by Barney Hoskyns (Author)
No city in the western world exerts such a fascination as the glamorous, debauched Los Angeles, and there is no city with more of a draw to musicians. Defined by the music of Brian Wilson, The Doors, NWA, jazz, funk, soul, hip hop, and fulled by drugs, alcohol, sun, sex and surf, LA has seen it all. Barney Hoskyns tells the definitive story of L.A.'s post-war music scene and spent nearly a decade researching this account of music which developed into a culture of its own. A hilarious, chilling, thoroughly scabrous history of post-war pop music in Los Angeles fascinating. - Los Angeles Times Book Review . Beautifully written - Melody Maker . Fabulously authoritative and grimly compelling. - Sunday Times . Magnificent. His enthusiasm for the subject is not only tangible but infectious, and will have you rifling through forgotten areas of your record collection with renewed passion. - VOX . A terrific, sprawling, hugely ambitious study of the city's rock 'n' roll history, Hoskyns skilfully straddles his role as detached historian and gushing enthusiast in this tremendous book. - NME . Impressive a chronicle of how the city of dreams has so often turned itself into a city of nightmares. Hoskyns writes with awesome command. - Time Out .
Format: Paperback
Pages: 432
Edition: Re-issue
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Published: 2003
ISBN 10: 074756180X
ISBN 13: 9780747561804
Book Overview: The definitive story of Los Angeles' post-war music scene from Eddie Cochran and The Beach Boys to Sonic Youth and Ice T. Rejacketed and updated with a new chapter by the author on Beck Beautifully written Paul Lester, Melody Maker A brilliant widescreen history of L.A.'s music scene Mojo