In the Fascist Bathroom: Punk in Pop Music, 1977-92


In the Fascist Bathroom: Punk in Pop Music, 1977-92
Customer Review: FUN AND INFORMATIVE
A collection on punk and related matters from 1977 through 1992, including what was left out of Marcus’ earlier book Lipstick Traces. In the author’s own words, it’s about “records, performances, twists of the radio dial.” It moves from the Sex Pistols’ “Anarchy” to Nirvana’s “Nevermind” in this illumined golden thread. Marcus writes about what moved, scared and disgusted him and what made him feel so privileged to be part of the punk audience. His views of punk encompassed a wide horizon, to include the likes of Bruce Springsteen, early Prince, Laurie Anderson and David Lynch’s film Blue Velvet. His point is that punk made wonderful things like Anderson’s “Superman” possible even though Superman itself isn’t punk. In other words, punk’s liberating effect caused sea changes in the perception of pop. A major weakness of the book is that it ignores the entire New York scene, because, as he puts it, “most [New York] punks seemed to be auditioning for careers as something else.” So no Patti Smith, no Richard Hell, a cursory mention of Talking Heads, but you WILL find Blondie here. Fascist Bathroom follows many avenues (The Clash, Sex Pistols, Elvis Costello) but maybe its most precious contribution is rescuing from obscurity some lower-profile such as Laura Logic, The Mekons, Marianne Faithfull. It’s a joy to read, chronologically arranged and ending with Nirvana and grunge in the 90s. The text swarms with relevant quotes from rock lyrics and references to other rock journalists like Lester Bangs. For anyone with a passionate interest in rock/pop music and youth culture, it’s required reading.

Customer Review: The secret history of a time that has passed
To find that no one has yet reviewed this book surprised and excited me. Surprise because I find it incredible that such a definitive, poetic and unique document could pass the world by unnoticed. Excitement because the pleasure, dare I say honour, of having my name next to the first review is genuine.

Let me put my cards on the table: this is my favourite book. One may have read a work that is the most enjoyable they have experienced, or another which seems the most accomplished and towering, but these criteria shouldn’t, I think, define such a judgement. What it rest on is less the distant appreciation of greatness than the ability of the work to both excite and persist in exciting, years after one has put it down. Just to think of the best passages in this book excites me: their sense of possibility, of the value of creativity, of the politics that go hand in hand with creation and the burden of those who take them on.

But I’m getting ahead of myself. What is this book about? A collection of pieces about punk? Certainly, but more than that: a mirror held up to a life lived with rock music as a constant companion. A view of a cultural earthquake by a man who, by the time the Sex Pistols were provoking tabloid hysteria, was past the age when many would consider an obsession with pop comprehendible.

Thus, the first piece in the book is not about punk at all, at least not in the spittle-fuelled generic sense. Writing for Rolling Stone Magazine in 1969, the author blends his review of The Rolling Stones’ Let It Bleed with his thoughts on a coffee-table thome of David Bailey portraits. Out of this seemingly bizarre scramble Marcus pulls a remarkably prescient picture of a decade fizzling away - a time when dreams are turning sour as people struggle to remember how alive with possibility those very dreams seemed a few short years ago, a time when aspirations of change and fulfilment turn into mere hopes for survival. In Bailey’s portraits of Christine Keeler and The Stones Marcus finds a wistful nostalgia for a time that has yet to fully pass, while in the longing cries of Gimme Shelter he hears men confused about where they have reached, wondering what ever got them there, what ever set them on the journey, but knowing that the journey is all they have, that they can never go back now.

His view of the decade is perfectly, poetically expressed in another, much later piece, as he pulls Oliver Stone’s film of The Doors from the critical dustbin:

“[it contains] a vision of the Sixties as a time that, even as it came forth, people sensed they could never really inhabit, and also never really leave.”

That sense of displacement, of people fighting to find meaning in the dreams they have created, of the danger of those dreams, for them and maybe for us, is the transcendent quality that informs his work and takes it far beyond the level of an ascetic treatise or even a cultural history.

To punk then. The opening salvo is delivered from the heart of the arena just as the theatre burns down- the Sex Pistols last concert in San Francisco. I have never read any piece of writing, let alone any this short, that describes a scene of anger, violence, confusion and confrontation so vividly. His description of Rotten’s stage manner is followed by an almost wistful sign off.

“His teeth were ground down to points… he held his microphone like a man leaning into a wind tunnel… [at the end of the concert] he gathered up the debris around him, took one final look and was gone, and we may never see his like again.”

Perhaps the Pistols had punched the hole, but many others would flood through the breach. As this writing moves through the late Seventies and in to the Eighties in becomes a parallel story of the way ‘real life’ - politics both personal and public - inform creativity and shape its reception, of how these politics can often seem to define the borders of what is relevant in pop and how sometimes, just sometimes, that equation can seem reversed.

Inevitably the cold, hard gloom of Thatcher and Reagan becomes the backdrop and, though they are rarely mentioned explicitly, the transformation in public discourse they unleashed becomes the all-consuming concern. In this climate Marcus makes the most free-wheeling of connections seem not merely plausible, but vital. In the book’s most moving passage the murder of John Lennon seems like a logical coda to the election of Ronald Reagan, and a dollar comic book seems to truly seal the shame of the age. Some of the figures he writes of move within this new climate, others kick and scream, some dig themselves in and are fated to become cranks, fighting lost battles.

