Backstage Passes & Backstabbing Bastards
Title | Backstage Passes & Backstabbing Bastards PDF eBook |
Author | Al Kooper |
Publisher | Hal Leonard Corporation |
Total Pages | 340 |
Release | 2008 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 9780879309220 |
(Book). A rock 'n roll classic, back in print, updated and revised. One of the funniest rock memoirs ever, Al Kooper's legendary Backstage Passes is available again! Al's quirky life, from would-be teenage rocker, to crashing Bob Dylan's recording session and playing the organ on Highway 61 , to forming Blood, Sweat, and Tears and masterminding the Super Sessions, it's all here...plus, in this updated version, Al rides with us all the way back to the end of the 20th century. There has never been a more wickedly humorous and honest book by a man who has made such rock history.
Backstage Passes & Backstabbing Bastards
Title | Backstage Passes & Backstabbing Bastards PDF eBook |
Author | Al Kooper |
Publisher | Hal Leonard Corporation |
Total Pages | 339 |
Release | 2008-02-01 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 1617745367 |
A rock 'n roll classic back in print updated and revised. One of the funniest rock memoirs ever Al Kooper's legendary Backstage Passes is available again] Al's quirkly life from would'be teenage rocker to crashing Bob Dylan's recording session an
Lonely Avenue
Title | Lonely Avenue PDF eBook |
Author | Alex Halberstadt |
Publisher | Da Capo Press |
Total Pages | 304 |
Release | 2009-04-28 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 0786732296 |
One of the most original, influential, and commercially successful American songwriters, Doc Pomus (1927-1991) was a role model for several generations of composers, renowned for his mastery of virtually every popular style, and for the numerous hits he wrote during rock ’n’ roll’s first decade. But despite his successes, few knew that this writer of jukebox hits led one of the most dramatic lives of his time. Spanning the extremes between extravagant wealth and desperate poverty, suburban family life and the depths of New York’s underworld, enduring love and persistent loneliness, and touching on more than a half-century of American popular music, Lonely Avenue reveals with novelistic flair the whole of Doc’s experience-one of the great untold American stories.
"Jews, Race and Popular Music "
Title | "Jews, Race and Popular Music " PDF eBook |
Author | Jon Stratton |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 242 |
Release | 2017-07-05 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 1351561693 |
Jon Stratton provides a pioneering work on Jews as a racialized group in the popular music of America, Britain and Australia during the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Rather than taking a narrative, historical approach the book consists of a number of case studies, looking at the American, British and Australian music industries. Stratton's primary motivation is to uncover how the racialized positioning of Jews, which was sometimes similar but often different in each of the societies under consideration, affected the kinds of music with which Jews have become involved. Stratton explores race as a cultural construction and continues discussions undertaken in Jewish Studies concerning the racialization of the Jews and the stereotyping of Jews in order to present an in-depth and critical understanding of Jews, race and popular music.
Guitar King
Title | Guitar King PDF eBook |
Author | David Dann |
Publisher | University of Texas Press |
Total Pages | 775 |
Release | 2019-10-15 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 1477318771 |
Named one of the world’s great blues-rock guitarists by Rolling Stone, Mike Bloomfield (1943–1981) remains beloved by fans nearly forty years after his untimely death. Taking readers backstage, onstage, and into the recording studio with this legendary virtuoso, David Dann tells the riveting stories behind Bloomfield’s work in the seminal Paul Butterfield Blues Band and the mesmerizing Electric Flag, as well as the Super Session album with Al Kooper and Stephen Stills, Bob Dylan’s Highway 61 Revisited, and soundtrack work with Peter Fonda and Jack Nicholson. In vivid chapters drawn from meticulous research, including more than seventy interviews with the musician’s friends, relatives, and band members, music historian David Dann brings to life Bloomfield’s worlds, from his comfortable upbringing in a Jewish family on Chicago’s North Shore to the gritty taverns and raucous nightclubs where this self-taught guitarist helped transform the sound of contemporary blues and rock music. With scenes that are as electrifying as Bloomfield’s music, this is the story of a life lived at full volume.
Blood Walk
Title | Blood Walk PDF eBook |
Author | Lee Killough |
Publisher | Meisha Merlin Publishing |
Total Pages | 458 |
Release | 1997 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 9780965834506 |
Police Officer Garreth Mikaelian investigates a very peculiar murder which brings him face to face with Lane Barber, a vampire. Now a vampire too, How can he keep is humanity and bring Barber to justice?
Hell Riders
Title | Hell Riders PDF eBook |
Author | Terry Brighton |
Publisher | Henry Holt and Company |
Total Pages | 434 |
Release | 2013-12-10 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1466859679 |
On the 150th anniversary of the world's most famous cavalry charge comes a revisionist retelling of the battle based on firsthand accounts from the soldiers who fought there In October 1854, with the Crimean War just under way and British and French troops pushing the tsar's forces back from the Black Sea, seven hundred intrepid English horsemen charged a mile and a half into the most heavily fortified Russian position in the Crimea in Ukraine. In the seven minutes it took the cavalry to cross this distance, more than five hundred of them were killed. Celebrated in poetry and legend, the charge of the Light Brigade has stood for a century and a half as a pure example of military dash and daring. Until now, historical accounts of this cavalry charge have relied upon politically motivated press reports and diaries kept by the aristocratic British generals who commanded the action. In Hell Riders, noted historian and Crimean War expert Terry Brighton looks, for the first time, to the journals recorded by survivors-the soldiers who did the fighting. His riveting firsthand narrative reveals the tragically inept leadership on the part of the British commander in chief, Lord Raglan, whose orders for the charge were poorly communicated and misinterpreted, and an unfathomable indifference on the part of British officers to the men who survived the battle and were left to tend their wounds and bury the dead in the freezing cold. While the charge overran the Russians, it gained nothing and the war continued for another two years. In finally capturing the truth behind the charge of the Light Brigade, Brighton offers a stirring portrait of incredible bravery in the service of a misguided endeavor.