Crosstown Traffic
247 pages
English

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247 pages
English

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Description

Jimi Hendrix 'transgressed many boundaries; both arbitrary musical definitions separating blues and soul or jazz and rock, and also those fundamental divides between the archaic and the avant-garde, between individualist and collectivist philosophies,between blacks and whites, between America and Britain, between passive acquiescence and furious resistance,between lust for life and obsession with death.' Charles Shaar Murray Crosstown Traffic charts the routes Hendrix took to arrive at his 'unique musical formulation'. The result is a bravura study of his art and life that has become established as the definitive work on 'the most eloquent instrumentalist ever to work in rock.' Winner of the Ralph Gleason Music Book Award on first publication, this brilliant and ambitious book, hailed as 'the most compelling and literate essay on rock since Greil Marcus' Mystery Train, is being reissued with an updated introduction.

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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 15 novembre 2012
Nombre de lectures 1
EAN13 9780857868015
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0520€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

CROSSTOWN TRAFFIC
‘The central accomplishment of Murray’s extraordinary new book, Crosstown Traffic , is to rescue Hendrix, the towering musical innovator, from the myth he helped fashion. But that is not all: in establishing Hendrix’s proper context, Murray, one of England’s premier rock critics, has composed a text that fuses memoir with a sweeping historical discussion of soul, jazz, the blues and the impact of electronic technology on modern pop music. The result is not simply the best book yet on Hendrix but the most compelling – and literate – essay on rock since Greil Marcus’ 1975 Mystery Train. ’
Jim Miller, original editor of The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock and Roll
about the author
Charles Shaar Murray is an award-winning author, journalist, musician and cultural infidel: ‘the rock critic’s rock critic’ ( Q Magazine ), ‘front-line cultural warrior’ and ‘original gunslinger’ ( Independent on Sunday ). He first appeared in print in 1970 in the notorious ‘Schoolkids’ issue of OZ magazine. By 1972 he was working for NME , subsequently becoming Associate Editor. Crosstown Traffic , his acclaimed study of Jimi Hendrix, won the prestigious Ralph J. Gleason Music Book Award in 1990; a decade later, Boogie Man was shortlisted for the same award. The first two decades of ‘his journalism, criticism and vulgar abuse’, to use his own description, were collected in Shots from the Hip. In 2010 he received a Record of the Day for his contributions to music journalism, and a novel, The Hellhound Sample , appeared in 2011. He is currently at work on a ‘somewhat unconventional’ book about The Clash and playing blues guitar with his band Crosstown Lightnin’. He aspires to be the missing link between George Orwell and Robert Johnson.

charlesshaarmurray.com

by the same author

DAVID BOWIE : An Illustrated Record (with Roy Carr)
BOOGIE MAN : The Adventures of John Lee Hooker in the American Twentieth Century
SHOTS FROM THE HIP
BLUES ON CD : The Essential Guide

This book is dedicated to the memory of Elizabeth de Gaster (1929–87)

and to Vernon Reid, Living Colour and the Black Rock Coalition
This updated edition published by Canongate Books in 2012
www.canongate.tv
This digital edition first published by Canongate in 2012
Copyright © Charles Shaar Murray, 1989, 2001, 2012
The moral right of the author has been asserted
First published in Great Britain in 1989 by Faber and Faber Ltd
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available on request from the British Library
ISBN 978 0 85786 774 2 eISBN 978 0 85786 801 5
Typeset by Faber and Faber Ltd
Contents


Acknowledgements
The English and American Combined Anthem: Introduction to the Original Edition
Still Reigning, Still Dreaming (Slight Return): Introduction to the Canongate Edition
1 The We Decade
2 Highway Chile
3 I’m a Man (At Least I’m Trying to Be)
4 Room Full of Mirrors
5 Never to Grow Old
6 Blue are the Life-giving Waters Taken for Granted
7 With the Power of Soul . . . Anything Is Possible
8 Hear My ’Trane A-comin’
Coda: The English and American Combined Anthem (Slight Return)
Appendix: Music, Sweet Music, Drips from My Fender’s Fingers
Discography
Jimi Hendrix on Video
Bibliography
Gratefully Undead
1963: A Merman I Should Turn to Be
Index
Acknowledgements

