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David Bowie needs no introduction. An immense star whose music and
writing transcended generations he was one of the most articulate
influencers of modern music. Over fifty years his singles and
albums slid up and down the bestseller charts, adapting to the
changing times, exploring new musical themes, always pushing at
boundaries in a desperate desire to seek out the new and the
different. This fantastic new, unofficial biography covers his
life, music, art and movies.
Pink Floyd are one of the world's most successful rock bands of all
time. After their breakthrough record, "The Dark Side Of The Moon",
brought prog rock to the masses, they have never looked back, and
their influence continues today in rock, ambient and techno music.
"Pink Floyd: Glorious Torment" is an unofficial, intriguing review
of their path to mega success, tracking too the dismay of Syd
Barrett's decline and the battles and the glory of their music.
Covering all the major events in their long career this great new
book is accompanied by revealing and evocative images of the band.
When considered in a broader social context, The Clash stand as one
of the most important musical acts in rock history. Original punks
who transcended the music's minimalist origins, The Clash lived and
breathed the idea that they could change the world with their art.
In The Clash: The Only Band That Mattered, respected music critic
Sean Egan examines The Clash's career and art through the prism of
the uniquely interesting and fractious UK politics of the 1970s and
'80s, without which they simply would not have existed. Tackling
such subjects as The Clash's self-conscious tussles with their
record label, the accusations of selling out that dogged their
footsteps, their rivalry with the similarly leaning but less purist
Jam, the paradoxical quality of their achieving multiplatinum
success, and even whether their denunciations of Thatcherism were
proven wrong, Egan has come up with new insights into a much
discussed group. Clash fans, Clash haters, social historians, and
political students will all find themselves entertained by his
thought-provoking conclusions.
This is an informative and thorough account of Tommy Docherty's
spell at Manchester United. It also looks at the post-United
careers of those who played in his sides and who came to love and
loathe him.
Bob Dylan's impact on popular music has been incalculable. Having
transformed staid folk music into a vehicle for coruscating social
commentary, he then swept away the romantic platitudes of rock 'n'
roll with his searing intellect. From the zeitgeist-encapsulating
protest of 'Blowin' in the Wind' to the streetwise venom of 'Like a
Rolling Stone', and from the stunning mid-sixties trilogy of albums
- Bringing It All Back Home, Highway 61 Revisited and Blonde on
Blonde - to Time Out of Mind, his stunning if world-weary comeback
at the age of 56, Dylan's genius has endured, underpinned by the
dazzling turn of phrase that has made him the pre-eminent poet of
popular music. Because Dylan's achievements have no equal, his
career is the most chronicled in rock history. Here, Sean Egan
presents a selection of the best writing on Dylan, both praise and
criticism. Interviews, essays, features and reviews from Dylan
intimates and scholars such as John Bauldie, Michael Gray, Nat
Hentoff and Jules Siegel are interspersed with new narrative and
reviews of every single album to create a comprehensive picture of
the artist whose chimes of freedom still resound.
Their songs have been covered by acts as diverse as Ride, Boney M,
and the Sex Pistols; they impressed Pete Townsend so much that he
asked their guitarist to join the already successful Who; said
guitarist pioneered the use of a bow on guitar strings--a trick
later plagiarized by Jimmy Page; and they have been cited as an
influence by the likes of Paul Weller and John Lydon. Yet The
Creation never had a hit single or even made an album in their
two-year recording career, from 1966-68. But nevertheless, they are
cherished by generations of fans. This is their untold story.
Are you enamored with instant messaging? Would you like to learn
how to create your own messaging application? This book shows you
how, by dissecting Gaimthe world's most popular open source instant
messaging application. Authored by the Gaim maintainer, -->Sean
Egan-->, you are presented with a thorough overview of Gaim
architecture and application programming interface.
You'll learn how to make the most of the popular GTK+ graphical
user interface toolkit. Egan guides you through the creation and
installation of plug-ins, and discusses strategies involved in
supporting messaging protocols like MSN Messenger, AIM and IRC. He
also covers topics such as multi-platform support and
internationalization.
The year 1979 was a seminal watershed moment in rock music. The
year saw the release of Pink Floyd's The Wall, David Bowie's
Lodger, Led Zeppelin's In Through the Out Door, Bob Dylan's Slow
Train Coming, Fleetwood Mac's Tusk, Elvis Costello and the
Attractions' Armed Forces, Joe Jackson's Look Sharp! and I'm the
Man, Stiff Little Fingers' Inflammable Material, Gary Numan/Tubeway
Army's Replicas and the Pleasure Principle, Joy Division's Unknown
Pleasures, the Jam's Setting Sons, the Clash's London Calling, and
the UK 2-Tone phenomenon. It also saw a slump in album sales, a
resurgence in single sales, and the peak and bloody death of disco.
Now, with the help of new and exclusive interviews with artists and
producers, New Waves, Old Hands, and Unknown Pleasures tells the
varied, vibrant, and often unexamined story of popular music in
1979. It reveals the stories behind key recordings, traces the
trajectories of commercial and artistic successes, and explains the
musical and socio-political context behind the sounds of the day.
