product title divider
EARN 13 SUPER POINTS! What's this?
Sorry, this selection is currently unavailable.
product image
$19.00
You Save 34%
Price:
$12.50 + $3.99 SHIPPING
Total Price:
$16.49
Quantity:
Ships from/sold by Alibris Media 2 (Who's this?)
Seller Rating: 4.33 out of 5
Format: Paperback
Condition:  Brand New
See all sellers
4 New and Used
from
$1.01

Marketplace Buying Choices

Buy.com
$13.42 + $3.75 shipping
In Stock 45 Day Returns
marketplace box buy button
See all 4 New & Used
from $1.01 + $3.99 shipping
advertisement

Product Summary

Format: Paperback
ISBN-10: 0385484364
ISBN-13: 9780385484367
Buy.com Sku: 30412287
Publish Date: 4/10/2007
Dimensions:  (in Inches) 9.25H x 6.25L x 1.25T
Pages:  496
Advertisement middle
 
A definitive collection of profiles, cultural commentary, and reviews from a 20-year career in rock criticism, by the author of "Shot in the Heart". "A refreshingly inclusive arc of rock history . . . consistently provocative".--"Kirkus Reviews".
From the Publisher:
Few journalists have staked a territory as definitively and passionately as Mikal Gilmore in his twenty-year career writing about rock and roll. Now, for the first time, this collection gathers his cultural criticism, interviews, reviews, and assorted musings. Beginning with Elvis and the birth of rock and roll, Gilmore traces the seismic changes in America as its youth responded to the postwar economic and political climate. He hears in the lyrics of Bob Dylan and Jim Morrison the voices of unrest and fervor, and charts the rise and fall of punk in brilliant essays on Lou Reed, The Sex Pistols, and The Clash. Mikal Gilmore describes Bruce Springsteen's America and the problem of Michael Jackson. And like no one else, Gilmore listens to the lone voices: Al Green, Marianne Faithfull, Sinead O'Connor, Frank Sinatra.

Four decades of American life are observed through the inimitable lens of rock and roll, and through the provocative and intelligent voice of one of the most committed chroniclers of American music, and its powerful expressions of love, soul, politics, and redemption.
Annotation:
Former ROLLING STONE reporter Mikal Gilmore offers his collection of essays and band interviews that cover twenty years of American rock and roll history. Discussions include: "The Problem with Michael Jackson," "Van Halen: The Endless Party," and "Sinead O'Connor's Songs of Experience." The final chapter is devoted to the late Kurt Cobain and inspired by a meditative visit Gilmore made to Cobain's hometown after the musician's death.

Read A Chapter

I guess I could say what many people of my age--or people who are younger or even older--might be able to say: I grew up with popular music encompassing my life.  It played as a soundtrack for my youth.  It enhanced (sometimes created) my memories.  It articulated losses, angers, and horrible (as in unattainable) hopes, and it emboldened me in many, many dark hours.  It also, as much as anything else in my life, defined my convictions and my experience of what it meant (and still means) to be an American, and it gave me a moral (and of course immoral) guidance that nothing else in my life ever matched, short of dreams of sheer generous love or of sheer ruthless rapacity or destruction.  I can remember my mother playing piano, singing to me her much-loved songs of Patsy Cline and Hank Williams, or singing an old-timey Carter Family dirge, accompanying herself on harmonica.  As I remember it, she wasn't half-bad, though o
Click to read more...
Advertisement Bottom