Record Guide Shootout: Rolling Stone vs. Christgau Consumer Guides vs. Trouser Press vs. Spin Alternative

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Which of these dog-eared beauties did you spend the most time with? Which lorded over the others?

https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1442068071i/1219046._UY659_SS659_.jpg
https://www.robertchristgau.com/images/cg80s-b.jpg
https://https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1387663259i/899268._UY630_SR1200,630_.jpg
https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51BMQWEXDFL.jpg

For reference, this earlier (less complete) thread: TS: The New Rolling Stone Record Guide Vs. The Spin Alternative Record Guide

Poll Results

OptionVotes
Trouser Press Record Guide 26
Christgau 70s/80s/90s Consumer Guides 15
Rolling Stone Record Guide (Blue or Red) 11
Spin Alternative Record Guide 9


Naive Teen Idol, Friday, 23 August 2019 14:20 (six years ago)

In descending order of most use

Christgau
SPIN
Trouser Press
RS

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 23 August 2019 14:21 (six years ago)

I think I preferred the red RS to the Blue . Though possibly the Blue one was more accurate. Think I liked the biases and working against them. Liked a lotof the records taht the Red one gave a square to.
BUt interesting to see what thought about certain records was at certain times. Though may be better to look at one of the Richard Morton Jack volumes on that count.

Enjoyed teh Christgau 70s too & think I may have the 80s somewhere. Really need to sort through all my books at some point. Quite a few I haven't seen in a while.

Is Spin Alternative the one with Rollins on the cover?

Stevolende, Friday, 23 August 2019 14:30 (six years ago)

I have Big Blue, Big Red, and three editions of the TP guide (New Wave Records; “New” TP Guide; and “Fourth Edition,” the last one published before they redid all the reviews for the ‘90s — I don’t need the ‘90s guide, I lived it!)

I never really saw RS & TP as “competing,” as there wasn’t a ton of overlap. Obviously, you go to TP for Throbbing Gristle and RS for Dave Marsh snark about some ‘70s band, etc.

Stub yr toe on the yacht rock (morrisp), Friday, 23 August 2019 14:40 (six years ago)

loved loved loved the red and blue rolling stone record guides. Somebody digitize those pronto before all the copies get withered away.

Mr. Snrub, Friday, 23 August 2019 14:40 (six years ago)

GAH

Naive Teen Idol, Friday, 23 August 2019 14:41 (six years ago)

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/31RECCM3ZSL._BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

Naive Teen Idol, Friday, 23 August 2019 14:43 (six years ago)

In descending order of most use

Christgau
SPIN
Trouser Press
RS

I think this is close to me, but I swap Spin and TP. My TP is gone now bc I read it so much it fell apart.

Naive Teen Idol, Friday, 23 August 2019 14:44 (six years ago)

The TP stuff is all online (as y’all probably know)

Stub yr toe on the yacht rock (morrisp), Friday, 23 August 2019 14:52 (six years ago)

I still have the Spin guide, though the binding is completely broken so it's in 2-3 pieces. That one's definitely my #1. I also still have the red RS guide. Had the TP at one point but I think that one might still be at my parents' house. Never bought the Xgau.

Evans on Hammond (evol j), Friday, 23 August 2019 15:09 (six years ago)

Rolling Stone Alt Rock O Rama!!!

brimstead, Friday, 23 August 2019 15:12 (six years ago)

Learned the most by far from the first three TP editions, especially the second one. I liked how they attempted to disentangle the differences between US and UK releases; not sure how well the other guides did this. Not crazy about the dismissive pans with the square ratings in the RS guides, too "grumpy old man." By the time the SPIN guide came out I basically no longer cared about alternative music, so don't really remember that one.

Josefa, Friday, 23 August 2019 15:16 (six years ago)

For me, it's a tie between TP and Xgau -- TP is great in that it covers stuff that RS and Xgau don't and the writing is pretty good. But Xgau's miniatures seeped into my brain like molasses.

Naive Teen Idol, Friday, 23 August 2019 15:54 (six years ago)

Tough call between Xgau, RS Red, and TP for me. Can't overstate how valuable these were, especially pre-internet.

xpost -- yeah, for me, Xgau really excels at 250-300 words per subject.

