TITLE: Bowie, Cambo, And All The Hype
AUTHOR: John Cambridge
PUBLISHED BY: McNidder And Grace
John Cambridge (Cambo) had a life-long
friendship with David Bowie but has only now decided to share his experiences
with the well-known singer and songwriter. Cambo recalls his friendship and
musical collaborations with Bowie in this endearing account of his life and
musical escapades.
Cambo started his early musical
career as a drummer in various clubs and bars in and around Hull. He started
practising his drumming skills on Beano annuals in his bedroom prior to being
able to afford to buy a drum kit. He has
kept every stage pass and aide-mémoire from every gig he performed at, plus an
autograph book filled to the brim with signatures from performers from the 60’s
and 70’s. He has performed with Robert Palmer and Marc Bolan plus many others
and was instrumental in introducing Bowie to guitarist and producer, Mick
Ronson. He is cited to have performed the ‘first ever glam rock gig’ with
Bowie’s Hype at the Roundhouse in 1970.
Cambo traces his career with the
bands in which he was drummer, such as The Gonx, The Hullabaloos, ABC, Treacle, The
Rats, Junior’s Eyes and Bowie’s Hype and details how whilst he was in ABC
backed up-and-coming artists, as they were then, such as The Searchers, The
Fortunes, Family, Zoot Money, Geno Washington, Pink Floyd. Manfred Mann, The
Small Faces and Alan Price.
He was friends with Bowie for 50
years, their first meeting being in July 1969; Bowie and his first wife Angie
actually stayed with Cambo in his home in Hull, with his parents at one
time, and they even shared the same bed Cambo and his brother slept in. Personal
disclosures about his early family life and his parents are recalled in the
book along with the affection he felt for Bowie and the admiration Cambo had for
him shines through each page where he’s mentioned. He lived with Bowie at Haddon Hall when he
had his first hit record 'Space Oddity' and toured with him in Junior's Eyes. He also had the privilege of being Bowie’s Best
Man when Bowie married Angie in 1970.
The book includes pictures of
personal letters received from Angie Bowie to Cambo’s parents, one from
Iman Bowie asking for Cambo’s contribution to a special book she was putting
together as a gift to David for his 50th birthday and a press cutting about
Cambo’s reunion with Bowie. There’s also
a picture of Bowie’s reply letter to Cambo’s daughter’s wedding invite. Transcripts of Cambo’s personal emails sent
to and received from Bowie are also included.
Cambo cites that he never thought
of Bowie as ‘the star’; he was always David to him. That was how he’d got to
know him in their younger days whilst both were struggling musicians. Also, he
says their relationship was ‘all very natural and relaxed’; and this is how
this memoir comes across. It is a very
relaxing read with interesting anecdotes and memories of the relationship Cambo
had with a much loved music icon. Cambo has relayed his life-long friendship
with Bowie from their early beginnings through to Bowie’s passing in January
2016. It is a tender memoir remembering
happy times with a person greatly admired and now sadly missed.
Reviewer - Anne Pritchard
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