When Surface Was Depth: Death By Cappuccino And Other Reflections On Music And Culture In The 1990s

When Surface Was Depth: Death By Cappuccino And Other Reflections On Music And Culture In The 1990s

by Michael Bracewell (Author)

Synopsis

He's the only person to whom The Velvet Underground ever played as an audience of one, the first British writer to talk to Patti Smith after her seventeen-year hiatus from rock. One reviewer hailed his previous book England is Mine as surely the strangest and most beautiful book on pop music ever written. Greil Marcus said that even the merely superb passages of that book read like intellectual sunrises, calling the work intoxicated and intoxicating. The author in question is Michael Bracewell, celebrated surveyor of the punk and rock scenes. Now, through funny, engaging, and occasionally devastating essays about his experience in the thick of the music scene of the 1990s, Bracewell tackles a decade where Greed became disguised as Attitude, where a cozy, urban feelgood fable replaced punk, and where the role of anxiety, so intrinsic to the culture and music of the 1980s, was swapped for a shallow I feel your pain sensibility. Read When Surface Was Depth and discover why Time Out has called Michael Bracewell, in a word, terrific.

$23.19

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 384
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Published: 11 Jul 2002

ISBN 10: 0306811308
ISBN 13: 9780306811302

Author Bio
Michael Bracewell is an acclaimed novelist as well as nonfiction writer. He lives in England.