REVIEW

"The strangest cat I’d ever seen": Earl Slick recalls meeting David Bowie in rock 'n' roll memoir

The legendary guitarist reveals life in many of rock’s fastest lanes, working with John Lennon, Bowie and more

By Kenneth Womack

Contributing Writer

Published May 31, 2024 2:09PM (EDT)

Earl Slick and David Bowie during David Bowie Gives Fans a Strong Dose of "A Reality Tour" at Special Poughkeepsie Warm Up Show For His Upcoming World Tour at The Chance Nightclub in Poughkeepsie, New York, United States. (KMazur/WireImage/Getty Images)
Earl Slick and David Bowie during David Bowie Gives Fans a Strong Dose of "A Reality Tour" at Special Poughkeepsie Warm Up Show For His Upcoming World Tour at The Chance Nightclub in Poughkeepsie, New York, United States. (KMazur/WireImage/Getty Images)

Earl Slick’s "Guitar: Playing with David Bowie, John Lennon, and Rock-and-Roll’s Greatest Heroes" affords readers with a ringside seat for many of popular music’s most iconic moments. But it’s more than that. "Guitar" provides a warts-and-all reading of what life as a working rock-and-roller is really like. From the soaring highs to the despairing lows, "Guitar" offers a fascinating account of life in many of rock’s fastest lanes, where superstardom’s rarefied air is marked by an exacting blend of high-stakes competition and fleeting instances of joy amidst the mayhem. 

Written with Slick’s musical collaborator Jeff Slate, a gifted writer and guitarist in his own right, "Guitar" hits its finest notes when the musician recalls his passion for mastering the instrument, a journey that has taken the balance of his lifetime. His steadfast pursuit of greatness is marked by an uncommon humility in a world so often known for its runaway bravado. And this sense of unpretentiousness doesn’t merely extend to his musicianship. When the chips are down — when he can’t get a solo career off the ground or a regular gig — Slick checks his ego and sells timeshares to make ends meet. 

Not surprisingly, "Guitar" is filled with dramatic descriptions of the instances in which Slick first encounters the artists who would change his life. His first meeting with Bowie makes for an unforgettable scene. “Man, he was skinny as a rake. And pale,” Slick recalls. “He was dressed the way an English rock star might think a Harlem pimp would dress. Loose, baggy pants matched with Capezio dance shoes. It was a weird combo, but very cool, too. And I was especially struck by the way he moved. He was graceful for a rock-and-roll guy. To top it off, he had bright orange hair under a grey fedora. Then, as he got closer, I noticed he didn’t have any eyebrows!”

For Slick, such outlandish moments prove to be par for the course. “David was definitely the strangest cat I’d ever seen, and I’d been around some off-the-wall characters, even at that point in my career.” Later, during the production of Bowie’s "Young Americans" album, Slick would succumb to the substance abuse at the heart of so many rock ‘n’ roll lives — so much so, in fact, that he wouldn’t be able to recall John Lennon — one of Slick’s genuine idols — participating in the sessions for “Fame” and Bowie’s cover version of the Beatles classic “Across the Universe.”

There's Only One John and Yoko"Guitar: Playing with David Bowie, John Lennon, and Rock-and-Roll’s Greatest Heroes" from Chapter 8: There's Only One John and Yoko (Penguin Books)This would prove to be a hazard of sorts in 1980 when producer Jack Douglas tapped Slick to play guitar in Lennon and Yoko Ono’s "Double Fantasy" band. “Now, I never get nervous. Ever,” Slick writes in "Guitar." “I’d been in a room with all kinds of people up to that point. But that first day working with John, I got nervous. This was a real ‘holy s**t’ moment.” He arrived at the studio early on the first day, hoping to impress Lennon with his professionalism and promptness. As it turned out, he would be shown up by Lennon, of all people — the very person whom he had most hoped to impress that day.

Even stranger still, Lennon greeted him warmheartedly, exclaiming “Nice to see you again!” Having blanked the Bowie sessions for "Young Americans," Slick spent much of the "Double Fantasy" recordings being endlessly taunted by Lennon, who took to asking him, in a kind of hilarious, albeit good-natured deadpan, “Remember me now?”

For all of the magic and majesty of his experiences working with the likes of Bowie and Lennon, Slick’s memories are inevitably tempered by the larger-than-life artists’ passage into the arms of history. Lennon’s senseless murder would prove to be devastating, of course, for Slick. Bowie’s death decades later would be harrowing in its own right, given the musicians’ longstanding collaboration both in the recording studio and on the concert stage. 

But throughout the whole of his rock ‘n’ roll life — a journey that continues into the present day — Slick remains driven by the seemingly unattainable spark that lingers just beyond his reach, yet motivates him to wake up and do it all over again. 


By Kenneth Womack

Kenneth Womack is the author of a two-volume biography of the life and work of Beatles producer George Martin and the host of "Everything Fab Four," a podcast about the Beatles distributed by Salon. He is also the author of "Solid State: The Story of Abbey Road and the End of the Beatles," published in 2019 in celebration of the album’s 50th anniversary, "John Lennon, 1980: The Last Days in the Life" and the authorized biography "Living the Beatles Legend: The Untold Story of Mal Evans" (November 2023).  Womack is Professor of English and Popular Music at Monmouth University.

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