I am addicted to these books.→[More:]
So far I've read four of them:
Low (David Bowie)- the first one I read, and still my favorite, for the way it combined a critique of the album with a history of Bowie in that era, with his many influences and projects.
Loveless (My Bloody Valentine)- the band were interviewed for this book, and it unravels a lot of the myths and the hype about the album, while still giving insights into it.
(I read this book on the plane to and from Bunnystock!)
ABBA Gold- The author uses this collection to talk about Abba's history and their influence on pop, esp. how their image sort of changed in the early 90s.
Daydream Nation (Sonic Youth)- another book where the band were interviewed (separately), this was my least favorite of the four because this author is a Lester Bangs wannabe, who spends too much time coming up with over-the-top descriptions of how the album sounds, and not enough time talking about how it was made, IMO.
I love to read biographies and histories of music and musicians, so these obsessive little books (10 bucks each!) spent focused one a single album are totally up my alley. Some of them I know to steer away from: apparently the one for the Magnetic Fields'
Sixty-Nine Love Songs is written by a band member and is said to be pretty self-indulgent, and one of them (I can't remember which) is a novella "inspired by" its album... ugh.
But the ones that give history and analysis are loads of fun. I think the next ones I want to read will be the ones about the Pixies'
Doolittle,
The Velvet Underground & Nico, and Dusty Springfield's
Dusty In Memphis.