The Greil Marcus Stranded Book

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Just got a used copy of this. Has it been out of print? I never see it anywhere. It's the 1996 Da Capo edition. I thought the piece on Trout Mask Replica was quite good. Any favorite pieces from this one? I know everyone likes Bangs's thing on Astral Weeks.

One of the writers wants to take a Jackson Brown album to a desert island.

Mark (MarkR), Monday, 10 October 2005 17:00 (twenty years ago)

You might want to review this thread:

It's ILM: The Book!

Ned Raggett (Ned), Monday, 10 October 2005 17:07 (twenty years ago)

(Mainly, admittedly, for the point that while it was out of print, it will soon be in print, etc.)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Monday, 10 October 2005 17:07 (twenty years ago)

I was working for Da Capo when the '96 revised ed. came out. I hate that John Rockwell thing on Linda Ronstadt. Winner on "Trout Mask" is the best thing in the book, altho Ward on 5 Royales is good, as is the piece on Huey Piano Smith. The discography is useful, although he Marcuses it up too much as usual--OK, what is the Signal Achievement of rock, fucking "Highway 61"? Ho hum. And no Meltzer, 'cause they was afeared he was gonna write about the Doors, the Dean and Holy Greil did, those dorks.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Monday, 10 October 2005 19:21 (twenty years ago)

Why on earth would someone putting a book together that included essays on the Eagles and Linda Ronstadt be "afeared" of a Doors piece?

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 19:23 (twenty years ago)

I just heard Highway 61 from front to back for the very first time the other week. Except for "Desolation Row," it's pretty good.

pdf (Phil Freeman), Monday, 10 October 2005 19:28 (twenty years ago)

>Why on earth would someone putting a book together that included essays on the Eagles and Linda Ronstadt be "afeared" of a Doors piece?>

durned if I know why. at least Meltzer says as much his "Whore" compilation, he acts like Dean and Marcus shut him out or something. and yeah, one song I like on "Highway 61" besides the hit is the one about riding a mail train, that is a very good one, and Marcus's discography at the end did turn me on to some good records, like Buster Brown's "Is You Is or Ain't My Baby" and several others I have enjoyed throughout the years.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Monday, 10 October 2005 19:33 (twenty years ago)

Best thing in Stranded (one of the best pieces of rock writing ever, actually) is the appendix.

Are there any writers as young as me, Kogan, Allred, George Smith, Metal Mike Saunders, etc, in Stranded? (Tom Carson, maybe; anybody else?) If not, I'm even more pissed that Phil is limiting his new book to people who are (or who he thought were) under 40. (Though the fact that Kogan, Allred, Smith, Saunders, and I are so dependent on that rockist old Stranded canon for our ideas and tastes, unlike all those independently minded kids in their 20s and 30s, may well be a valid reason. Oh wait..)

Fuck, I should edit a book with ONLY writers between 40 and 55 in it. It just might blow the other two out of the water. (Not that I have time, or that I would've had time to contribute to Phil's book had I been invited. And I'm looking forward to it anyway, and it looks like it could be great. But the "over 40 = brains turned to cottage cheese" delusion is still worth complaining about. So I did.)

xhuxk, Monday, 10 October 2005 19:37 (twenty years ago)

(Actually, not positive that everybody I listed is between 40 and 55 per se, though I'm pretty sure they're all close. And I left plenty of people out.) (As did Greil. And Phil.)

xhuxk, Monday, 10 October 2005 19:41 (twenty years ago)

I love the Linda Ronstadt essay. And the Neil Young piece is one of the best shorter things I've read about him.

