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Joni - The Anthology (Paperback)
Barney Hoskyns; Introduction by Barney Hoskyns; Barney Hoskyns
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R448
R420
Discovery Miles 4 200
Save R28 (6%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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With his trademark growl, carnival-madman persona, haunting music,
and unforgettable lyrics, Tom Waits is one of the most revered and
critically acclaimed singer-songwriters alive today. After
beginning his career on the margins of the 1970s Los Angeles rock
scene, Waits has spent the last thirty years carving out a place
for himself among such greats as Bob Dylan and Neil Young. Like
them, he is a chameleonic survivor who has achieved long-term
success while retaining cult credibility and outsider mystique. But
although his songs can seem deeply personal and somewhat
autobiographical, fans still know very little about the man
himself. Notoriously private, Waits has consistently and
deliberately blurred the line between fact and fiction, public and
private personas, until it has become impossible to delineate
between truth and self-fabricated legend.
"Lowside of the Road" is the first serious biography to cut through
the myths and make sense of the life and career of this beloved
icon. Barney Hoskyns has gained unprecedented access to Waits's
inner circle and also draws on interviews he has done with Waits
over the years. Spanning his extraordinary forty-year career from
"Closing Time" to "Orphans," from his perilous "jazzbo" years in
1970s LA to such shape-shifting albums as "Swordfishtrombones" and
"Rain Dogs" to the Grammy Award winners of recent years, this
definitive biography charts Waits's life and art step by step,
album by album.
Barney Hoskyns has written a rock biography--much like the subject
himself--unlike any other. It is a unique take on one of rock's
great enigmas.
Think Woodstock and the mind turns to the seminal 1969 festival
that crowned a seismic decade of sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll. But
the town of Woodstock, New York, the original planned venue of the
concert, is located over 60 miles from the site to which the fabled
half a million flocked. Long before the landmark music festival
usurped the name, Woodstock--the tiny Catskills town where Bob
Dylan holed up after his infamous 1966 motorcycle accident--was
already a key location in the '60s rock landscape. Drawing on
numerous first-hand interviews with the remaining key players in
the scene--and on the period when he lived there himself in the
1990s--Hoskyns has produced an East Coast companion to his
bestselling L.A. canyon classic Hotel California. This is a richly
absorbing study of a vital music scene in a revolutionary time and
place.
God Is in the Radio gathers 50 pieces from 40 years of writing
passionately about music. A former mainstay of NME and MOJO and
author of such acclaimed books as Hotel California and Small Town
Talk - Barney Hoskyns hymns the artists that have thrilled and
moved him most, from Frank Sinatra to Amy Winehouse, via the
Cocteau Twins and Queens of the Stone Age. Together with acts as
varied as Laura Nyro and Luther Vandross, Burial and Bobby Womack,
these are the "unbridled enthusiasms" that - for Hoskyns - dissolve
the rationalisation of feeling, producing a sense of rapture that
borders on religious ecstasy. Spanning multiple decades and moments
of music history, and containing personal reflections as well as
recommendations, this is a poignant and evocative must-read book
from one of the UK's foremost music writers.
'An indispensable compendium for Steely Dan fans' The Wire At its
core a creative marriage between Donald Fagen and Walter Becker,
Steely Dan are one of the defining and bestselling American rock
acts of the last half-century, recording several of the cleverest
and best-produced albums of the '70s - from the breathlessly catchy
Can't Buy a Thrill to the sleekly sinister Gaucho. In the '90s they
returned to remind us of how sorely we had missed their elegance
and erudition, subsequently recording Two Against Nature and
Everything Must Go during the following decade. They have sold
close to forty-five million albums. 'A lot of people think of them
as the epitome of boring '70s stuff,' novelist William Gibson said
in 1993, when Becker and Fagen toured for the first time in
nineteen years. 'They don't realize this is probably the most
subversive material pop has ever thrown up.' Now fully embraced by
the 'Yacht Rock' generation - semi-ironic devotees of '70s
Southern-California slickness - Steely Dan no longer polarize lo-fi
punks and studio geeks in the way they used to. In 2001 they were
inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Major Dudes collects
some of the smartest and wittiest interviews Becker and Fagen have
ever given, along with insightful reviews of - and commentary on -
their extraordinary songs. Compiled by Rock's Backpages editor
Barney Hoskyns, the book's contributors include Charles Shaar
Murray, Robert Palmer, Ian MacDonald, Bud Scoppa, Penny Valentine,
Fred Schruers, Sylvie Simmons and Michael Watts.
