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40 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
At Long Long Last !!!, 12 Nov 2002
I'm not going to bore you with the endless clichés (ch..ch..changes et al). I am simply going to say - BUY THIS DVD - fan or not. At last, one of music's most innovative stars performances have been condensed onto a 4 hour plus double DVD set, and the creators have bothered to scour BBC archives to fill some of the essential missing earlier spaces that Bowie's previous "Greatest Hits Video" (video only) ignored. I am referring to Bowie's earliest TV appearances on UK TV to promote Hunky Dory and the soon-to-be -released classic, Ziggy Stardust. Here, Bowie is presented in his Ziggy-persona infancy, tight jump suit haircut spiky but not yet the flame red that was to be his earliest trademark, he comes across as young, fresh, hungry, incredibly polished and is a clear pre-cursor for the legend that Ziggy would eventually evolve into 6 months later. The first three Old Grey Whistle Test performances are a wonderful insight into how the former awkward, unsure-of-himself youngster, was quickly able to weave himself visually into his wonderful songs and adapt a cult-like image in front of cameras and crowds. The musical performance is simply breathtaking. The next video, Starman - his classic Top of the Pops debut, underlines what a few months of motivation and self-belief can do. This performance literally changed thousands of people's lives in the UK and while watching, you'll understand why. A tall, attractive male (or is he a female ??) in a glowing jumpsuit, flirting with the crowd and camping it up with his supremo guitarist Ronno, gave countless people in the UK a reason to feel that they were not the only people who were "different". Not only did the man look great, he had fantastic songs and suddenly it was OK to be unusual - the BBC had endorsed this by including Starman on TOTP. This performance more than likely launched Bowie into the mainstream and rapidly took the man away from his loyal underground following, and made him available to the public. His image was quickly copied by many (fans and others groups alike, although he wasn't the first man to wear make up.) Oh, the power of TV and a benchmark about the importance of being seen as well as heard. The next three videos ( Mick Rock directed) are RCA promos to cover the public demand and momentum whilst Bowie was touring and have been widely available, but again are a visual feast, allowing us to witness how Ziggy's metamorphosis takes shape over a period of a few months. Bowie now bristles with confidence, pouting, standing and gyrating like a weird Elvis - making love to the camera. Another bonus, the Russell Harty performance of "Drive In" shows Bowie at a newfound peak, right in the middle of his new fame and adoration, and is probably worth the cost of the DVD alone. The next bonus is the Young American performance from the Dick Cavett show. Showing Bowie in his first new image for 3 years, the clear signs of [...] abuse are as transparent as a sheet of glass and help transform this American TV appearance into a skeletal and once seen, never forgotten performance. Bowie, RCA (his label) and his management Mainman fell out for about four years and this is reflected in the lack of investment for videos to promote Station to Station, Low and Heroes - hence 2 performances represent nearly 4 years of work, but Bowie clicks into the MTV video age from hereon ( another 32 videos)and the majority of his other singles are represented here from 1979 to 2000. In all, a must buy product for three essential reasons: This man has influenced so many artists, this dvd allows you to benchmark who and how. No music artist has ever been so able to adapt, adopt and improve his or her visual image over a 40-year career span and remain so cool. The man is a legend and has presented excellent value for money if you are a fan or not.
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