The appendix ROCKS. Marcus' blurbs on Bryan Ferry, "It Don't Come Easy," and Hunky Dory made me seek them out.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Monday, 10 October 2005 19:45 (twenty years ago)

I always thought the appendix was by far the most important part of the book. I can remember reading only one or two books on pop music before Stranded came out- The Beatles: An Illustrated Record and Mystery Train.

k/l (Ken L), Monday, 10 October 2005 19:50 (twenty years ago)

i'll buy the geezer book, chuck. get kogan and sinker and honorary oldster scott seward.

dan (dan), Monday, 10 October 2005 20:25 (twenty years ago)

40-55 is the lost demographic. too young for primetime hippie baby boom, too old for generation XYZ whatever. we had to take shit from our older brothers and sisters about missing the 60s and then suffer the callow insults of our younger siblings cause we lacked alt/indie cred. I'm over it now but sometimes it's fun to realize that the handfull of slacker assholes who busted my balls for being an over 30 rockcrit in the early 90s are now pushing 40 themselves.

FWIW Tom Carson was by far the youngest writer in the original Stranded, unless Debra Rae Cohen is in there (I forget).

light & lively fat free (lovebug starski), Monday, 10 October 2005 20:29 (twenty years ago)

>40-55 is the lost demographic.

Very true. I was talking to another critic (one slightly older than Chuck, I think) about exactly that when I first got the thumbs-up for the book - he said "his generation" had gotten hosed w/r/t anthologies, etc. And he's right.

pdf (Phil Freeman), Monday, 10 October 2005 20:48 (twenty years ago)

We didn't have any Generation X to toe the line of! We were on our own! Which may well be (pure conjecture here) why the aging hippies understood the Nirvana/Pixies/Pavement era sheep more than they ever understood us; maybe the X-ers at least feigned some sense of commuity we never gave a flying fuck about. Also, maybe it's why so many of the most original thinkers among critics fall in those middle years. Not saying I necessarily believe that (ALL generational generalizations are almost always horseshit), but the case sure could be made for it. (I'm still curious, though, why Phil picked 40 as his cutoff point,)

xhuxk, Monday, 10 October 2005 21:04 (twenty years ago)

Why on earth would someone putting a book together that included essays on the Eagles and Linda Ronstadt be "afeared" of a Doors piece?
-- Matos-Webster Dictionary (michaelangelomato...), October 10th, 2005.

There goes Matos again, standing up for his surrogate daddies, The Dean and Greil and dissing Meltzer in the process - par for the course, right?

Matos is your head stuck so far up their asses that you're denying that someone like Meltzer was capable of making them nervous when it came to including him in Stranded? Read Whore again (or maybe for the first time) and see for yourself.

sri, Monday, 10 October 2005 21:12 (twenty years ago)

>(I'm still curious, though, why Phil picked 40 as his cutoff point.)

Because I figured that in the 25-26 years since Stranded, music had changed in a whole bunch of maybe-superficial-to-serious-fulltime-critics-but-vastly-more-important-to-the-record-buying-public ways (the rise of hip-hop being only the biggest example), and I wanted to get essays from writers young enough to have been formed in that crucible without having any experience of a world when things sounded different. Somebody over 40 had to put hip-hop into the context of what they knew already, and would likely view it as something Other or tangential to what they loved; somebody under 40 was likely to hear hip-hop as something that had always been there (because if we're to assume that one starts seriously listening to music around age 12 - which would be 1977 at the earliest, and probably sometime more like 1985-86 since most of my contributors are actually in their early 30s, like me - it would have been), or hear it as culturally dominant and thus filter other stuff through hip-hop rather than filtering hip-hop through rock. Am I making any sense? Probably not.

pdf (Phil Freeman), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:16 (twenty years ago)

haha Christgau edited how many of the Whore pieces again?

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:20 (twenty years ago)

xpost

your assumptions are cock-eyed nonsense.

for straters: somebody over 40 who's been listening to hip-hop since its birth might have some perspective on its development and even be able to fit the music into a larger historical context, as opposed to a younger somebody who hears hip-hop as part of the pop landscape, i.e. takes its revolutionary impact for granted.

m coleman (lovebug starski), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:31 (twenty years ago)

A lot less than you think. He "edited" or attempted to soften a number of them, true. But then again the general consensus is that Meltzer's writing was always the most neutered in the Voice. The majority of the selections and by far the best pieces in Whore are the ones untouched by Christgau. Although, I will admit that the funniest anecdotes inevitably concern what a puffed up, self-important douchebag the guy was/is. Thanks for proving my point about your hero-worship of Ol' Bob though. Anyone who thinks that Meltzer's work and career was done anything but disservice by that guy (and Marcus to a lesser extent) is either completely ignorant or a pathetic ass-kisser like yourself.

sri, Monday, 10 October 2005 21:33 (twenty years ago)

awwww. I'm wounded!

