David Bowie: The Last Five Years (Documentary)

Posted by: Yetizone on 05 January 2017

David Bowie: The Last Five Years. Saturday 7th Jan on BBC2 at 21.00.

Just a quick heads up for the forum David Bowie fans. I heard this programme previewed on BBC Radio4 Front Row last night. As a Bowie fan, it really piqued my interest as it concentrates on Black Star & The Next Day albums, which I personally think are amongst his strongest. If anything like the original David Bowie: Five Years documentary, it could provide a fascinating insight into the creative process behind those last two albums.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b088ktm6

BBC synopsis...

"There was nothing predictable about David Bowie. Everything was designed to intrigue, to challenge, to defy all expectations. But perhaps no period in David Bowie's extraordinary career raised more fascination,more surprise, and more questions than the last five years. This is an intimate portrait of one of the defining artists of the twentieth and early twenty first centuries, told by the people who knew him best - his friends and artistic collaborators.

This film takes a detailed look at Bowie's last albums, The Next Day and Blackstar, and his play Lazarus. In his final five years, Bowie not only began producing music again, but returned to the core and defining themes of his career. This film explores how Bowie was a far more consistent artist than many interpretations of his career would have us believe. It traces the core themes from his final works and relates them to his incredible back catalogue. His urge to communicate feelings of spirituality, alienation and fame underpin his greatest works from the 1960s to 2016. This is what lies at the heart of his success and appeal - music that deals with what it means to be human in a way that goes far beyond the normal palette of a rock star.

The film is not a comprehensive overview of his entire career, but an in-depth exploration of pivotal moments that show how the themes, the narrative and the approach is consistent - it is simply the palette that changes. The film includes every key member of the Next Day band, the Blackstar band and those who worked with him on the stage play Lazarus. In addition, old friends and colleagues are on hand to explore how the work of the last five years relates to Bowie's back catalogue. And, as in David Bowie: Five Years, there is a wealth of unseen and rare archive footage."

Posted on: 05 January 2017 by Allan Milne

 

Thanks for the heads-up, will certainly be watching.

Allan

Posted on: 13 January 2017 by Skyhigh

Caught this on iPlayer - absolutely excellent - watch before it's gone!

Posted on: 13 January 2017 by Yetizone

Agree - I thought it well done overall, but it did examine the easier years a little more than expected. When the programme expanded his later work I found it fascinating, especially how the jazz fusion for Black Star came about. Essential watching for Bowie fans I thought, but perhaps a little long for the merely curious.

Posted on: 13 January 2017 by BigH47

Great programme awful, jazz band.

Posted on: 27 January 2017 by mudwolf

I'm always amazed at Bowie's creativity and theatricality.  When I hear his earlier stuff  it really takes me back and he certainly wasn't MOR middle of the road.