2013 ➤ Duran’s Rhodes exhumes a 90s art-rock project that anticipated the downside of the internet

Duran Duran, Nick Rhodes, TV Mania, albums, photography, Bored with Prozac,

Never ask an artist “Why?” An inner Rhodes and another Cuccurullo, step up to brand their new project, TV Mania

➢ Nick Rhodes will exhibit a collection of original photographic works for sale at The Vinyl Factory Soho, London W1F 7BE, March 8-April 5. The collection, entitled Bei Incubi – translated as Beautiful Nightmares – will feature 20 Polaroids, and more than 30 original photographs and prints that have all been taken and signed by Nick.

❚ THE PHOTO SHOW celebrates the release on Monday of Nick Rhodes’s new experimental electronic album Bored with Prozac and the Internet? in a collaboration with former Duran Duran guitarist Warren Cuccurullo. Originally created in the mid-90s for the Broadway stage as the music to a “bizarre TV soap opera”, the tracks tell the tale of Cathy and Ray (named from the cathode ray tube) and their two children Sassy and Snoop, a fame-hungry family who give away their freedom to scientists in exchange for reality-show fame.

Bored was culled from a collection of tunes recorded when the band were between day jobs. Using samples from such sources as The Outer Limits and the British TV show Planet Fashion, TV Mania’s pastiche of cool beats and melodic hooks proved surprisingly prescient.

“It was innocently masquerading as an art-rock project, but there was a deep concept behind it all,” Cuccurullo says. “We were envisioning a world where a family would give up their day-to-day privacy and allow their existence to be televised to the masses, and this was two years before Truman showed and four years before Survivor. Now everyone is giving away their most intimate details online and on reality TV.”

“In 1996 the internet was still in its infancy,” Rhodes adds. “I was fascinated by communication and how things were becoming more instant and this was decades before all the sites we have now to communicate in different ways.”

A few months after Rhodes and Cuccurullo finished recording Bored with Prozac, a series called Big Brother hit the airwaves. “We looked at each other in absolute disbelief,” Rhodes says. “It was an idea that was in the ether at the time. We decided to lock it in the bottom drawer whilst we changed the story.”

➢ More details at TV Mania’s website

TAYLOR’s TALE FROM LOST SOUL TO HUMAN BEING

 John Taylor, Duran Duran, interview, books, video, In the Pleasure Groove,

John Taylor grilled for Google… Click on pic to run video in another window

❏ Also published today: John Taylor bassist and cofounder of Duran Duran can now be seen on video visiting Google Los Angeles last November to discuss his frank autobiography In the Pleasure Groove: Love, Death and Duran Duran. [Click on the pic to run video in another window]

Taylor tells his audience: “I have to fight to hold onto my memory these days, because there’s so much info coming at me… I started formulating an idea for the book, which is in three parts. There’s growing up in the 60s in the Midlands of England and becoming ‘John’… It’s a coming-of-age book, watching this little kid, an only child, and how he got into music. I had to find it for myself, at that time, 12-13-14, where the desire to remake my identity was so strong, and music in the UK had a lot of very strong personalities: David Bowie, Freddie Mercury, Rod Stewart, Bryan Ferry. And for a kid who was not really connecting with school, I started connecting with these guys.

“The second section is hysteria and that’s really about the first five years of the 80s, this wild ride Duran Duran took. Then the third part is about becoming an adult human being … some of the more profound highlights of the last 15 years: losing parents, gaining children, marriages, divorces, all of that sort of real-life stuff. But through the lens of an ex-popstar.”

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➤ Bowie as the human equivalent of a Google search

➢ David Bowie’s role was an unlikely form of education for a teenager in thrall to the Zen-master popstar – Paul Morley recalls his influence in The Telegraph Review, March 2, 2013

Telegraph online,David Bowie ,Paul Morley,

Today’s Telegraph Review cover

When I was a 15-year-old David Bowie fan in 1972, Bowie was for me a kind of teacher, so much more inspiring and motivating than my real teachers. In the middle of a mundane, mainstream world that limited possibility, his explosive mind and the way he represented it through sheer otherness suggested everything was possible.

He was the human equivalent of a Google search, a portal through which you could step into an amazing, very different wider world – if he mentioned in an interview, or referenced in his work, someone like Andy Warhol, Jean Cocteau, Antonin Artaud or Marcel Duchamp, I would immediately want to find out what he was talking about. He flooded plain everyday reality with extraordinary, unexpected information, processing the details through a buoyant, mobile mind, and made intellectual discovery seem incredibly glamorous. He helped create in my own mind a need to discover ways of making sense of both the universe and the self by seeking out the different, the difficult and the daring… / Continued at Telegraph online

➢ Riddle of the train Bowie could not have taken in
Where Are We Now?

➢ 2013, The Bowiesconti proxy has spoken – Shapersofthe80s translates revelations from the Visconti interview

➢ David Bowie is the enigmatic title of a retrospective exhibition drawn from Bowie’s personal archive. Opening March 23 it has been extended to August 11, 2013, at the Victoria & Albert museum, London SW7 2RL. Book online, in person at the museum, or by phone +44 (0)20 7907 7073 where you will spend a lifetime on hold.