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:33 (twenty years ago)

You're making a little bit of sense, Phil, except I sure don't hear most of the writers you picked as filtering their other listening through hip-hop any more than, say, me or Frank Kogan (both of whom have been listening to hip-hop since, well, 1980 or so) do. (Since "Rapper's Delight" came out in 1979, which was basically the same year that I started paying attention to music in any kind of serious manner, yeah, I *guess* I put in the context of what I already knew, since it sounded kinda like a goofy disco novelty to me, and I was a skinny tie new waver and stuff. So right, I guess you have a point. But I basically discovered hip-hop around the same time I discovered AC/DC, to be honest.) (And music had been changing all along anyway. It's not like it STARTED changing with hip-hop. I mean, hell, why not disco? Or heavy metal? Do they exist in Stranded at all??)

xp

xhuxk, Monday, 10 October 2005 21:34 (twenty years ago)

(Actually, maybe Marcus names a Zeppelin LP or two in the appendix? Anything else?)

xhuxk, Monday, 10 October 2005 21:36 (twenty years ago)

it just seems like you're assuming any writer over 40 is "rockist" incapable of appreciating anything w/o filtering it through the beatles and stones, bob dylan etc. obv there's some truth to this but as w/all generalizations it's sorta limiting. but hey, it makes perfect sense that you would tap your peers for writing assigments.


couple xxxx posts in there

if there's any positive mention of disco in the marcus anthology I'll eat your copy of it while listening to Boney M.

m coleman (lovebug starski), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:39 (twenty years ago)

Marcus ref's Led IV and I'm pretty sure that's it as far as metal goes (unless you're counting Hendrix, Paul Revere & The Raiders, Neil Young and other old school stairway to hell noms - but no REAL metal, hyuk).

miccio (miccio), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:40 (twenty years ago)

oh, he also refs the Adverts & Sex Pistols! That's SWH-metal.

miccio (miccio), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:41 (twenty years ago)

"The Boys Are Back in Town"! (Actually, he has a great blurb about that one!)

The least rockist major music critic ever may well be Michael Freedberg of the Boston Phoenix, who I believe is in his mid 60s by now.

xhuxk, Monday, 10 October 2005 21:43 (twenty years ago)

it took me a minute to figure out what SWH meant

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:43 (twenty years ago)

Thin Lizzy ain't in "Treasure Island"! But Free's "Wishing Well" is.

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:44 (twenty years ago)

Really?? I could have sworn he said something about how the boys in the Thin Lizzy song are like the men of ancient myth, and they bring the summer WITH them! But maybe I'm thinking of something he wrote about it in Rolling Stone a couple years later, or somewhere else (or, uh, somebody else. Whatever, it was great!)

xhuxk, Monday, 10 October 2005 21:47 (twenty years ago)

i thought the boys in the thin lizzy song were like your h.s. buds during winter vacation from college.

miccio (miccio), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:49 (twenty years ago)

Oh, also Boston's Don't Look Back, Heart's "Crazy for You," buncha Hendrix, Stooges, MC5, Kinks' Greatest, Lynyrd's Street Survivors, The New York Dolls, Mott, Yardbirds, Rust Never Sleeps, Trashmen, "Do Ya," "We're An American band"...

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:50 (twenty years ago)

Christ, I forgot about the Boston.

miccio (miccio), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:50 (twenty years ago)

And I guess The Who Sings My Generation counts too.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:51 (twenty years ago)

>I sure don't hear most of the writers you picked as filtering their other listening through hip-hop

Well, hip-hop was just one big obvious example.

>as w/all generalizations it's sorta limiting

Of course.

