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Music Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Music
The Cure: Ten Imaginary Years
Published in Paperback by Zomba Books (1990-06)
Authors: Barbarian, Steve Sutherland, and Robert Smith
List price: $24.95
Used price: $35.00

Average review score:

wonderfully done a must for any cure fan
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-06
writen as well as the music, in depth from early school days to 1989. beutiful pictures not just for a cure fan but for anyone wants to read about interesting people.

The semi-autobiography for The Cure's first ten years
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-06
This book is the "definitive version" of the first ten years of the band we all know and love, The Cure. It takes us from Robert's early school days to the height of 1986, without leaving anyone behind. By far, the best biography to date, but another is in the works.

A treat to any Cure fan.....
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-20
Ever since I became a Cure fan I had always wondered if Robert or any of the other band members had a biography, marking the major turning points of their musical careers.... And I guess that my question has been answered ever since I first heard about this crucial book. It lives up to what everyone has said about it, and I just got it yesterday from my friend Ben actually!(Thanks again! You're a sweetie!!)
What can I really say that hasn't been said already? It starts out in the late 70's, the original band members were in the middle of high school and already showing major signs of music excellence. Robert showed obvious signs of his intrest in music around his 10th grade year, and this book clearly highlights his journey to the top. I personally think it's quite intresting to read about their rise to fame and the obstacles they had to encounter along the way. I don't want to give out any spoilers so you all will just have to find out of yourselves the stories in here (oh yeah, there's a hilarious one that concerns Lol and Billy Idol... I almost fell over laughing!!)
This treasure is full of surprises and just about anything else you won't expect to hear. And, lets not forget the oh so needed eye candy!! It's practically exploding with tons of rare, great pictures... Color and black and white. The cute as hell baby pictures are a perfect ending. I especially love the color on the cover. Just because it says it's "paper-back" does not mean that it's not durable or good-looking. First time I saw it I thought it was a hard back because the front is glossy.
The pages are made out of nice quality paper and it's really thick, so you'll have hours to spend reading it. It's a fairly large book as well, I'd say around the size of a good-sized magazine (the width being roughly 8 1/2 in. and the length being 11 in.). This book is generally hard to come across(if not impossible), so I highly urge any Cure fan who is considering on buying this to second-guess no more.
You WILL NOT find any and I mean ANY other Cure book that will be more on the mark than this one. Take it from me and millions of Cure fans alike, this book will easily become one of your most valued possesions. Also, it's important to note that this is the only site on the 'net where I've seen this book for sale (new and used).
I've tried bidding before and no matter what, I was always outbidded by like, 12 other people so just save yourself some time and not to mention money and buy this now! I wish that I would've done that a long time ago. I promise you won't be disappointed in the least!

What an Amusing Band!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-19
I have been a cure fan for as long as I remember and own several cure books, but I must say this is my very favorite, one of the most interesting I have ever read on this band."Ten Imaginary years" takes you on a journey from the very begining of the band (it even mentions how Smith and Tolhurst meet) and ends around the late 1980's when the cure play in Orange, France.
Members of the band talk about their experiences with being in the world of music,their musical inspirations, life on the road, bad managment,fights,bar hopping, drinking binges (hilarious!!!), making of their videos, family life and the very unusual characters and situations they have been in along the way.
This was one of my first cure books , so I absolutely recomend it to the new cure fan and for the old cure fan, its a must have. It has great pictures (including childhood pictures form all members!!), a discography at the end of the book and lots of information about the members I had no idea about. Most important of all this book is extremely humorous.This book is the real thing, it revelas all unapologetically. You will love it!!!!!

A must for any Cure fan!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-23
This book is not just a The Cure fan's book, it just a great book. In depth from cover to cover with every thing from school times to kiss me kiss me kiss me. In a few words: Lovable, interesting, and just wonderful.

Music
THE DEATH OF JAMES DEAN
Published in Paperback by NEW ENGLISH LIBRARY (1988)
Author: WARREN NEWTON BEATH
List price:
Used price: $7.97

Average review score:

A book that tells what the title says (for once!)
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-05
The focus of this book is the automobile crash that ended the life of actor James Dean. Dean only ever made three movies but those three had a huge impact on folks of that period.

In any case, the details given here will present you with a clearly defined account of why and how this youth noir-icon died.

He was on his way to a race, in a racecar, when a young man pulled out from an intersecting highway. So, the question arises, 'Was Dean's speed the cause of the spectacular crash or, was it carelessness on the young man's part who possibly failed to yield the right-of-way?' (HINT: Dean was just issued a speeding ticket about an hour or so before the crash!)

This book has plenty of nice illustrations and I found it a real page-turner of a mini-biography.

Author invites you to please visit our James Dean Site
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-29
We invite you to learn more about James Dean and other Warren Beath titles at http://jamesdeanindeath.com/

CREEPY PULP NON-FICTION
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-02
I first read this book almost 15 years ago and lost the original paperback whilst at college.But I can still recall the creepy passages of Beath's descripton of Dean's death and Beath's veiled admission of his own descent into madness and obsession-the young man that Beath describes throughout the book IS the author himself because if you read his bibliography at the front,he lists NOTES ON DYING which is the thesis the character writes in the book.Bits that stick out are the Japanese business-man buying the hulk of the tow-truck that carried away the crumpled porshe after the crash and the author stealing a high-way cornice and storing it in his room,only to find it infested with hornets and flies.Quite superb.

