Tag Archives: Iggy Pop

JIM JARMUSCH AT THE AERO

This week—in a co-presentation of the American Cinematheque and Beyond FestJim Jarmusch will present his new comedy THE DEAD DON’T DIE.

The film stars Bill Murray, Adam Driver, Chloë Sevigny, Tilda Swinton, Iggy Pop, Steve Buscemi, Tom Waits, Selena Gomez, Danny Glover, Caleb Landry Jones, and Carol Kane, and the director will be on hand for a post-screening Q & A.

THE DEAD DON’T DIE

Wednesday, June 5, at 7:30 pm.

Aero Theatre

1328 Montana Avenue, Santa Monica.

The Dead Don’t Die, from top: Bill Murray (left), Chloë Sevigny, and Adam Driver; Iggy Pop; Selena Gomez; Murray; Tilda Swinton. Images courtesy the filmmaker and Focus Features.

DEBBIE HARRY AND CHRIS STEIN IN CONVERSATION

To mark the publication of Point of View: Me, New York City, and the Punk Scene—a collection of Chris Stein’s photographs taken during Blondie’s rise from CBGB regulars to international hitmakers—the School of Visual Arts presents a conversation with Stein and Debbie Harry.

DEBBIE HARRY and CHRIS STEIN

Thursday, January 31, at 6:30 pm.

SVA Theatre

333 West 23rd Street, New York City.

From top: Chris Stein, Debbie Harry & Iggy Pop 2, © Chris Stein, 1977; Chris Stein, Joey Ramone & Debbie Harry, © Chris Stein, date unknown; Chris Stein, Richard Hell, Max’s Kansas City, © Chris Stein, date unknown.

UNKNOWN RICHARD BERNSTEIN

Although Richard Bernstein’s 1970s and ’80s cover portraits for Interview are well known, another body of work—pre- and post-Interview—is now on view at Jeffrey Deitch in Manhattan.

The exhibition is in conjunction with the publication of Starmaker, a new Bernstein monograph by Mauricio Padilha and Roger Padilha.

RICHARD BERNSTEIN—FAME

Through October 27.

Jeffrey Deitch, 76 Grand Street, New York City.

Richard Bernstein artwork (from top):

Pilules (Multi), 1965; Iggy Pop I; The KennedysFlourescent Beatles, 1968.

Photograph of Bernstein in his studio attributed to Berry Berenson.

JOHN CALE AND ARIEL PINK IN THE HIGH DESERT

DESERT DAZE—the Joshua Tree music festival where fans converge to see their favorite bands, and enjoy the campgrounds and metaphysical offerings of the Mystic Bazaar—is back.

Iggy Pop and Spiritualized are headliners, but of particular interest are scheduled sets by Ariel Pink and John Cale.

ARIEL PINK, Friday, October 13.

JOHN CALE, Saturday, October 14.

DESERT DAZE 2017, Thursday, October 12 through Sunday, October 15.

INSTITUTE OF MENTALPHYSICS, 59700 Twentynine Palms Highway, Joshua Tree, California.

desertdaze.org/

ARIEL PINK—DEDICATED TO BOBBY JAMESON, out now.

arielpink.bandcamp.com/album/dedicated-to-bobby-jameson

JOHN CALE—FRAGMENTS OF A RAINY SEASON, out now.

smarturl.it/FragmentsOf

Cover of new album by Ariel Pink; and John Cale, photographed by Julien Mignot.

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HEROES: DAVID BOWIE AND BERLIN

David Bowie moved to Berlin in late 1976 and stayed—on and off—for about two years. He recorded 32 songs for the “Berlin triptych”—Low, Heroes, and Lodger—but none of this dovetails too neatly: Low was started at Château d’Hérouville (“Honky Château”), outside Paris, and Lodger was recorded in Montreux. Only Heroes was made at Hansa Studios in Berlin. For the first time since Hunky Dory, he was just “David Bowie,” sans overly-constructed persona or alter ego (unless you count Iggy Pop). During the very years that punk exploded out of lower Manhattan and London and in dives off Hollywood Blvd., Bowie went back to a deeper source—his fascination with the rough imagery of the artists of Die Brücke, as a gateway to Weimar Berlin.

Bowie’s new, temporary home was a life-saving move from the death trip of Los Angeles, where the singer was subsisting on little more than cocaine, Gitanes, and glasses of milk. In Berlin, Bowie rediscovered food (and alcohol). And he began a working life with Brian Eno.

This is the subject of Tobias Rüther’s HEROES: DAVID BOWIE AND BERLIN, a Reaktion Books translation of Rüther’s Helden (2008), and part of their Reverb series. Sifting through the myths and creating a few of his own, Rüther draws from a rich vein of source material: memoirs by Romy Haag, Christine F., and producer Tony Visconti; Paul Trynka’s Iggy Pop and Paul Stump’s Roxy Music biography Unknown Pleasures; histories by Rory MacLean and Ernst Bloch; and dozens of Bowie bios, which are legion.

Following the release of Lodger, Bowie moved to New York City and entered the mainstream. The”Berlin years” are remembered as his last great period of true experimentation, until the final burst of Blackstar just before his death.

 

HEROES: DAVID BOWIE AND BERLIN by Tobias Rüther

reaktionbooks.co.uk

This British paperback is available locally at Book Soup for $25.

BOOK SOUP, 8818 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood.

booksoup.com

Image credit: Reaktion Books

Image credit: Reaktion Books. Original image © Steve Shapiro/Corbis