Ending with the improbable resurgence of punk in the form of Nirvana et al, and finally bookending the volume with further thoughts on the shadow that the Sixties can still often cast over us, this writing resurrects years now as distant in memory as the other more celebrated eras of pop.

As for the artists, perhaps their final question becomes: how does one find meaning in a world that has been transformed into everything one once set face against? Therein lies the dilemma posed by the title, but you’ll have to read this wonderful book yourself to understand that conundrum.

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POP MUSIC - washingtonpost.com

Former Top Producer, Scott Storch's Pop Music Empire Falls
She also participated in a high-profile American-led effort to beam pop music and propaganda throughout Eastern Europe during the Cold War. …

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Pop Music in British Cinema: A Chronicle (BFI Film Classics)


Pop Music in British Cinema: A Chronicle (BFI Film Classics)
Customer Review: A real must-have book for British music and cinema lovers
A marvellously detailed book of musical facts and figures of British cinema. The book is sorted by year, and the 1960s and 1970s are particularly interesting as unlikely pop musicians found their music (and sometimes themselves!) on screen. Kevin digs out many obscure films that have long since been forgotten (and some they’d like us to forget!). My only criticism is that I’d like to have known a little more about each film, plot/rating etc, like Fred Dellar’s 1981 book, but this is minor stuff. My advice? Buy this book!

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The veteran record producer, arranger and composer says he isn't enamoured of today's pop-music scene. "I've listened to quite a few records," Martin said, … Read more..

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50 Pop and Rock Hits for Buskers: The Black Book (Music)


50 Pop and Rock Hits for Buskers: The Black Book (Music)

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Global Pop: World Music, World Markets


Global Pop: World Music, World Markets

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Pop/Rock Hits: CD-ROM Sheet Music Series


Pop/Rock Hits: CD-ROM Sheet Music Series
Customer Review: A really good idea for the developing player
This wasn’t quite what I expected - I thought it would be a book of sheet music with a CD - but actually all the music is on a CD ROM. There is a good range of tracks - ColdPlay, Michael Jackson, some fast ones, some ballads, and all the words are included. However, the really useful features are on the CD_Rom which offers you the chance to customise the music to the key and instruments (including voice) you require, to print out with the piano score. It also has an excellent feature where you can play the music and watch it on-screen - by adjusting the tempo you can carefully listen and follow exactly how to play that tricky bit in ‘Clocks’ (or whatever!) which is really helpful in improving your playing fluency. Knocked down to 4 stars as it says you can only print out one copy of each song without paying more. However, it is a small niggle - you get 75 songs for under ?10.00.

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Sampler 2: Art, Pop and Contemporary Music Graphics


Sampler 2: Art, Pop and Contemporary Music Graphics
This reviewer angrily objected to the advent of CDs on the grounds that four square-inch cover art simply doesn’t do justice to the medium. This loving, lavish exploration of music graphics by London-based design practice Intro–who themselves design record covers and direct music videos–shows that perhaps this reviewer was a bit hasty.

The evolution of music graphics seems to have been galvanised, rather than hindered, by shrinking covers to a third of their former size and encasing them in jewelled plastic. Sampler2 leads you through the evolution of this specialisation, from typography to layout to printing techniques, and explores what designer Adrian Shaughnessy of Intro characterises as a search for authenticity that’s distinct from the instant gratification we often associate with conventional graphic design.

But mainly this book gives joy by inundating you with page after page of cover art, the graphics printed on the CDs themselves and the little extras–hand-written liner notes, translucent paper packaging and the like–we’ve grown to expect from the artistry of modern music. –Liz Bailey

Customer Review: Better than he thinks.
I think that the Intro books are superb…along with the two volumes of Blue Note cover art, the book on soundtrack cover art, and the one covering the blues, I think these are essential for anybody interested in the history & development of commercial graphic arts as applied to the music industry. Of course these books will cover contemporary releases, they’re put together by a contemporary design firm, after all. It doesn’t matter when these designs were made, some of them are still rather ingenious.

Customer Review: Covers a lot of good music related design
This book shows a good selection of graphics, which are mostley used in the music industry,But a lot of it you would have seen before if you buy current music.So i was a bit disapointed by this, But it is a really good book to have if you want to discover whats out and about at the moment in the wonderfull world of music packaging.

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Modern Pop music sucks ? Groups at Last.fm

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Rock ‘n’ Pop Music Trivia


Rock ‘n’ Pop Music Trivia

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Continue …

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Singer Songwriters: Pop Music’s Performer-Composers, from A to Zevon (Billboard Hitmakers)

Singer Songwriters: Pop Music’s Performer-Composers, from A to Zevon (Billboard Hitmakers)

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Rock and Pop Music in the Yahoo! Directory

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Da Capo Best Music Writing 2000: The Year’s Finest Writing on Rock, Pop, Jazz, Country and More (Da Capo Best Music Writing)


Da Capo Best Music Writing 2000: The Year’s Finest Writing on Rock, Pop, Jazz, Country and More (Da Capo Best Music Writing)

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Jump In: Pop Music - The Boston Globe

Critic's picks - pop music - The Boston Globe

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When the Music’s Over: Story of Political Pop

When the Music’s Over: Story of Political Pop

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