The story of a remarkable time and place: Los Angeles from the dawn
of the singer-songwriter era in the mid-Sixties to the peak of The
Eagles' success in the late Seventies. 'Hotel California' is an
epic tale of songs and sunshine, drugs and denim, genius and greed,
and is the first in-depth account of the LA Canyons scene between
1967 and 1976. Hoskyn's history of this vital period in the
development of today's great musical influences spans the rise of
Joni Mitchell, Crosby Stills Nash and Young, The Eagles, James
Taylor and Jackson Browne, and focuses on the brilliance and
determination of David Geffen, the man who linked them all.
Covering genius, drug-crazed disintegration, and the myriad
relationships between these artists and the songs that issued from
them, and drawing on extensive interviews with countless stars,
singers, writers, managers, executives and scenesters, 'Hotel
California' is a pop-culture classic.
The definitive oral history of the iconic, bestselling rock band
Led Zeppelin
With Robert Plant on lead vocal and Jimmy Page on guitar, Led
Zeppelin is one of the most iconic, legendary, and influential rock
bands in musical history. Tales of their indulgence in sex, drugs,
and excess have swirled for decades. In this definitive oral
history of the band, Barney Hoskyns finally reveals the truth about
Led Zeppelin, paring away the myths and describing what life was
really like for four young men on top of the world, enjoying fame
on a scale that not even the Beatles experienced as a touring live
act. Through fresh new interviews with the surviving band members,
close friends, their tour manager, and scores of other fascinating
characters, Hoskyns provides deep insights into the personalities
of the band members and chronicles the group's dramatic rise, fall,
and legacy.Based on more than 200 interviews with everyone from
Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, and John Paul Jones to road manager
Richard Cole, their late manager Peter Grant, and many others
central to the Zeppelin storyFeatures striking photos of the band
both on and offstage, many published here for the first timeTakes a
fresh look at Led Zeppelin's music, cultural significance, and
legend, as well as the highs and lows of the sex, drugs, and rock
and roll lifestyle on the roadAnalyzes the way the band wrote,
arranged, and recorded, from how they created the stupendous sound
and dynamics on ""Dazed and Confused"" and ""Whole Lotta Love"" to
the group's folk-suffused acoustic side embodied in songs like
""Friends"" and ""That's the Way""Written by Barney Hoskyns,
contributing editor at British "Vogue" who is the author of the
bestselling book "Hotel California" and the co-founder of online
music-journalism library Rock's Backpages
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Hotel California - The True-life Adventures of Crosby, Stills, Nash, Young, Mitchell, Taylor, Browne, Ronstadt, Geffen, the "Eagles", and Their Many Friends (Paperback, New edition)
Barney Hoskyns
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R606
R560
Discovery Miles 5 600
Save R46 (8%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"Hoskyns brings a genuine love as well as an outsider's keen eye to
the rise and fall of the California scene...This is a riveting
story, sensitively told." - Anthony DeCurtis, Contributing Editor,
"Rolling Stone". From enduring musical achievements to drug fueled
chaos and bed hopping antics, the L.A. pop music scene in the
sixties and seventies was like no other, and journalist Barney
Hoskyns re-creates all the excitement and mayhem. "Hotel
California" brings to life the genesis of Crosby, Stills, and Nash
at Joni Mitchell's house; the Eagles' backstage fistfights after
the success of "Hotel California"; the drama of David Geffen and
the other money men who transformed the L.A. music scene; and more.
Barney Hoskyns (London, UK) is the former U.S. correspondent for
MOJO, the author of several books about music and Hollywood, and
the cofounder of rocksbackpages.com, a rock journalism library.
"Hoskyns brings a genuine love as well as an outsider's keen eye to
the rise and fall of the California scene. . . . This is a riveting
story, sensitively told."
