📰 Just a Gigolo – Article: Feb. 1974
- David Bowie

- Feb 17, 1974
- 2 min read
Updated: Feb 17
A one‑page music‑press article reporting on the Village People’s reissue of “Just a Gigolo,” tied to David Bowie’s new film.
📰 Excerpt
A short industry report announcing the Village People’s new version of “Just a Gigolo,” released to coincide with David Bowie’s forthcoming film of the same name.
📰 Key Highlights
• One‑page article published February 17, 1974
• Covers the Village People’s reissue of “Just a Gigolo”
• Song tied directly to David Bowie’s new film
• Single added to the film’s soundtrack album
• Notes the withdrawal of the previously planned track “I Am What I Am”
📰 Overview
This brief music‑press article reports on the Village People’s reissue of “Just a Gigolo,” the title song of David Bowie’s new film. The piece highlights the single’s release, its inclusion on the soundtrack, and the shifting plans behind the album’s tracklist.
📰 Source Details
Publication / Venue: UK Music Press
Date: February 17, 1974
Issue / Format: One‑page article
Provenance Notes: Industry news column covering soundtrack and single releases.
📰 The Story
The article announces that the Village People — then still charting with “Y.M.C.A.” — are reissuing their version of “Just a Gigolo,” now positioned as the title song for David Bowie’s new film. The single is scheduled for release by DJM, with the soundtrack album arriving simultaneously through the newly formed Jambo label, distributed by Pye.
The report emphasises the eclectic mix of artists featured on the soundtrack: Marlene Dietrich, Manhattan Transfer, the Pasadena Roof Orchestra, and the Ragtimers. The Village People’s contribution replaces the previously planned track “I Am What I Am,” which has been withdrawn.
Although Bowie is not the performer on this particular single, the article frames the release within the context of his film, underscoring the cross‑media attention surrounding the project. The tone is brisk and industry‑focused, typical of mid‑70s music‑press news columns, but it captures a moment when Bowie’s film work was beginning to generate its own orbit of promotional activity.
📰 Visual Archive

“Just a Gigolo” article, February 17, 1974.
📰 Related Material
Explore the tags below for connected posts and themes
📰 Closing Notes
This article captures a small but telling moment in Bowie’s 1974 media presence — a film‑related release generating its own ripple of industry news, even when performed by other artists.
📰 Sources
• UK music‑press article (Feb 17, 1974)
• Contemporary soundtrack release notes
• Bowie film chronology
📝 Copyright Notice
All magazine scans, photographs, and original text excerpts referenced in this entry remain the property of their respective copyright holders. This Chronicle entry is a transformative, non‑commercial archival summary created for historical documentation and educational reference. No ownership of the original material is claimed or implied.





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