Jeff Wright, Friday, 23 August 2019 15:59 (six years ago)

Dark horse vote for the "Psychozoic Hymnal" section of Joe Carducci's Rock and the Pop Narcotic.

shared unit of analysis (unperson), Friday, 23 August 2019 16:00 (six years ago)

I remember working in the library in college (this was 1995 ok) and going through the Trouser Press guide in the reference section and making a list of all the obscure records by obscure bands that looked interesting. I don't think I got past M. I don't know what happened to the actual list, so I only had my memory of the list.

sarahell, Friday, 23 August 2019 16:01 (six years ago)

xpost -- yeah, for me, Xgau really excels at 250-300 words per subject
Agree with this.

I’m old so I Vote RS Record Guide (Red). Read Trouser Press the magazine more than the TP guide and Xgau in the VV more than his guidebook, although I did find it useful.

The Fearless Thread Killers (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 23 August 2019 16:02 (six years ago)

I do remember years of looking for some of those records -- for about 2 or 3 years, I could not find a James Chance record anywhere -- that time seems totally irrelevant now.

sarahell, Friday, 23 August 2019 16:03 (six years ago)

I'm with the consensus, I think. Xgau, TP, and RS in the last place. Never got to read the Spin one.

I find the RS Encylopaedia much more interesting than the guide. The guide gets weaker as it gets nearer to what was the present back then. I'm not sure if this is due to the proximity, or if it was related to being written by JD Considine.

cpl593H, Friday, 23 August 2019 16:05 (six years ago)

And the XGau stuff is the only one I still go back to.

cpl593H, Friday, 23 August 2019 16:06 (six years ago)

Voted RS, since red/blue and yellow (jazz) were the ones I spent the most time with, but I don't think they're the best in retrospect. The differences between red and blue did teach me that critics hauled a fair bit of personal baggage around with them and that I should just treat the books more as discographical references than guides. I wish Cook/Morton's Penguin Guide to Jazz had been an option, definitely would have voted for that.

The Chronicles of Ermagerd (WmC), Friday, 23 August 2019 16:22 (six years ago)

Voted RS. The blue guide steered me through a lot of my listening as a kid (and later), but the in print/out-of-print inclusions/exclusions meant a lot of one-star reviews for mediocre one-album artists, and no reviews at all for, say, Big Star or the MC5. But RS also used experts in reggae/dub, gospel, and other areas. I recently picked up a few records from the Music In The World Of Islam series based on the RS blue guide recommendations.

The Trouser Press guide (the first two, maybe three editions) filled in some of the gaps of the RS guide, but I seem to remember weird shit like Ira Robbins flatly dismissing the entirety of dub as a genre/movement (in his Sandinista! review).

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 23 August 2019 17:22 (six years ago)

I didn't care for Ira's judgments very much... and at least Marsh's weird judgments (like the Led Zep hate) were usually entertaining to read.

Stub yr toe on the yacht rock (morrisp), Friday, 23 August 2019 17:36 (six years ago)

Basically agree with the last two posts.

Think one of the most idiosyncratic and enjoyable features of the RS Guide (Red) has thus far gone unmentioned: the pictures of the five star albums scattered throughout.

The Fearless Thread Killers (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 23 August 2019 17:39 (six years ago)

Marsh didn’t hate Zep, nor did he write the RS guide entries on them (Billy Altman did, and they were generally laudatory).

xp

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 23 August 2019 17:41 (six years ago)

Maybe it was Sabbath?

The Fearless Thread Killers (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 23 August 2019 17:42 (six years ago)

I think I had all of these except TP. The one I liked reading the best by far was the Spin Guide

Dan S, Friday, 23 August 2019 17:50 (six years ago)

Marsh didn’t hate Zep, nor did he write the RS guide entries on them (Billy Altman did, and they were generally laudatory).

The way I remember it is that Marsh hated Zep, and BA sort of punched up those entries. Do I have it backward? I'll have to look back at those books tonight.

