Fotografía de autor

David Rowell

Autor de The Train of Small Mercies

3+ Obras 133 Miembros 35 Reseñas

Obras de David Rowell

Obras relacionadas

The Best American Travel Writing 2016 (2016) — Contribuidor — 99 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
male

Miembros

Reseñas

It's kind of disappointing that this book didn't achieve more of what the author clearly intended: profound comment expressed through moment-in-time observation. I think the difficulty was trying to do it through so many groups of people.
½
 
Denunciada
cherilove | 32 reseñas más. | May 10, 2023 |
Rowell goes in pursuit of unusual instruments like zithers and Frampton's talk box and the people dedicated to them.
½
 
Denunciada
beaujoe | otra reseña | Feb 15, 2023 |
Story covers characters along the route of the train carrying Bobby Kennedy's Body from New York to Washington. They appear to be random characters, their ordinary lives impacted by the assassination. Ordinary people reacting to an American Tragedy. Fiction mixed with real life events.
 
Denunciada
booklovers2 | 32 reseñas más. | Dec 20, 2022 |
David Rowell, a journalist, writes about following music to where it takes him. To Switzerland in pursuit of an elusive instrument called the hang. To the Talk Box, as popularized by Peter Frampton. To a storage shed in Maryland where a man named Bill plays a 122 piece drum set for hours at a time. To the quest to get the band Yes into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. On a small-venue tour with his childhood singer-songwriter friend.

A chapter on the Hammond organ, which started as a church and family instrument and became popularized by jazz and rock musicians, is fascinating.

Rowell is as funny as he is intrepid. Regarding the 40 Funky Hits album he sent away for as a kid: “With songs by Little Anthony and the Imperials, Little Caesar and the Romans, Little Richard, and Little Jimmy Dickens, I surmised that rock music and dwarfism went hand in hand.” And “As a little white boy in North Carolina, I had no real understanding of what it meant to be funky – or a need to be.”

Rowell steps out of his comfort zone, and attends a death metal festival in a shirt and tie: “the look of a beleaguered guidance counselor.” He describes the vocals of a particular death metal band as “distorted, high-pitched bleats. It was the sound used in movies by aliens disguised as humans to signal to their kind that they’ve been found out.”

A good, journalistic view of several of the innumerable places music can take us.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
Hagelstein | otra reseña | Jul 4, 2021 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
3
También por
1
Miembros
133
Popularidad
#152,660
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
35
ISBNs
13

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