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Who wrote the book of love? The MB book thread

Posted on 4/24/14 at 9:25 am
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142485 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 9:25 am
A few books I've gotten recently and plan to read

=============



I've never been terribly impressed with Hilburn, but this got a rave review from Bernie Taupin on his great Sirius show American Roots Radio, so I guess I'll give it a shot.



quote:

From Publishers Weekly
In these entertaining sketches, Steely Dan keyboardist and front man Fagen pays tribute to the talented musicians, writers, and performers from beyond the suburban New Jersey of his youth. In one chapter, Fagen recalls his early fascination with now-forgotten jazz singers the Boswell Sisters. He singles out Connie—whose career was affected in some measure by an early brush with illness (likely polio)—and praises her last recording, saying that she sounds like a toned-down Wanda Jackson or Brenda Lee. Fagen sends a kind of love letter to Henry Mancini, telling the composer of the theme from the television show Peter Gunn—a theme whose first notes every neophyte guitarist tried to learn back then—that his music continues to be young and fresh. Fagen vivaciously recalls his college days at Bard, meeting his future Steely Dan bandmate Walter Becker, and playing at a Halloween party with Walter and actor Chevy Chase on drums. In 2012, Fagen, Michael McDonald, and Boz Scaggs toured as the Duke of September Rhythm Revue; during the months of the tour, Fagen kept a journal, included in these pages, that's filled with irony, sarcasm, humor, anger, and flat-out honesty about what it's like to be on the road playing to houses filled with aging hippies: Tonight the crowd looked so geriatric I was tempted to start calling out bingo numbers. By the end of the set, they were all on their feet, albeit shakily, rocking.... So this, now, is what I do: assisted living
That last line is a contemptuous and rather cruel way to treat the fans that have given him a good living... Kind of an ingrate if you ask me. I'll probably read this for the early stuff about his influences, but I never cared much for Steely Dan (and Michael McDonald I hate), so I may not make it much further.




The autobiography of the New York Dolls bassist. He was the subject of an interesting documentary a few years ago. His post-music life turn may surprise you.






These I'm really looking forward to. The Wrecking Crew was the group of ace L.A. session men who played on numerous hits in the 1960s (Hollywood's version of the Muscle Shoals band, or Motown's Funk Brothers). A nice documentary was made about them not long ago; however it has never been officially released due to music rights issues (it can be found online if you look hard enough).

Jimmy Webb was very active in the L.A. scene, writing "Galveston" and "Wichita Lineman" for Glen Campbell. The jacket blurb says this is a a primer on songwriting as well as a memoir, which makes it especially interesting. I've read the classic "Always Magic In The Air" (on NYC's Brill Building) and a few chapters of Leiber and Stoller's book -- Ira Gershwin supposedly wrote a book called "The Art of Lyric Writing", but I've never been able to find it.
Posted by HeadyBrosevelt
the Verde River
Member since Jan 2013
21590 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 9:26 am to
READ THE frickING BOOK!!!
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142485 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 9:28 am to
quote:

READ THE frickING BOOK!!!
which one?
Posted by HeadyBrosevelt
the Verde River
Member since Jan 2013
21590 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 9:29 am to
Posted by Spaulding Smails
Milano’s Bar
Member since Jun 2012
18805 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 10:09 am to
Just picked this bad boy up



quote:

The first biography of superstar rapper Drake At a time when album sales were plummeting, Drake’s 2010 debut album, Thank Me Later, went platinum, hit number one on the Billboard 200 chart, and spawned numerous Top 10 hits including “Over,” “Best I Ever Had,” and “Find Your Love.” His sophomore release, Take Care, also debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart, went platinum, and has been downloaded at a record pace. In Far From Over, award-winning writer and hip hop expert Dalton Higgins examines the life of Aubrey Drake Graham, whose path to superstardom has been anything but typical. Raised in Toronto’s upscale Forest Hill neighbourhood by his Jewish mother, the multi-talented entertainer first made a name for himself as an actor on the popular teen drama Degrassi: The Next Generation before becoming one of the world’s most successful rappers. Featuring original interviews, Far From Over reveals the life story of a musician and actor whose star will only continue to rise


quote:

"Music writer Dalton Higgins combines original interviews and extensive research to tell the story of Aubrey Drake Graham." —The Globe and Mail (October 2012)


"Any music library strong in hip hop culture will welcome this survey." —www.MidwestBookReview.com


“Toronto music lovers holiday gift guide.” —BLOGTO


"it's a good bet that Far From Over will become the definitive book about Drake for years to come." —Exclaim!
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142485 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 10:25 am to
I figgered it would a douche Phish reference first, instead of a douche Drake reference

Congrats on the imaginative and unexpected move
Posted by HeadyBrosevelt
the Verde River
Member since Jan 2013
21590 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 10:26 am to
Read the Book is a Phish reference.
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142485 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 10:32 am to
quote:

Read the Book is a Phish reference
PLEASE GOD FORGIVE ME FOR NOT KNOWING THAT
























But I was RIGHT!!!

Guess Smails isn't so original after all

Posted by Spaulding Smails
Milano’s Bar
Member since Jun 2012
18805 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 10:41 am to
quote:

Guess Smails isn't so original after all

Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142485 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 10:45 am to
well you boys have phapped up this thread just like you've phapped up the rest of the board

Posted by HeadyBrosevelt
the Verde River
Member since Jan 2013
21590 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 10:48 am to
Don't worry- the threads will fade away after Jazz Fest until tour revs up in July.

