When Ziggy Played Guitar: David Bowie and Four Minutes that Shook the World

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Description

___________________6 JULY, 1972David Bowie appears on Top of the Pops for a third time.His quiff is big, bold, and the colour of fire. His make-up is lavish. His jumpsuit is a wild burst of colourful patterns, like a fluorescent fish skin. He carries a brand-new blue acoustic guitar. There’s excitement, mixed with incredulity. And then he begins to play.It’s a moment that will change the world of music forever.This is Ziggy Stardust, what would become Bowie’s most famous persona. It’s an instant seismic shift in the zeitgeist. This one performance embeds Ziggy Stardust into the nation’s consciousness, and music will never be the same again.In When Ziggy Played Guitar, Dylan Jones looks back at one of the most influential moments in pop history,the birth of an icon, and the myriad unexpected ways that David Bowie reshaped pop culture.

Additional information

Weight 0.244 kg
Dimensions 1.9 × 12.9 × 19.8 cm
by

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

304

Publisher

Year Published

2018-11-15

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

1786090635

About The Author

Dylan Jones is the multi-award winning editor of GQ magazine.He has been an editor at i-D magazine, The Face, Arena, the Observer and the Sunday Times. He is a Trustee of the Hay Festival, a board member of the Norman Mailer Foundation and was awarded an OBE in 2013 for services to publishing. He has written twenty books including the critically aclaimed When Ziggy Played Guitar and From the Ground Up, U2's celebration of their record-breaking 360° tour.

Review Quote

The best music book I have ever read, dislodging Revolution in the Head and England's Dreaming. Superb in every way.

Other text

His blow-by-blow account of the performance is breathless in its fan-boy enthusiasm and much of the rest of When Ziggy Played Guitar is rooted in its personal impressions. “The by-product of Ziggy’s success was the validation of identity, our identity”, Jones writes, and it’s hard not to be moved by his hero worship.