An Interesting Twist To Dean's Last Ride
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-14
I read this book when it first was published, so I am obviously not in the best position to critique it at least a couple years later. However, when it comes to James Dean I am an admitted addict and have read almost everything that has been published about him over the past 30 years. What makes this book a standout is that it concentrates on Dean's death as opposed to his life. It provides very detailed information re: his last ride and how his death and the subsequent hoopla surrounding it was handled. It also provides quite a lot of previously unpublished material in regard to the period immediately before and after his death. The author has saved us all a lot of pain and irritation by researching this material in a factual and precise manner.
What makes this book a positive departure from the other Dean book is that there is no psychological stuff about Dean's tortured youth or attempts to affix a death wish to him, just a lot of good hard facts. Joe Friday couldn't do a better job in that area.
The best part of this book? It sticks to the truth and makes for an interesting read.

not just a read - an experience
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-13
Beath makes the death of James Dean a very personal experience for the reader. This is not a book one reads and forgets - the reader has participated in the author's passionate search for the substance behind the tragedy and the reader is changed. I'm ready for more from this author.

Music
Deep Community: Adventures in the Modern Folk Underground
Published in Paperback by Black Wolf Press (2003-05-15)
Author: Scott Alarik
List price: $19.95
New price: $2.75
Used price: $1.04
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Sing Out!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-24
Appeared in Sing Out! the Folk Music Magazine, June, 2003 by Rich Warren
Scott Alarik is arguably the finest contemporary journalist covering the folk community. Alarik begins with a succinct, well-reasoned definition of folk in his introduction and moves on. (He considers the word 'folk' to include the contemporary aspect of the music, and prefers using 'traditional' or 'traditional folk music' when describing the older music.) For this book, Alarik has collected more than 300 columns primarily written for the Boston Globe (along with a few written for these pages) over more than a decade; from Dave Carter and Tracy Grammer in September 1991 to The Mammals in August 2002. As a performer himself, Scott brings considerable knowledge to the table, knowing what questions to ask and how to approach his subjects. You'll find conversations with Dar Williams, Pete Seeger, Gordon Bok, Hankus Netsky of the Klezmer Conservatory Band, a good number of Irish artists and even Patricia Monteith, station manager at WUMB. However, unlike some others writing about the community, Scott is objective without an axe to grind or a chip on his shoulder. He handles the descriptive prose and invites the artists to do the talking. While Scott removed dated references, the book does read like a collection of columns, often ending abruptly. As a newspaper writer myself, I know the brick wall of column length limitations. Many times I wished the short pieces were longer with a more graceful flow. One very distracting newspaper style element is putting one quote in each piece in large type, about 10-points larger than the body text. Obviously, the book is Boston oriented, but that should not lessen enjoyment for readers in Omaha or Sacramento. Sadly for researchers, the book is not indexed. The sub-title, Adventures in the Modern Folk Underground, captures the essence of this book. It is rich with nuggets of intelligence and insight. Scott gives us the stories behind the songs, the singers and the music. He covers a multitude of subjects, with many artists turning up in more than one chapter. Even if you never read a word, the scores of Robert Corwin's black and white photos are worth the price of admission. Corwin's lens brings to light whatever soul Alarik might miss with words. While some interest in the folk community is likely a prerequisite to an interest in this book, others would do well to understand that, in a broader sense, the folk community is a microcosm of the larger music community. There's a lot to learn here. If someone approached me wanting to know more about this music that I love so dearly, I would buy that friend a copy of Deep Community.

Contemporary and Historical Overview of the U.S. Folk Scene
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-30
Author, songwriter, and folksinger Scott Alarik is fully qualified to document the current U.S. Folk Scene. His new book, Deep Community: Adventures in the Modern Folk Underground (2003), is comprised of articles he has written between 1990 and 2002 for the Boston Globe newspaper and Sing Out! The Folk Music Magazine. Black & white photographs by the noted music photographer, Robert Corwin, add immediacy and drama. Published by Ellis Paul manager Ralph Jaccodine's Black Wolf Press, Deep Community is comprehensive in scope, detailed in its appraisal, and accurately researched. There are illuminating interviews and articles here about older generation performers, musicians of every stripe, from traditional to pop, including Celtic, Klezmer, bluegrass, old timey, new acoustic, cowboy, blues, and songwriters, some Music Industry acts as well as grass roots & DYI performers, the New England dance community, managers, agents, record producers & labels, coffeehouses & commercial venues, festivals, concert promoters, folk radio, folk arts & educational organizations, and, of course, today's hottest young stars, all presented up-close & personal. Mr. Alarik writes from a valuable three-pronged perspective: his Boston Globe pieces are tailored for broad readership, his Sing Out! articles for a targeted folk music audience, and all are informed by his many years as a professional folk performer. Throughout the book, his extensive knowledge of folk music, its values, and its value to the culture is obvious. Mr. Alarik writes with insight, humor, curiosity, and profound respect for his subject. This is a fascinating, intelligent, and imminently readable book presenting ideas & perspectives that resonate far beyond the boundaries of the folk world. My only complaint is the lack of an index.

