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Beskrivning
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum:2011-08-10
- Mått:156 x 235 x 19 mm
- Vikt:481 g
- Format:Häftad
- Språk:Engelska
- Antal sidor:352
- Förlag:Duke University Press
- ISBN:9780822350101
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Chuck Eddy is an independent music journalist living in Austin, Texas. Formerly the music editor at the Village Voice and a senior editor at Billboard, he is the author of The Accidental Evolution of Rock ’n’ Roll: A Misguided Tour through Popular Music and Stairway to Hell: The 500 Best Heavy Metal Albums in the Universe. Chuck Klosterman is a freelance journalist and the author of numerous books, including Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs: A Low Culture Manifesto and Fargo Rock City: A Heavy Metal Odyssey in Rural North Dakota.
Recensioner i media
“This wide-ranging collection of essays (from the Voice, Rolling Stone, Spin, etc.) captures Eddy’s cantankerous, spirited, enthusiastic, and forceful takes on music from rap to country and musicians from Michael Jackson to Brad Paisley. . . . Eddy’s far-reaching insights into rock music push the boundaries of the rock criticism, showing why he remains one of our most important music critics.” - Publishers Weekly “Eddy’s eccentricity is not only refreshing and entertaining; it’s also valuable. . . . [S]omething compels Eddy to pay attention to music that no other music journalist can be bothered with. This is a vital counterbalance to the critical herd-mind, and a reminder of how much music making and music fandom exists outside the media radar, and never makes it into the official narrative.” - Simon Reynolds, Bookforum “[T]his new compendium of pieces by Eddy . . . reads like an alternate history of pop's last 25 (or so) years, in which album-oriented rock is saved from itself by the Ramones' Too Tough To Die, latter-day Def Leppard isn't rendered irrelevant by Nirvana, and horn-rimmed consensus about indie darlings Animal Collective is just a bad dream.” - Greg Beets, Austin Chronicle “You can predict what Eddy will think of something, and you’ll often be wrong, but what he actually thinks will always make more sense, will fit Eddy’s written persona better, than what you had in mind. Eddy’s taste has a deep coherence that’s close to unique among rock critics. . . . [F]or an Eddy fan, it’s a kick getting to read about his favorite music in-depth in these pages, especially when he’s in its first flush of Chuck-love. Will to Power, the Lordz of Brooklyn, Banda Bahia, and White Wizzard are all here, because who else was going to write about them?” - Josh Langhoff, Los Angeles Review of Books “Eddy's unflinching ability to connect the dots between what he's hearing and what he's living makes Rock and Roll an electric read. It should trip wires in the minds of not just aspiring and current critics but also casual listeners who might not realize how much is below the surface of what they're hearing.” - Michael Hoinski, Village Voice “Other anthologies of music writing leave you wanting to race to hear the music being written about. Rock and Roll Always Forgets leaves me wanting to read more Chuck Eddy. And more, and more…” - Ken Tucker, Entertainment Weekly “I don’t always agree with Chuck Eddy. In fact, I only occasionally agree with Chuck Eddy. But I’m always sure he cares, which I can tell not just because I know him, but because I love reading him. For more than twenty-five years he has been an original and indefatigable voice whose openness to new and unheralded music is legendary.”-Robert Christgau, Dean of American Rock Critics “When Chuck hears a pop song, it’s like he is the first person who has ever heard it; he’s certainly aware of what the rest of the world already wants to believe, but those pre-existing perceptions are never convincing to him. . . . More than any other critic, Chuck Eddy showed how the experience of listening to music was both intellectually limitless and acutely personal. There was no ‘correct’ way to hear a song, and there were no fixed parameters on how that song could be described in print, and if that song made you reconsider abortion or the Oakland Raiders or your father’s suicide, then that intellectual relationship mattered because your engagement was real.”-Chuck Klosterman, from the foreword “Few longtime pop music critics have been as fearlessly unhip in both their likes and dislikes, have been so willing to accept oft-ignored music on its own terms and have been as rock 'n' roll as Chuck Eddy, writer, former Village Voice music editor, self-described curmudgeon, ex-Army captain and hair-metal expert.” - Randall Roberts (Los Angeles Times) “This smart, very funny anthology includes some of the best work by any writer on country, metal, teen pop, Eighties hip-hop and Eminem. It’s the only book you’ll ever read that compares Jay-Z’s The Blueprint to Huey Lewis’ Sports-and means it as a compliment.” - Jody Rosen (Rolling Stone) “[T]his new compendium of pieces by Eddy . . . reads like an alternate history of pop's last 25 (or so) years, in which album-oriented rock is saved from itself by the Ramones' Too Tough To Die, latter-day Def Leppard isn't rendered irrelevant by Nirvana, and horn-rimmed consensus about indie darlings Animal Collective is just a bad dream.” - Greg Beets (Austin Chronicle) “Eddy’s eccentricity is not only refreshing and entertaining; it’s also valuable. . . . [S]omething compels Eddy to pay attention to music that no other music journalist can be bothered