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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
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@onlydavidbowie
ain't there one damn song that can make me break down and cry
Bowie ‘75
Q Magazine 57 (1991)
Live 1978
Ziggy Stardust
David Bowie with Tin Machine
Live at The Academy, New York City
November 1991
Photo credit Kathy Greene
they say jump!
Noted personalities: David Bowie on the Cher Show 1975
In his 1992 interview with Tim Grundy, David Bowie reflected on learning to appreciate the lighter, more playful side of life after years of intensity and self-mythologizing. Looking back on the emotional extremes of his earlier career, Bowie spoke about maturity bringing balance - less obsession with identity, more comfort with simplicity and humor. He suggested that survival, not excess, had taught him the value of lightness: enjoying domestic life, laughing at himself, and letting go of perpetual seriousness. This shift marked a quieter confidence in Bowie's post-80s years, where curiosity replaced chaos. The interview reveals an artist who no longer needed constant reinvention to feel alive, embracing joy, irony, and everyday pleasure as hard-earned wisdom rather than creative compromise.
Source of the clip: BBC Archive
David Bowie Oslo 1978