Rock Books
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Nice FinisherReview Date: 2008-02-16
Great book for the Springsteen fanReview Date: 2008-01-07
Great Book With Great PhotosReview Date: 2007-01-12
Great for your Springsteen super fanReview Date: 2007-01-21
As a huge Springsteen fan, I devoured this book and begged for more.Review Date: 2007-11-23
Here, he provides a tour-by-tour analysis/memoir/scrapbook of the career of Bruce Springsteen.
I am a huge Springsteen fan. Just huge. I devoured this book and begged for more.
There are literally hundreds of killer little details that will delight anyone who has seen a Springsteen show. If this book is given to a Springsteen fan who by chance has not yet seen him live, it will make them want to donate a kidney to do so.
The most frequent comments I internally made while reading this tome were "I wish I was there", or " I wish that would come out on CD or DVD", or "That must have been amazing" and usually ending with " I must find a way to get tickets to his next concert!"
No other musician could have a book like this. Many of his beloved onstage stories are reproduced here. Accounts of particularly historic shows (The Bottom Line, The Roxy, Nassau, the Coliseum), guest performers (Ronnie Spector, his mom requesting an encore)...the way he went from band tours to solo shows...
Bottom line (no pun intended) is that this is a mandatory purchase for any Bruce fan!
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The best Bush collectible I've seen!Review Date: 2001-07-17
16 Stone Tour BookReview Date: 2000-01-13
This book is so bushey!!!Review Date: 1999-01-17
one for aestetics . . . and a smileReview Date: 2000-01-31
YEAH BABY GET SOME!Review Date: 1999-02-27

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CLOUD CUCKOO LAND IS TRULY A WINNERReview Date: 2003-01-02
Opus MaximusReview Date: 2002-12-01
Keep Your Eye on This WriterReview Date: 2002-11-26
Coming of Age Tale that Never Gets OldReview Date: 2003-01-26
Some books seem to evoke their own soundtrack, and this is one of them, from an old Patsy Cline song heard from a passing Cadillac on a flat Texas highway to early REM drifting out of a diner at 5 a.m. on a grey, haunted Philadelphia morning.
Cloud Cuckoo Land is realistic fiction that isn't mundane. Like the mythical place recalled by its title, this beautifully written novel has a strange magic that can't really be defined; it's hard to categorize and just as hard to forget.
A Delicious DiscoveryReview Date: 2003-05-20
I feel that way again now about those of you who have yet to read Lisa Borders' Cloud Cuckoo Land. Miri (short for Miriam) Ortiz has everything you'd ever want in a protagonist. She's lovable, smart, flawed, authentic, and layered as an onion. Experiencing the twisting road she traverses, starting with her less-than- perfect childhood in Prairie Rose, Texas, means not only the discovery of unknown and resonant worlds (foster homes of varying degrees of heartbreak; street life, at turns shadowy and joyful; the Philadelphia music scene in the 1980s) but also an opportunity to know these worlds through Miri's compelling and wholly original viewpoint.
And then there's Borders' language. Oh. So often we read books that feel affected, too self-aware, "workshopped" to death. Borders' prose, on the other hand, is at turns skippingly light and hauntingly fragile. There are turns of phrase in these pages that make you have to run and tell somebody.
Maybe I should stop being jealous, though, because the best thing about Cloud Cuckoo Land might be the feeling the author leaves you with after the book is done. Even in the face of Miri's upheavals, Borders manages to uplift with a non-saccharine kind of hope. In scenes that hover and drift back into the mind long after the cover is closed, Borders restores one's faith in in the power of human connections -- wherever and however one finds them.

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Festival in the DesertReview Date: 2007-01-03
Full-color visuals and personal memoriesReview Date: 2002-11-08
Awesome Review Date: 2004-11-01
Awesome DVD, beautiful book!Review Date: 2003-06-07
Fantastic!Review Date: 2005-01-09
A must have for anyone interested in Burning Man!