--Anthony DeCurtis, Contributing Editor, "Rolling Stone"
From enduring musical achievements to drug-fueled chaos and
bed-hopping antics, the L.A. pop music scene in the sixties and
seventies was like no other, and journalist Barney Hoskyns
re-creates all the excitement and mayhem. "Hotel California" brings
to life the genesis of Crosby, Stills, and Nash at Joni Mitchell's
house; the Eagles' backstage fistfights after the success of "Hotel
California"; the drama of David Geffen and the other money men who
transformed the L.A. music scene; and more.
A unique look at the history, adventures, myths and realities of
this most legendary and powerful of bands, it is a labour of love
based on hours of first-hand and original interviews. What emerges
is a compelling portrait of the four musicians themselves, as well
as a fresh insight into the close-knit entourage that protected
them, from Peter Grant to Richard Cole to Ahmet Ertegun, giant
figures from the long-vanished world of 1970s rock. Featuring many
rare and never before seen photographs, it is also the first book
on Led Zeppelin to cover such recent events as their triumphant
2007 O2 Arena gig and Robert Plant's Grammy-winning resurgence of
recent years.
Think 'Woodstock' and the mind turns to the seminal 1969 festival.
But Woodstock itself was over sixty miles away, and already a key
location in the rock landscape as a community of brilliant,
dysfunctional musicians, opportunistic hippie capitalists, scheming
dealers, and freaks dazed and confused by the search for spiritual
truth. Central to this was the power and presence of Albert
Grossman - manager for Dylan, Janis Joplin, Richie Havens, The Band
and Todd Rundgren - who turned Woodstock into his own personal
fiefdom. Drawing on first-hand interviews with all the remaining
key players, Small Town Talk is a classic study of a vital music
scene in a revolutionary time and place.
From the Beatles to Beck, Sinatra to Sam Smith, a parade of
era-defining artists have passed through the doors of the Capitol
Records Tower, one of Hollywood's most distinctive landmarks and
home to one of the world's most defining labels for the past 75+
years. To commemorate this extraordinary history of recorded music,
TASCHEN presents this official account of Capitol Records, from its
founding year of 1942 to today. With a foreword by Beck, essays by
cultural historians and music and architecture critics, as well as
hundreds of images from Capitol's extensive archives, we follow the
label's evolution and the making of some of the greatest music of
the 20th and 21st centuries. Through pop, rock, country, classical,
soul, and jazz, the photographic and musical history includes the
label's most successful, cool, hip, and creative stars, as well as
the one-hit wonders who had their all-too-brief moments in the
spotlight. Along the way, we encounter the likes of Miles Davis,
Nat King Cole, the Kingston Trio, and Frank Sinatra in Capitol's
first 20 years; the Beach Boys, the Band, and the Beatles in the
1960s; global rock magnets Pink Floyd, Wings, Steve Miller Band,
Bob Seger, and Linda Ronstadt in the 1970s; Beastie Boys, Duran
Duran, Radiohead, and Bonnie Raitt in the 1980s and 1990s; and such
contemporary stars as Coldplay, Katy Perry, and Sam Smith. An
unmissable milestone for music lovers, Capitol Records is a live
and kicking celebration of the mighty giant of the industry that
created the soundtrack to generations past, present, and future.
'Present Tense is an anthology to savour . . . giving you as sharp
a portrait of this unknowable band as you could hope for . . .
Radiohead fans will love it' Classic Rock A Rock's Backpages
anthology of Radiohead, the most radical and fascinating rock band
in modern music history, edited and introduced by Barney Hoskyns.
For over 25 years, Radiohead have been the most radical and
fascinating rock band in the world. Fearless in their desire to
change and shape-shift, the Oxfordshire quintet has - through the
nine studio albums from 1993's Pablo Honey to 2016's A Moon-Shaped
Pool - consistently stretched the boundaries of what 'rock' means
and does. Anchored in Thom Yorke's soaring voice and elliptical
lyrics, and in the compositional genius of guitarist/keyboardist
Jonny Greenwood, Radiohead continue to astonish as they approach
their fourth decade. Present Tense collects the best writing on
this most literate of pop groups, from the earliest local reports
about On A Friday - Radiohead's first moniker - through the
inspired commentary of Mark Greif and Simon Reynolds to the
trenchant profiles of Will Self, John Harris and others. It's an
anthology that goes a long way towards explaining what Rock's
Backpages editor Barney Hoskyns describes as the band's
'seriousness, emotional grandeur and willingness to stare
humanity's dystopian hi-tech future in the face'.
