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The Sound Board #8: The Books About Music Episode

Needcoffee podcasting

This podcast generally covers music and other transgressions and is co-hosted by Rob Levy, Tuffley and myself. Let us know what you think.

This episode’s central topic is books about music. What are ones you should check out? And literacy is important.

Other topics include our summer new music guide, UK vs US release dates, Dave Matthews Band’s hiatus, Ozomatli’s cause, and more.

[audio:http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/www.needcoffee.com/podcasts/soundboard8.mp3]

Headsup: You can find the music we discuss at our Amazon Store.

If you have music you want to bring to our attention, you can send it snail mail to NEEDCOFFEE.COM MUSIC MINISTERS, 4480-H South Cobb Drive, PMB 394, Smyrna GA USA 30080. Or ping me at widgett at need coffee dot com.

To find Tuffley’s Randomizer, go here. And to find Rob Levy at KDHX, go here.

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To download this episode directly, The Sound Board #8: The Books Episode, then do that thing.

4 comments

  • The best book on a musical figure I ever read was “Woody Guthrie: A Life” by Joe Klein. It told the life story of Guthrie, warts and all, as well as telling the story of the folk music movement of the ’30’s, ’40’s and ’50’s. A very good read

  • I recommend The Manual (How to have a number one the easy way) by the KLF. Despite being tongue in cheek, it has a lot of wisdom and is a funny read. I think it’s freely available to read online as it is long out of print.

    I really don’t like Phonogram. I was around for Britpop and I get all the references but having all the characters constantly talk in song lyrics or yuppy-isms and it makes me cringe.

    I sent an email about listener submitted albums, are you still wanting to review them?

  • Very interesting topic. This past spring I took an English class called Literature of Rock and Roll.

    I read:

    Mystery Train by Greil Marcus
    Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung by Lester Bangs
    Our Band Could Be Your Life by Michael Azerrad
    Great Jones Street by Don DeLillo
    The Commitments by Roddy Doyle
    High Fidelity by Nick Hornby
    The Ground Beneath Her Feet by Salman Rushdie
    and
    Master of Reality by John Darnielle

    My favorites were by Bangs (a great, witty, satirical, intelligent critic), Azzerad (he wrote biographies of 80’s DIY/Indie/Hardcore bands like Fugazi, Minor Threat, Black Flag, Sonic Youth, Minutemen, etc. Some bios were better than others), Doyle (very funny and irreverent, yet spot on with the music), High Fidelity (for many of the same reasons discussed on the show), and Master of Reality (part of the Continuum 33 1/3 series [which is a series where one book reviews one album] this particular book reviews Black Sabbath, but is written as a fictional account of a teenager in a mental institute. Also, Darnielle is the songwriter for the Mountain Goats, which is a great band).

    Rushdie was horrible.

    Mystery Train and Great Jones Street were just okay. Didn’t stand out to me at all.