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Excellent, well written biography on Cass ElliotReview Date: 2008-07-26
I think the book is intresting thus far Im still reading it.Review Date: 2007-10-28
Very Sad and Selfish peopleReview Date: 2007-12-26
And you thought you had troubles...Review Date: 2007-05-20
This is a simply wonderful biography of a great, flawed, unfortunate, amazingly talented person.
Mama BaltimoreReview Date: 2007-06-21

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Metropolis scenes from a memory bookReview Date: 2008-08-10
ExcelenteReview Date: 2008-06-14
La verdad, Para mi ESTE es el Mejor Album de Dream Theater
y tenerlo en libro es lo mejor que he tenido
Se los recomiendo mucho, esta muy completo no le falta nada
Solo practicar y practicar hasta que salga la Magia :D
MaRtYn
MTY-MEX
It is exactly what it saysReview Date: 2006-02-22
awesomeReview Date: 2005-10-06
A musician's guide to songwritingReview Date: 2002-01-04
Not every page is going to surprise you, because there's a lot of repetition in DT's music and usually with enough subtle variation that few shortcuts can be taken and still remain faithful to the original songs. You'll see that here. You'll also see plenty of "Riffs" and "Rhythm Figures", too. Again, the trick is to see how they constructed their songs and appreciate both the repetition and the changes.
You will learn from this book, which is an excellent transcription of the guitar and voice parts, and I think you'll enjoy it every step of the way. 5 stars simply because this is such a great resource for any guitarist's education -- and it's such great music, too.

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Love the bookReview Date: 2008-05-03
They love the book, mostly for personal reasons - I carry the baby, ELIZABETI carries her baby; our baby is Eva, THE DOLL is Eva - but I love the book just because it's a very sweet story.
It has simple enough wording, only a few sentences per two-page spread, that it can be read easily to a young child, only two years or so... and it has a deep enough story that it will be enjoyed by an older child as well.
There's only one part of the book that strikes me as strange, and that's at the very end. Elizabeti's mother thinks to herself that Elizabeti will be a good mother when she grows up... and then we're told that Eva (the doll/rock) thinks so too. The style of the book is so realistic that it's a strange note, because, of course, dolls and rocks don't think. But I can always edit or skip that line, so it's not a problem.
Outstanding bookReview Date: 2007-09-27
Great to prepare for new siblingsReview Date: 2003-04-16
What a precious book!!Review Date: 2002-10-12
One of the most charming children's books I've ever readReview Date: 2000-10-03
Elizabeti is a completely endearing character, who reminds adults and children that childhood has its special joys, and high among those is the ability to involve the entire family in a fantasy world of the child's own making. Elizabeti turns a rock into the family's new baby, whom everyone loves and cherishes right along with her. It's a story about what is best in all of us.

The best yetReview Date: 2008-06-28
What does surprise me is that someone like Dee Stanley, who put her own sons in foster care so she could pursue Vernon Presley, would condemn them.
I am also not surprised that Elvis was never able to form a long-lasting relationship with a woman. Most of the women I have read about seemed only interested in what they could get from him. not what they could give to him; a total contrast to his Mother. And let's face it, most men are looking for someone like Mom when they get married.
I thought Elaine Dundy did a masterful research job. Too bad the history books kids use in school don't usually match this level of dedication to facts.
This book is not just about Elvis, it is about poverty and how it shapes people and stays with them throughout their lives.
Buy this book, you will treasure it.
Gladys and ElvisReview Date: 2008-03-18
Excellent book!Review Date: 2007-07-28
New InsightsReview Date: 2006-08-09
The life of Gladys and her influence on Elvis are well documented. I've read several Elvis books, and none provides a better description. Gladys had her own dreams of stardom which filtered through to Elvis.
The author does a thorough, excellent job of researching and developing her own independent conclusions. For the most part, her logic rings true. In a very few instances, she may infer too much.
Gladys Did The Best She CouldReview Date: 2006-08-25
The reader closes the book with one thought about Gladys (and Vernon) and that is that these two parents loved their son more than life itself and that they simply did the best they could. They were handicapped from the beginning by poverty, ignorance, and also quite possibly genetic pre-dispositions towards depression, obsessive/compulsive disorders, and addictions. It was not uncommon throughout the 19th century and into the 20th that first cousins would marry and have children. The inter-marriages within the Smith and Presley families were pervasive and no doubt exacerbated genetic tendencies.
Gladys' relationship to Elvis was very close in that she put his needs above everything else in her life. She was the only person who could have ever "saved" Elvis from his excesses. But unfortunately, she succumbed to her own drinking habits early on. Once she was gone, his life spiraled out of control.
Elaine Dundy leaves the question unanswered: If Elvis had such a close relationship with Gladys, why wasn't he ever able to form an equally enduring and intimate relationship with a lover? The answer comes from the reader's personal conclusion that the mother-son relationship was close to the point of crippling to Elvis. Just as he reached young adulthood his fabulous success story began. He was stretching out for independence and Gladys figuartively and literally abandoned him -- through death. Elvis was always able to keep the "enduring" part of a relationship going (i.e. he could never let Priscilla go) but his love affairs seemed to mirror his relationship with Gladys in bizarreness, obsessions, and misery.