A new collection of pieces, covering 20 years of popular music, by
one of the UK's pre-eminent rock journalists and the people who
sung and played it. From Prince to Pavement, James Brown to Joni
Mitchell, ZZ Top to Tom Waits, Beck to Eminem, the former US editor
of MOJO burrows deep into the heart of America's greatest music.
Probing interviews with Lou Reed, Randy Newman and Johnny Cash;
exhaustive profiles of cult heroes Big Star, Little Feat and Todd
Rundgren; shrewd essays on disco, cyberpunk, and Americana, Ragged
Glories is a hymn to the USA - to its pop, soul, country and blues
- from the author of the acclaimed Across the Great Divide (about
The Band) and Waiting for the Sun (about Los Angeles). Barney
Hoskyns collects some of his best pieces about American music and
pop culture from the last 20 years - all rock 'n' roll life is
here!
Joni Mitchell has only visited the U.S. Top 40 singles chart four
times in her long recording career - and the Top 20 just once. So
much for "stoking the starmaker machinery behind the popular song",
as she sang in her 1974 song 'Free Man in Paris'. What Joni has
done, on the other hand, is record a handful of masterful albums -
Blue, Court And Spark, The Hissing Of Summer Lawns for starters -
that prove she is right up there with the big boys: with Bob Dylan,
Brian Wilson and Stevie Wonder. Few women can hold a candle to her
oeuvre: maybe Aretha Franklin, maybe Kate Bush, Bjork, Joanna
Newsom. Airs and graces she may have, but airs and graces backed up
by 'Woodstock', 'The Arrangement', 'A Case Of You', 'Help Me', 'Dog
Eat Dog' and 'The Magdalene Laundries' are forgivable. Some of
Mitchell's songs are great art. Almost all are emotionally complex
and musically gripping. Reckless Daughter collects some of the most
incisive commentary on Joni's music - and some of the most candid
conversations she has had with journalists through her long career.
From a review of her first performance at L.A.'s legendary
Troubadour in 1968 to a career-sweeping 1998 interview by MOJO's
Dave DiMartino, this anthology of almost 60 articles charts every
stage of Joni's extraordinary journey as a singer, songwriter and
artist.
A Rock's Backpages anthology of Radiohead, the most radical and
fascinating rock band in modern music history, edited and
introduced by Barney Hoskyns. For over 25 years, Radiohead have
been the most radical and fascinating rock band in the world.
Fearless in their desire to change and shape-shift, the Oxfordshire
quintet has - through the nine studio albums from 1993's Pablo
Honey to 2016's A Moon-Shaped Pool - consistently stretched the
boundaries of what 'rock' means and does. Anchored in Thom Yorke's
soaring voice and elliptical lyrics, and in the compositional
genius of guitarist/keyboardist Jonny Greenwood, Radiohead continue
to astonish as they approach their fourth decade. Present Tense
collects the best writing on this most literate of pop groups, from
the earliest local reports about On A Friday - Radiohead's first
moniker - through the inspired commentary of Mark Greif and Simon
Reynolds to the trenchant profiles of Will Self, John Harris and
others. It's an anthology that goes a long way towards explaining
what Rock's Backpages editor Barney Hoskyns describes as the band's
'seriousness, emotional grandeur and willingness to stare
humanity's dystopian hi-tech future in the face'.