Bear in mind I also had to get money from a publisher for this. And "A New Generation Speaks Its Mind/Fuck You, Dad" is a very good marketing hook when sequelizing an existing anthology, particularly one viewed as canonical.

pdf (Phil Freeman), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:51 (twenty years ago)

"I LEARNED IT BY WATCHING YOU, DAD!" seems a little more appropriate.

miccio (miccio), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:52 (twenty years ago)

And The Stooges count as "metal" too.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:53 (twenty years ago)

the college boys in the thin lizzy song are the same ones who go home for the summertime in that one toby keith song. (but i am not greil, i have never read *the golden bough*.)

xhuxk, Monday, 10 October 2005 21:53 (twenty years ago)

Or "The Golden Bowl."

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:54 (twenty years ago)

He definitely mentions the Yardbirds, because I remember him referring to "Mister, You're A Better Man Than I" as "a heart-stopping protest song."

k/l (Ken L), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:55 (twenty years ago)

We are the greatest generation just like you were, Dad! (Gen X rock critics = the world's ALL TIME ass kissers/teacher's pets, obviously. hell, NOBODY can argue with that one.)

xhuxk, Monday, 10 October 2005 21:56 (twenty years ago)

Hell, I've been putting apples on THOSE desks for 8 years.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Monday, 10 October 2005 21:59 (twenty years ago)

12x5 (London). English robber barons laying tracks across the U.S.A., they seized huge chunks of right-of-way, foreclosing on modern soul with "Time Is On My Side," careening to apocalyptic heighs with "It's All Over Now," and terrifying all opposition as the guitar that opened "Empty Heart" reached out and grabbed your very soul. 1964.

miccio (miccio), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:02 (twenty years ago)

Greil's squib on the "5" Royales is still one of my favorite reviews ever

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:04 (twenty years ago)

The rhetorical, er, relish in Greil's writing was there from the beginning.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:05 (twenty years ago)

I "paid homage" to the Stooges entry in my very first paid album review.

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:05 (twenty years ago)

And he said Wings' Jet was "the most exciting single of its year"! Pure pop for now people!

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:06 (twenty years ago)

haha the Stooges entry was written by Dave Marsh!

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:07 (twenty years ago)

And thanks to his entry for Chairs Missing, I had dreams about the album a full year before I heard it or even knew what it looked like.

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:07 (twenty years ago)

ah, the modern soul of time is on my side.

scott seward (scott seward), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:08 (twenty years ago)

That's how I felt about "St Dominic's Preview," which was the last Van Morrison album I bought.

(xpost)

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:09 (twenty years ago)

in 1964 it was totally modern soul!

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:10 (twenty years ago)

haha the Stooges entry was written by Dave Marsh!

No, he wrote two of the Hendrix entries and the MC5.

WE'RE HAVIN' A ROCKCRIT DWEEB-OUT (WITH THE ELECTRIC EELS)!

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:10 (twenty years ago)

ha! The last time so many people geeked out to an appendix was when T.S. Eliot appended his to "The Waste Land."

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:11 (twenty years ago)

ah, yr right, Mike!

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:13 (twenty years ago)

So, in summary...Chuck is right.

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:19 (twenty years ago)

Greil's squib on the "5" Royales is still one of my favorite reviews ever
Was it something about how Eric Clapton would have paid to hold Lowman Pauling's coat?

k/l (Ken L), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:22 (twenty years ago)

"in 1964 it was totally modern soul!"

