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David Bowie dead: German government thanks late singer for helping to bring down the Berlin Wall

Tweet by the German Foreign Office read: 'Good-bye, David Bowie. You are now among #Heroes.'

John Hall
Monday 11 January 2016 14:03 GMT
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David Bowie, whose death aged 69 was announced this morning, had a long relationship with Germany
David Bowie, whose death aged 69 was announced this morning, had a long relationship with Germany (Reuters)

The German government has paid tribute to David Bowie, thanking the late singer for helping to bring down the Berlin Wall.

A message posted on the German Foreign Office’s official Twitter account, read: “Good-bye, David Bowie. You are now among #Heroes. Thank you for helping to bring down the #wall.“

The account also linked to a YouTube video showing Bowie performing his track ‘Heroes’ live.

Bowie, whose death aged 69 was announced this morning, had a long relationship with Germany, having lived and worked in Berlin during the height of the Cold War.

David Bowie (right) shared an apartment in Berlin with a drug-ravaged Iggy Pop (left) during the mid 1970s (Getty Images)

The singer became fascinated with German musicians in the mid-1970s – particularly the bands Kraftwerk and Neu. In late 1976 he moved from Switzerland to West Berlin where he was often seen riding a bicycle between his apartment on Hauptstrasse in Schoneberg and Hansa Tonstudio - the recording studio he used in Kreuzberg, close to the Berlin Wall.

David Bowie Dead

Bowie shared the apartment with a drug-ravaged Iggy Pop while working in Hansa Tonstudio with Brian Eno. The music he produced during this period included the 1977 album Low, which drew enormous influence from Kraftwerk’s stripped-down industrial sound.

David Bowie was often seen riding a bicycle between near the apartment he shared with Iggy Pop on Hauptstrasse in Berlin's Schoneberg neighbourhood (Getty Images)

His second Berlin-based album was Heroes, released in 1978. The album embraced a more traditional pop-rock sound while its lyrics drew influence from the Cold War – in particular the influence the tensions were having on his divided adopted city.

Bowie released his third Berlin album, Lodger, in 1979 which draw on punk and new wave for inspiration. Bowie left Berlin shortly before recording the album in Switzerland, although he would return to Germany numerous times over the subsequent years.

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