Sing Out!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-24
Appeared in Sing Out! the Folk Music Magazine, June, 2003 by Rich Warren
Scott Alarik is arguably the finest contemporary journalist covering the folk community. Alarik begins with a succinct, well-reasoned definition of folk in his introduction and moves on. (He considers the word 'folk' to include the contemporary aspect of the music, and prefers using 'traditional' or 'traditional folk music' when describing the older music.) For this book, Alarik has collected more than 300 columns primarily written for the Boston Globe (along with a few written for these pages) over more than a decade; from Dave Carter and Tracy Grammer in September 1991 to The Mammals in August 2002. As a performer himself, Scott brings considerable knowledge to the table, knowing what questions to ask and how to approach his subjects. You'll find conversations with Dar Williams, Pete Seeger, Gordon Bok, Hankus Netsky of the Klezmer Conservatory Band, a good number of Irish artists and even Patricia Monteith, station manager at WUMB. However, unlike some others writing about the community, Scott is objective without an axe to grind or a chip on his shoulder. He handles the descriptive prose and invites the artists to do the talking. While Scott removed dated references, the book does read like a collection of columns, often ending abruptly. As a newspaper writer myself, I know the brick wall of column length limitations. Many times I wished the short pieces were longer with a more graceful flow. One very distracting newspaper style element is putting one quote in each piece in large type, about 10-points larger than the body text. Obviously, the book is Boston oriented, but that should not lessen enjoyment for readers in Omaha or Sacramento. Sadly for researchers, the book is not indexed. The sub-title, Adventures in the Modern Folk Underground, captures the essence of this book. It is rich with nuggets of intelligence and insight. Scott gives us the stories behind the songs, the singers and the music. He covers a multitude of subjects, with many artists turning up in more than one chapter. Even if you never read a word, the scores of Robert Corwin's black and white photos are worth the price of admission. Corwin's lens brings to light whatever soul Alarik might miss with words. While some interest in the folk community is likely a prerequisite to an interest in this book, others would do well to understand that, in a broader sense, the folk community is a microcosm of the larger music community. There's a lot to learn here. If someone approached me wanting to know more about this music that I love so dearly, I would buy that friend a copy of Deep Community.

An essential primer to the continuing folk revival
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-24
Library Journal
Alarik, folk writer for the Boston Globe and music critic for National Public Radio's Here and Now program, has compiled nearly 125 of his brief articles to capture the spirit and substance of folk music at the turn of the 20th century. Initially published in Sing Out!, the Boston Globe, and Folk Music Magazine, these sketches portray a wide range of folkies, including the well known (e.g., Joan Baez, Pete Seeger, Judy Collins, and Emmylou Harris), the seasoned veterans (e.g., Utah Phillips and Ronnie Gilbert), the up-and-comers (e.g., Bill Morrissey, Dar Williams, Greg Brown, and Chris Smither), the relatively obscure (e.g., Jerry O'Sullivan, Natalie MacMaster, and Aine Minogue), and important folk entrepreneurs (e.g., Chris Strachwitz and Ralph Jaccodine). Though focusing on singer-songwriters and the sounds of his home base of Boston, the author defines the folk genre to cover a broad expanse of musical styles, including Celtic music, bluegrass, country dance, acoustic blues, the women's music movement, and the Latin revival. He emphasizes such themes as the crippling effects of the fickle music business, the potential of the Internet for folk, the importance of tradition, the definition of folk music, gender in folk, and the sense of community engendered by folk artists. Fascinating, informative, well written, and enhanced by Corwin's photos, this book offers an essential primer to the continuing folk revival that first blossomed during the 1980s. Highly recommended to anyone remotely interested in American music, folk, and the music industry.-Dave Szatmary, Univ. of Washington, Seattle Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

A Masterpiece and A MUST for Your Folk Library
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-16
CORRECTED REVEIW:

DEEP COMMUNITY by Scott Alarik
July 15, 2003

Reviewer: Susan E. Naiman-Pascar (see more about me) from Lynn, MA United States
"Deep Community," authored by Scott Alarik, is an incredibly insightful, exquisitely written and well put-together book, a patchwork quilt woven of stories and reviews about the modern folk genre and the music that comes out of a music community segregated (Thank goodness!) from the mainstream of the pop music culture. It has always been so, and as most mainstream music trends have been born and died, folkmusic stays ever-bouyant and followed by its loyal fans. It has evolved to include ancient, traditional, topical, blues, and merging new styles of music such as "Afro-Celtic." "Deep Community" is a DEEP examination and look inside the hearts and minds of the artists, songwriters, singers and musicians who create this music and perform it.
I have been a "folkie" since I attended my first Newport Folk Festival in the summer of 1963, entered art school in Boston that same September and Harvard Square became my "hangout." I became a member of Club 47 on Palmer Street just outside the Square and was a regular attendee every Friday and Saturday night until the club closed its doors in October of 1968. The club opened again a few years later, has changed hands several times and is presently a strong and ongoing folk establishment now known as Club Passim.
Once again I am proud to be a member and recently attended a book release and music night the club hosted for Scott's book. Present were Ellis Paul, Vance Gilbert, Robbie O'Connell, Catie Curtis, Aoife O'Donovan and Aine Minogue. To start off the evening, and between the two sets by all of the performers, Scott read exerpts about each one from his book. It has to be one of the best evenings of folkmusic I've ever attended.
Like that evening, "Deep Community" is a collection of reviews I've been reading for many years from Scott's career as Boston Globe's folk critic. The artists run the genres from Pete Seeger, Tom Rush, Judy Collins, Bill Morrissey, Joan Baez and Utah Phillips to newer and younger artists such as Ellis Paul, Vance Gilbert, Dar Williams, John Gorka, Eddie from Ohio, Christine Lavin, Richard Shindell, Patty Larkin, Dave Carter and Tracy Grammer, just to name a few.
Aside from Scott's individual, truthful, creative and unrepetitious reviews, the artists' thoughts and feelings about their reasons for being folk performers, their love of the music, and their dedication to preserving and keeping folkmusic alive are interspersed throughout the book. The book is written from Scott's own experience as a folk performer and his perspective as a gifted writer. I don't want to say too many specifics or make too many references because I want you to buy the book, read it for yourself, and see why it should be an important and integral part of your folk library.
Along with Paul Stookey's and Geoff Bartley's reviews, and artists I've personally had the good fortune with whom to discuss Scott's book, I feel there isn't enough to be said about what a folk masterpiece and fitting tribute "Deep Community" is to a medium I hold passionately to my heart and to the man who wrote it. Thank you, Scott!!!

