Bowie didn’t know he was dying when recording ‘Blackstar’ says new documentary

By editorial board on January 6, 2017

The Last Five Years will air on BBC 2 this Saturday (January 7), a day before singer’s 70th birthday a year following his passing. 

Revelation comes from new BBC 2 documentary 'David Bowie: The Last Five Years'Documentary looking back at singer’s last five years says suggestion that his final single Lazarus was a ‘parting gift’ to fans is wrong

David Bowie didn’t know he was dying when he recorded his final album ‘Blackstar’, according to a new documentary about the late music icon’s final years.

David Bowie: The Last Five Years will air onBBC2 on Saturday night, (January 7) a day before what would have been the singer’s 70th birthday – reveals that Bowie discovered his treatment was to be stopped while he was filming the music video for his final single, Lazarus., a day before what would have been the singer’s 70th birthday and just under a year following his passing.

The Guardian reports that in the documentary it is claimed by ‘Lazarus’ video director Johan Renck that Bowie only discovered his cancer had become terminal when he was in the middle of filming the clip in November 2015.

“David said: ‘I just want to make it a simple performance video’,” Renck recalls in the documentary. “I immediately said ‘the song is called Lazarus, you should be in the bed’. To me it had to do with the biblical aspect of it… it had nothing to do with him being ill.”Renck continues: “I found out later that, the week we were shooting, it was when he was told it was over, they were ending treatments and that his illness had won”.

[columns]
[column size="1/2"]


[/column]
[column size="1/2"]

[/column]
[/columns]

Bowie’s final album ‘Blackstar’, recorded early in 2015, is widely regarded as a “parting gift” to fans, but these new claims contradict this intent.Yet even then, Bowie had not given up hope of surviving his cancer and was still keen to make new work just weeks before he died, according to Ivo Van Hove, who directed Bowie’s musical, Lazarus. In the programme he recalls one of the last exchanges the pair had, after the play made its debut in New York in 2015.

Meanwhile, a special tribute concert to David Bowie is set to take place at Brixton Academy to mark his birthday this weekend, featuring friend and actor Gary Oldman along with over 30 musicians that collaborated with Bowie throughout his career.

“Often he would go and record in the studio and then go and watch the rehearsals for Lazarus in the evening, or talk about the play in the morning, go to the studio, and then come back. It was quite an extraordinary workload,” said Whately.

“I think everyone would like me to say he was turning up to the studio to record Blackstar and he was terribly ill, but I don’t think he was. There are musicians in the Blackstar band who didn’t even know. We all now know he was ill, we know he was undergoing treatment, but it doesn’t seem to have had an effect at all on his output.”

[columns]
[column size="1/2"]


[/column]
[column size="1/2"]

[/column]
[/columns]

DISCLAIMER: the images used by Videomuzic are for the purpose of criticism and exercise of the right to report news, in low quality, in compliance with the provisions of the law on copyright, used exclusively for the information content.
DISCLAIMER: Videomuzic usa le immagini per finalità di critica ed esercizio del diritto di cronaca in modalità degradata conforme alle prescrizioni della legge sul diritto d'autore utilizzate ad esclusivo corredo dei contenuti informativi.
Copyright © 2022 Videomuzic | Rome. ITA | Pictures, videos remain the property of the copyright owner, Any copyright owner who wants removed should contact us..
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram