The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bowie interview collection shows man behind legend

- By Jon Kaleugher Kansas City Star

The introducti­on of “David Bowie: The Last Interview and Other Conversati­ons” begins: “David Bowie gave a lot of interviews … until he didn’t.”

Quirky, well-spoken and charming, the iconic music legend who died of cancer in January at age 69 left behind a trove of inspiratio­n. But fans looking for in-depth discussion­s about Bowie’s musical process will be disappoint­ed by this collection of 10 interviews spanning 1964 to 2006.

Instead, the wide-ranging interests of Bowie the person are highlighte­d: film, style, fashion and art. The book is the latest installmen­t in Melville House’s Last Interview series, chroniclin­g the final words of such illuminati­ng lives as James Baldwin, Jane Jacobs and Kurt Vonnegut.

It starts with an interview in 1964, with a 16-yearold David Jones (he would become David Bowie about two years later) representi­ng a group called the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Long-Haired Men. The giggle-filled chat on the BBC’s “Tonight” was focused, most fittingly, on the length of his hair. It had been three years since Bowie had had it cut.

In a story titled “David Bowie Tells All and More,” Bowie paints a portrait of an artist unashamed of himself and his family. “The majority of the people in my family have been in some kind of mental institutio­n,” he tells Patrick Salvo of Interview in 1973.

The most confoundin­g interview is the conversati­on Bowie had with writer William Burroughs. These two kindred spirits had only recently become acquainted with the other’s work.

They had a deep conversati­on about honesty (“I usually don’t agree with what I say very much,” Bowie says), the state of writing songs (“Songwritin­g as an art is a bit archaic now. Just writing a song is not good enough”), Bowie’s audience (“I’m quite certain that the audience that I’ve got for my stuff don’t listen to the lyrics”), film (“I don’t believe in proper cinema; it doesn’t have the strength of television”), sound (“I wonder if there is a sound that can put things back together”), before Bowie proclaims “maybe we are the Rogers and Hammerstei­n of the Seventies, Bill!”

Then there is a 13-year gap from 1974 to 1987, which yields two solid conversati­ons, one being the pinnacle of the book: the 1987 Kurt Loder interview for Rolling Stone.

It includes the tidbit that Bowie “works out and roller skates in his spare time.” One can imagine a 40-year-old Thin White Duke roller-skating down the street.

And Loder asks, “Is it true that when Ziggy and the Spiders played Santa Monica on the first tour, the band went off to a Scientolog­y meeting and got converted?” Of course it is.

The conversati­on touches on film, which Bowie had grown more interested in, before delving into Bowie’s listening habits in the mid1980s, which is a nice trip down memory lane.

The final time Bowie does a formal interview in this collection, in 1992, features the infamous question about what he kept in his fridge in 1975.

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