the fringes, going to jazz clubs. We always stayed in contact but then reconnected when we were living in the same area around South Kensington in the ’60s. I suppose we were pseudo-French then, trousers with turn-ups, brogues, and bikes with an engine on the front wheel.

David Bowie: My cousin Kristina was a huge Fats Domino fan and had “Blueberry Hill” and I had Elvis Presley’s “Hound Dog” and we did a trade because I preferred the sound of that. What I liked about it was that I couldn’t understand the lyrics and that really made an impression on me—there was some secret information there that I didn’t have. I think that’s been something that’s been important to me ever since. It was [Little Richard’s] sax lineup he had behind him that impressed me more than anything else, because I’d only heard the saxophone through my brother’s records as being a jazz thing and that was too complicated for me. I was always very vain. I always liked clothes a lot, I guess it was my way of confirming I had a personality, not really being sure if I did or didn’t. If you wore clothes of a certain nature you automatically were a personality because clothes maketh men, but going up [to London] on the train there was a guy with makeup on and he was a mod. He wore eye shadow and he looked rather peculiar and I thought he looked rather good. One of my keenest memories of the Marquee club in the mid-’60s is having a permanent erection because there were so many fantastic girls coming over from Europe. All these Swedish girls were flocking to London to come and get an R&B star, so you grew your hair really long and hoped that they recognized you as [the Yardbirds’] Keith Relf—I made a better Keith Relf than Brian Jones. Anyway I hung out with Jonesy a few times and he was too short and fat.

Kristina Amadeus: I don’t remember him being worried about being lower middle class. His father was from a very affluent family who were partners in the Public Benefit Boot Company. He went to a good public school and inherited money when he came of age. David’s grandfather was killed at the end of WWI and his wife died the following year, so John inherited from both his parents and his own grandfather. But David did, like Jagger, adopt an almost Cockney accent for a while because it was trendy.

David Bowie: Elvis had the choreography, he had a way of looking at the world that was totally original, totally naïve, and totally available as a blueprint. Who wouldn’t want to copy Elvis? Elvis had it all. It wasn’t just the music that was interesting, it was everything else. And he had a lot of everything else. (There was once talk between our offices that I should be introduced to Elvis and maybe start working with him in a production-writer capacity, but it never came to pass. I would have loved working with him. God, I would have adored it. He did send me a note once: “All the best and have a great tour.”)