Stub yr toe on the yacht rock (morrisp), Friday, 23 August 2019 17:51 (six years ago)

Marsh didn’t write the Sabbath one, either (I think that was Ken Tucker?). But as co-editor, yeah, he could’ve chosen someone somewhat attuned to metal to write the Sabbath entry.

xxp

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 23 August 2019 17:52 (six years ago)

I wish Cook/Morton's Penguin Guide to Jazz had been an option, definitely would have voted for that.

Agree with this 1000%. The final (sixth?) edition was incredible.

As it is, I'm voting TP. By the time I got around to reading books like this I was already deep into trawling for weird shit and didn't need to know about the classic rock canon, having grown up listening to it on classic rock radio. I already knew about Jim Morrison; I needed to know who Jim Thirlwell was.

shared unit of analysis (unperson), Friday, 23 August 2019 17:53 (six years ago)

I don’t think Marsh was a massive Zep fan, but he didn’t hate them: two of their songs are in his 1001 singles book (and there’s no hint of backhanded praise or anything along the lines of “they suck except for these two songs”).

Maybe you’re thinking of the Doors? Altman’s praise for them in the red guide was absurdly over-the-top, so Marsh panned them in the blue guide.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 23 August 2019 17:57 (six years ago)

I already knew about Jim Morrison; I needed to know who Jim Thirlwell was.

yep!!

sarahell, Friday, 23 August 2019 17:58 (six years ago)

Roxon's Rock Encyclopedia from 1969 is an amazing snapshot of a very small world, even compared the world of the red RS just a few years later, all written by one person.

bendy, Friday, 23 August 2019 18:10 (six years ago)

i had this one which in retrospect just completely blew:

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51TK9CCM8EL._SX323_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

i never owned any of the others mentioned here but would skim them periodically in bookstores. The SPIN one was my speed at the time. I also owned an All Music Guide from the mid-'90s and it was a vv good resource.

omar little, Friday, 23 August 2019 18:19 (six years ago)

I didn't mind this one! The New Order section is wack, though.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 23 August 2019 18:21 (six years ago)

The first two editions of the Trouser Press guide were invaluable for me. And remarkably solid critically, for my taste.

This is my most dog-eared reference, salvation (along with an enlightened guitar teacher loaning me records) in a benighted junior high year in Alabama:

https://ia800801.us.archive.org/view_archive.php?archive=/18/items/olcovers662/olcovers662-L.zip&file=6620858-L.jpg

by the light of the burning Citroën, Friday, 23 August 2019 18:27 (six years ago)

Trouser Press >>>>>>>>> Spin > RC=RS

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Friday, 23 August 2019 18:51 (six years ago)

I didn't mind this one! The New Order section is wack, though.

― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, August 23, 2019 11:21 AM (thirty-eight minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

it gave me a truly misguided notion regarding the importance of the '80s solo work of Robbie Robertson, is what i remember. i should amend it to admit that it was pretty decent on blues music, but at the same time it only covered the obvious artists and then only the big Chess guys and the old timey Blind Lemon Jefferson types.

omar little, Friday, 23 August 2019 19:02 (six years ago)

I got pretty much nothing from the RS guide, and I think I only ever saw xgau's '90s guide, by which point he was well on his way to desiccation (imo). Trouser Press and Spin, however, both had in inestimable impact on the expansion of my musical tastes (even as some of the reviews in the latter made me furious). Really need to track down fresh copies of those things.

McGrief the Crying Dog (Old Lunch), Friday, 23 August 2019 19:07 (six years ago)

first couple solo Roberton albums are pretty good, imo

brimstead, Friday, 23 August 2019 19:19 (six years ago)

kinda bruce hornsby esque

brimstead, Friday, 23 August 2019 19:20 (six years ago)

"Somewhere Down the Crazy River" is some all-time-worst boomer post-Peter Gabriel crap, though.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 23 August 2019 19:26 (six years ago)

I'll include some non-poll options:

1. Red RS Guide, Stranded, Christgau's '70s book

Basically a tie. I can point to dozens and dozens of the records I bought in the late '70s/early '80s and tell you which book prompted me to buy them. There are phrases from each, especially the first and third, I can recite from memory.

2. Lilian Roxon's encyclopedia, the Logan/Woffinden encyclopedia pictured above, Paul Gambaccini's first Top 200 Albums book, the Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock & Roll (second edition, I think--the 1980 edition edited by Jim Miller)

These shaped my record collection too. I have great affection for the Lilian Roxon book, though I wouldn't seriously advise anyone to use it as a guide--that's how you end up with Sons of Champlain albums.