PS.....By the way, Scott is also a talented and diversified singer/songwriter and musician in his own right. If you have a chance and he's playing in your area, be sure to catch his show. Though he often performs on his own, he also has a wonderful and unselfish habit of doing shows that showcase and expose to us folk fans several new and gifted performers on stage within one evening's entertainment.

Music
A Deeper Blue: The Life and Music of Townes Van Zandt (North Texas Lives of Musicians)
Published in Hardcover by University of North Texas Press (2008-04)
Author: Robert Earl Hardy
List price: $24.95
New price: $15.58
Used price: $24.95

Average review score:

A Thorough And Compelling Look At TVZ
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-23
Hardy has written a meticulous and incisive book on TVZ that is sure to please TVZ fans. I have not read John Kruth's bio on TVZ so I cannot compare the two. Nevertheless, I was quite pleased with the ethos of this bio and am sure other TVZ fans will appreciate it in kind. Despite Hardy's obvious awe of Townes, "A Deeper Blue" does not come off unctuous. It never approaches hagiography, and comes fairly close to being quite objective. Moreover, the narrative methodically unravels, yet is consistently interesting. It is well-written and overall, offers a thorough and compelling portrait of TVZ. I'm glad I bought it.

All You Probably Need To Know
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-10
Townes Van Zandt was a cult musician with a lot of demons like mental illness and alcoholism and drug abuse. It's all catalogued here for those who care. He left a lot of recordings, but never quite achieved the kind of fame he may have deserved. I'm not sure how thoroughly this book was researched, because I know of at least one manager of Van Zandt's who is not even mentioned. Still, it's unlikely that anything better will be done for a long time.

major effort gets it right
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-08
If I had 10 or more years to do the research Hardy has done (and I could write) I would not have done better myself. I could not detect one false note or major factual error in the covering of Townes 52 years. This book is a joy to read and gives a very close account and filling in of many "missing years" that had never been shared before now. The album and song reviews are well done, and the adherence to chronology is most rewarding. Highest recommendation.

this is the one.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-30
Hardy's long-awaited biography of Townes Van Zandt pretty much gets everything right. This is an excellent work. Hardy's treatment of Van Zandt's life is appropriately thorough, but it isn't at all tedious. I know that this book was exhaustively researched (and in the interest of disclosure I should say that I contributed some research). It is also clearly a labor of love - Hardy is a fan - but he has not succumbed to the tendencies of so many biographers to gush or to simply list everything he learned over the years about his subject's life.
What Hardy says about Van Zandt's song "Waitin' Around To Die" is also true about this book: The archetypical story is well-told. To the extent that Van Zandt's story is a sad one, this book, "bears the weight of its seriousness almost effortlessly. . . it is handled so deftly that there is no sense of it being maudlin." But the details of Van Zandt's drinking and drug use are not glossed over or glamorized. Hardy is objective; he doesn't vilify anyone, and he lets the narrative speak for itself.
This book is well-written, well-organized, insightful and quite moving too. It's the one to read if you're seriously interested in Townes Van Zandt. And you should be.

Tremendous
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-19
This is an excellent biography. Townes' story is assuredly a sad one but he left a legacy of unparalleled songs. I actually put off finishing the book for almost a month just because I didn't want to read the end...I already knew what happened but it didn't make reading a detailed account of his last days any easier.

I've also read the other biography out there, To Live's To Fly, and there's simply no comparison. TLTF was largely anecdotal and the author broke a key rule of biography writing by attempting to project his own importance into the story; Hardy has simply done an exhaustive amount of research and cites all of his sources. He presents the story and then steps aside, so this is the one to go with if you want a more factual recounting of Townes' life. 100% worth the price and read if you're a fan, and if you aren't it just might convert you.

Music
Diana's Dogs: Diana Ross and the Definition of a Diva
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2007-10-12)
Author: Ed Ifkovic
List price: $20.95
New price: $13.09
Used price: $12.00

Average review score:

Excellent Pop Music History
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-11
What I most enjoyed was the tone or attitude the author established about Diana Ross and her musical history. Maybe I mean "attitude." I'm very much interested in the cult of celebrity and how it plays out in the media, so this book seemed a natural to acquire. I'm not a big fan of Ross, but I am intrigued by "Motown" and its importance. Most of all, the author seems to relish the offbeat observation, the humorous aside, and more importantly, the jaundiced, slightly tempered satirical focus. Done lovingly (I assume), the author explores the evolution of the word "diva" as epitomized in the career of Supreme Diana Ross--an exploration that takes him into a variety of places, some not so laudatory, to be sure. Nevertheless, what he has managed to do is to encapsulate something of the shifting, evolving currents of contemporary pop media, as evidenced by the rise of black crossover music, best exampled by Diana Ross and her early days as a Supreme and later as a solo performer.