Oh, I agree. Nothing quite says soul music like mick's vocals on time is on my side. i'll bet it was all they could talk about over at stax and motown and chess back then.

scott seward (scott seward), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:33 (twenty years ago)

Chuck Berry is solely represented by More Chuck Berry, "fourteen performances, all your favorites" (emphasis his!), while the Stones get 11 albums and 6 singles. He includes The Complete Buddy Holly ('how could I leave out "Well...All Right" or "Crying, Waiting, Hoping"?') AND The "Chirping Crickets" Elvis gets 9 albums plus. Did he have something against Chuck Berry? There's more Graham Parker on here than Chuck! Gah!

miccio (miccio), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:42 (twenty years ago)

xpost

hahahaha. there's a great bit near the end of Peter Guralnick's new Sam Cooke bio where all the other soul/gospel singers are hating on Mick & the Stones and Sam says no no no guys, this is the future.

m coleman (lovebug starski), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:46 (twenty years ago)

I gotta get that Cooke bio

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:50 (twenty years ago)

They were always talking about More Chuck Berry back in the day. I think it was the only thing available that was not a rerecord or stereo reprocess. Or maybe they just didn't like "In The Wee, Wee Hours."

k/l (Ken L), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:51 (twenty years ago)

haha I'm not making any claims on Mick's vocal, Scott--I'm not even foreclosing on it! just saying the song counted as such back then.

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:51 (twenty years ago)

(in a strict genre sense, I mean)

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:54 (twenty years ago)

Marcus' blurb on Fleetwood Mac's Rumours is pretty OTM too.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Monday, 10 October 2005 22:57 (twenty years ago)

Let's face it, back in the day, record geeks spent as much time memorizing that appendix as they did memorizing the liner notes on the back of Meet The Beatles.

k/l (Ken L), Monday, 10 October 2005 23:00 (twenty years ago)

"That's John on the lead vocal - double-tracked!"

k/l (Ken L), Monday, 10 October 2005 23:01 (twenty years ago)

I think you may have won, k/l

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Monday, 10 October 2005 23:01 (twenty years ago)

I'm waiting for edd s hurt to show up and mention the blurb for The Grateful Dead Live At The Pyramids, which at the time had not yet been recorded.

k/l (Ken L), Monday, 10 October 2005 23:10 (twenty years ago)

people who still think richard meltzer is some kind of censored genius who would blow our minds with his wisdom if only he weren't being edited by the "squares" are funny.

J.D. (Justyn Dillingham), Monday, 10 October 2005 23:11 (twenty years ago)

You sure it was written before the concerts were recorded? The Pyramids concerts were in mid-September '78, and Greil dates the intro December 2nd, plus there's a few '79 records in "Treasure Island."

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Monday, 10 October 2005 23:17 (twenty years ago)

"people who still think richard meltzer is some kind of censored genius who would blow our minds with his wisdom if only he weren't being edited by the "squares" are funny"

Not to defend the poster who was being obnox-o to Michaelangelo,* but I don't think he was saying this and I don't ever remember anyone else saying it either. Meltzer hardly wrote for the Voice at all, anyway - maybe twenty pieces total over almost a decade. He wrote for like Creem and Zoo World and stuff in the seventies.

* When Michaelangelo was only questioning that Doors thing - something that only came from Meltzer's speculative ruminations about why he wasn't asked to contribute to Stranded anyway

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Monday, 10 October 2005 23:37 (twenty years ago)

yeah, Meltzer says he *thinks* that maybe Christgau and Marcus were afraid that he was gonna write about the Doors. Christgau refutes a lot of what Meltzer said, in a piece reviewing "A Whore" and the Tosches Reader, if I recall rightly. I'm not taking Meltzer's side at all, and while I like his writing a lot, I don't think he's some kind of "censored genius." I mean it seems to me he belongs in "Stranded" if anyone does, though.

xpost k/l's comment about the Dead at the Pyramids, I have no idea about the chronology of the Dead. I have the original edition of "Stranded" around here somewhere--it came out in '79, right?