'This book could save your life' John Crace 'An unblinking account
of living with - and more importantly, beyond - addiction. Brave,
clear-eyed and inspiring' John Niven 'A rich, uplifting memoir:
Hoskyns portrays how painful inadequacy, masked by drugs, can be
replaced by the messiness of ordinary life' Oliver James A few
months after graduating with a 1st class honours degree from Oxford
University, Barney Hoskyns sat in a damp Clapham basement and asked
his best friend to inject him with heroin. From that moment on, for
the next three years, Hoskyns is hopelessly hooked. This is the
searingly honest story of what brought him to this place - and how
he got himself out of it. Barney Hoskyns is one of the leading
music writers of our time: his books have ranged the musical
landscape from Led Zeppelin to Tom Waits, from Laurel Canyon to
Woodstock. His articles have appeared in NME, Melody Maker, Rolling
Stone and Vogue, and in 2000 he founded Rock's Backpages. Hoskyns
beautifully describes the relationship between music and addiction,
between love and infatuation. Never Enough is Hoskyns's raw,
uncompromising and utterly compelling account of the highs and lows
of life under the needle. Interspersed with photos and diary
entries, Hosykns examines why he so willingly gave himself up to
the death-grip of heroin, and what it took to finally free himself
from it.
The Band was one of the most celebrated and influential groups to
arrive on the music scene in the late 1960s. The Band's members -
Robbie Robertson, Richard Manuel, Rick Danko, Garth Hudson and
Levon Helm - fashioned something magically new out of musically
traditional components: old-time country and gospel, Preservation
Hall jazz, medicine-show vaudeville. They started as The Hawks, a
teenage backup group for the rockabilly renegade Ronnie Hawkins,
touring the endless highways through the heart of the South.
Eventually they headed north, where they left Hawkins to become Bob
Dylan's band on the revolutionary electric tours of 1965 and 1966.
From there they retreated to Woodstock, and, during a period of
intense personal closeness and creativity, produced two of the
hallmark albums of the era. When The Band finally emerged from
their Woodstock home they found themselves ill-equipped to deal
with the realities of fame and the music business. Stage fright,
drug addictions and growing bad feelings within the group led them
to quit with the star-studded farewell of "The Last Waltz" in 1976.
A few years later Richard Manuel hung himself in the bathroom of
the Winter Park Quality Inn.
(Book). A classic, finally back in print British rock historian
Barney Hoskyns (Hotel California, Across the Great Divide: The Band
in America) examines the long and twisted rock 'n' roll history of
Los Angeles in its glamorous and debauched glory. The Beach Boys,
Buffalo Springfield, the Doors, Little Feat, the Eagles, Steely
Dan, Linda Ronstadt, Joni Mitchell, and others (from Charlie Parker
right up to Black Flag, the Minutemen, Jane's Addiction, Ice Cube,
and Guns N' Roses) populate the pages of this comprehensive and
extensively illustrated book.
(Book). This is a vivid and rollicking account of The Band's
journey across three decades. Spanning the history of American rock
and boasting a supporting cast that includes Dylan, Janis Joplin,
and U2, the book brilliantly captures the raw magic and complex
personalities of a group George Harrison called "the best band in
the history of the universe." This revised U.S. edition includes a
postscript, together with an obituary of Rick Danko and a brand-new
interview with Robbie Robertson.
With his trademark growl, carnival-madman persona, haunting music,
and unforgettable lyrics, Tom Waits is one of the most revered and
critically acclaimed singer-songwriters alive today. After
beginning his career on the margins of the 1970s Los Angeles rock
scene, Waits has spent the last thirty years carving out a place
for himself among such greats as Bob Dylan and Neil Young. Like
them, he is a chameleonic survivor who has achieved long-term
success while retaining cult credibility and outsider mystique. But
although his songs can seem deeply personal and somewhat
autobiographical, fans still know very little about the man
himself. Notoriously private, Waits has consistently and
deliberately blurred the line between fact and fiction, public and
private personas, until it has become impossible to delineate
between truth and self-fabricated legend.
"Lowside of the Road" is the first serious biography to cut through
the myths and make sense of the life and career of this beloved
icon. Barney Hoskyns has gained unprecedented access to Waits's
inner circle and also draws on interviews he has done with Waits
over the years. Spanning his extraordinary forty-year career from
"Closing Time" to "Orphans," from his perilous "jazzbo" years in
1970s LA to such shape-shifting albums as "Swordfishtrombones" and
"Rain Dogs" to the Grammy Award winners of recent years, this
definitive biography charts Waits's life and art step by step,
album by album.
Barney Hoskyns has written a rock biography--much like the subject
himself--unlike any other. It is a unique take on one of rock's
great enigmas.
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