Geoff MacCormack first met David Bowie once they had been each 8 and college students in main faculty. They spent a number of of their childhood collectively as music-obsessed teenagers with a penchant for mod style and American rock ‘n’ roll. On the time, MacCormack by no means thought of that his childhood pal would go on to develop into one of many world’s most influential artists. “I had no concept till it obtained critical,” he not too long ago informed UCR.
Though he’d develop a profession underneath the stage title Warren Peace, MacCormack collaborated with Bowie all through the years. He contributed backing vocals to 5 Bowie albums from 1973’s Aladdin Sane to 1976’s Station to Station and in addition took half in 1974’s Diamond Canines tour. He additionally co-wrote with Bowie Diamond Canines‘ “Rock ‘n’ Roll With Me” and “Flip Blue” from Iggy Pop’s 1977 album Lust for Life, which Bowie co-produced.
MacCormack revealed From Station to Station: Travels With Bowie 1973-1976 in 2007, which chronicled his three years touring and dealing within the studio with Bowie. However as he notes, this was solely a part of the journey. MacCormack’s new e-book, David Bowie: Rock ‘N’ Roll With Me, is an expansive memoir that begins together with his childhood in Bromley, England, and ends with the final communication he had with Bowie earlier than the legend’s demise in January 2016. MacCormack not too long ago found extra never-before-seen images of his time with Bowie, capturing the Star Man in tender, unguarded moments.
A standard theme that appeared to run by way of your friendship with Bowie was his confidence in asking your opinion. Within the e-book, you describe a second when Bowie performed you a brand new tune he’d written referred to as “House Oddity.” Do you keep in mind what you considered it?
I assumed it was one. I assumed it was, ‘Oh, that is obtained the large business potentialities.’ And the timing was proper as a result of it was across the time of the movie 2001 [A Space Odyssey], which was an enormous movie worldwide.
Do you’ve a very favourite reminiscence of being within the studio with Bowie?
His voice went midway by way of the night time once we had been recording “Golden Years” [from Station to Station]. So I did a lot of the vocals, the backing vocals. In order that was type of cool, and to listen to it from time to time hear, Oh, that is my [sings] “golden years,” you realize, within the background, that is type of cool. I used to be hanging out with my pal. It wasn’t like he desperately wanted me. … I in all probability did not even receives a commission for it, you realize? I in all probability did not even have the frequent sense to invoice for it. I did percussion on that and “Panic in Detroit.” I did the percussion on that as a result of [drummer] Woody [Woodmansey] did not wish to do it or no matter. I in all probability simply did it as a result of I used to be hanging out and forgot about it.
Hearken to David Bowie’s ‘Golden Years’
The attractive factor concerning the images on this e-book is their intimacy. These aren’t publicity footage; they’re footage taken by a pal. I like the one among Bowie asleep within the prepare automobile. Have been you making an attempt to get pictures like that or is that simply type of the way it occurred?
It is type of the way it ended up occurring. I wished a digital camera as a result of I beloved the thought of a digital camera. I beloved the thought of a digital camera such as you would possibly like the thought of a gun, the mechanics of it and the burden of it … so to have a correct digital camera, versus an Instamatic — Instamatics have gotten their place, by the best way, as do Polaroids — however to have a critical digital camera with dials that you just did not know what they did. I in all probability by no means discovered my manner round it, however there’s one thing actually attractive a couple of digital camera – an actual digital camera, digital camera. So I wished that. I do not know the way a lot was wanting that and wanting to make use of it, and never the topic as such. So, you realize, David wasn’t simply in the best way [Laughs] … however largely it was the digital camera, it was having a digital camera and utilizing a digital camera, which I assumed was actually attractive.
It is attention-grabbing since you captured some stunning pictures throughout eras wherein Bowie possibly wasn’t as glad or fulfilled in his life or profession — the interval when he was filming 1976’s The Man Who Fell to Earth, for instance.
Yeah. While you’re used to bumming it for many of your life, and also you rebound, it isn’t a giant factor, you realize? It is gonna be all proper in the long run. OK, so the administration has obtained maintain of his cash, however the file firm was serving to him out a bit … however he’d had a No. 1 in America at that time [“Fame” from 1975’s Young Americans]. He all of a sudden did not have any cash and we had been in Los Angeles, and New York as properly. However I feel you realize when you’ve had a No.1, you are going to be all proper.
What’s one thing you would like extra folks knew or understood about Bowie?
He was extraordinarily beneficiant. He was extraordinarily well mannered. That is the best way we had been introduced up in Bromley, the place all of us got here from.
Watch Geoff MacCormack Carry out With David Bowie on 1974’s ‘Diamond Canines’ Tour
You describe how in December 2015, a couple of month earlier than he died, Bowie emailed you a photograph of you and some buddies who’d already handed on saying, “Pretty image, took me again.” You did not know he was ailing or the extent of his sickness?
No. I knew he had been ailing, however I did not know he had been that ailing, as a result of though I hadn’t seen him for, like, a 12 months and a half earlier than, I keep in mind him having to take tablets and no matter and his [personal assistant] fussing over him. So I assumed, Oh, that is maybe not signal. However no, and I am glad I did not, actually.
Trying again now, how does that informal interplay strike you?
I feel it is excellent, actually. As a result of he stated what he stated, I stated what I stated. … And he mainly stated goodbye, with out saying it. … After I give it some thought, it is truly fairly a stunning factor, fantastically handled.
As somebody who knew him personally, what do you assume Bowie’s legacy can be?
I feel, like every large artist who’s had that longevity and that array of labor, I feel he is fairly properly cemented himself a spot in music historical past. As a result of there’s one thing — even when you’re not a fan of every part he did — there’s one thing admirable about the best way he obtained by way of that and reinvented himself so many instances and saved you guessing that different artists simply haven’t got. You consider a band or an artist, you type of consider that style, whereas it is tough to stay that on him and go, “Which style? When he did that? Or when he did that?” So it is that power of a physique of labor, moderately than a mode. So I feel on that foundation, he’ll all the time be large. Vastly revered.
David Bowie Yr by Yr: 1965-2016 Images
David Bowie’s style sense fueled his chameleon-like profession, from the early days as a mod and a folksinger by way of Ziggy Stardust, the Skinny White Duke and past.