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SurfGuitar101 Forums » The Shallow End »

Permalink What are you Reading now...

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Great new book eh Badge?

Been bending the pages of my new copy a lot.

Once again Bob, Super job!

ed

Traditional........speak softly and play through a big blonde amp. Did I mention that I still like big blonde amps?

Ha, yeah. Already cost me money but the new re-release from Sundazed with John's liner notes in Stereo (with the big F-101 Voodoo on the cover) is like listenable music room art. I'd better take this one slowly...
Big Grin

Wes
SoCal ex-pat with a snow shovel

DISCLAIMER: The above is opinion/suggestion only & should not be used for mission planning/navigation, tweaking of instruments, beverage selection, or wardrobe choices.

Play Like Elvis – How British Musicians Bought the American Dream

A marvellous book, about young British musicians from the 50s through the70s and how they battled to get on the rock n roller-coaster.
It’s about cheap guitars, amps that give out electric shocks and “why do the chords in this book sound nothing like the record?”.
There’s loads of great anecdotes; like the attempts to get that elusive echo and reverb…one deluded soul believed a friend who said that echo came from using really, really, long wires. So he wired his guitar lead to the chain-link wire fence of his parent’s house, then wired the fence to his amplifier…boom…

Lots of Hank and Bruce stories in there too

Clarry wrote:

Play Like Elvis – How British Musicians Bought the American Dream

A marvellous book, about young British musicians from the 50s through the70s and how they battled to get on the rock n roller-coaster.
It’s about cheap guitars, amps that give out electric shocks and “why do the chords in this book sound nothing like the record?”.
There’s loads of great anecdotes; like the attempts to get that elusive echo and reverb…one deluded soul believed a friend who said that echo came from using really, really, long wires. So he wired his guitar lead to the chain-link wire fence of his parent’s house, then wired the fence to his amplifier…boom…

Lots of Hank and Bruce stories in there too

image
Gonna buy this - thanks for the tip!

Bill S._______
image

HELLDIVER on Facebook

Under Tiberius by Nick Tosches

http://www.satanspilgrims.com
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Satans-Pilgrims/8210228553
https://satanspilgrims.bandcamp.com/
http://www.surfyindustries.com

I
image
Don't know much about Elvis Costello's career, so I can't tell what he was telling the truth about, what he was shading and what he might have been lying about, but I found it interesting.

"We're lousy, we can't play. If you wait until you can play, you'll be too old to get up there. We stink, really. But it's great," Johnny Ramone .

The 12th Planet by Zecharia Sitchin.

I am not obsolete, I am RETRO.... Cool

I just finished Station 11 - an account of what happens when a virus wipes out 99.9% of the world's human population. Very imaginative, very affecting. This book with be with me a long time.

http://www.amazon.com/Station-Eleven-Emily-John-Mandel/dp/0804172447/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top?ie=UTF8

Last edited: Feb 11, 2016 01:45:45

Thoroughly enjoying John Blairs "Southern California Surf music 1960-1966". I am also enjoying his illustrated discography of Surf music.

Anyone recommend any other history/biography/band books on Surf music. I have already read "Surf Beat"

I am not obsolete, I am RETRO.... Cool

John Fogerty's autobiography. He mentions the influence of The Ventures in several places. It's also interesting to read of his intense level of dedication to succeeding in songwriting, arranging, recording and performing. -Marty

"Hello Girls!"

Nokie - Thanks, I will check it out. Smile

I am not obsolete, I am RETRO.... Cool

Marty,
I need to read that book. Sounded interesting when it came out.
I did some work with and for John and just as you mentioned - his intense dedication to "getting it right" was inspiring and refreshing.
Sound checks were long affairs in which he wanted to hear and play, test all of his guitars and gear and even though he had/ has outstanding, world class musicians he would keep them on their toes by reviewing and rehearsing parts etc.
Really cool to see someone who has been in th business for so long take such an involved and as you said intense interest in what they do.
Someone like that could easily rest on their laurals, almost turn into a nostalgia act but not John.
Pretty cool.

http://www.facebook.com/CrazyAcesMusic
http://www.youtube.com/user/crazyacesrock
http://www.reverbnation.com/crazyacesmusic

CrazyAces wrote:

Someone like that could easily rest on their laurals, almost turn into a nostalgia act but not John.
Pretty cool.

I have only one Fogerty tale but it was kinda like one of those "meant to be" things. He was playing West Berlin when I was there (this was after Tom had left & they were 3-piece). Some upstart named Rod Stewart was supposed to open, but he & crew & vehicles had apparently gotten all jammed up with the East Germans at the checkpoint over some paperwork or something (with the VoPos it didn't take much since their inferiority complex was institutionalized).

