5 Bands Influenced By David Bowie

One fo My Favourite Bowie classics, Starman, 1972.

David Bowie is a highly influential musician leaving his mark on many top artists throughout the years, whether they realized it at the time or not. David Bowie had a career in music that was influential in shaping the world of modern rock and pop!

He was never one to fit in with the status quo or do what was expected. No, it was entirely opposite. He never cared about how he looked to others. David Bowie came onto the music scene with an outlandish style and unique voices that soon paved the way for more incredible talent!

My truth is this. I was never much of a Bowie fan when I first caught a flame for rock ‘n roll. No, my first influences were country through my parents and self discovered artists such as Billy Joel, Genesis, the Bee Gees (yes, and I still love them!) and of course, the Beatles!

There is always going to be great debate about how much influence artists had on future artists. Probably best to just let the artists speak for themselves on how much they were influenced by any one artist. I discovered David Bowie in 1983 after the release of his the debut solo album, “Let’s Dance”. There was this girl, she loved David Bowie, so of course I immersed myself in that album and actually found joy in discovering more of his earlier stuff.

Ok so as the title of this post reads, here are 5 artists whose work was influenced by David Bowie’s work.

Top 5 Artists Influenced by David Bowie

5. The Smiths, Morrissey

In 2012 in a radio interview Morrissey sites David Bowie as one of the artists that he is indebted to. The two would go on to become old friends until Bowies passing in January 2016.

In a 2017 Rolling Stone magazine Morrissey, ever himself as outrageous as David Bowie had been, told contributing editor Rob Sheffield “He must surely be happy now. Music is eternity, and there he is, now, very much in it. I don’t imagine he wanted anything else from life”

Though relations between the two men were not always good, in fact there was a scathing call out of Bowie by Morrissey, who suggested in an interview that Bowie was no longer the artist he once was. He went on saying “he gives people what he thinks will make them happy, and they're yawning their heads off.” It ended with him proclaiming that Bowie was not relevant and had only become relevant by accident.

David [Bowie] quietly tells me, ‘You know, I’ve had so much sex and drugs that I can’t believe I’m still alive,’ and I loudly tell him, ‘You know, I’ve had SO LITTLE sex and drugs that I can’t believe I’m still alive.
— Morrissey, Autobiography

The Smiths, How Soon is Now

4. The Cure, Robert Smith

The Cure’s Robert Smith was hugely influenced by David Bowie and will often speak to this during interviews. As a child he discovered David Bowie and described the experience of discovering Bowie like this “David Bowie was probably the first artist that I felt was mine. He was singing to me. The first vinyl purchase Smith made was Bowie’s 1972 release, Ziggy Stardust.

The post-punk icon, Smith, describes being drawn into Bowies music, like so many others, by the multitude of characters that became apart the ever evolving career made of of different characters and changes which helped him rise to the top of music charts across several decades.

Robet Smith’s dream came true in New York City when he was asked to sing with Bowie at his 50th birthday party! From a young fan in the 70’s and an album that changed his life. Bowie’s sound patented the Cure’s doom and gloom sound of the 80’s

I listened to music before Bowie, obviously. I have an older brother and he played me Hendrix, Cream and Captain Beefheart… all that type of stuff from the 1960s but David Bowie was probably the first artist that I felt was mine. He was singing to me.
— Robert Smith, the Cure

The Cure, Just Like Heaven

3. Madonna

Madonna gave a speech inducting David Bowie into the music Hall of Fame in 1996, where she credited him with changing her life, proclaiming he taught her everything. The woman who in the 80’s and 90s can be credited with single handedly changing the way modern rock concerts are performed, gave the nod to her greatest influence, David Bowie

As the story goes, her and a friend snuck out of the house when she was 15 years old to see her first concert. A David Bowie concert her father already said there was “no way in hell” she would be going. Her father’s refusal encouraged her all the more to take the risk and go. Of course she got caught and spent that summer grounded. In her own words “it was worth every minute that I suffered in my house that summer”.

Madonna patterned her chameleonic stage personas after Bowie. She immediately saw that he created and used his personas as part of the art. “I found him so inspiring and innovative. Unique and provocative. A real genius.” Many artists like Madonna have credited David Bowie with being very provocative for the time, embracing and toying with the ideologies of gender. The realms in between and around masculine and feminine.

When she heard the news that January 10th, 2016 she sent out the following tweet celebrating his life!

David Bowie Changed the Course of My Life Forever. I found him so inspiring and innovative. Unique and provocative. A real genius
— Madonna

Borderline - Madonna

2. Motley Crue, Nikki Sixx

Nikki Sixx on David Bowie

This man right here hugely influenced and shaped the types of music I enjoyed when I was a 16 year old in Weston, Toronto. I fell hard for the music that is Motley Crue is famous for now. Nikki Sixx has long credited David Bowie with being a huge influence in his music. Yeah, it seems hard to make the leap from David Bowie to Motley Crue, but as Nikki describes above, it is there.

When looking to make a great band, Nikki described such a band that would be like David Bowie and the Sex Pistols thrown into a blender with Black Sabbath. What a mix right? Truthfully, if I am listening to a song like “Live Wire” I feel that is exactly what I am getting. The song is early raw and hard Crue. It tastes heavily of metal and punk. An homage almost to Sabbath and the Sex Pistols. Especially in that messy energy that drives straight through the song.

The words used by Nikki Sixx after learning of Bowie’s passing, just 2 days after his 69th birthday. “Bowie not only inspired me as a songwriter but inspired me to add layers to my creativity as an artist” aptly describes Nikki’s fondness for David Bowie.

As for the musical influence in Motley Crue and other hair bands, well… Look at a number of the early 80’s hair bands. Present in most of the videos was a strong androgynous teased hair, tights as pants and makeup. The best evidence, Poison’s 1986 “Look What the Cat Dragged In”! Those four boys were looking pretty feminine and masculine all at one. I mean Brett Micheals used to be so pretty! My own gender confused heart was in full crush mode.

Bowie showed us that it’s not only important to evolve as artists but mandatory... Bowie was my hero and always will be
— Nikki Sixx, Motley Crue

Home Sweet Home - Motley Crue

1. Nirvana, Kurt Cobain

By the time Kurt and Nirvana found themselves rising on the charts with hits like “Teen Spirit” and the release of Nevermind in 1991, there were many incredible bands that could influence a group of 90’s musicians. Here is an NPR article that describes 50 Artists who Inspired Kurt Cobain.

Nirvana recorded a cover of David Bowie’s “the Man Who Sold the World”, an electrifying version that was released on November 19, 1993 just about 5 months before Cobain’s sudden and unexpected death at age 27. If you think about it the song, a story of a man who no longer recognizes himself as he looks at his reflection in the mirror. Somehow fittingly poignant if you consider the timing and what Kurt was experiencing personally before his death.

Bowie himself had described the version by Nirvana as “heartfelt” noting that “until the cover, it had not occurred to me that I was part of America’s musical landscape.

I was simply blown away when I found that Kurt Cobain liked my work, and have always wanted to talk to him about his reasons for covering ‘The Man Who Sold the World’” and that “it was a good straight forward rendition and sounded somehow very honest. It would have been nice to have worked with him, but just talking with him would have been real cool.
— David Bowie

The Man Who Sold the World - Nirvana, MTV unplugged

What are your favourite Bowie Songs?
Do you have a favourite artist influenced by David Bowie?

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