What I really enjoyed were the throwaway asides, the glib observations, the shoot-off-the-hip comments. Somehow, as the book moved along, I felt I was reading not only a personal commentary on the author's favorite singer but, as well, a sardonic, bemused speculation on the bizarre contemporary culture we now live in.

To tell you the truth, this book was captivating.

A fan's tribute
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-09
I have read the 5 star reviews listed here and agree with them. I want to add however, that what makes this book even more special is to see the picture of the author. He is a white guy in his 60's who has simply adored Diana Ross for over 45 years. It is the vignettes he tells about his Ross sightings and meetings that add depth and warmth to this book. He also tells the reader "everything you wanted to know but didn't realize would interest you" which separates this from all other biographies on Diana Ross (for example, the films Diana was going to star in but the projects never happened.) I have read J Randy Taraborelli's 2007 biograhy Diana Ross Diana Ross: A Biography and actually suggest it be read PRIOR to Diana's Dogs, because it provides more detail in a chronological order about Diana's amazing life and career. Diana's Dogs is like finding a pearl in an oyster for a Ross fan, though. The one criticism I have is simply the title--I love the cover artwork, but I would have chose a different name, perhaps DIVA--the definition of Diana Ross. And as I stated prior, the author's personal stories were so essential that I could have read more of those as well. As a big fan, I completely identified with him, and am so grateful that he wrote and published this treasure of a book!

A Supreme Book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-18
This is the most realistic book on Diana Ross I have read to date. So much about this woman that is written is either slanted too far against her or in favor of her. This book is balanced and explores Diana Ross in both positive and negative ways.

I agreed wholeheartedly with the author when he critiqued the Return to Love Tour where Diana Ross partnered with two former Supremes with whom she had never performed with in the past. It was a poor choice for her career and that certainly showed the years that followed. She should have either made the real reunion happen and do all she could to get Mary Wilson and Cindy Birdsong on that tour or not do it at all.

Still I have to say I went because I am a diehard fan! And it was great!

Even so, I love this DIVA and have since the day I heard her on the radio and watched her perform. I appreciated the author talking about how embarrassed he was to admit he was a fan of Diana Ross. I have felt that way throughout my life thinking that people would see my celebrity worship as less than and inferior to others who worship sport celebrities or classic writers or even the Beatles or the Stones.

I no longer feel this way. I am a proud fan of Diana Ross and the Supremes.

Thank you for this realistic view of this wonderful woman!

I have always been able to see the good side of this star and her "dark" side which we all have.

A Surprising Read
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-10
I was given a copy of this book by a fan who bought it, read it over night, disliked it, and said it was too negative. He knows of my love for Diana's music, so he thought I'd join him in not liking it. To the contrary, I think he misread the book's intent. Yes, there's a lot of dark stuff about the great diva, but that's what makes a diva, no? The great divas of history are bigger-than-life, impetuous, over-the-top, furious, willful, wonderful. What's also there is a lot of the great, wonderful, compelling stuff--Diana as the singular singer of our time.

But what makes me write these comments is the fact hat the book seems to be to tell a large, comprehensive story. There is so much ground covered here, there is so much information packed into the smallish chapters. It's a comprehensive look at the singer. I learned stuff I've never known before, and I've read all the bios and the magazine articles (I own them all!). I've been a fan for over 30 years, and thought I know what needed to be known about her. But the author seems to pull gossip and facts and observation together into a seamless package that somehow tells me some things I didn't know. And that takes some doing.

Oh yeah: there are no pictures inside, like in the biographies. That's why my friend handed it over (aside for the belief that it's a negative screed intended to smear the reputation of the untouchable lady). No pictures. Just commentary. Lots of it. A thousand words are sometimes better than one picture. Believe me.

A new book on Diana Ross, the Supremes, and Motown.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-25
A new book on Diana Ross, the Supremes, and Motown. And, frankly, a book totally different from what's been published before.

What caught my attention were the later chapters of the book--the ones dealing with aspects of Diana Ross's careers I'd never considered. Long a fan, if not a constant one, I nevertheless had read the Taraborrelli and Wilson tomes, and so I knew the story of the Supremes and of Ross herself. I admit that their viewpoints may have colored my way of looking at her, taking something away from my appreciation of her music. But this book makes me look at her in a new light. This is because of the chapters in the "Act 3" part of the book. Ifkovic has these fascinating chapters on the way the tabloid headlines depict her, how reviewers employ poetic similes to describe her, and, even more bizarre, the titles of movies she never made--but was "supposed" to make. What was "not" filmed tells us about her career. There's even a chapter on the academic papers delivered around the globe at various esoteric conferences. As well, there is material on the use of Diana (or the Supremes) as inspiration for writers, from Stephen King to Ann Beattie. I can't think of another such book on a celebrity--and I've read a bunch on celebs from British punk rockers to Hollywood luminaries-that tackles such offbeat and utterly unexpected topics.

A good read, this slight book. I also appreciate his plays on language, his delight in the pun, and his cynical disregard of the proprieties of good taste in his depictions of such Motown stalwarts as Mary Wilson. This book won't make some people happy, but its story needs to be out there.