amazingReview Date: 2007-06-14
Funny Side of the MoonReview Date: 2000-04-10
Life and Times of Moon the LoonReview Date: 2005-03-14
My real awakening was the film "The Kids Are Alright," and after that finding this book, written by Peter "Dougal" Butler, Moon's longtime "man," or personal assistant.
Butler's rollicking tale of ten-plus years with the madman of rock is a sometimes nasty one, following his string of practical jokes, endless escapades and occasionally spotlighting his musical prowess.
But it really mostly is the relationship Butler established with Moon, and some of the insights that later came out about Moon's personality, and what may have been wrong with him.
Butler notes that Moon sometimes would get into a state where he just could not discern the real world from the false. Case in point his work on the film "That'll Be The Day," where he plays a drummer. The star of the film is David Essex ("Rock On"), and Moon is unable to handle it. His dive into a mental pool of despair and thinking the whole affair is real is pathetic...and as Butler notes sometimes you just don't have a straight jacket available when you really need one.
Butler notes the problems in Moon's relationships with his wife Kim as well as Annette Walter-Lax, whom Moon had said he intended to marry toward the end of his life. Moon's friends, if ever he had close ones include Ringo Starr and Harry Nilsson, as well as Vivian Stanshall of the Bonzos.
One problem I have is finding that Butler seems to have placed himself at events that he was not present for. He also I think in retrospect put too much emphasis on the zaniness without really getting deeper into the causes, etc.
But perhaps he just didn't know; Butler was no psychiatrist.
He also skips over certain pivotal moments in Moon's life; the accidental death of his close friend and driver Neil Boland (though in fairness, Butler was not present for that) and his longtime fling with groupie extraordinaire Pamela Des Barres (who has her own insights on Keith).
Either way, some interesting and funny photos, some intriguing stories and a sad, but truthful ending that pretty much says the only thing that really happened was that Moon up and died.
The funniest book I've ever readReview Date: 1999-04-01
Time For a Reprint!Review Date: 1999-08-19

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An essential read & keeperReview Date: 2008-04-23
But once again we have a biography written by two people - why would a poet like Carl need anybody more than an "editor"? Same goeswith Sun label buddy Scotty Moore - his book too had that unecessary naarrator - an excellent piece of prose, like with Carl, but the thought of it gets me depressed. Do you think Dylan or Costello would need a helper?
'50s friend Chuck Berry did his all by himself. The defiant Rocker wrought the defiant Writer. (And baby, that is Rock and Roll....).
Love reading about that Sun to Columbia to British career "rescue" period.
As a CP fan/collector I was natuarlly disappointed in the lack of deatils as to the lesser-known should-been-million-sellers and the conspicuous absence of a much-needed sessionography. A Perkins *Discography* is always helpful. But when in the world am I gonna learn when and where he
cut "We Did In '54?"
Great Look Into The Life of a Great TalentReview Date: 2007-06-18
I personally believe that Carl was one of the truest talents in early rock and roll, and his importance as an innovator/songwriter/performer is vastly undervalued. Get this book, and the "Complete Sun Recordings", and you can't go wrong.
Now THIS should be a movie!Review Date: 2006-05-15
"They" really should make this life story a movie!
What a man; what a life!Review Date: 2003-06-18
Inspiring!!Review Date: 2002-10-03
This is a must read for anyone who has any interest in music,or for that matter,the sociology of the South during the late 1940's and 1950's. It is also ,quite simply,one of the most inspiring books that I've ever read,Thank You, Carl Perkins!
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