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Bloomberg explores the epic oral history of David Bowie's Ziggy Stardust album, as told by ClassicRockMag. The album, released half a century ago, aimed to define the archetype messiah rock star. The article delves into the making of the album, highlighting its significance in Bowie's career and its lasting impact on the music industry.
"It was a critical mistake, and ultimately it broke up the band": How Creedence Clearwater Revival fell to pieces https://t.co/1vls8hkcKF
"Electric Ladyland was one of those albums that I look back on now and think 'Good grief! What the hell were we doing?'": the road to Jimi Hendrix's final studio masterpiece https://t.co/0lsc9IQDcB
With some classic songs their success is just overdetermined; there are at least three separate reasons "One Way Or Another" was going to be a monster hit in 1978. But Debbie Harry's vocal turns it into something almost X-ratedly feral: https://t.co/4PpnVUuw4o
Why the Grateful Dead's 'Wake of the flood' Didn't Meet Expectations: https://t.co/F5wVsqeq7M
“It was like an ego thing. It did make me wonder if Bruce was right for the band”: how Iron Maiden rose above bickering, booze and exhaustion to make The Number Of The Beast, the album that defined them https://t.co/kwGqKXMmQG
Half a century after it envisioned cultural De-Evolution, the pioneering new wave band Devo would have preferred to be wrong about it all. https://t.co/EZsyMX3AQm
Half a century after it envisioned cultural De-Evolution, the pioneering new wave band Devo would have preferred to be wrong about it all. https://t.co/3MAfY6wEeJ
“I wanted to define the archetype messiah rock star. That’s all I wanted to do”: the epic oral history of David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust album https://t.co/SzGk4CQE6q