For Debbie Hilton, David Bowie meant “everything”. “My house is a shrine to him. He’s still alive in my house. My Christmas tree was David Bowie, even my bedding is Bowie,” she said.
She travelled from Liverpool to join her fellow Bowie devotees at the Starman memorial in Brixton, south London, where the singer was born, to pay their respects on the anniversary of his death.
The gathering has become a site of annual pilgrimage for some, but this year larger than usual crowds amassed to mark 10 years since the artist’s passing.
Hilton, 64, said she could recall the first time she came across Bowie when she was a child in Manchester.
“He was on at the Free Trade Hall in 1972. I was just a kid and it was before he became famous with Ziggy. I just fell in love with him. I was 11 years old and awestruck. It was just like something you couldn’t imagine the feeling of watching him. I was hooked ever since,” she said.

Bowie’s death, which followed a liver cancer diagnosis about 18 months before, shocked the world. It was announced days after the release of his 26th and final album, Blackstar, which has since been interpreted as an expression of the singer’s impending mortality.
When Bowie died, Hilton said her brother sent her a text in the morning that said: “Are you okay”. She said: “I thought: ‘What’s he going on about?’ and then I put the TV on. Well, that was it. I couldn’t go to work two weeks. I had lilies and a candle burning. I was crying and it went on for about a month. It was like losing everything in my life.”
Julian Furnival braved the chilly weather to lay flowers at the mural. “It don’t matter what the weather is going to say, we’re always going to come here and pay our respects to him,” said the 68-year-old, who appeared emotional as he stuck stickers on the glass protecting the memorial.
Furnival said he has been a Bowie fan since he received a copy of Aladdin Sane for Christmas when he was 13 years old. He still remembers the day when the Starman’s passing was announced. “It still rubs in pretty bad. Our niece phoned us up at 6.30am and said it happened. We didn’t believe it but then we turned the telly on. It was really upsetting. It was a big shock,” he said.

His partner, Laura Hough, 69, has scrawled the names of fans from around the world on the memorial on their behalf. The couple have yet to listen to Blackstar. “We’ve never had the guts to play at all because my son says it’s a very solemn album,” said Furnival. Hough agrees: “Knowing he was in so much pain but still doing it, he’s just amazing.”
Sisters Jenny Wasiak, 65, a train conductor who travelled to Brixton from Norwich, and Astrid Ballhorn, 74, who is retired, came to “spend the day doing all things Bowie to do what we can to remember and love him”.
“We don’t like a lot of each other’s music but as far as David is concerned, he’s our favourite,” said Ballhorn. “We adore and love David and miss him dearly,” said Wasiak. “We came here the year he died.”

Reflecting on his legacy, Wasiak described Blackstar an “amazing” and “moving” parting gift. “He gave something to everybody explaining that he’s dying. It was very moving and a brilliant piece of music as well,” she said.
“He’s such an iconic legend who influenced everybody,” Ballhorn said.
“If you listen to musicians speaking, they nearly all reference David in some way or another.”
“I was listening to an interview the other day that compared him to Beethoven. He’s the Beethoven of our day. It’s a class of music that will live on for 200 years or more” she said. “It seems incredible to think that we lost him 10 years ago.
“He was a genius, there’ll never be anybody else like him.”

15 hours ago
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