I have the Trouser Press book, but it came later and didn't have much influence on me. Triple that for the Spin guide--I've flipped through once or twice, otherwise it just sits on the shelf. It's all a matter of timing.

clemenza, Friday, 23 August 2019 19:51 (six years ago)

Ok, Montgomery was right and I was wrong about Zeppelin — their entries in both volumes were written by Altman, and most of the albums are highly rated (even though Physical Graffiti is underrated and glossed over in a single sentence that only mentions “Kashmir”). Weird, what was I thinking of?

Stub yr toe on the yacht rock (morrisp), Saturday, 24 August 2019 03:22 (six years ago)

Haha, Marsh definitely is no fan of the Doors (entry begins: “Unlikely as it may seem, given the obnoxious and insipid cult that now surrounds Jim Morrison...”).

His slam of X’s two (at the time) albums even begin with a guilt-by-association move (noting that Manzarek has produced the group).

Stub yr toe on the yacht rock (morrisp), Saturday, 24 August 2019 03:27 (six years ago)

Yeah, Marsh really hates X with a passion, which is a little mystifying. Part of me wonders if it’s meant to serve as a corrective/response to Christgau’s occasionally over-the-top X love.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Saturday, 24 August 2019 03:35 (six years ago)

Assume you guys are taking about the Blue Guide, can’t find that in the Red.

The Fearless Thread Killers (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 24 August 2019 03:43 (six years ago)

Ah! I was thinking of the Grateful Dead — whose catalogue Marsh eviscerates in the blue book (“one assertedly major oeuvre that’s virtually worthless except for documentary purposes”), awarding most of the albums only a single star. What an asshole! Listen to the music play, Dave!

The Dead’s entry in the red book, written by John Milward, was entirely different, and at least gave the albums a fair shake (even though 3 stars was their ceiling).

Stub yr toe on the yacht rock (morrisp), Saturday, 24 August 2019 03:44 (six years ago)

Even better, you can write him directly and give him hell.

http://www.robertchristgau.com/xgsezm.php

clemenza, Monday, 28 September 2020 00:03 (five years ago)

Excellent, hope he replies.

✖✖✖ (Moka), Monday, 28 September 2020 06:45 (five years ago)

serious question here, honestly not trolling. why do people care which records this guy likes / doesn't like?

好 now 烧烤 (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Monday, 28 September 2020 06:52 (five years ago)

I don't care whether he likes what I like. I read him for the quality of his writing, and if it alerts me to a good record I haven't heard, that's a bonus.

Halfway there but for you, Monday, 28 September 2020 23:11 (five years ago)

He hasn't served as a consumer guide for me since, oh, 2004 at least, but, like a friend, I check in on his taste.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 28 September 2020 23:16 (five years ago)

Both of these posts otm. Lorde knows he has lots of annoying tics, but he had a few things going for him. For one, he always seemed to spend much more effort keeping up with the times than the rest of his cohort, for another he didn’t mythologize or cozy up to the big stars quite the way those others might.

Erdős-szám 69 (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 28 September 2020 23:34 (five years ago)

I switched to the past tense there but presumably he still treads the same path.

Like most of these guys there was a time when I had to, um, rebel against some of strictures, but it still nice to stumble across some recent act we both like, fun to discover a shared appreciation for Wussy, to name one. Clemenza to thread!

Erdős-szám 69 (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 28 September 2020 23:38 (five years ago)

Wussy, Imperial Teen, the Shoes...He's had almost zero percent influence on my writing, but lots of influence on my listening (or at least did for about a decade).

clemenza, Monday, 28 September 2020 23:41 (five years ago)

But I don't think you ever actually care if your tastes diverge. You might find that interesting, but it's not like you're going to stop liking something because he doesn't. I didn't listen to Schoolly-D's first album any less because of his basic indifference.

