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La verdad es que esto sale por una deduccion bastante simple del acutar de Bowie en los ultimos años (mas arriba puse mi interpretación sobre lo mismo), aqui hay un buen quote al respecto:
Fuente: http://consequenceofsound.net/2016/...ever-die-decoding-the-icon-who-fell-to-earth/
Saludos
He has these representatives. It makes him even more mystical. It’s a bit like having prophets speaking about your cause,” says Trynka. “Meanwhile, he stays behind the scenes like the Wizard of Oz.” His longtime producer Tony Visconti has answered questions about his last two albums, and for the 2013 opening of the David Bowie Is exhibit, his lookalike Tilda Swinton showed up to give a speech in his stead. Last month, he performed ★ cut “Lazarus” on Colbert in a brand-new body belonging to Michael C. Hall, who plays Newton in the Lazarus stage show. “Mr. Bowie, an international star since the early 1970s, has always come across as his own spectral avatar, in a series of beguilingly designed alter egos who are both there and not there,” wrote Ben Brantley in his review of Lazarus for the New York Times. “Much of Mr. Bowie’s extraordinary longevity as a rock god has to do with the feeling that he has never really been with us ‘in the flesh.’” More than any other pop star, Bowie has mastered the art of being everywhere and nowhere at the same time — a little like an alien, a little like God.
Fuente: http://consequenceofsound.net/2016/...ever-die-decoding-the-icon-who-fell-to-earth/
Saludos