Bowie at the BBC (2000) Poster

(2000 TV Special)

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8/10
The Other Review is WRONG!
arfdawg-121 September 2019
The other reviewer here says this is a 2000 concert. It's not.

Not in the slightest.

It's a chronology of clips from the BBC archive giving an overview of David Bowie's extraordinary career from 1964 to 2000. Blending interviews and performances from music programmes, documentaries, news outlets and chat shows, this portrait of Bowie both at his most thoughtful and his most opportunistically promotional is a series of snapshots into a rapidly evolving career across music, films and the theatre.

From a 17-year-old David Jones interviewed by Cliff Michelmore in 1964, on to 1973 when in Ziggy mode Bowie, Ronson and co gave their seminal Top of the Pops performance of Starman, and then to 2000 when Bowie reimagined himself as the cover of Hunky Dory to storm Glastonbury, this is a journey through many Bowies.

The programme includes other classic Top of the Pops, The Old Grey Whistle Test and Later... with Jools' performances and looks at Bowie the actor with interviews about his roles in The Elephant Man, Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence and Labyrinth.

Bowie at the BBC gives an insight into the many ways Bowie chose to present himself at different moments in time, revealing how innovative, funny, surprising and influential he always was.

It's really good too! My only complaint is that the songs are often cut short.
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10/10
Excellent concert!
bskeller28 January 2003
Bowie's 2000 concert in the BBC Theater was nothing short of totally brilliant. The support came from Earl Slick (guitar), Gail Ann Dorsey (bass guitar), Mark Plati (guitar), Sterling Campbell (drums), Mike Garson (keyboards), with backing vocals by Emm Gryer and Holly Palmer. The concert itself was made up from a wide selection of Bowie's amazing back catalog, including 'The Man Who Sold The World' and 'Always Crashing In The Same Car.' Newer songs from his then most recent album "Hours..." such as 'Survive' and 'Seven' didn't make the BBC America broadcast but they were included on the CD. Amazing because not only was it David Bowie, but it was David Bowie getting over a nasty cold and cough. Despite illness, he was still able to give an electrifying and marvelous concert.
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