A Cartography of Glam, Jazz, and the Bowie/Ronson/Mark O’Leary Axis There is a mainstream history of rock and roll, and then there is the subterranean pipeline where the real alchemy happens. We are taught to view musical movements as isolated islands. We treat the glitter-drenched glam rock of early 1970s London, the intellectual minimalism of ECM jazz, and the gritty underworld of modern prestige television as entirely separate universes. But if you pull back the curtain and map the DNA of these scenes, you find a hyper-dense, cosmic web of connection. At the very center of this specific, mind-bending network sits an extraordinary intersection: The Bowie, Ronson, and Mark O'Leary axis. Through a series of staggering personal alignments, this web bridges the gap between David Bowie’s inner sanctum and the absolute vanguard of musical experimentation. Here is the secret genealogy of rock’s most fascinating "six degrees of separation." 1. The Georgia Milieu and the LA P...
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