and Chuck makes a good point above when he talks about all the people--I'm one of 'em--stuck in between the boomers and Gen X. We were on our own. I remember the Beatles and Stones when they were new, but I never sat down and actually listened to most of that stuff until new wave/disco time; I remember buying the first Clash album and "Who's Next" and "Beatles for Sale" the same day, or "Saturday Night Fever" and Allman Brothers "Eat a Peach" and the first Marshall Tucker album at the same time, it all ran together for me. People I knew five or six years older than I were appalled that I liked Parliament or disco, and people six or ten years older just accepted that stuff like that had always been around. I like to think I benefitted from a slight struggle or a slight dissonance back then, and figure I got something out of connecting music from around 1980 with music from a decade earlier. And yeah, the appendix to "Stranded" gave me a lot to work with, as did Christgau's '70s guide a few years later; and as much as I like Meltzer I don't think I would have gotten the same kind of grounding in *records* I probably would like or needed to know about from him, and don't think I was savvy enough then to take what he was saying for what it was worth. Just knowing about the records and getting them to listen to, that obviously counted for a lot back then.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 00:10 (twenty years ago)

No, Michael, I'm not sure, but I think maybe he implied that he hadn't been there or even heard it, but he thought it was a good idea. I can't seem to find my copy, I probably got rid of it last time I moved. Maybe I just read it wrong.

k/l (Ken L), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 00:44 (twenty years ago)

i was being slightly hyperbolic, tim, sorry if that's not allowed anymore.

yeah eddie i wasn't aiming that remark at you. i just get a bit fed up when people like "sri" use meltzer to bash xgau and marcus, espec considering they've been far more active, interesting and engaged critics for the last 20 years if not more. i agree that he should have been in stranded, tho, who knows why that didn't happen.

J.D. (Justyn Dillingham), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 00:44 (twenty years ago)

This is the Dead entry. Took me a few years to realize it was a joke:

Grateful Dead Live at the Pyramids (Arista). Who knows what it'll sound like: the concept is staggering. Recorded 1978/release pending.

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 00:52 (twenty years ago)

He was hip to the "database with fake entries" idea even way back then.

I don't know why I discussed this with edd s hurt here once before. Maybe we were talking about the Pyramid in Memphis, Tennessee?

k/l (Ken L), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 01:00 (twenty years ago)

the list ends with "close the book" by "the zurvans" - does that exist? according to google, no.

J.D. (Justyn Dillingham), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 01:02 (twenty years ago)

Maybe it was on the lost Memphis thread, when I posted something about an album called Sly and Robbie Present Roky: When The Pyramid Meets The Eye And Eye.

Yeah, I remember eventually thinking that Zurvans thing was a fake too, but I didn't want to take a chance with Mike D.

k/l (Ken L), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 01:05 (twenty years ago)

The Zurvans record does not exist. I am reasonably certain of this.

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 01:11 (twenty years ago)

It doesn't exist. "Close the Book" on End Records. Get it?

Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 02:47 (twenty years ago)

Greil himself has said it doesn't exist.

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 02:58 (twenty years ago)

I'm getting the impression that it doesn't exist.

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 03:05 (twenty years ago)

Kudos for including the kalin twins though.

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 03:05 (twenty years ago)

soooooooooooooo anyway, it's late and all and i'm heading off to bed, but it has occurred to me that - and taking my own self out of the equation and just looking at it from a fan/admirer of good writing/crit perspective and hearing xhucx's 40 and over lament up top - a *Best Of The Voice Music Section - The Eddy Years* book would be a mighty fine thing chockablock with koganallredmetalmike etcetera und sidebars and eddytor's dozens/singles again and bells and whistles and i realize that the eddy years are ongoing, but still...i would buy five even if i wasn't in it. i don't want people to forget about all the great stuff that has gone on there for lo these, how many years has it been? heck, one old girlfriend, one wedding day, and two kids ago and some change for me. um, anyway, i could go on, but it seems like a no-brainer. and i realize that a doorstop compendium of the entire history of the section is needed as well, but i like to think smaller. who among you wouldn't buy it up like a hot cake? okay, okay, i'm going. i don't really have any idea how these things work.

scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 03:26 (twenty years ago)

frith's piece is far and away the best thing in that book.
i found this googling:

"Are you still pleased with your Stranded selection of Beggars Banquet, and the accompanying essay?

Yes! I still love/play the record and find what I said interesting! "

and he should be proud of it, pretty deft and unimpeachable (if admittedly not much else, its short, but that's a good thing!)

noizem duke (noize duke), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 03:49 (twenty years ago)

(Sometimes scanning these threads feels like watching a really geeky version of "The Warriors".)

