The
Man Who Sold the World
David Bowie’s legacy had long been sealed as one of the most
influential artists of the last 50 years. He passed away last weekend at the
age of 69 after an 18 month battle with cancer. Case and point to his impact?
Here we sit, publishing blogs with affirmations to the Starman’s influence a
mere days after his passing on to the next galaxy and the great beyond.
Before I became versed in classic rock and roll, I was a
grunge loving, flannel shirt wearing punk with a propensity for power chords
and all things Nirvana. When they performed for MTV’s Unplugged series they
played a number of songs not their own (much to the dismay of the MTV brass)
that would go on to be classics. One of these that would become immortalized
that night was a cover of David Bowie's ”The Man Who Sold the World.”
At the point of hearing/seeing it, I instantly knew I liked
it… the words, the melody, the imagery, and that bassline… oh man that
bassline. What I didn’t know then was that my heroes hadn’t changed it
very much from the original version and that the song remained a David Bowie
song as he had intended it. This was my accidental entrĂ©e into David Bowie’s
music.

Fast forward a few years and I became immersed in all things classic rock and roll. It was then that I truly came to appreciate Bowie for the artistic visionary and unique performer and songwriter he was. He was audacious and creative, both inspired and inspiring. He was a trendsetter with regards to fashion, glam rock, art, songwriting, acting, and created the idea of a concept album.
He was ahead of his time as a voice that challenged accepted
gender role norms and societal stereotypes with relation to sex and sexuality.
Ever the flamboyant performer with his orange hair as Ziggy Stardust, he showed
that a man with makeup and a vinyl silver jumpsuit on wasn’t necessarily a
homosexual like many would have concluded. Quite the opposite, he was twice
married to women and has a son named Duncan. He described himself in a later
interview as a “closet Heterosexual” despite reporting in the promotional run
up to Ziggy Stardust that he was gay and then later bi-sexual.
I find it interesting that he was not LGBT himself, but rather a straight man who
closely identified with that movement very early on. Regardless of sexual
orientation, we now have many people who are champions of equal rights causes.
A majority of Americans have supported legislation legalizing gay marriage, but
David Bowie was advocating on the behalf of LGBT community way before it was
fashionable or the cool thing to do. Aside from being a trendsetter, it makes
him a true champion of that cause in my opinion. I couldn’t think of a better
way to eulogize him in some small way on my blog then to say that he was on the
side of love and equality
far before it was cool, easy, or popular. Musical and artistic contributions
aside, this was a big part of his legacy that deserves mention.
