Amazing performance of this fantastic song. I uploaded it in HD to make it even more sizzling and sparkling! Be prepared to get blown away! Sorry for the tight cut...but everything is there. Enjoy!
Bowie once said I play music because I like it not to nbe better then other versions. Just his take on a great song.and I love it 😀 this man will never be repeated. Amazing artist 🎨
Great version...to be honest the only time David out iggyed iggy was with the reality tour version of sister midnight....that my friends was amazing......how luck we are to be able to rewithness Davids magic......
It's great, but is the date Nov 3 '10? So many videos just don't haave dates. I have to look at the haircut to see maybe which era we're in. I look to check out his wedding band, too...if it's on, the video must've been made after '92. A lot of guess work on my part!
Iggy was around before Bowie met him, but Bowie gave him much needed direction. Remember, Iggy influenced songs like Jean Genie. Also, I believe Lust for Life song was Bowies lone contribution to that album, but he was instrumental in The Idiot
@@francescoilsarda True, but Blah Blah Blah was pretty flimsy 80s commercial pop rock. Iggy Pop and David Bowie were the only truly interesting part of Blah Blah Blah. If a different act from that era recorded that album, say Fine Young Cannibals or Robert Palmer, it would have sucked. Bowie wrote it as a cash in album for Iggy, and it worked, mostly because Iggy was performing it. His deadpan, sarcastic baritone singing and meth head body builder figure running around like a lunatic in the music videos made it work. I'll take any Iggy album that came before it first, Idiot, Lust for Life, Kill City, New Values, Soldier, Party, and the criminally overlooked and underrated Zombie Birdhouse. Iggy usually surrounded himself with a cooking band and industry wizards during that period. Bowie for Idiot, Lust for Life, and Soldier, James Williamson for Kill City and New Values, and his band was a who's who of punk and avant garde icons during the period, Carlos Alomar, Ivan Kral, Glen Matlock, Clem Burke, Michael Page, Robby Dupree, not to mention the sibling rhythm section of Hunt and Tony Sales on Lust for Life. He made a few solid records after Blah Blah Blah, like Brick by Brick, Instinct, Naughty Little Doggie, American Ceaser, Skull Ring, Ready to Die with Williamson and The Stooges, and his recent collaboration with Josh Homme, Dean Fertita, and Matt Helders resulted in some great live performances of early Iggy songs and the very successful Post Pop Depression. Bowie was a legend, but he enjoyed alot of success and popularity during his peak in the 70s and 80s. Iggy fought his way through that period with help from guys like Bowie, but was really a bit too risque and experimental for the times. Fortunately, he has enjoyed god like status as a pioneer of garage, punk, new wave, etc , over the last 20 years or so.
De su larga carrera musical su etapa glam es lo que menos me gusta. Ahí prefería a Marc Bolan. Pero Bowie era un auténtico animal de escena. Un adelantado musical que muchos han imitado incluso el Bandido Bosé.
Not an Iggy classic... This is totally Bowie's creation. Not saying Iggy deserves no credit but this song is not really an honest portrayal of Iggy's talent.
Sorry, not impressed. DB has a legacy for FAR better performances than this one! Also, prefer he mating his very English accent, So sorry - I’ve loved his work for 40 years; this doesn’t cut it! JaneR
@@staywellandstrong4199 Well I never claimed the Ig to have penned it. China girl is by the Ig himself, and one of the few listenable tracks on Let's Dance (what a sad way to end Bowies magnificent string of albums from "The man who sold the world" to "Scary monsters".