The iconic life and career of the famed guitarist of the Rolling
Stones is detailed in this compilation of interviews that spans the
last 50 years. Featuring articles from GQ, Melody Maker, and
Rolling Stone, as well as interviews that have never previously
appeared in print, it charts Keith Richards's journey from gauche,
young pretender and swaggering epitome of the zeitgeist to beloved
elder statesman of rock. Initially overshadowed by band mates Mick
Jagger and Brian Jones, Richards gained popularity as half of the
second-most important songwriting team of the 1960s, and in 1967
the drug bust at his house and his subsequent trial and
imprisonment made him a household name. His interviews match his
outlaw image: free of banality and euphemism, they revel in frank
stories of drugs and debauchery. Yet they also reveal an
unexpectedly warm, unpretentious, articulate, and honest man. This
collection amply illustrates the magic and charm of Keith Richards.
Over 30 landmark interviews, accounts, and memoirs of The Beatles
and their entourage, recording how they inadvertently became
counter-culture's figureheads and changed society. The pieces
include Paul Johnson's 'The Menace of Beatlism', Maureen Cleave's
'Beatles Bigger than Christ' feature, the News of the World feature
suggesting The Beatles were spent forces - just before they
unleashed Sergeant Pepper on the world - interviews with their
entourage and main loves; plus latter-day contributions from the
likes of Paul Gambacinni, Dave Marsh, Greil Marcus. Also included
is a chronological tracing of each Beatles album and single, and
analysis of all Beatles movie releases and television appearances.
Some albums are so extraordinary that they influence generations of
aspiring artists and even redefine entire genres. Such a
description applies to Are You Experienced. In this revelatory
book, now UPDATED AND EXPANDED, Sean Egan tells the story of the
making of the Jimi Hendrix Experience's classic 1967 debut. His
interviews with key figures and access to diary entries help create
the definitive study of one of the most important, groundbreaking
and exciting albums ever made. ..".proffers a wealth of dedicated
detail. Utilising scores of new interviews, he offers a keen sense
of Hendrix's impact on the London scene..." - Q ..".with copious
facts for the boffin seeking tape reduction info or the beginner
pondering how these imperishable sounds were fashioned, this] is an
accessible, informative read"- Record Collector ..".his judgements
on this album are sound and lovingly eloquent..." - Uncut "An
original contribution to the enormous body of Hendrix literature" -
Library Journal
THE DEFINITIVE HISTORY OF CORONATION STREET NOW IN PAPERBACK.
Coronation Street was reluctantly commissioned in 1960 as a
twice-weekly stop-gap until a new programme could be found to fill
its airtime. Half a century later, the gritty working class serial
broadcasts five times per week and remains one of the television
schedules' biggest ratings-pullers. Sean Egan has been granted
access to the show's creators, producers, directors, writers and
actors. With their aid, he has constructed a fascinating account of
how Coronation Street became the most successful drama in the
history of UK television. Acclaim for 50 Years of Coronation
Street: The (Very) Unofficial Story. "An invaluable guide to the
making of a television classic" - Michael Cox, former Coronation
Street director and producer. "It rings very true, and there are
some fascinating quotes from many old colleagues. A remarkable
piece of work" - John Finch, former Coronation Street scriptwriter
and producer. "Diligent and astonishingly detailed research has led
to an absorbing narrative" - Stan Barstow, author of A Kind of
Loving, former Coronation Street consultant. "Extremely accurate in
its detail" - coronationstreet.wikia.com. "Lively unofficial
history" - Financial Times. Londoner Sean Egan has contributed to,
among others, Billboard, Book Collector, Classic Rock, Record
Collector, Tennis World, Total Film, Uncut and RollingStone.com. He
has written or edited 22 books, including works on The Beatles,
Jimi Hendrix, The Rolling Stones, Manchester United and Tarzan. His
critically acclaimed novel Sick of Being Me was published in 2003,
while his 2008 collection of short stories Don't Mess with the Best
carried cover endorsements from Booker Prize winners Stanley
Middleton and David Storey.
The story of Eric Burdon and The Animals is the story of the
Sixties. The original Animals were part of the British rhythm 'n'
blues movement in the early years of that momentous decade - a
movement whose love of a musical genre almost forgotten in its
native America succeeded in "Bringing It All Back Home." Blessed in
Eric Burdon with the most authentic white blues vocalist of their
generation and a collective and astonishing capacity to
reinvigorate old forms - most notably in transatlantic chart topper
'The House of the Rising Sun' - The Animals overcame bitter
internecine rivalry to produce a string of truly classic singles
that put them briefly on a par with The Beatles and The Rolling
Stones. They also gained a reputation for remarkable live shows
that showcased Burdon's almost frightening commitment to their
material. By 1967, though, both music and society were changing. A
trip to love-infused, LSD-drenched San Francisco convinced Burdon
that R&B was redundant. His new line-up of The Animals espoused
the philosophy of Flower Power and made the shift to writing their
own material. Their hits 'San Franciscan Nights' and 'Sky Pilot',
as well as being brilliant records, fascinatingly freeze for
posterity the concerns and issues of a particular time and place.
