Joseph I. Goldstein; Dale E. Newbury; Joseph R. Michael; Nicholas W.M. Ritchie; John Henry J. Scott; David C. Joy Springer-Verlag New York Inc. (2017) Kovakantinen kirja
Joseph I. Goldstein; Dale E. Newbury; Joseph R. Michael; Nicholas W.M. Ritchie; John Henry J. Scott; David C. Joy Springer-Verlag New York Inc. (2018) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Prof Pierre Joubert; Prof Michael Goldman; Dr Sean McCoy; Prof Frikkie Herbst; Ms Adri Jonker; Prof Johan Strydom; Visser Oxford University Press Southern Africa (2014) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Globe Pequot Press Sivumäärä: 440 sivua Asu: Kovakantinen kirja Julkaisuvuosi: 2022, 01.11.2022 (lisätietoa) Kieli: Englanti
Addicted to Noise collects the best interviews, profiles, and essays Michael Goldberg has written during his forty-plus years as a journalist. From combative interviews with Frank Zappa and Tom Waits to essays on how Jack Kerouac influenced Bob Dylan and the lasting importance of San Francisco’s first punk rock club, Goldberg, as novelist Dana Spiotta wrote, “shows us how consequential music can be.”
Contained within these pages: interviews with Sleater-Kinney, Sonic Youth, Patti Smith, Lou Reed, Flipper, John Fogerty, Neil Young, and Rick James, along with profiles of Robbie Robertson, John Lee Hooker, James Brown, the Clash, Prince, Michael Jackson, the Flamin’ Groovies, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, X, Laurie Anderson, Stevie Wonder, George Clinton, Devo, San Francisco punks Crime, and more.
Plus short takes on Muddy Waters, Townes Van Zandt, Captain Beefheart, Professor Longhair, and others. As Greil Marcus writes in the Foreword, “You can feel the atmosphere: someone has walked into a room with a pencil in his hand—as the words go in perhaps the first song about a music critic, not counting Chuck Berry’s aside about the writers at the rhythm reviews—and suddenly people are relaxed . . . He isn’t after your secrets. He doesn’t want to ruin your career to make his. He doesn’t care what you think you need to hide. He actually is interested in why and how you make your music and what you think of it. So people open up, very quickly, and, very quickly, as a reader, you’re not reading something you’ve read before.”