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From an outrageously costumed parade to a bacchanalian party in heaps of glitter, memorial events to David Bowie are multiplying as fans find their own ways to mourn the rock legend.
Bowie – a pioneer of glam rock at the start of a half-century career marked by constant reinvention – apparently did not want a soppy public funeral.
He had stayed discreet about his 18-month battle with cancer that killed him last Sunday at age 69, and his family said it would hold a private ceremony.
But Bowie’s death has triggered an avalanche of mourning around the world with many fans looking to grieve together.
Arcade Fire, the Canadian indie rockers championed by Bowie when they started out, announced that the group would lead a parade this weekend through New Orleans.
Arcade Fire was to be joined by the celebrated Preservation Hall Jazz Band, keeping up the New Orleans tradition of musical funeral parades.
The groups in a Facebook posting encouraged fans to join them and to “dress in your best Bowie outfit or something more strange” – likely an uphill task considering the rocker’s range of characters from the androgynous extraterrestrial rocker Ziggy Stardust to Jareth the Goblin King.
To many fans, Bowie’s importance lay in his openness to new personas and identities, with his music offering a welcoming new world for those who had none.
One of the most prominent celebrations has been the “BowieBall”, first launched in 2006 in the rocker’s adopted home of New York.
Taking to heart Bowie’s lyric to “put on your red shoes and dance the blues”, revelers each year have picked their most outrageous outfits, often donning drag, and hit the floor to ample amounts of glitter and confetti.
In the wake of the Starman’s death, BowieBall founder Deryck Todd said that he is talking with leading concert promoter Live Nation to expand significantly the event, which features DJs and musicians who perform cover versions of songs.
Todd, a designer, said that the 10th anniversary BowieBall will take place in the coming months and expected it again to draw passionate Bowie fans who were never among “the cool kids”.
“I really hope that this event does provide a home for all the misfits, who can feel like they belong in some way,” he said. “We’re going to go bigger, we’re going to go harder and we’re really going to do it in a way that pays proper homage to this wonderful man.”
BowieBalls have sprouted up elsewhere, with an edition in Chicago on January 7 that celebrated Bowie’s birthday and new album, Blackstar, with almost no one knowing that he was about to die.
Todd, through his dealings with the singer’s entourage, said that Bowie himself was aware of the BowieBall and appreciated it.
Past BowieBalls have been captivated by tales that Bowie himself showed up secretly in costume, although Todd acknowledged there was little evidence.
“I will let that magic be what it is for that moment,” he said.
Fans earlier celebrated Bowie in Brixton, the area of London where he was born, with a street party hours after news of his death.
In one of the most organised events, hundreds of fans – some with faces painted like Bowie’s character Aladdin Sane – mourned him on Friday at his studio in Berlin where he recorded three of his landmark albums.
From 1976 to 1978, Bowie lived in the Schoeneberg district of former West Berlin.
Bowie’s family has welcomed the tributes, but stressed that it was not involved.
“Just as each and every one of us found something unique in David’s music, we welcome everyone’s celebration of his life as they see fit,” a statement read.
Sign in Texas capital changed to David Bowie Street
A music festival organiser helped make the Texas capital of Austin a little bit funkier this week by putting up a skillfully crafted sign that dubbed a downtown road David Bowie Street.
The city of Austin, none too pleased about what it sees as vandalism to a street named for Alamo defender James “Jim” Bowie, will allow the sign to stay up until next week to honour the British music great, who died a few days ago and wrote hits such as Changes.
“We appreciate Austin’s reputation as the live music capital of the world and recognise David Bowie for all he did for the music industry and more,” the Austin Department of Transportation said.
Roland Swenson, co-founder of the South by Southwest festival, put up the sign out of show of respect for the music great, a lawyer for Swenson said.
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