However, the 'new' Animals' affi nity for peace-and-love was not
reflected by relations within the band. After personnel upheavals
and a terrifying tour of Japan in 1968, the group collapsed. Animal
Tracks tells the story of both versions of The Animals.
Additionally, it reveals the astonishing behind-the-scenes rancour
that marked the ill-fated reunions of the original band. In this
UPDATED AND EXPANDED version of his definitive Animals biography,
Sean Egan draws on hours of interviews with surviving Animals, both
original (Eric Burdon, John Steel, Hilton Valentine, Dave Rowberry,
Barry Jenkins) and 'new' (Vic Briggs, John Weider, Zoot Money, Andy
Summers) to produce a compelling portrait of a truly remarkable
band. Egan has also been granted unprecedented access to band
member journals and archives, enabling him to reveal the story
behind the recording of each and every Animal Track.
James Kirkwood is the forgotten man of American lettersIn 1975, he
had two shows playing on Broadway, while his latest novel Some Kind
of Hero saw reviewers comparing him to Saul Bellow and Joseph
Heller. One of those shows - A Chorus Line - won him a Pulitzer
Prize for his co-writing contribution and went on to become the
biggest stage phenomenon in history. Yet today his work is largely
out of print and his name rarely mentioned.Kirkwood led a life that
was as gripping as any of his novels or plays. The son of silent
screen stars, he grew up in Hollywood surrounded by celebrities and
opulence before his parents went broke. His childhood was littered
with trauma, including finding the dead body of his mother's fianc
when he was twelve. Before writing, his professional life
encompassed the coast guard, stand-up comedy and soap opera acting.
His private life was equally varied, involving loving sexual
relationships with both men and women.Sean Egan - author of
seventeen books - took over seven years to write this definitive
biography, interviewing more than sixty of Kirkwood's family,
lovers, colleagues, friends and adversaries in the process. In a
sweeping narrative that takes in Hollywood in the Twenties, the
boom era of New York nightclubs in the Forties and the Eighties
AIDS holocaust, Ponies & Rainbows both details a remarkable
life and seeks to re-establish an even more remarkable talent.
Leiber & Stoller. Mann & Weil. Greenwich & Barry. Bobby
Hart. Chip Taylor. Holland-Dozier-Holland. Tony Macaulay. Stock,
Aitken & Waterman. Few would recognise them in the street but
they are responsible for some of the best-selling and most famous
songs of all time. From Jailhouse Rock to You've Lost That Lovin'
Feelin' to Leader Of The Pack to (Theme From) The Monkees to Reach
Out I'll Be There to Wild Thing to Build Me Up Buttercup to I
Should Be So Lucky, their melodies and lyrics are embedded in the
minds of music lovers worldwide. With the aid of lengthy and
exclusive interviews with some of the biggest names in the history
of rock and pop songwriting, Sean Egan's The Guys Who Wrote 'Em
seeks to put right the lack of recognition for compositional
geniuses who for most of their careers have chosen to use their
musical skills to help not themselves but others achieve stardom.
The result is a recounting of the story of post-Elvis popular music
from an intriguing and delightful lateral angle. Amongst those to
whom respected music journalist Egan has been granted access are
Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller, Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil, Ellie
Greenwich, Jeff Barry, Eddie and Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier,
Bobby Hart, Joey Levine, Graham Gouldman, Chip Taylor, Tony
Macaulay, Nicky Chinn, Mike Stock and Matt Aitken. Their anecdotes
feature Elvis Presley, Phil Spector, Eric Clapton, The Shangri-Las,
Diana Ross, Jimi Hendrix and a host of other iconic figures. The
Guys Who Wrote 'Em is both the most comprehensive book ever written
about the 'bespoke songwriter' and the fascinating, untold story of
popular music. Extract to run in 'Record Collector' magazine and
reviews to appear in several musicmonthlies.
The brilliant debut novel by respected music journalist Sean Egan,
SICK OF BEING ME is the alternately exhilarating and harrowing
story of guitarist Paul Hazelwood, from his childhood on a London
council estate where he nurtures his dreams of stardom to his
agonising realisation on the cusp of his thirties that talent
doesn't necessarily bring success. Egan - author of four previous
non-fiction titles - portrays the reality of being a struggling
musician and of achieving low-level success in that profession with
an authenticity that spurns the sensationalism and cartoon nature
of previous literary depictions of this milieu. Similar compelling
verisimilitude informs the drug scenes, which reveal the touching
pain that can be hidden beneath an unpleasant junkie exterior.
Vulnerable, truthful, moving and beautiful, SICK OF BEING ME is one
of the great coming-of-age tales of our times. The manuscript of
this remarkable literary entree has led an array of musicians and
writers to garland the book with some stunning endorsements
(reproduced on the cover and interior). The endorsers include
Charles R. Cross, author of 'Heavier Than Heaven: A Biography Of
Kurt Cobain', well known rock critic Richie Unterberger, Gary
Valentine (formerly of Blondie) and Frank Allen (The Searchers).
The book will attract considerable publicity in the music press,
much of which Egan has written for. Coverage is also planned in the
half-dozen or so UK guitarist's magazines.
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