clemenza, Monday, 28 September 2020 23:44 (five years ago)

xp

I read him seriously for a very short while in the '80s because other writers whose opinions I respected (and whose ranks I wanted to join) worshipped him, so I figured, as the joke goes, that there had to be a pony in there somewhere. Plus, I was reading the Voice anyway for Gary Giddins and Greg Tate. Soon enough I realized that our tastes were so divergent as to be basically on two different sonic planets, and I didn't even like his writing on a phrasal level, so I stopped reading him except for the occasional hate-read, and that was without even getting into the issues of his repellent, patronizing sexism and the way he'd put his thumb on the scale for musically shit acts with whom he agreed politically. At this point I'm so totally disengaged from/uninterested in pop that he's completely irrelevant to me. I mostly wish Gary Giddins would come back.

but also fuck you (unperson), Monday, 28 September 2020 23:46 (five years ago)

his repellent, patronizing sexism

Don't forget the racism (see: Hendrix as 'psychedelic Uncle Tom', which we talked about in another thread).

pomenitul, Monday, 28 September 2020 23:48 (five years ago)

I don’t really care about the records he likes or doesn’t like but as a fan of Broadcast I would at least like to read why he thinks they are duds. Just saying “this albums sucks imho” is valid for a comment section or an entry on a forum but for a review site it’s a bit frustrating. It’s perfectly valid to only want to talk about music you love, but if he has nothing but indifference towards those albums, then why have the dud section at all?

✖✖✖ (Moka), Tuesday, 29 September 2020 04:52 (five years ago)

tbh I can understand a certain generation and taste configuration hearing only muzak in Broadcast, hence "dud"

Xgau was very formative for me because he gave A+ to all of my favorites at the time (Star Time, 69 Love Songs, Maxinquaye, Public Enemy, Steely Dan, Lil' Wayne) so I read him a lot and it helped me explain my own taste to myself.

g simmel, Tuesday, 29 September 2020 08:12 (five years ago)

You definitely piqued my interest with Broadcast. So two duds and zero words, I see. Ouch!

Was about to say that I'm not sure I've ever cared what he thought about non-American acts but then remembered that he's definitely 'got' the likes of the Pet Shop Boys, Go-Betweens and Saint Etienne over decades. (Though, amusingly, on rechecking I see he basically alternated 'dud' and A-, with almost nothing in between, for Saint Etienne. Haha. Madness.)

Nag! Nag! Nag!, Tuesday, 29 September 2020 08:19 (five years ago)

he got me into Pet Shop Boys and Go-Betweens for example (Saint Etienne too but I don't love them as much)

g simmel, Tuesday, 29 September 2020 08:33 (five years ago)

Christgau uses emoticons to indicate, "I put in time listening to this, but have nothing to say about it". I agree that it's useless from a reader's standpoint.

Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 29 September 2020 12:11 (five years ago)

Critic and historian Robert Palmer actually reviewed the second edition of the Rolling Stone Guide and Trouser Press back in the day (January 4, 1984):

''The New Rolling Stone Record Guide'' is a partially successful attempt to redress the critical imbalance and poor fact-checking that made the original guide such a mixed blessing. The new volume has some value as a source of information on currently available rock, pop, soul, country, blues, folk, gospel and reggae albums. The new guide is much easier to use. But its rating system, one to five stars as in the jazz magazine ''Downbeat,'' and the prejudices of its editors make its critical evaluations impossible to trust.

The guide is heavily weighted in favor of rock's mainstream traditionalists - artists such as Bruce Springsteen, Bob Seger and Tom Petty, who are portrayed as ''working- and middle-class Middle Americans struggling against their emotional circumstances, not always winning but never ceasing to fight.'' Even second- string Springsteen and Seger imitators like the Iron City Houserockers get ratings for excellence, while artists who have been far more innovative and influential - the Doors, David Bowie, and most punk and new-wave bands - are rated mediocre-to-good. Mr. Bowie is faulted for something called ''lack of faith in rock''; Mr. Springsteen is praised for making ''no concessions to nonrock.'' These are empty sophistries, characteristic of the book's rear-guard action against new ideas, redolent of a fan-club mentality that penalizes originals for daring to be different while taking the cynical posturings of arena-rock ''populism'' at face value.