The Ghost of Black Elegance (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 12:27 (twenty years ago)

*I don't know why I discussed this with edd hurt here once before. Maybe we were talking about the Pyramid in Memphis, Tennessee?*

I don't remember talking about this; and it would've been great had the Dead did something at the Memphis Pyramid. But I always thought the Dead live at Pyramids recording actually occurred..? No? I've often wondered about the Zurvans, too.

xp

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Tuesday, 11 October 2005 15:03 (twenty years ago)

four years pass...

Wait, so the Masked Marauders LP isn't in Stranded's discography? I just checked the book, and it's not there! Why did I think it was? Or what am I confusing it with? (Anyway, I actually saw a copy of that album today. In an antique store, for $12. Way too steep for my budget, but until now, I wasn't entirely sure whether somebody had made it up - a' la the Zurvans' "Close The Book" -- or what.)

xhuxk, Sunday, 25 October 2009 01:16 (sixteen years ago)

It was definitely in one of those books back in the day. Maybe it was in the original Book Of Rock Lists? My copy finally fell apart so I couldn't tell you.

oater to oxidation (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 25 October 2009 01:48 (sixteen years ago)

I'm at least partially probably conflating it with Rag's Rock N Roll (Atlantic), which also may or may not be real, and which Dave Marsh weaves a possibly invented-on-the-spot (or possibly not) Stones hoax story about in the appendix of his 1985 The First Rock & Roll Confidential Report book. But yeah, I could have sworn Masked Marauders was in some appendix, too -- a Marcus one, I thought. But I'm not finding it in any of the likely candidates on my shelf. (So yeah, maybe Rock Lists, which I haven't owned a copy of in forever.)

xhuxk, Sunday, 25 October 2009 01:53 (sixteen years ago)

one year passes...

bump!!

can we talk a little bit more about the Marcus epilogue. what are your thoughts on his list?

I'm loving it

gospodin simmel, Friday, 10 December 2010 03:11 (fifteen years ago)

I know the appendix like I know my name--it influenced me more than any piece of music writing ever. I started wondering if he revised it as I looked over this thread, but when the book was reissued, didn't he make a point of saying he resisted revising it? Yet I know I read something somewhere about what he would have included had he revised it...maybe that was an interview? I'm a little confused at this point.

clemenza, Friday, 10 December 2010 03:32 (fifteen years ago)

it's in this interview http://rockcriticsarchives.com/interviews/greilmarcus/02.html

gospodin simmel, Friday, 10 December 2010 13:23 (fifteen years ago)

Scott Woods' site...I've heard that guy's bad news.

clemenza, Friday, 10 December 2010 14:58 (fifteen years ago)

Finally understand this statement a week later.

The Decline of British Cat Power (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 20 December 2010 01:08 (fifteen years ago)

I still do not.

curmudgeon, Monday, 20 December 2010 04:13 (fifteen years ago)

Think he is actually a friend of clemenza's and clemenza is being ironic- they co-authored a book and there is some stuff on that website that they did together. Unless they had a falling out that I don't know about.

The Decline of British Cat Power (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 20 December 2010 04:24 (fifteen years ago)

meta

can we talk about our discoveries from the Marcus list?

Dee Clark's Raindrops is blowing my mind at the moment

gospodin simmel, Monday, 20 December 2010 14:49 (fifteen years ago)

My fault--sorry.

If you want to hear a totally great Dee Clark song, look for "When I Call on You" by the Kool Gents. In a little blurb I wrote on it once, I actually had Marcus in mind; it's very much like Nolan Strong's "The Wind," which I know he loves, yet I've never come across any mention of "When I Call on You" in anything he's ever written.

clemenza, Monday, 20 December 2010 15:10 (fifteen years ago)

two weeks pass...