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➤ 26 million hits for 1D’s music movie 4RND

One Direction,charity ,video, Red-Nose Day,Comic Relief,Ghana

Clowning in Ghana: One Direction’s Red-Nose Day movie. © 2013 Simco Limited

❚ CAN’T RESIST THE “HOME-MOVIE” for this week’s Number One on the UK singles chart, One Direction’s charity mash-up for Red-Nose Day, One Way Or Another which has clocked 26m views at YouTube, despite the prime minister’s cringe-making moment in the spotlight

➢ March 15 marks the 25th anniversary of Red Nose Day – Join in Comic Relief’s fundraising from bake sales to sponsored silences and loads more. Since the charity was launched in 1985, Comic Relief has raised over £750m

One Direction,charity ,video, Red-Nose Day,Comic Relief,Ghana

Moment in the sun: prime minister David Cameron in the One Direction music video. © 2013 Simco Limited

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2013 ➤ Bowie’s psychodrama The Stars mocks the rockiness of godliness

[Video NSFW]

❚ WHAT A FRISKY, UNSETTLING VIDEO David Bowie has created for this year’s second single, The Stars (Are Out Tonight). It’s hard to tell who’s doing what to whom in this sexy Rocky Horror homage on the theme of celebrity stalking.

The souls of a happily married suburban couple are haunted by the neighbours, a tantalising pair of godlike and androgynous celebrity sirens played by supermodels Andrej Pejic and Saskia De Brauw, who have been cast from Bowie’s 70s character moulds. The story sees wifey, played by  Tilda Swinton, morph into another early Bowie lookalike, which has often seemed to be her destiny. Dave himself ends up in mindless zombie mode despite his protective bemused face, the me-looking-at-me double-take, first clocked in his 2003 Vittel TV commercial.

David Bowie,The Stars (Are Out Tonight),video,Floria Sigismondi, Andrej Pejic

Waiting to make their night-time moves: Andrej is about to plonk one on David in the video for The Stars. © 2013 ISO Records

Even today, it’s brave that gender-bending role-play is the medium for The Stars’ saga of corruption, depicted with a cold eroticism appropriate to the zeitgeist. That we’re led astray by ambivalent naked body parts in a pseudo-Hitchcockian psychodrama is eye-popping. On top of which, this absorbing, elegant mini-movie by Floria Sigismondi makes flesh of a rocking melody and an intelligent song, delivered with classic Bowie vocals. (Here, musically, is another echo from 2003’s album Reality, which was widely under-rated.) The weirdo video for The Stars is all of a piece: it’s tongue-in-cheek, it’s creepy and it’s funny.

Also: Dave is sporting a proper set of glam teeth and NO evidence of a turkey neck at 66. So unfair.

David Bowie,The Stars (Are Out Tonight),video,Floria Sigismondi

Gender-bending confusion: “Brigitte, Jack, Kate and Brad”, according to the lyric for Bowie’s The Stars. © 2013 ISO Records

➢ The Stars on sale at iTunes

➢ 2013, Shock and awe verdicts on Bowie’s born-again masterpiece – Shapersofthe80s rounds up verdicts on Where Are We Now?

1970 ➤ Where to draw a line between glitter and glam:
naff blokes in Bacofoil versus starmen with pretensions
— analysis by Shapersofthe80s

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➤ Mixes of the moment, Feb into March


♫ More mad dance moves and sexual tension in the video for Man Like Me’s single Sleaze to be released via The Beats / Cartoon Records March 18, from the album Pillow Talk, co-produced by Mike Skinner, out March 3. Expect swinging from chandeliers onstage from London based duo Johnny Langer and Peter Duffy during their headline tour from March 6.

Alison Valentine, Dazed Digital,Warm Winter’s Day, playlist,Dazed Digital’s March playlist features latest tunes from Alison Valentine (left), My Bloody Valentine, slow jams from INC, The Weeknd, and loved-up pop from Autre Ne Veut, Jhené Aiko and Disclosure.

The i-D February Mixtape claims to trail “a big year for new music”, namely, Drake, Juicy J, Frank O, 2 Chainz, J. Cole, The Foals, Felix da Housecat, James Blake and Duke Dumont … Browse here for the Mixtape back catalogue.

Chris Sullivan, DJ, Wag club, Soundcloud, mixtape, dancing, clubbing, music♫ 77 hip-shaking minutes as the former host of Soho’s seminal Wag club posts Chris Sullivan’s Groovalicious Mix — “A pal said to me, ‘I didn’t know you played music that was made past 1990,’ so I, rather taken aback, did a mix that, although somewhat Latin and very me, is still very ‘modern’. Point is, I play mostly new stuff but hide it behind the patina of antiquity so no one ever notices” … Very efficient debriefing of the Sullivan life-story by Princess Julia at the uber-cool website Post New where the Big Man says: “I found my creativity forever been stymied by extreme poverty and hunger.”

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