Bowie finale soars on charts after death shock

Floral tributes are seen beneath a mural of British singer David Bowie, painted by Australian street artist James Cochran, aka Jimmy C, the day after the announcement of Bowie's death, in Brixton, south London, on January 12, 2016. PHOTO | AFP

What you need to know:

  • Billboard, which will publish the benchmark US chart this weekend, said that "Blackstar" was expected easily to outsell ballad singer Adele's blockbuster "25," which has spent seven weeks at number one.
  • In Britain, the Official Charts Company forecast that "Blackstar" would lead the weekly list and that 13 of Bowie's previous albums would re-enter the top 100.
  • "Blackstar" on its release already enjoyed nearly universal critical acclaim, with Bowie again proving his mastery of reinvention by creating a saxophone-driven hard jazz sound.

NEW YORK

David Bowie's final album soared toward the top of the charts Tuesday after the music legend's death from cancer stunned the world, with the details still shrouded in mystery two days on.

"Blackstar," released on Bowie's 69th birthday Friday, was on course to be the first number-one album in the United States for the quintessentially avant-garde artist who lived his last two decades in New York but enjoyed greater mainstream success in his native Britain.

Billboard, which will publish the benchmark US chart this weekend, said that "Blackstar" was expected easily to outsell ballad singer Adele's blockbuster "25," which has spent seven weeks at number one.

In Britain, the Official Charts Company forecast that "Blackstar" would lead the weekly list and that 13 of Bowie's previous albums would re-enter the top 100.

"Blackstar" was the top-selling album on iTunes in all major developed countries on Monday.

Songs from the album as well as classic Bowie hits such as "Heroes," "Let's Dance" and "Under Pressure" — performed with Queen — also entered the charts of streaming leader Spotify, with Bowie's catalog ascending especially quickly in France.

"Blackstar" on its release already enjoyed nearly universal critical acclaim, with Bowie again proving his mastery of reinvention by creating a saxophone-driven hard jazz sound.

SECRET ILLNESS

A memorial on David Bowie's star on The Hollywood Walk of Fame on January 11, 2016 in Hollywood, California. British music and fashion icon David Bowie died earlier January 10 at the age of 69 after a battle with cancer. PHOTO | AFP

Yet only a few people knew that the album would be Bowie's swansong and that it was in fact a meditative finale to a nearly half-century career.

Especially poignant is the song "Lazarus," whose video — also released on Bowie's birthday, two days before he died — depicts him levitating from a hospital bed.

"This way or no way / You know I'll be free / Just like that bluebird," Bowie sang over an ominous bassline but with no hint of weakness in his voice.

News of his demise broke with a stunning statement Monday on his social media accounts: "David Bowie died peacefully today (Sunday) surrounded by his family after a courageous 18-month battle with cancer."

Bowie's family asked for privacy and a representative said that no further details would be released.

Left unanswered were where exactly Bowie died as well as funeral arrangements for the artist whose influence towered over music, art, fashion and drama.

Bowie had told only a few people he was seriously ill as he worked on "Blackstar" and the music to "Lazarus," an off-Broadway science-fiction play based on "The Man Who Fell to Earth," whose 1976 film version starred Bowie.

The play's director Ivo van Hove said that Bowie told him in confidence more than a year ago that he was suffering liver cancer and was racing to finish the projects before it was too late.

At the December 7 premiere of "Lazarus" in New York, few knew that anything was amiss.

"The press wrote that he looked so well and so healthy. But as we went off the stage, he collapsed. And I realized that it might be the last time I saw him," van Hove told the Dutch daily NRC.

Bowie's death set off an avalanche of mourning among fans and fellow artists, especially in cities that he had called home including New York, London and Berlin.

Yet after the initial shock, many admirers also hailed Bowie as classy until the end for suffering away from the spotlight in a culture of 24-hour sharing.

A woman with a painted face stands outside the Ritzy cinema in south London to pay homage to British singer David Bowie following the announcement of Bowie's death on January 11, 2016. PHOTO | AFP

ELEGANT GENTLEMAN

Fellow British songwriting great Elvis Costello suggested he would grieve for Bowie away from social media.

"The right words would be written in ink on card, not to be seen suddenly and brutally, like the news. In acknowledgement, the lights on this particular, peculiar little theater will be lowered for a while," Costello wrote on Facebook, while hailing "a truly great artist, beautiful melodist and elegant gentleman."

Other mourners around the world sought to find fitting tributes to the constantly innovative artist, who helped to define glam rock and to infuse an intellectual heft in pop music.

Oslo's City Hall decided to ring its bells to the melody of "Changes," one of Bowie's most-loved songs.

Bowie — who was fascinated by the universe and took on the extraterrestrial alter ego Ziggy Stardust — was mourned as far as the astronauts on the International Space Station.

NASA, quoting his early hit "Space Oddity," tweeted: "And the stars look very different today."

And Canadian indie rockers Arcade Fire said the band could not have existed without Bowie, who was not only an influence but an early supporter.

"A true artist even in his passing, the world is more bright and mysterious because of him."