Iggy Pop has paid tribute to David Bowie with a special radio show.
The Lust for Life singer discussed his memories of his friend, who died of cancer in January this year aged 69, and had a special playlist that spanned the Ziggy Stardust hitmaker's career on his two-hour BBC 6 Music show Iggy Confidential.
Pop said he had personally chosen the songs according to his memories of Bowie.
"I took out a piece of paper and a pen and closed my eyes and just remembered what I liked at different times ... I'm weighing things that are a little more low on the totem pole, but not obscure."
Before he played Wild Is the Wind from the album Station to Station, Iggy recalled all the "strange" people who were hanging out at the recording studio when Bowie was working on the track.
"This was recorded at Cherokee Studios, which was just a very typical, good old solid rock'n'roll studio owned by some guy who was connected to some guy who always had a mountain of drugs.
"And there were people with hair too long for their bodies coming and going in weird cars. And strange girlfriends."
Pop also shared anecdotes about eating burgers with Bowie and Frank Zappa, the room that inspired the "blue, blue, electric blue/ that's the colour of my room" line from Sound and Vision and the recording process of the seminal album Low.
After Bowie died, Pop tweeted: "David's friendship was the light of my life. I never met such a brilliant person. He was the best there is."
Bowie and Pop toured together in 1976, before sharing a home in Berlin in 1977, where Bowie helped his friend write his first two post-Stooges solo albums, The Idiot and Lust For Life.
Pop's live shows at that time saw Bowie join him on keyboard, while he provided backing vocals on Low.