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Loading... Glam Rockby Barney Hoskyns
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. At about 100 pages plus forewords and indexes, Hoskyns tribute to Glam is concise, but covers all the key movers in this short-lived musical genre. Bolan and Bowie predominate quite rightly as the two who really started it all - everyone else just jumped on the bandwagon. Yet who can forget that absolute classic Christmas Top of the Pops in 1973 which featured Slade, Mud, Sweet, Wizzard - all the inheritors of Boland and Bowie's artistry. A discussion of Bowie's influence on Lou Reed and the New York Dolls is inevitable but (I think) the US bands are less interesting than the total Englishness of the main glam movement. Hoskyns postulates that glam opened the doors for punk and disco to burst onto the scene, and is still part of the make-up of many of today's artists such as Prince and Suede. A great read in one sitting, which brought back such nostalgia - I'm just off to listen to Ziggy once more. ( )no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0671034405, Paperback)The complete, behind-the-scenes story of the flamboyant glitter rock of the early 1970s.David Bowie, Marc Bolan, Bryan Ferry, and Iggy Pop were the icons that defined the music known as glam rock. With outrageous getups and glitz cosmetic artistry, they were the gender-bending, trendsetting performers of the music movement that was centered in London but electrified the world. Now, in the first book of its kind, a rock music journalist takes a no-holds-barred tour of a chapter in pop music history that was as transient as stardust...and which influenced countless musicians in the decades that followed, including Prince, Madonna, Annie Lennox, Guns 'N' Roses, and others. Published in time for the release of Todd Haynes' eagerly awaited film, Velvet Goldmine, Barney Hoskyns' GLAM! captures a thrilling, thoroughly over-the-top time in pop's life, an age of visual excess as rococo as it was space-age. From Oscar Wilde to Ziggy Stardust, from Liberace to Lou Reed and T Rex to Roxy Music, here is the flamboyant decadence, the androgyny, and the sheer unadulterated fun of the early Seventies -- in an incredible rock history that tells it like it was. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:05 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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