The Wind is a classic of course, but When I Call On You is news to me. thanks a lot, great song

sorry, my computer died so I couldn't reply earlier.

from the Stranded list: Robin Luke's Suzie Darling is a find, as is the Elegant's Little Star and about 30 other songs.

gospodin simmel, Tuesday, 4 January 2011 17:26 (fifteen years ago)

One Stranded pick I tried for 25 years to get my hands on was the Colonel Jubilation LP. At a certain point, I started to wonder if it was a joke, like the Zurvans. Once file sharing became prevalant, getting hold of it was quite easy. I only listened once; it didn't make much of an impression on me, but I should go back and give it another try.

clemenza, Tuesday, 4 January 2011 18:10 (fifteen years ago)

two years pass...

maria and i are going to the monday thing. see ya there, boston!

Harvard University’s Committee on Higher Degrees in American Studies is pleased to announce the Fall 2013 Massey Lecturer:

GREIL MARCUS
“Three Songs, Three Singers, Three Nations”

Monday, October 21, 5:30 p.m.
“Inflection: ‘The Ballad of Hollis Brown,’ Bob Dylan”

Tuesday, October 22, 5:30 p.m.
“Disappearance and Forgetting: ‘Last Kind Words Blues,’ Geeshie Wiley”

Wednesday, October 23, 5:30 p.m.
“World Upside Down: ‘I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground,’ Bascom Lamar Lunsford”

scott seward, Saturday, 19 October 2013 15:18 (twelve years ago)

All three lectures will be delivered in the
Sackler Auditorium
485 Broadway
Cambridge, MA

Free and open to the public.

A reception will follow the lecture on Monday, October 21st, in the Thompson Room, Barker Center, 12 Quincy Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

scott seward, Saturday, 19 October 2013 15:20 (twelve years ago)

Posted about Gothika elsewhere--meant to add that it might contain the only Greil Marcus joke in a big-budget Hollywood movie ever.

(I'm kidding, but the scene I'm thinking of does fit.)

clemenza, Saturday, 19 October 2013 15:32 (twelve years ago)

me and my boys at harvard tonight. great time. greil killed it. gonna steal like half a dozen lines from him at least.

https://scontent-b-iad.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-frc1/3801_10152588755537137_256138507_n.jpg

scott seward, Tuesday, 22 October 2013 02:39 (twelve years ago)

boy, rufus and cyrus have grown up fast...

ian, Tuesday, 22 October 2013 03:09 (twelve years ago)

Greil, Scott, and Bob Christgau, right? Awesome

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 22 October 2013 03:11 (twelve years ago)

<oblig WithTheBeatlesjoke alt=PleasePleaseMejoke>

Mark G, Tuesday, 22 October 2013 11:00 (twelve years ago)

That is so rad.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 22 October 2013 12:34 (twelve years ago)

Nice one, Scott!

Tommy McTommy (Tom D.), Tuesday, 22 October 2013 12:59 (twelve years ago)

I saw Greil do a Dylan talk at the Library of Congress once, and while there was a bit of pretention to it, I mostly was impressed

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 22 October 2013 14:25 (twelve years ago)

eleven years pass...

Scored an original hardback copy in decent shape for around $6 this afternoon.

Over 20 years ago I picked up a well-loved and partially underlined/highlighted og copy of the paperback that after about 8 years in my care fell completely apart as the binding glue gradually crumbled--the only time that's ever happened to me with an old book.

Okay, heteros are cutting edge this year, too. (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 27 February 2025 20:30 (one year ago)

Nice

curmudgeon, Friday, 28 February 2025 01:40 (one year ago)

six months pass...

Anyone have a way I can read Rob Sheffield's interview with Marcus (50th anniversary edition of Mystery Train)?

clemenza, Monday, 22 September 2025 20:26 (seven months ago)

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/music/articles/greil-marcus-50-years-mystery-155928466.html

hungover beet poo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 22 September 2025 20:39 (seven months ago)

Works--thanks!

clemenza, Monday, 22 September 2025 20:40 (seven months ago)

Biggest revelation: he's writing a “listening to Bryan Ferry” book.

hungover beet poo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 22 September 2025 20:41 (seven months ago)


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