''The Trouser Press Guide to New Wave Records'' makes up for at least some of the Rolling Stone guide's willful distortions. It provides carefully even-handed evaluations of disks by newer artists and bands, and of important recorded work by new-wave predecessors such as David Bowie and the Velvet Underground. There are no ratings; the more impressive disks are simply ''highly'' or ''very highly recommended.''

birdistheword, Tuesday, 6 October 2020 16:15 (five years ago)

Yes to writer Robert Palmer ( except for the Doors defense)

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 6 October 2020 21:03 (five years ago)

I love that, never read it before but it speaks to me deeply as someone who found that RS guide very bewildering when I was 15 and was finally able to get the big picture a few years later with the Trouser Press Guide.

sleeve, Tuesday, 6 October 2020 21:07 (five years ago)

Feel like the original was still the greatest, critical imbalance and poor fact-checking aside. Nothing can replace the magic of the randomized five star album cover placement, for one thing.

Erdős-szám 69 (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 6 October 2020 21:07 (five years ago)

Trouser Press guide came a little too late for me. I was still missing the magazine but it didn’t fill the void.

Erdős-szám 69 (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 6 October 2020 21:09 (five years ago)

Mr. Bowie is faulted for something called ''lack of faith in rock''; Mr. Springsteen is praised for making ''no concessions to nonrock.''

can't stop laughing at this

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 6 October 2020 21:19 (five years ago)

It’s pretty funny

Erdős-szám 69 (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 6 October 2020 21:22 (five years ago)

What I love about Palmer was that rock, for him, was just a beloved bend in the river of American musical forms.

Julius Caesar Memento Hoodie (bendy), Thursday, 8 October 2020 02:34 (five years ago)

Mr. Bowie is faulted for something called ''lack of faith in rock''

This about the guy who sang "Rock and Roll With Me"!

o. nate, Friday, 9 October 2020 20:54 (five years ago)

oh man Iron City House rockers I spent money on some comp once

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 9 October 2020 20:57 (five years ago)

“Crazy Little Thing Called Lack Of Faith In Rock”

Regard the timeless piano balladeeress! (breastcrawl), Friday, 9 October 2020 20:57 (five years ago)

This about the guy who sang "Rock and Roll With Me"!

But... this song can hardly be accused of rocking (or rolling, even)

eatandoph (Neue Jesse Schule), Friday, 9 October 2020 21:13 (five years ago)

Dave Marsh loves his second-string Springsteen imitators. He wrote an article where he asserts that because John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band had a hit single, "no-one is comparing them to Bruce anymore". Of course, now they're only remembered as the Boss's most shameless copyists.

Halfway there but for you, Saturday, 10 October 2020 17:41 (five years ago)

five years pass...

When was the last book like these? The Dave Thompson Alternative Rock guide is from 2000. Of course there's been guides to more specific subgenres but I'd love to see something bigger in scope.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 8 April 2026 15:32 (six days ago)

There's a Spin book from 2005 but I think it's all essays?

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 8 April 2026 15:32 (six days ago)

The Wire put out a book of some of its Primers about 15 or so years ago.

Mollusk, Virginia (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 8 April 2026 15:36 (six days ago)

It's 2009 and the newer ebook seems to be the same version

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 8 April 2026 15:49 (six days ago)

Important, world-altering correction to something I posted here seven years ago:

1. Red RS Guide, Stranded, Christgau's '70s book

Basically a tie. I can point to dozens and dozens of the records I bought in the late '70s/early '80s and tell you which book prompted me to buy them. There are phrases from each, especially the first and third, I can recite from memory.

"Second and third," that should have read--it's Stranded and Christgau's book where certain phrases are embedded in my mind. I remember very little of the writing in the first RS guide, though I can usually remember if an album got five stars or not.

clemenza, Wednesday, 8 April 2026 17:01 (six days ago)

Fourth and presumably final edition of Rolling Stone Album Guide was 2004

EsBeeKid (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 8 April 2026 17:11 (six days ago)

good riddance, I will never forgive Dave Marsh for his bullshit. even in high school (red and blue volumes both iirc) it was obvious how clueless he was.

Serfin' USA (sleeve), Wednesday, 8 April 2026 17:18 (six days ago)

I drove myself nuts a few years ago trying to find my old copy of the Spin guide but never could. I ought to just buy a replacement on ebay but they tend to be fairly expensive.