Music
Dream a Little Dream of Me: The Life of Cass Elliot
Published in Paperback by Chicago Review Press (2007-04-01)
Author: Eddi Fiegel
List price: $16.95
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Average review score:

I think the book is intresting thus far Im still reading it.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-28
I like the book I recemend it to anyone who is a mama and papas fan

Very Sad and Selfish people
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-26
This book was very good, but it was sad to find out how really pathetic these talented people were. John Philips was the worst of the group, what a egotistical and controlling as*hole! I was totally blown away by the actions of this famous group! I understand that this was the 60's , but not everyone was doing drugs and laying around stone out of their minds. Cass Elliott brags that she dropped acid 5 times during her pregnancy and her daughter turned out perfectly normal! She was considered a "good" mother by her friends?!! (I have to wonder what her daughter really thinks about that.) To me, being very talented is not an excuse for being irresponsible. I'm glad I read this book, It was a real eye-opener about who the Mama's and the Papa's really were.If you Love this group you HAVE to read this.

And you thought you had troubles...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-20
For me, a good celebrity biography has several qualities: it makes me feel I know the person better, it feels credibly researched, and it makes me glad I am NOT that person.

This is a simply wonderful biography of a great, flawed, unfortunate, amazingly talented person.

Mama Baltimore
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-21
My mom went to Forest Park High School in Baltimore. Cass Elliot went there also. There is a picture of her in my mom's yearbook, 1959....Who knew? Love you Cass, always have, always will!!!

Beautiful book about a beautiful talent
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-31
David Crosby offered the author $100 if during her research she came across anyone who disliked Cass.Needless to say,she did not collect any reward.

Her reward is knowing she has done a worthy job in presenting the essence of Cass Elliot for readers touched by the singer's amazing talent and personality.

A must-read for anyone remotely interested in Cass,The Mamas and Papas and the West Coast music scene of the mid to late 60's

Music
Dream Theater Metropolis: Scenes from a Memory (Authentic Guitar-Tab)
Published in Paperback by Alfred Publishing Company (2000-12)
Author:
List price: $24.95
New price: $15.39
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Average review score:

Excelente
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-14
EXCELENTE Transcripcion
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 says
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-22
This book is simply what it says it is. It's note for note. I often sit down and read the book while listening to this work of art. The information found in this book is awesome...take from it the licks and chord harmonies and help shape your own playing. If you want to know how to play these songs, buy this book. Its simple.

awesome
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-06
this book is correct note by note. The fact that Petrucci edited it makes it even more amazing.

A musician's guide to songwriting
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-04
Where I really learn from Dream Theater is when I read this score while the CD is playing. Because, after all, this book really is a very thorough score for the album, allowing you to watch at least two of the parts in action (guitar and voice), plus the occasional piano part written out. Since I play both piano and guitar, and sing, it's like having a partial orchestration provided for my education. And I do learn from this music. You will, too, and that can only help your own technical ability. Of course, you really need to know how to read music (and quickly, in some sections) to read the book while the CD is playing. As Petrucci says in another book, regular practice is the greatest boost to proficiency - so if you get this book, read thru it with the studio recording, and practice regularly, you will learn how to play this music. Maybe not as well, maybe not as spontaneously, but there are so many techniques here you'll gain a solid foundation for rock playing and writing. Not a bad return on your $25 investment, as long as you're willing to put in the time, too.

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.

Best buy!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-28
This book is excelent. A must for all guitar players.

Music
The Duchess' Lover
Published in Paperback by Jove (2002-03-26)
Author: Julie Beard
List price: $6.99
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Average review score:

Beard at her Best!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-28
Julie Beard's THE DUCHESS' LOVER, is a multi-faceted, sparkling gem of a book! She deftly weaves the subplots while keeping the readers' emotions focused on the sensual, yet poignant, unfolding lovestory between a lonely duchess and her forbidden lover. Several secondary characters enliven the story with their authenticity and humor. Beard always manages to delve deeply into the dark complexities of human nature to mine out shining shards of humanity and compassion and love and hope.

Cheers for Older Women and their Younger Men!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-17
Lady Chatterly isn't the only woman who loves her gardener--but Julie Beard tells a much more compelling, satisfying tale than the classic by giving us a heroine and hero who develop their own dreams while making each other's come true, societal pressures be damned! And she leads us down a delightful primrose path with plenty of misleading clues as we discover who dunnit to the Duke.
It's been a long time since I've enjoyed a cast of such well-developed, interesting characters, and I literally couldn't put this one down.

Making it work!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-22
If you read the other reviews you should know that Oliva is in her 40's and Will, the gardner cum artist is in his twenties. Her husband dies, they get together, fall in love and he helps find a killer. Besides the murder mystery, the story looks at society's ills and examines not just the main couples relationship (although it does focus on them) but the fascinating secondary characters' as well.

What really is astounding though, is that Ms. Beard makes this whole May/December plot work. Completely.

Ordinarily, I don't really go for the older woman/younger man scenario. I have the usual hangups about it and wonder what will happen when she is 60 and he is 40. But the author really sells the whole kit and kaboddle. It's so well written and the characters are so well defined that I can picture Livie and Will falling in love. I can see them facing anything to be together. I can feel the love they share and I believe that they can each change enough to make a life together.

