While an exhausted record industry -- and nation -- takes a long nap on the couch next week to slowly rise from that oh-so-pleasurable, somewhat delirious, post-turkey and trimmings food coma, a terrific stack of new Rock & Roll books give good reason to stay down a little longer and balance a good read
and another piece of pie on your belly.
The Beatles add two terrific selections to their wing of the sophisticated Rock library, and a long lost moment in time from the late 1960s is given a new life. Almost as large as the visual punch of a 12-inch LP jacket, Boxigami Books has just released the perfect coffee-table gift for any fan in
Beatles Art: Fantastic New Artwork of the Fab Four. Featuring over 200 pages of visual interpretations both joyfully touching and quietly sad, the glossy pages turn like a mash-up jukebox of perfect Beatles melodies, jumping and cross-cutting the band's iconic imagery, both real and imagined. Looking through the prism of each painter, sculptor, and artist, the overflowing love is a delicious, giddy visual high. Highlights include the quartet portrayed as sloth, Hip Hop homeboys, a Spanish Colonial retablo, and wild beer-keg-sized ceramic busts. More psychedelic visions are found in
The Beatles: Illustrated Lyrics, originally published in 1969 and now issued in paperback by Black Dog & Leventhal. With over 200 songs given the pen and pallet treatment, a few noteworthy artists made the cut -- Peter Max's kaleidoscope peek through "Glass Onion," Ralph Steadman's take on "Oh Darling" and underground cartoonist Victor Moscoso's M.C. Escher-esque look at "Ob-la-di, Ob-la-da." Obsessive-compulsive doctorates of Beatleology get plenty to gnaw on in Backbeat Books'
The Unreleased Beatles: Music & Film, dissecting every rare outtake session, home demo and live performance in nearly 400 pages. Year by year, and practically day by day, author Richie Unterberger places the reader as a fly on the wall with illuminating detail. If you've stumbled upon the plethora of Beatle bootlegs on LP and CD, this history is a must-have companion to answer why each of these collectable recordings is so special. Also of note is a chapter dedicated to the "songs the Beatles gave away" to Badfinger, Peter & Gordon, The Applejacks, Mary Hopkin and others. ...
San Francisco's RE/Search Publications is back with another stunning prick at the masses with Pranks 2, a second volume of anti-corporate and anti-stupidity shenanigans meant to teach a little and laugh a lot between the lines of social protest. Two rockers find their way inside -- entertaining malcontent and spoken word sage Jello Biafra hacks off about hacking scenarios, and Ministry's Al Jourgensen shares tales of subversive resistance within his major record label deal. Other political artists turning everything sideways include the Yes Men, John Waters, painter Ron English, comedian Margaret Cho, master satirist Paul Krassner and the brilliant modifiers of the advertising landscape, the Billboard Liberation Front. Highly recommended, this is smart stuff for those witty enough to throw ideas instead of bombs. ...
Cool cars and Rock & Roll go together like peanut butter and jelly. With enough songs written over the past 50 years about cars and the need for speed, XM or Sirius could easily format a whole radio station on the subject. Author Paul Grushkin, who's Art of Rock ushered in the new age of Rock posters, has done it again with the visually explosive Rockin' Down the Highway: The Cars and People That Made Rock Roll. With the beauty of vintage hubcaps alongside the beauty of vintage 45-rpm records, this massive 240-page thriller tells the intersecting tale of the hot rods and the mack daddies who drove and designed them, as well as the Rock & Roll (and later Hip Hop) scene that fueled the engines in spirit and song. If you can dream it, it's in here -- "Rocket 88," Rat Fink mania, eight-track tapes, Rockabilly car culture, Detroit pride, eerie deaths behind the wheel, pimped whips, ZZ Top's CadZZilla and Ken Kesey's 1939 International Harvester cosmic school bus, all gorgeously electrified in rare archival photography, record sleeves, album jackets, magazine covers and concert posters. Most fun are the photos of touring musicians' life on the road and in the van, and wealthy rockers proudly flanking their four-wheel obsessions. If you've got a gearhead on your gift list, this is pure, orgasmic, hemi-powered delight. ...
Looking to screw down your thinking cap and dive into the heady world of music and social anthropology at the grad school level? It might hurt a little, but the brainy diatribes found in The Resisting Muse: Popular Music and Social Protest from the Ashgate Press is an insightful collection of essays written by college professors from around the country, each passionately offering discourse on an array of anomalies in popular music. Topics range from the failure of straightedge, women in Rap, Reggae and the ideology of Rastafarianism, the undead of Gothicism, and Heavy Metal as a community. I was particularly engaged with Sean Kelly's essay on cassette culture and its influence on the Pacific Northwest Grunge scene and Russell Potter's look at postmodernism in today's Hip Hop. ...
It's not exactly "daddy dearest," but a new book by Gregory Davis, the eldest son of Miles Davis, tells the ups and downs of his father's life in Dark Magus: The Jekyll and Hyde Life of Miles Davis on the Backbeat Books imprint. Between his mad, impulsive genius, the dope and the women, Davis' legacy was peppered with destructive demons, all told here among the tender moments with his family, and personal photographs from the family album. Told in anecdotal form from his sidelines as a housemate and traveling partner with his father, fans of John Coltrane and Charlie Parker will enjoy the history of Blues colliding with Be Bop Jazz.
Television Alert
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno hosts Nelly Furtado Wednesday and Snoop Dogg Tuesday. The Late Show with David Letterman welcomes John Mayer Thursday, Tom Waits Monday and The Decemberists Tuesday. Late Night with Conan O'Brien boasts Billy Talent Wednesday, Brand New Heavies Thursday and Jet Monday. Last Call with Carson Daly drafts Army of Anyone on Thursday. And Jimmy Kimmel Live serves up Bowling For Soup Friday and Chris Daughtry Tuesday.
New Releases Coming Tuesday
Faithless To All New Arrivals (Sony) featuring the first single, "Bombs"; David Gilmour On an Island (Columbia) deluxe edition featuring a bonus DVD of Abbey Road and AOL sessions from earlier this year; Incubus - Light Grenades (Epic) featuring the single "Anna Molly"; NRBQ & the Whole Wheat Horns - Derbytown Live 1982 (MVD) DVD filmed in Louisville; The Pennies 10,000 Things (Darla/Ear X-tacy Records) from Louisville; Public Enemy Beats and Places (Slam Jamz) collection of 15 previously unreleased tracks.