|
|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Victor Bockris's much admired biography of Keith Richards has been
constantly revised since its original publication, now with an
additional 12,000 words for a new edition of the Omnibus Press
paperback that brings the story up to the present day. First
published in eight countries in 1992, at that time Keith Richrds
had stood in the shadow of Mick Jagger for thirty years. Then, as a
result of Victor Bockris biography, Richards was put in the
spotlight and emerged as the power behind the throne, the creator,
the backbone, and the soul of the Rolling Stones.Here are the true
facts behind Richards' battles with his demons: the women, the
drugs and the love-hate-relationship with Jagger. His struggle with
heroin and his status as the rock star most likely to die in the
1970s. His scarcely believable rebirth as a family man in the
1980s. Illuminated with revealing quotes and thoughtful insights
into the man behind the band that goes on forever.
The Velvet Underground is arguably one of the most influential
American rock bands ever. Based on interviews with former members
Lou Reed, John Cale, and Sterling Morrison, as well as others from
Andy Warhol's circle of artistic collaborators, Up-Tight is the
definitive oral and visual history of the band and its
revolutionary, often avant-garde music. Bockris and Malanga's
intelligent and entertaining approach-which does not shy away from
the drugs, sleaze, and controversy that enveloped the band
seemingly from its inception-provides compulsive reading.
Here, accompanied by dozens of unique photographs, are the very
best of Victor Bockris's infamous interviews, essays, and
observations on the stars of downtown Manhattan in the 1970s and
1980s. The internationally acclaimed biographer Bockris was there
as a witness, friend, collabourator, and co-conspirator. Some of
the stars were founding members of Beat or Punk, others were just
passing through. But all of them,rockers, rebels, artists, and
intellectuals,revealed more to Bockris than they did to any other
writer: Allen Ginsberg, Richard Hell, Andy Warhol, Robert
Mapplethorpe, Debbie Harry, William Burroughs, Patti Smith,
Marianne Faithfull, Keith Richards, Terry Southern, Martin Amis,
and Susan Sontag. Bockris's conclusion,that Punk owed the Beats a
big debt and that the Beats were in turn re-animated by the
Punks,is argued from the perspective of someone who was in the
thick of it, and who loved every minute of it.
Burroughs, the eccentric, brilliant artist who burned the bridge
with logic and wrote the classic Naked Lunch, has a court recorder
in Victor Bockris. Bockris has collected into a cogent whole the
man's most brilliant moments of conversation, thinking, and
interview repartee. This fascinating material, gleaned from the
fertile time at Burroughs's New York headquarters, the Bunker
(which was located on the Bowery, three blocks from CBGB),
encompasses the years 1974 to 1980, and also includes a 1991
Burroughs interview from Interview magazine. The Beats' devotion to
subjective experience has left readers with a profound amount of
objective material to analyze and debate. Choice public and private
utterances, hallucinatory and prescient diatribes such as these,
remain rich sources of literary history. As Americans we find the
Beats' approach to life romantic, even heroic. Tearing the walls
down in the name of freedom and spirituality strikes a particularly
pilgrimesque chord. With William Burroughs: A Report from the
Bunker is a fascinating compendium of Burroughs-speak, so complete
it can be considered a credo.
During the 1960s, Dennis Hopper carried a camera everywhere-on film
sets and locations, at parties, in diners, bars and galleries,
driving on freeways and walking on political marches. He
photographed movie idols, pop stars, writers, artists, girlfriends,
and complete strangers. Along the way he captured some of the most
intriguing moments of his generation with a keen and intuitive eye.
A reluctant icon at the epicenter of that decade's cultural
upheaval, Hopper documented the likes of Tina Turner in the studio,
Andy Warhol at his first West Coast show, Paul Newman on set, and
Martin Luther King during the Civil Rights March from Selma to
Montgomery, Alabama. From a selection of photographs compiled by
Hopper and gallerist Tony Shafrazi, this extensive volume, finally
back in print in a new edition, distills the essence of Hopper's
prodigious photographic career. Also included are introductory
essays by Shafrazi and legendary West Coast art pioneer Walter
Hopps, as well as an extensive biography and new afterword by
journalist Jessica Hundley. With excerpts from Victor Bockris's
interviews of Hopper's famous subjects, friends, and family, this
volume revives an unprecedented exploration of the life and mind of
one of America's most fascinating personalities.
|
|