Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Matt Bowden

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Birth name
  
Matt Bowden

Role
  
Musical Artist

Name
  
Matt Bowden

Years active
  
1989–present

Occupation(s)
  
Musician, activist


Matt Bowden Matt Bowdens solution for legal highs TVShows 3 News

Genres
  
Instruments
  
Vocals, Guitar, Bass, Synths, Piano, Composition, Arrangement, Programming

Matt bowden an eternity of reaching for the stars 09 12 11


Matt "Starboy" Bowden is a rock musician and activist from New Zealand. Previously known as the "Godfather of the legal highs industry", he is credited with creating party pills and successfully lobbying in New Zealand for a change in drug policy towards a regulated supply of psychoactive substances. He performs musically as Starboy and produces progressive rock music with elaborate theatrical stage shows, and produces short films, most notably Starboy Eternity.

Contents

Matt Bowden Matt Bowden Photos Matt Bowden Portrait Session Zimbio

His musical single Flying, released 29 October 2012, debuted at number five in the NZ Single charts and number 29 in the New Zealand Top 40 Singles charts.

Matt Bowden Matt Bowden Photos Matt Bowden Portrait Session Zimbio

As of July 2016, Matt Bowden is living in exile in Thailand, after being threatened with imprisonment by the Australian government for promoting the production of synthetic alcohol.

Matt Bowden static2stuffconz13089074318055191805jpg

Biography

Bowden was born 10 June 1971 in Auckland, New Zealand. His father was an internet pioneer and his mother was a piano teacher. He studied guitar under Nigel Gavin and played in Gavin's acoustic avant garde jazz ensemble "Gitbox Rebellion." At 18, after studying music at Auckland University, Bowden joined Auckland metal band "The Highwaymen" on lead guitar. Together the band recorded a first album "Torrent of Darkness. After a break-up Bowden played eclectic guitar solos on drummer Gavin Stokes' album Continuum, and worked as a guitar teacher for 7 years.

In 1997 Bowden was involved in the formation of New Zealand's top selling automotive magazine, Performance Car, then went on to become one of the original creators and distributors of party pills. After the death of a family member from ecstasy overdose Bowden worked with a neuropharmacologist and biopsychologist to develop demonstrably safer alternatives to methamphetamine to be used as a substitute therapy.

Lobbying

Following a friend's death, Bowden contracted a research team to identify safer alternatives to illicit substances and identified benzylpiperazine from research and began dialogue with New Zealand's Ministry of Health Drug Policy Team, identifying himself as a community member with a potential solution for drug demand reduction as called for in methamphetamine action plan.

Products were developed for amphetamine addicts and initially targeted toward them as a substitute therapy.

As popularity grew, the Inter-Agency Committee on Drugs (IACD) and the Ministerial Committee on Drug Policy (MCDP) funded research into usage of the products, that confirmed of those who used illegal drugs and party pills, 44.1% recently stopped using illegal drugs and 45.6% used party pills so they could avoid using illegal drugs.

A submission by Stargate International in April 2010 to the New Zealand Government, as part of their investigation into the control and regulation of drugs in New Zealand, was subsequently recommended by the Law Commission as part of a range of suggestions encompassing non-psychoactive "lifestyle" drugs such as aphrodisiacs, some cosmetics, and the wide and growing range of substances used in athletics and bodybuilding.

Following this Law Commission report, the New Zealand Government announced in September 2011 that they would follow the advice of the Law Commission and implement a new regulatory regime. The result of this amendment was the introduction of a "Class D" schedule, which moved to "restrict the sale of herbal highs or party pills to people over the age of 18…and places controls on marketing and labelling of the products."

Bowden led the lobbying activity regulations in lieu of prohibition and established an industry body, STANZ (Social Tonic Association of New Zealand) and developed a "Code of Practice" which became the default discussion document for what became the Misuse of Drugs Amendment Act, being the first of its kind of drug regulating legislation in the world. The Canadian Government has subsequently referenced this legislation and activity as a potential new direction in harm minimisation and drug regulation.