Are you going Saturday?
Posted by JumpingTheShark
America
Member since Nov 2012
22927 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 11:00 am to


Reading this one right now. There are a million books on the Beatles and they all claim to have the "real story," but this one is pretty legit so far.
Posted by Rickety Cricket
Premium Member
Member since Aug 2007
46883 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 11:12 am to
The Wrecking Crew looks interesting.
Posted by Cdawg
TigerFred's Living Room
Member since Sep 2003
59610 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 11:57 am to



I've read these two. I'll have to check out that Hilburn one.
Posted by CaptainPanic
18.44311,-64.764021
Member since Sep 2011
25582 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 12:04 pm to
My arsenal:







High School bestseller:


And of course:



My next targets:





Not exactly a "MB Book" but it has a very strong connection to classical music, the movie soundtrack is phenomenal and is my all-time favorite book:
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142485 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 12:53 pm to
From The Wrecking Crew:
quote:

“Hello?”

“Don, this is Joe Adams. I’m Ray Charles’s manager. We’ve heard some good things about you. Can you come down here right now to the corner of Washington and Western for an audition at Ray’s studio?”

Peake hesitated.

“But, Joe, I’m white,” he finally said, still unsure as to whether Adams and his famous client were actually aware of his ethnicity. Brother Ray was blind, after all.

“But can you play?”

“Yes.”

“Then get yourself down here.”
quote:

After a couple of weeks of rehearsals and a few shows in Los Angeles at major venues like the Shrine Auditorium and the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, it was time for the Ray Charles Orchestra to head out on tour and make some money.

First stop: Montgomery, Alabama.

quote:

As they neared the main entrance to Garrett Coliseum, the city’s largest concert venue, Don Peake’s jaw dropped and his heart sank, both at the same time. Passing by outside his window, in what seemed like some kind of perverse, slow-motion, neorealist-style post-war film about life behind the Iron Curtain, were row after threatening row of razor-sharp barbed wire strung across an endless procession of poles, completely encircling the building and its grounds. Heavily armed state troopers were also standing in groups around the perimeter. And, in case anybody missed the point of the whole display, a large red Confederate flag flapped prominently in the breeze atop a tall, gleaming, floodlit pole.

Uh-oh, this can’t be good, Peake thought.

But before he or anyone else on board could further process the frightening scene, the band’s bus slowed to a stop. As the front door of the huge, now-silent vehicle hissed open, several grim-faced, shotgun-carrying state troopers immediately climbed inside. As they spoke with the driver in a series of hushed tones, it became apparent they had something—or more likely someone—on their minds.

“What do they want?” Ray Charles asked his tour manager, Jeff Brown, who was sitting nearby. As a famous black entertainer, Charles was a high-profile target and had every reason for concern. He had grown up in the South and had experienced the evil and unpredictability of racism firsthand.

Straining to hear the conversation going down in the front of the bus, Brown finally deciphered exactly why Ray and his band had been stopped.

“They want the white boy,” Brown said.

quote:

Word had apparently traveled with speed uncommon on the day that Don Peake and the Ray Charles Orchestra had flown into Alabama. The assembled state troopers had been told that Charles was carrying a white musician in his entourage. They had also been told that Governor Wallace had decreed that there would be no white people allowed at the Ray Charles concert in Montgomery that night, either audience or band. The black population could have their little show, fine. But by the grace of the good Lord—and the boot heel of the law—there would be no mixing.

As the troopers began to menacingly shine their flashlights up and down the aisle of the stranded bus, looking for the purportedly Caucasian interloper, Ray Charles had to think fast. He wasn’t going to allow anyone to take one of his band members away.

“Tell them he’s Spanish,” Charles whispered to Jeff Brown. “Maybe the crackers will go for it.”
quote:

Lowering his head, Peake inched down in his seat and tried his best to look and act the part of a non-English-speaking guitar player, mumbling a bunch of random Spanish-sounding gibberish that he vaguely recalled from a class he once took in high school.

After Brown passed the word along that there was indeed a Spanish band member aboard, the state troopers huddled in the front. After about a minute of discussion, they suddenly stepped off the bus and motioned it down the ramp toward the stage entrance. Twenty different sets of lungs exhaled as one. Alabama’s finest had bought the story.
Posted by TFTC
Chicago, Il
Member since May 2010
22322 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 12:53 pm to
It's been a few years now, but this was a great read... I think a must read for a Beatles fan

Posted by Peazey
Metry
Member since Apr 2012
25418 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 1:31 pm to
I'm not much of a biography reader. The only books I've read that fit into this thread is that Scar Tissue when I was in high school and this one:



I thought it was pretty good.
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142485 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 1:37 pm to
quote:

I'm not much of a biography reader
I've always been a big bio reader. It's the lazy man's way of self-education.

I read the Zappa auto-bio a l-o-n-g time ago. One thing I remember from it is, curiously, FZ lauding a song for its unusual chord structure -- The Beach Boys' "Little Deuce Coupe".
Posted by liquid rabbit
Boxtard BPB®© emeritus
Member since Mar 2006
60690 posts
Posted on 4/24/14 at 1:39 pm to
I have that Zappa bio and it is very good. I also read this one recently:




This is also pretty interesting:

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