with. This is a vital counterbalance to the critical herd-mind, and a reminder of how much music making and music fandom exists outside the media radar, and never makes it into the official narrative.” - Simon Reynolds (Bookforum) “Eddy's unflinching ability to connect the dots between what he's hearing and what he's living makes Rock and Roll an electric read. It should trip wires in the minds of not just aspiring and current critics but also casual listeners who might not realize how much is below the surface of what they're hearing.” - Michael Hoinski (Village Voice) “Other anthologies of music writing leave you wanting to race to hear the music being written about. Rock and Roll Always Forgets leaves me wanting to read more Chuck Eddy. And more, and more…” - Ken Tucker (Entertainment Weekly) “This wide-ranging collection of essays (from the Voice, Rolling Stone, Spin, etc.) captures Eddy’s cantankerous, spirited, enthusiastic, and forceful takes on music from rap to country and musicians from Michael Jackson to Brad Paisley. . . . Eddy’s far-reaching insights into rock music push the boundaries of the rock criticism, showing why he remains one of our most important music critics.” (Publishers Weekly) “You can predict what Eddy will think of something, and you’ll often be wrong, but what he actually thinks will always make more sense, will fit Eddy’s written persona better, than what you had in mind. Eddy’s taste has a deep coherence that’s close to unique among rock critics. . . . [F]or an Eddy fan, it’s a kick getting to read about his favorite music in-depth in these pages, especially when he’s in its first flush of Chuck-love. Will to Power, the Lordz of Brooklyn, Banda Bahia, and White Wizzard are all here, because who else was going to write about them?” - Josh Langhoff (Los Angeles Review of Books)
Innehållsförteckning
- Acknowledgements xvForeword / Chuck Klosterman xiIntroduction 11. Predicting the Future Over and Out 9Rhymed Funk Hits Area 10Skin Yard, Skin Yard 12Drug Crazed Teens: Flaming Lips 14Music That Passes the Acid Test 15New Kids in the '90s: A Decade in the Life 18Radiohead, The Bends 19Walking into Spiderwebs: The Ultimate Band List 20Talking World War III Blues 232. Alternative to What Bombast in the Blood: Bad Religion 29Conscience of Some Conservatives: The Ramones 32Punk's First Family Grow Old Together: The Ramones 35Howls from the Heartland: The Untamed Midwest 42An Indie Rises Above: SST Records 48Slime is Money (Bastard) 52Big Black Give You a Headache 56Nirvana, "all Apologies" 62Wrong is Right: Marilyn Manson 64Live: Tower Theatre, Philadelphia, 18 February 1997 68City of Dreams: Rock in Mexico 69Chumbawamba at the Piss Factory 76Mr. and Mrs. Used To Be: The White Stripes Find a Little Place to Fight 'em Off 793. Umlauts from Heck Five Great Beats-Per-Minute 89Seduce, Seduce 92Agnostic Front, Beyond Possession, Dr. Know, Helstar, Raw Power 94Top 40 That Radio Won't Touch: Metallica 98Welcome Home (Sanitarium): Metallica Seek Psychiatric Help 104Mentors, Up The Dose 106Robert Plant, Technobilly 108Def Leppard's Magic and Loss 116AC/DC's Aged Currencies 124White Wizzard Escape Each Other 1374. To the Beat Y'all Mantronix: Strange Loops 143Spoonie Gee: Unreformed 144Just-Ice: Rap With Teeth 147Pazz & Jop Ballot Excerpt 1989: N.W.A. 149Pazz & Jop Ballot Excerpt 1992: Arrested Development 149Sir Mix-A-Lot: Chief Boot Knocka 149From Taco Bell to Pachalbel: Coolio 150Pazz & Jop Ballot Excerpt 1997: Erykah Badu and B-Rock & The Bizz 152Timbaland, Magoo, and Ma$e, As the World Turns 153Pazz & Jop Ballot Excerpt 2001: Jay-Z 157Licks: Bone Crusher, Turk, Crunk & Disorderly 158Pazz & Jop Ballot Excerpt 2003 1605. Race-Mixing Emmett Miller: The Minstrel Man from Georgia 167Mississippi Sheiks vs. Utah Saints 168Pazz & Jop Ballot Excerpt 1984 170Pazz & Jop Ballot Excerpt 1985 170Boogie Down Productions: Ghetto Music: The Blueprint of Hip-Hop 172Yothu Yindi: Tribal Voice 175Living Colour: Biscuits EP 1753rd Bass: Cactus Love 176Teena Marie in Wonderland 178Shake Your Love: Gillette 180The Iceman Cometh Back: Vanilla Ice 183Motor Suburb Madhouse: Kid Rock and Eminem 184The Daddy Shady Show: Eminem's Family Values 196Spaghetti Eastern: The Lordz of Brooklyn 2066. Country Discomfort Yippie Tie One On: Rural Roots and Muddy Boots 217John Cougar Mellencamp: Life Goes On 222K.T. Oslin: Greatest Hits: Songs from an Aging Sex Bomb 224The Temptations of Mindy McCready 226CMT 228Banda, Si, Por Qué No 229Big & Rich Boogaloo Down Broadway 233Pazz & Jop Ballot Excerpt 2004: Montgomery Gentry and Chely Wright 235Please Stop Belittling Toby Keith 236Brad Paisley is Ready to Make Nice 2407. Pop Muzik Cutting It as a Bay City Roller in 1989 247People Pleasers: The Village People 249Arrivedérci, Bay-BEE: Nocera and Fun Fun 251Debbie Gibson: Angel Baby 253It Was In The Cards 255Pet Shop Boys' Mad Behavior 256Gimme Back My Bullets: Will to Power Shoot for Disco Valhalla 263Michael Jackson Loves the Sound of Breaking Glass 267If It Ain't Baroque, Don't Fix It: Michael Jackson and Faithless 273They Know What They Really Really Want and They Know How to Get It: Spice Girls and Gina G 277Pazz & Jop Ballot Excerpt 1998 2818. Singles Again and Again Sucking in the '70s: Have A Nice Day, Volumes 1–10 287Zager and Evans: "In The Year 2525" 289Radio '86: Dead Air 292Radio On reviews 298Ten Cents a Watusi 304Singles Again: Tangled Up in Blue 309Singles Again: Paranoia Jumps Deep 313Singles Jukebox reviews 316The Year of Too Much Consensus 322The End? 325Index 329
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