Evans on Hammond (evol j), Wednesday, 8 April 2026 17:28 (six days ago)

When was the last book like these?

The Rolling Stone 2004 guide does seem to be the last of its sort. No-one regards these books as authoritative anymore, or wants to read putdowns of their favourites. It's been replaced to an extent by books celebrating certain records, especially obscurities that the authors want to bring to light.

Of course there's been guides to more specific subgenres but I'd love to see something bigger in scope.

The last I can recall reading was Martin Popoff's

The Collector's Guide To Heavy Metal Volume 4: The '00s
, published in 2011. Even he admitted a few years ago that there was no demand for a volume 5 covering the 10s.

There's a Spin book from 2005 but I think it's all essays?

There was a third Spin book from around the same time that I can't seem to name or find online but was essentially a short writeups around a chronological playlist of the history of alternative from punk onward. One of the early tracks was Eno's "1/1".

Fourth and presumably final edition of Rolling Stone Album Guide was 2004

good riddance, I will never forgive Dave Marsh for his bullshit

Don't think Marsh had anything to do with the fourth edition, though we've discussed in other threads as well why that book was such a misfire.

I'd just like to say a good word for the MusicHound guides, published between 1996 and 2002. They had a somewhat eccentric and unusual selection of artists profiled, and somehow awarding "bones" instead of stars made it seem genially absurd when they put down something you liked.

Halfway there but for you, Sunday, 12 April 2026 17:19 (two days ago)

Outside the purview of this thread but hugely important in its way: The Penguin Guide To Jazz On CD was published until 2010; the first nine editions were guides to as much music as they could cover, but the final/10th edition was more of a "1001 jazz albums You Must Hear" collection.

wipes chooser (unperson), Sunday, 12 April 2026 18:58 (two days ago)

I regret unloading all my Penguin Jazzes; they were great guides.

I will edit thread titles like no one has ever seen before (WmC), Sunday, 12 April 2026 19:14 (two days ago)

I still have a jazz one, but I got rid of the classical one, which I now regret.

o. nate, Sunday, 12 April 2026 19:16 (two days ago)

yah I still have a 1992 Penguin Jazz Guide

Serfin' USA (sleeve), Sunday, 12 April 2026 19:38 (two days ago)

FYI all of the Penguin Jazz Guides are on archive.org. I could never find the last two editions (the ones before the guide was reworked as The History of the Music in the 1001 Best Albums), so finding them there was extremely useful, but I feel less bad about missing them because they drastically scaled back on their coverage.

I always wished they had done a digital version that combined ALL of their past guides rather than dropping any titles. I figured the idea had less appeal to them because it might discourage sales of the updated editions, but now that the guides are pretty much done, it really would've been a better way to conclude its run.

birdistheword, Sunday, 12 April 2026 20:44 (two days ago)

Jim Svejda's guide to classical music is fantastic but I don't think it got updated past 2001.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Monday, 13 April 2026 14:11 (yesterday)

No-one ever seems to remember the Rough Guide to Rock, but I used to think it was great. From what I gather the last edition came out in 2003 (White Stripes on the cover).

bored by endless ecstasy (anagram), Monday, 13 April 2026 14:18 (yesterday)

I've got the Rough Guide To Classical from 2010. They had a couple of World Music guides that I need to look into.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Monday, 13 April 2026 15:21 (yesterday)

out of all of these, the Trouser Press guide was the biggest for me, and the most influential

Serfin' USA (sleeve), Monday, 13 April 2026 15:42 (yesterday)

I bought a hard copy AMG recently when i realised i could read all the Blue Gene Tyranny reviews in one chunk

pfutt, Monday, 13 April 2026 16:21 (yesterday)

Trouser Press is probably me favorite too, though it clearly isn't trying to be comprehensive (which tbf may make it easier for them to maintain a higher standard across the entire guide). I wish they kept updating it, especially when it's all online now, but it's understandable and not surprising when Trouser Press itself ceased publication a long, long time ago.

birdistheword, Monday, 13 April 2026 23:24 (yesterday)

I basically had the 2nd edition memorized

Serfin' USA (sleeve), Tuesday, 14 April 2026 01:28 (seven hours ago)


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