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File:David Bowie - The Video Collection VHS cover.jpg; File:David Bowie - Thursday's Child.jpg; File:David bowie - tonight 12 inch single cover.jpg; File:David Bowie - Valentine's Day cover art.jpg; File:David Bowie "Bang Bang" Promotional Single Cover Image.jpg; File:David Bowie BBC Sessions 1969-1972.gif; File:David Bowie Bowie Legacy Album ...
Bowie also released 28 video albums and 72 music videos. [1] Throughout his lifetime, Bowie sold at least 100 million records worldwide. [2] In 2012, Bowie was ranked ninth best selling singles artist in United Kingdom with 10.6 million singles sold. [3] As of January 2016, 12.09 million David Bowie singles had been sold in Britain. [4]
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; Appearance. ... David Bowie album covers (186 F) David Bowie albums (5 C, 28 P)
It should only contain pages that are David Bowie albums or lists of David Bowie albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about David Bowie albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The original 1970 US release of The Man Who Sold the World employed a cartoon-like cover drawing by Bowie's friend Michael J. Weller, featuring a cowboy in front of Cane Hill asylum. [48] Weller, whose friend was a patient there, suggested the idea after Bowie had asked him to create a design that would capture the music's foreboding tone.
The man born David Jones adopted the stage name David Bowie in 1966, avoiding confusion with The Monkees’ Davy Jones. But then he just kept on adding more aliases to his roster of identities ...
It is no small understatement to say that David Bowie was at a creative crossroads in 1970 — one that was baffling, possibly even to himself. He began the year essentially as a folksinger coming ...
"Heroes" [a] is the twelfth studio album by the English musician David Bowie, released on 14 October 1977 through RCA Records.Recorded in collaboration with the musician Brian Eno and the producer Tony Visconti, it was the second release of his Berlin Trilogy, following Low, released in January the same year, and the only one wholly recorded in Berlin.