1975: David Bowie’s ‘Lost Year’ . . .

Kris C. Jones
5 min readJun 2, 2019
A montage of a few of the lighter moments from Bowie’s dark year of 1975 | Collage created by Kris Jones using Adobe Illustrator

The desert of southern California cannot be said to have created a religion, but it has contributed greatly to the development of a way of life that operates at the extremity of Western civilization. When you reach Los Angeles you are as far west as you can go. — Hollywood: The Haunted House by Paul Mayersburg

David Bowie was no newcomer to Los Angeles in 1974. The city had held an eternal fascination for him beyond that of the typical Hollywood glamour, and his one-week sojourn there in the fall of 1974 marked his fourth visit.

Looking down at Los Angeles from Mount Lee | GoodFreePhotos.com

Bowie immediately recognized that the essential aspect of L.A. and its environs was its plasticity. It was a factory town that ground out endless ephemeral images as its currency — and if anyone was a master of image, it was David Bowie.

Bowie’s “Plastic Soul Record” — YOUNG AMERICANS (1975): recorded in August of 1974 at Sigma Sound | Wikipedia Commons

During a frantic two-week break from touring, Bowie completed recording the lion’s share of his ninth album — Young Americans, at Philadelphia’s Sigma Sound Studios. The musical adventurer then boarded the Santa Fe El Capitan on August 24, 1974 — bound for the City of Angels.

Hotel California | Kevin Dooley on Flickr

Little did he realize at the time, though, that this particular visit to L.A. would quickly devolve to become his own personal Hotel California, and once settled there, he would have a hard time leaving intact.

Bowie performs during the 1974 Diamond Dogs Tour | Hunter-Desportes on Flickr

The Diamond Dogs Tour
The warm-up to what would become Bowie’s one-year L.A. residency was the kick-off to the second American leg of the 1974 Diamond Dogs Tour (2–8 September 1974).

One-time girlfriend Dana Gillespie, Manager Tony DeFries and Bowie back in 1971 (Costume designer Freddie Burretti can be seen over Bowie’s left shoulder) | Wikimedia Commons

During an extended set of performances at the Universal Amphitheater, David held court at the nearby Beverly Wilshire Hotel, along with the key members of his inner circle, including his longtime manager, Tony DeFries. DeFries fancied himself a modern-day Colonel Tom Parker — legendary manager of Elvis Presley, and took Parker’s notorious carnival huckster methods as his personal promotional playbook.

Who Can I Be Now?
For his own part David, the eternal bibliophile, was also looking to cast himself in a new role and took Dave Dalton’s pioneering biography, James Dean: The Mutant King as his own particular template.

Actor James Dean wearing his trademark REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE red windbreaker | Pixabay

As author Mark Spitz relates in Bowie: A Biography . . .

Fast, sexed-up, palpably sad and searching, James Dean was American rock ‘n roll before there was such a thing as rock ‘n roll. What is irresistible about rock, the slippery, stylish, hot freakiness, is what’s irresistible about Dean. David Bowie could not have looked at Dean’s androgynous features, prettier than most girls, and not see a kindred soul.

Subsequently, in tandem with the adoption of his new persona, David set out to take on the dress, manner and characteristic tortoiseshell wayfarers of the legendary red-jacketed hero as his own.

It was a good match, for Dean’s image seemed perfectly suited to Bowie’s purposes, reflecting as it did the archetypal American male — sensitive and vulnerable, macho and detached and, much like Bowie, androgynous and sexually appealing to both sexes.

As an added allure, Dean’s tragic end not only perfectly mirrored in tone the oft-quoted ‘chickie run’ scene in Rebel Without a Cause (Nicholas Ray, 1955), but also related back to Bowie’s longtime yen for dystopian, apocalyptic landscapes filled with waves of disaffected youths.

The monstrous set for Bowie’s 1974 DIAMOND DOGS tour as designed by Jules Fisher & Mark Ravitz | Wikimedia Commons photo by Sam Howzit taken at the Rock ’n’ Roll Hall of Fame

‘The Gouster’ Wades Ashore
Preeminent in David’s 1974 tour agenda was the overriding goal of conquering America. While Bowie was big in his native England, Europe, and many other parts of the world, to most people stateside Bowie was “just another swishy English queen.”

So, while he made the rounds of major American cities with his epically ambitious Diamond Dogs Tour, Bowie also ruminated and strategized —

What David needed to do was become “more American” (hence the title and lead-off track of his forthcoming album, Young Americans — still in the can at this point).

He then determined to adopt as his next guise the overt masculinity of a black street hustler, or “gouster,” as he referred to this, the latest in an ever-evolving line of deftly-crafted personas.

For better or worse, the disco ball and its attendant culture ruled the music scene from 1970–1979 | Pixabay

In implementing his plan, Bowie would achieve two of his primary goals: simultaneously put some distance between himself and the American public’s negative preconceptions and, more importantly, become one with the nascent American music of the moment — black soul & dance music — soon enough evolving to become the now infamous late 70s disco craze — just as Bowie conveniently exited stage left.

American Breakthrough
David’s strategy was correct. In the spring of 1975 Bowie’s daring whitebread R&B experiment would go on to hit #9 on the Billboard album chart, with the platter’s lead-off track, “Young Americans,” becoming Bowie’s first U.S. Top 40 single, peaking at #29.

But the true crowning moment of the album’s release campaign was the single “Fame,” written and recorded with Bowie’s good friend John Lennon at Electric Lady Studios in New York City in January of “75.

And while David sweated away in the deserts of New Mexico on the set of The Man Who Fell to Earth (Nicolas Roeg, 1976), the single would go on to become a worldwide hit and subsequently something of a signature tune for Bowie throughout his career.

Most importantly, it was the first Bowie #1 single to top the US charts — strangely ironic for a catchy, prophetically-titled rant on the pitfalls of celebrity.

— But then, irony always was Bowie’s stock and trade . . .

Bowie’s ultimate fans . . . | TORLEY on Flickr
  • AUTHOR’S NOTE: This essay is part of the preface to Brittle Atlas — a forthcoming book on David Bowie’s most tumultuous and productive year.
Mockup cover for Brittle Atlas | GermanCreative on Fiverr
Cover blurb mockup cover for BRITTLE ATLAS | GermanCreative on Fiverr
  • Kris Jones may be reached via his Medium Homepage.
Kris C. Jones

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Kris C. Jones

Published film historian actively pursuing a colorful love affair with the flickering image. I specialize in films of the early to mid=1970s.