We thought we'd be there all night. It was my birthday, and I also had the boss's secretary's daughter with me. Fogerty took the position that, basically, "we're supposed give a show at such & such a time, that's when we're going on." So the big headliner played first and played a reeeeeeallllly loooonnnnnnng show, everything they ever did practically. Turns out much of that night from the Berlin show was on the live album that followed from that tour (which I still have). By the time Stewart showed up lots of people were leaving (and the secretary's daughter was safely tucked in, so that bridge didn't get burned). I will never forget that night.
Livin' large.
Cool

Wes
SoCal ex-pat with a snow shovel

DISCLAIMER: The above is opinion/suggestion only & should not be used for mission planning/navigation, tweaking of instruments, beverage selection, or wardrobe choices.

http://www.amazon.com/Smugglers-Cove-Exotic-Cocktails-Cult/dp/1607747324

The Scimitars

Badger wrote:

CrazyAces wrote:

Someone like that could easily rest on their laurals, almost turn into a nostalgia act but not John.
Pretty cool.

I have only one Fogerty tale but it was kinda like one of those "meant to be" things. He was playing West Berlin when I was there (this was after Tom had left & they were 3-piece). Some upstart named Rod Stewart was supposed to open, but he & crew & vehicles had apparently gotten all jammed up with the East Germans at the checkpoint over some paperwork or something (with the VoPos it didn't take much since their inferiority complex was institutionalized).

We thought we'd be there all night. It was my birthday, and I also had the boss's secretary's daughter with me. Fogerty took the position that, basically, "we're supposed give a show at such & such a time, that's when we're going on." So the big headliner played first and played a reeeeeeallllly loooonnnnnnng show, everything they ever did practically. Turns out much of that night from the Berlin show was on the live album that followed from that tour (which I still have). By the time Stewart showed up lots of people were leaving (and the secretary's daughter was safely tucked in, so that bridge didn't get burned). I will never forget that night.
Livin' large.
Cool

That's a great story, Wes, thanks for relaying it. I love that "Live in Europe" album with CCR working as a three piece. If I have a complaint about CCR, it is that Fogerty wanted the live show to be as exacting as the album. I prefer when bands change it up in live performances. As a three piece, John was forced to change things up a bit. They had more of a raw edge and more energy to make up for the lack of rhythm guitar on that live album. He also throws in some cool extra licks on "Lodi" and "It Came Out of the Sky". -Marty

"Hello Girls!"

Last edited: Jun 09, 2016 16:41:07

CrazyAces wrote:

Marty,
I need to read that book. Sounded interesting when it came out.
I did some work with and for John and just as you mentioned - his intense dedication to "getting it right" was inspiring and refreshing.
Sound checks were long affairs in which he wanted to hear and play, test all of his guitars and gear and even though he had/ has outstanding, world class musicians he would keep them on their toes by reviewing and rehearsing parts etc.
Really cool to see someone who has been in the business for so long take such an involved and as you said intense interest in what they do.
Someone like that could easily rest on their laurals, almost turn into a nostalgia act but not John.
Pretty cool.

Oh dear, that sounds like a grueling process! Of course it pays off. I think you'll find the book well written and compelling. -MT

"Hello Girls!"

kick_the_reverb wrote:

http://www.amazon.com/Smugglers-Cove-Exotic-Cocktails-Cult/dp/1607747324

I'm intrigued by the "Cult of Tiki" part of this title, Ran. -Marty

"Hello Girls!"

On Marty's recommendation I picked up John Fogerty's book also. Put down another book to devour the first 1/3 of it yesterday. I'm struck (pleasantly) by his candor, as well as by the Mack truck at how similar during that era our childhoods were, one up in El Cerrito, one down in Van Nuys. 'Twas a different country then. Great read, highly recommended.

Jeff, busy or not, put this one on your shelf as what we'd call up here a "winter" read.
Thumbs Up

Wes
SoCal ex-pat with a snow shovel

DISCLAIMER: The above is opinion/suggestion only & should not be used for mission planning/navigation, tweaking of instruments, beverage selection, or wardrobe choices.

My summer reading bag has a couple of books I've been intending to read for a long time. I'm about halfway through Hemingway's "A Farewell To Arms" now and have "The Sun Also Rises" tucked away in the bag. Nothing like a day on the beach with a good book under the shade of an umbrella... cooler of bottles of water at hand.

Happy Sunsets!

Just finished The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Wu. Latest Hugo winner. Very good. Also Scalzi's Old Man's War.

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