David Bowie hadnβt finished making new music in the weeks before he died.
In fact, the British music legend told his longtime Brooklyn-born producer Tony Visconti he had just written new material.
Visconti was behind the boards for 14 Bowie albums including this yearβs Blackstar which was released two days before The Thin White Duke died from cancer on Jan. 10.
βThree weeks before he passed away – he was fond of doing Facetime, your phone would ring and youβd open up your iPhone and thereβs David looking at you which would be very jarring, very disarming – and he said, βHow are ya, Tone?β He goes, βIβve written five songs for the next album,β relayed Visconti to celebrity interviewer Larry LeBlanc in front of a packed Sherton Centre Hotel ballroom on Saturday afternoon.
βSo Iβm telling you first hand, this is from the horseβs mouth, that he had five songs planned.β
Visconti, who was presented with the third annual Nile Rodgers Global Creator Award at Canadian Music Week, never heard the new material which he said Bowie had only made as demos at home.
He wasnβt sure if or when the songs would see the light of day.
βEverybody in the Bowie family and everyone involved is still in turmoil about this, not turmoil but grieving,β Visconti said in response to a question from Postmedia Network about the future of the songs.
βItβs hard to believe that heβs gone. Itβs hard for me to speak of him in the past tense. And those close to him are going through the same thing.β
In fact, Visconti was in Toronto with his Bowie music tribute band Holy Holy when the news broke of Bowieβs death but he decided to press on with two sold out shows at the Opera House.
βWe were shocked,β said Visconti. βI got the news at 2 a.m. when my text started going off and I woke up. I was the only one who knew he had cancer. It was even more of a shock to the other musicians, especially when we were doing this kind of show. I went back to sleep. And then I got (Holy Holy drummer) Woody (Woodmansey) coming into the bedroom at seven in the morning, saying βAre you alright?β And I said, βNo, Iβm f–ked. Iβm not alright. Iβm really messed up.β … we went the next night (to the Opera House), and (the audience) cried, we cried. It was fantastic.β
Visconti, who first met Bowie in 1967, said he was first attracted to the singer-songwriterβs voice.
βI like people with a great voice and a unique voice,β he said.
βI donβt like a sound-a-like. I look for that extraordinary gentle voice which I heard on that very diverse record that he made β his first album. My words were, βHeβs all over the place but I think I can focus him in on one of those styles.β He told me in later years that if he wasnβt a rock star, he would have gone into music theatre.β
When Bowie and Visconti first worked together on Bowieβs 1969 self-titled second album, they decided on a β12 string folk-rock style,β and he wrote Space Oddity a week before they were going into the studio.
Visconti was not impressed and let co-producer Gus Dudgeon handle that one song.
βHe said, βCan we do this one?ββ Visconti recalled. βAnd I listened to it twice and I said, βYou know, you sound a little bit like the Beatles. And βIβm sitting in a tin can,β is a straight rip off from Paul Simon, from the Bookends album.β And I said, βAlso, thereβs a guy floating in space and youβre capitalizing on that and this is a cheap shot. This is a novelty record. And youβll get played on the radio every time they show a guy in space, theyβre going to play your song. How are you going to follow up on that β a trip to Mars?β I thought I lost the job.β
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