This is no small feat, let me tell you. ;-)

So if you're squeamish at all about the older woman/younger man scenario, please, don't be. It's a terrific book. One of the best I've ever read. I've read it many times now and it will definitely be on my keeper shelf for many years to come.

A beautiful story of love against all the odds
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-18
Beard triumphs in this well-constructed and touching tale. The hero and heroine are well-rounded and beautifully developed. Any woman who's had to or is reassessing her life will immediately relate to Olivia. Her courage is inspiring. And the hero is everything such a woman could dream of. Theirs is a powerful story of unexpected love and passion in spite of the strictures of society and differences in age and social rank.

In addition to the wonderful love story, one that had me wondering how Beard would manage to come up with a happy ending, there are a number of wholly satisfying subplots, including a secondary love story that parallels Olivia's discoveries about love and life and a who-done-it murder mystery with plenty of red herrings, possible suspects, and titillating clues. On top of all this are penetrating looks at social mores, societal ills, and personal foibles, dreams, and heartaches. The doubts, joys, and anguish experienced by the characters ring true, allowing the book to do what the best literature should do: question ourselves and the world around us, reevaluating what we believe and how we live.

"The Duchess' Lover" is a riveting book that should be on everyone's to-be-read list, reminding us that real love truly is the most important thing. This is probably a book that needs to be read periodically, just to remember all these things when the tyranny of the urgent and the expectations of others begin weighing us down.

Scandalous!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-03
Olivia "Livie" had been very young when she married Quinton Thorpe and became the Duchess of Brandhurst. For almost twenty-five years she lived with her husband's cruelty by shutting off all emotions. As the book opened, I learned Quinton had been murdered, stabbed in the back with a letter opener by an unknown person (while trying to kill Olivia), and Livie was still in shock.

Few knew the Duke had been murdered. Those few, which included Olivia, felt the Duke had gotten what he deserved. So the murder was covered up and kept quiet. The title fell to Andrew Thorpe, an American. Until he could settle his affairs and get to England, Livia was to be in charge.

Neville Thorpe, second in line for the title, was jealous. He stayed by his Aunt Olivia's side and took charge of everything in her for her. He used his time to plot and scheme ways of obtaining the title he so coveted. He was aided by Quinton's wicked valet, Antonio. Neville found Olivia to be easily controlled until ...

Clara Peabody was an advocate with the Ladies' National Association. She approached Olivia, a year after the Duke's death, about helping fight to help the suffering of the match factory ladies. Olivia's eyes opened to possibilities and she developed a backbone.

Willoughby Barnes was an unknown artist. Since his deceased father had worked in the Duke's garden, Will had grown up learning the trade. He was asked to design the garden around the Duke's burial plot. Out of money for paints, he agreed. There, Olivia and Will met and fell in love. Olivia felt true love for the first time. However, Livie was forty and a duchess while Will was in his twenties and a gardner. It could never work.

***** The author, Julie Beard, keeps the reader guessing as to who really murdered the Duke. At the same time, she succeeds in keeping romance, betrayal, compassion, and several wonderful sub-plots going in the story. Normally this would not work. However, Julie Beard MADE it work! It all blends smoothly together and becomes as beautiful as Will's painting of Olivia! An enlightening and graceful story that I highly recommend to one and all! *****

Reviewed by Detra Fitch of Huntress Reviews.

Music
Dylan and Cohen: Poets of Rock and Roll
Published in Paperback by Continuum International Publishing Group (2004-05-01)
Author: David Boucher
List price: $26.95
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Average review score:

Poetry Always was the New Rock & Roll
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-16
David Boucher has written a book that examines in detail the contribution of both artists to the worlds of both literature and rock & roll. In his intoduction he looks at the progress of Cohen from serious poet to rock & roll recording artist and performer. This transition cost him status in the literary world but aided by the legendary "golden voice" and some consummate musicians it allowed him to reach a hitherto undreamed of audience.

Dylan, whom he refers to as "The Changing Man" in Chapter Three, was the chameleon-like performer who picked up, and discarded new personas and new musical styles at the drop of his very famous hat. The obvious example here is the infamous "electric tour" where Dylan was heckled and called "Judas". This abuse was, the book shows, not only for his perceived betrayal of the acoustic folk movement, but also a reaction to the contempt with which Dylan treated his audience. Dylan had always been a confrontational performer, and his response to such attacks was to become louder and less acoustic than ever. What David Boucher also shows is that this signified a shift from the community centred ethic of the folk movement to the excessive individualism and nihilism of the Beat poets who through the drug culture wanted, like Rimbaud, to experience the extremes.

In other chapters the myriad influences on both performers are examined as well as their involvement with political and religious organisations. Finally David Boucher gives us an insight into the road travelled by both men in search of their own personal salvation.

Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen are complex men and complex performers. To listen to, or to read the works of either man is always challenging. In this book the author has written an analysis that is equally challenging exploring, as it does, the anger and the angst of the 1960s and beyond. I enjoyed every minute of the challenge.

Take This Waltz
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-23
What makes this book such a unique and significant contribution to its genre is that it is written with the insight and sensitivity of a spirit that seems deeply attuned to those of its subjects. Not only does the reader come away with a better understanding of the historical times and political contexts that shaped these men, and the personal struggles and psychological bents that motivated their writing, but also with a clearer understanding of what attracts their devotees to their work.