Bowden is planning to manufacture products that will pass the tests required by the Psychoactive Substances Bill, if it passes into law.

EASE

One of the most high-profile party pills products that Bowden developed was EASE. Bowden's organisation Stargate International began 'clinical trials' to distribute EASE, later identified as methylone, after receiving confirmation from the New Zealand Ministry of Health that the product was legal to import and sell.

The initial advisement from the Ministry of Health stated:

Methylone is structurally and pharmacologically similar in some respects to the illegal and neurotoxic drug of abuse MDMA, although its structure falls outside the definition of “Amphetamine analogues” as defined in Part 7 of Schedule C of New Zealand’s Misuse of Drugs Act.

Following the screening of a locally produced documentary into EASE entitled The Truth Files, Associate Health Minister Jim Anderton released a statement classifying EASE as an illegal product, and provided the following assessment:

Yesterday, Associate Health Minister Jim Anderton said advice from the chair of the Expert Advisory Committee on Drugs, Dr Ashley Bloomfield, showed Ease contained a substance called methylone, an “analogue” – similar to – cathinone, which is a Class B amphetamine controlled under the Misuse of Drugs Act.

This announcement resulted in the termination of the trial, on the basis that although methylone was not explicitly scheduled and fell outside the strict definitions of an "amphetamine analogue" in the Misuse of Drugs Act, it was considered to be "substantially similar" to methcathinone and thus considered by law enforcement authorities to be a Class C illegal drug.

Starboy

Bowden's key musical persona 'Starboy' produces classically fused psychedelic rock music, using digital technology to create soundscapes and musical journeys. Receiving a great deal of publicity and media attention around his 40th birthday party, several hundred guests witnessed Starboy's first big outing. It was, says Bowden "the birth of a new persona", a return to the long-dormant ambitions that saw him play in metal bands in his youth.

According to reports in the Sunday Star-Times, the event included, "women hanging from the ceiling on trapezes, others in bunny suits, loads of booze, and Bowden up on stage with his band amid lasers and costumed dancers, wearing Kiss-style makeup, big boots and long shiny coat, and evidently "enjoying himself much more than anyone else was".

Under the banner of 'Starboy', Bowden has released an eclectic range of progressive rock music, and a short film, entitled Starboy Eternity. In media interviews he has described his persona as, "an interdimensional traveller... in time and space responding to the cries of this troubled earth... It's about raising consciousness and hope and freedom. About love. What the world needs". Other media interviews indicate that Bowden is likely to look offshore for his fanbase, as his role as de facto spokesman for the legal-high industry in New Zealand and changing personas has led to some discord. Bowden states in an interview with the New Zealand Herald, "my market has to be overseas now, because in New Zealand the public don't like it if you've changed from one thing to something else."

Starboy's Eternity

Starboy's Eternity is a 10-minute-3-second music video for Eternity the song of the same name released on November 2011 and directed by Zac Blair.

Initially a stand-alone music video, the production has expanded into a three-part mini-movie that revolves around a young girl and her fight against the "Strangers" who have invaded her village. The films have been defined as Steampunk by reviewers. Production began in November 2009 with shooting commencing June 2011 in various locations around Auckland, New Zealand.

Development

In online articles and the extra features on the DVD, singer Matt Bowden elaborates on the concept behind the video. He states, "the image of a child moving through a sleeping village came to him while he sung the lyrics in reaction to the funky bass line. The song is about enlightenment and the lyrics borrowed from classical poetry so it suited that era, with the addition of sci-fi content and Zac Blair's direction."

Credits

  • Directed by: Zac Blair
  • Edited by: Matt Alison
  • Written by: Zac Blair and Matt Bowden
  • Starring

  • Daughter: Shizzi Bowden
  • Alchemist/Starboy: Matt Bowden
  • Mother: Kristi Bowden
  • Younger Daughter: Kezi Bowden
  • Stranger 1: Andrew Pether
  • Stranger 2/Villager in forest: Craig Malyon
  • Stranger 3: David Cotter
  • Priest: Justin Bennett
  • Burley Villager: Dallas Barnett
  • References

    Matt Bowden Wikipedia