"I should be dead, but someone up there likes me." Billy Idol looks back on his wild adventures in '80s New York, including the night he met David Bowie while covered in his own vomit

Billy Idol and David Bowie
(Image credit: Richard E. Aaron/Redferns | Marcello Mencarini/Getty Images)

The title of the new Billy Idol documentary, Billy Idol Should Be Dead, speaks volumes about the English rocker's uninhibited and frequently reckless embrace of hedonism and debauchery at the height of his fame. Idol had a moderately successful career in England with London punks Generation X -once dismissed as "really dreadful garbage" by Elton John - who scored three Top 40 singles and one Top 30 album in the UK before disbanding in 1981. But it was only after he relocated to New York that he truly realised his potential, with the invaluable assistance of guitarist Steve Stevens, and career guidance from Kiss' wily manager Bill Aucoin, who encouraged his new client's reinvention as an MTV-friendly pop-punk-New Wave cartoon character.

"One of the things Bill Aucoin told me was, ‘New York’s bankrupt. Anything goes'," Idol, now 70, recalls in a new interview with The Times. "It was a post-apocalyptic place, like the bomb had been dropped and we were living in the rubble. The cops didn’t care about anything. They were looking for the real criminals - unlike England, where the police were always bothering people like us."

Idol's first solo album, 1982's Billy Idol, sold half a million copies in the US, and spawned two hit singles, Hot In The City and White Wedding, which made the singer a household name. His second album, 1983's Rebel Yell, was an even greater commercial success, selling two million copies in the US alone. Unfortunately, this success also enabled him to develop a ferocious cocaine habit and turned him into, in his own words, a "sexual maniac". One of the more memorable quotes in his new films finds him telling an interview "I just wanna get screwed to death".

"The free love of the Sixties was still happening," he tells The Times. "We’d heard about this thing called Aids but until Magic Johnson [the American basketball star] got it in about 1991 no one cared. Until that point, it was just our generation’s time. We were very young and having fun with it."

"There was a no-holds-barred feeling about the eighties," he recalled to Classic Rock in 2016. "We were partying as if it was the end of the world, as if tomorrow there'd be no more drugs and there'd be no more fun. There would be nothing. We were all living in a fool's paradise."

In 1984, Idol almost died of a heroin overdose while back in London. Upon his return to the US he sought to kick his addiction to heroin by smoking crack. This didn't go terribly well, as one might imagine.

Idol's 'carefree' approach to life did however help rejuvenate the career of another English ex-pat musician.

Article continues below

One evening in 1982, while partying in NYC with Nile Rodgers, Idol spotted David Bowie drinking alone in a club.

“Fucking hell, it's David Bowie,” he recalls saying, before promptly vomiting all over himself. Idol then offered Bowie a vomit-covered handshake and introduced him to Rodgers. This meeting would ultimately lead to Bowie and Rodgers working together on 1983's Let's Dance album, which resurrected his flagging career.

“I did the world a favour by being off my face, didn’t I?” Idol suggests.

A much calmer man now, the singer is 'California sober', largely restricting his vices to wine and marijuana, and is hugely appreciative that he's still around to share his stories.

"The idea that I would get to live this life is incredible," he tell The Times. "Like I said, I should be dead, but someone up there likes me."

Billy Idol Should Be Dead is on Sky Arts in the UK from March 26

Paul Brannigan
Contributing Editor, Louder

A music writer since 1993, formerly Editor of Kerrang! and Planet Rock magazine (RIP), Paul Brannigan is a Contributing Editor to Louder. Having previously written books on Lemmy, Dave Grohl (the Sunday Times best-seller This Is A Call) and Metallica (Birth School Metallica Death, co-authored with Ian Winwood), his Eddie Van Halen biography (Eruption in the UK, Unchained in the US) emerged in 2021. He has written for Rolling Stone, Mojo and Q, hung out with Fugazi at Dischord House, flown on Ozzy Osbourne's private jet, played Angus Young's Gibson SG, and interviewed everyone from Aerosmith and Beastie Boys to Young Gods and ZZ Top. Born in the North of Ireland, Brannigan lives in North London and supports The Arsenal.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.