Throughout the book, Boucher weaves explorations of various aspects of the lives and cultural context of Dylan and Cohen that strongly affected them and their work. These include the civil rights movement, drugs, women, sexuality, God and religion, what it means to be reluctantly identified as the voice of a generation, and -- particularly for Cohen -- the holocaust. Boucher also explores the influence of other artists on their work, from Woody Guthrie for Dylan to Lorca for Cohen, as well as the influence that Dylan and Cohen had on each other.

Just as Dylan and Cohen make poetry an accessible part of popular culture, with equal skill Boucher makes philosophy of art and interpretation accessible as well. He points out that our experience of lyric poetry is informed by the questions we bring to it and he explains that the richest experience is to be had when the most appropriate questions are asked. Boucher uses the theories of several philosophers such as R. G. Collingwood, Henry Jones, and Michael Oakeshott, to identify which questions are most appropriately asked of particular works at particular moments in the artists' creative development. He also shows the fruitlessness of asking the wrong kind of questions of a particular poem, as is the tendency of many thinkers. He describes various forms of artistic expression: pseudo-art, or art as magic; art as the expression of emotion, or imaginative art; and inspirational art, or poetry which delights in images. He then demonstrates how, at various stages in Dylan's artistic development, his work takes all three forms of expression, whereas Cohen's work primarily takes the form of the last two. He then offers examples from their poetry to illustrate which form(s) of expression is/are being inhabited by a particular work and he supports his demonstrations with quotations about their work from the artists themselves.

Finally, Boucher helps to bring the period to life for his reader by including several pictures of book covers, concert and film posters, magazine covers and various photographs. The overall result of the book is that Boucher successfully positions his readers to have a richer experience and a deeper understanding and appreciation of the lyric poetry of Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen.



Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-16
The irate and intemperate person signing himself pepidude in a previous review seems incapable of being able to appreciate an argument or of understanding the nature of the exercise that David Boucher has undertaken. It is a thematic book with a wide range of references, not a book of facts about Bob Dylan.The author introduces us to the complexities of issues relating to the difference between popular music lyrics and poetry, between origins and originality, the poetry of imagination and inspiration and much more. Anyone interested in ideas and issues, and in theories as well as facts will find this book immensely stimulating and fascinating.

How lovely does it get...?
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-11
David Boucher's masterly work 'Dylan & Cohen' is essential reading, not simply for devotees of these 'Poets of Rock and Roll' but for anyone with an interest in the history of the radical cultural, political and musical changes in the last century.

It is clear from this eloquent book that neither Dylan nor Cohen wished to speak for anyone but themselves and equally clear that the strength of their work would be seized upon by a generation looking for a new direction. Thankfully they both continued to write through their tribulations and we have a bank of some of the most evocative music to continue to listen to.

I urge you to buy this book but with a word of warning: you won't want to stop reading once you've started.

Compulsively Readable
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-10
This is an excellent study of the music and lyrics of the 2 greatest rock "poets." Boucher explores whether or not their lyrics even qualify as poetry and keeps the subject interesting! He effectively delves into their psyches,as well, without getting hung up on personal, biographical details which have been over analyzed in other places. I found the final chapter "The Religious Experience" to be some of the best writing that I've seen on Dylan and Cohen's spiritual journeys. I highly recommend this to fans of either man's work.

Music
Ella Elephant Scats Like That: Baby Loves Jazz
Published in Board book by Price Stern Sloan (2006-08-03)
Author: Andy Blackman Hurwitz
List price: $7.99
New price: $3.83
Used price: $3.66

Average review score:

funky Jazz music
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-19
Big winner for my 2 and 4 year old.


We already own the Charlie Bird CD which they like.

They love this one. It is very very funky fun music that adults can listen to and enjoy as well which is not the case for a lot of children's music out there as most parents know.

There's maybe 12 songs or so on the CD and 8 will be huge hits with your kids. The only minor thing I can say is the book that it comes with is mostly useless -- it's not really a book. These guys should save the money and charge even less -- not that the price isn't more than fair. But definitely a great CD if you even like jazz a little bit.

A hit!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-23
This series is wonderful! Our two-year-old absolutely loves the Baby Loves Jazz series. We bought a few to start out, then ended up buying the whole set. Two months after acquiring them, she is still enamored and requests to listen to them and read them every day. Her favorites? Well, these are the words we hear most often: "Mommy, read Duck and Miles?" or "Daddy, listen to Duck and Miles?" Philly Joe is also high on the list. I recommend them all. The books stand out on their own, but the music is what makes this series really shine. For example, on Duck Ellington's CD, he does a great Monk style on one track, then switches to great impression of Coltrane's classic quartet on the next track, with a very nice McCoy Tyner impression. Lots of variety and high quality make this series worthwhile (though I could have done without Louis Lion's potty tune). Don't forget the Go Baby Go CD as well (a stand-alone CD without a book), which is perhaps a notch above the music on the book CDs. The ABC tune is her favorite on that one.

Our Daughter Loves this Music
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-16
Our 17-month old always asks for Ella the Elephant music. She's completely entertained by it. My only complaint is that the book has minimal use, as there's not much to point out for an entire song on two pages.

Great quality fun jazz for all ages.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
Our 2 1/2 year old granddaughter played 'Ella Elephant Scats...' over and over for the week she was with us. We ALL enjoyed it every time.

16 month old loves this book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-15
Do not know if it is the rhyming in the beginning of the book or the beautiful breakout colors but my 16 month old loves this book.


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