Holiday Gift Guide to Best Books on Rock and Roll
Beautiful New Books Cover the Spectrum of Rock Music Icons
By Eve Lichtgarn, published Nov 28, 2006
Published Content: 93 Total Views: 78,720 Favorited By: 1 CPs
The rock and roll fan on your gift list is the easiest person to shop for this holiday season. There are a number of richly produced books covering a spectrum of rock icons just waiting to be unwrapped. Here is a guide to some outstanding titles that will be welcomed by anyone who ever belted out a rock tune in the shower or played an air guitar when they thought no one was looking.
Born To Run: The Unseen Photos
By Eric Meola
Insight Editions, 72 pages, $39.95
ISBN 1933784091
When a very young Bruce Springsteen conquered the music world, he was heralded simultaneously on the October 1975 covers of Newsweek and Time magazines. Springsteen not only survived such heady adulation, he has remained on top of the heap ever since. Renowned photographer Eric Meola conducted photo sessions with that young Springsteen and captured his exuberance just as the Jersey troubadour was learning that the world was his oyster. In this collection of more than 100 black and white photographs printed in rich quadratone, Meola presents images of The Boss that have never before been published.
Exile on Main Street: A Season in Hell with the Rolling Stones
By Robert Greenfield
Da Capo Press, 224 pages, $24
ISBN 0306814331
There was an earlier book written in 1999 by John Perry with the same title covering the same season when the Rolling Stones dodged British income taxes by exiling themselves to Keith Richards’ chateau in the South of France where they created their seminal double LP. But there was enough brilliance and debauchery flowing through that French mansion to fill another book for more great behind-the-scenes reading.
The Blue Moon Boys: The Story of Elvis Presley’s Band
By Ken Burke and Dan Griffin
Chicago Review Press, 320 pages, $24.95
ISBN 1556526148
Bill Black, Scotty Moore and D.J. Fontana may have been anonymous as the musicians behind the man who would become king of rock and roll, but they were pillars of rockabilly. This scholarly retrospective explains the band’s role in creating the Elvis signature sound and contains a Foreword written by latter day rockabilly devotee Brian Setzer.
Holiday Gift Guide to Best Books on Rock and Roll
Elvis At 21: New York to Memphis, by Alfred Wertheimer published by Random House
Credit: Random House
Copyright: Random House
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Takeaways
- The Rolling Stones were dodging British taxes when they recorded "Exile on Main Street."
- The Blue Moon Boys gave Elvis Presley his signature rockabilly sound.
- U2 began by playing on homemade guitars.
Did You Know?
In October 1975, Bruce Springsteen was featured on the cover of both Newsweek and Time magazine during the same week.
Resources
- Insight Editions, Da Capo Press, Chicago Review Press, Chronicle Books, Harper Entertainment, Random House
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Amy Brantley
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Posted on 12/06/2006 at 11:12:00 PM
Zane Ewton
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Posted on 12/05/2006 at 1:12:00 PM