‘Yeah, uh, dig, brother . . . it’s rilly outasite to be here . . .’
Jimi Hendrix, Monterey Pop Festival (18 June 1967)
Despite a sentimental fondness for the venerable ‘solitary genius’ theory and a well-nigh overwhelming temptation to grab this opportunity to deliver a quick chorus of ‘I did it myyyyyy waaaayyyyyyy’, such a fraudulent claim would stick in my throat. Crosstown Traffic is undoubtedly all my own fault, but it wouldn’t be here at all, in this or any other form, without the contributions of a small army of people who, doubtless against their own better judgement, pitched in to help me transform a grab-bag of disconnected ideas and vague theories into what I hope is a coherent whole.
My largest debt of honour I owe to my wife, Ruth King, who provided unstinting spiritual, logistic and financial support throughout the entire process, despite the fact that she can’t stand Jimi Hendrix and considered it an act of near-suicidal foolishness for me to devote thousands of hours to something like this when I could instead have been earning something vaguely resembling a living by maintaining my regular critical and journalistic practice. What can I say except – now the book’s finished I promise to tidy up my study, Ruthie . . . first thing tomorrow morning.
Tom Paley, Nigel Levy (who also helped to transcribe the Pete Townshend interview) and Igor Goldkind unhesitatingly volunteered to endure the disruption of their personal and professional lives by offering temporary accommodation and work-space, thereby enabling work on Crosstown Traffic to continue during the Great Redecoration of 1988. Steve Sparks introduced me to the wonderful world of word-processing, while Su Small, Steve Wallington and Andy Oldfield accepted panicky phone calls at unsocial hours, provided Flying Programmer services and generally soothed a highly non-technical two-finger typist through the early stages of Computer Trauma.
My good friend Peter Hogan originally commissioned the book – in vastly different form – during his days as an editor at the now-defunct Eel Pie Publishing. Later, as my agent, he fearlessly steered it on the storm-tossed course which eventually ended up at Faber and Faber, where Chris Barstow and Tracey Scoffield not only beat the manuscript – and, for that matter, the author – into shape, but protected me from the righteous wrath thundering about my ears through a succession of perforated deadlines.
John Berry, a tireless collector of Hendrix memorabilia, virtually adopted the project as his own during the extensive period of pre-production, and enthusiastically ransacked his vast archives for rare, unreleased tapes of Hendrix’s ‘secret music’, and obscure quotes and anecdotes, thereby providing insights into my subject’s musical subconscious which it would have been near-impossible for me to have obtained any other way. And my mother, Agnes Schaar Murray, helped me to realize that I was on to something worthwhile back in 1970, when – as a messianic young hippie – I dragged her to a local cinema to see Woodstock. She sat through the whole thing with a pained expression of someone stoically enduring a bad smell until Hendrix came on to play ‘The Star Spangled Banner’ for the grand finale. ‘Now that,’ she said, ‘was marvellous .’
More people than I can ever hope – or afford – to thank adequately provided anecdotes, interviews, insights, opinions and plain old ordinary encouragement over the years since this book (or something like it) was first contemplated. Some loaned records, tapes, books and clippings, some organized interviews or opened their address books, and some told me what I needed to know about things I knew little or nothing about. Others shot holes in my dumber ideas or honed and refined my brighter ones. Others still simply dragged me out for a drink when I was feeling mildly hysterical and desperately needed one.
They are not all quoted directly in the text, but all of them contributed materially to making this book what(ever) it is. In alphabetical order, then, can we please have some of that o-o-old soul clappin’ for Keith Altham, Alan Balfour, J. G. Ballard, John Bauldie, Alfreda Benge, Larry Blackmon, Peter Boe, Steve Boon, David Bowie, Lloyd Bradley, Felicity Brooks, Tony Brown, Joanna Burn, Will Calhoun, Roy Carr, Stuart Cohn, Richard Cousins, Robert Cray, Johnny Guitar Crippen, Miles Davis, Bernard ‘Papa Doc’ Doherty, Paul DuNoyer, Mark Ellen, Pete Frame, Debbie Geller, Andy Gill, Corey Glover, Daryl Hall, Barney Hoskyns, Ernie Isley, Wilko Johnson, Nick Jones, Dik Jude, Peter Kameron, Nick Kent, B. B. King, Garrie J. Lammin, Herman Leonard, Ian MacDonald, Tom McGuinness, George McManus, Phil Manzanera, Michael Moorcock, Alan Moore, Bill Nitopi, Rob Partridge, Little Richard Penniman, Noel Redding, Vernon Reid, Marsha Rowe, Vermilion Sands, Jon Savage, Harry Shapiro, David Sinclair, Mark Sinker, Neil Slaven, Mat Snow, Neil Spencer, T. M. Stevens, Barnaby Thompson, Pete Townshend, Tina Turner, Ed Ward, Harold Waterman, the late Muddy Waters, Cliff White, T-Bone Wolk, Bobby Womack, Robin Wood, Ron Wood (no relation), Robert Wyatt and Elizabeth J. Young.
Crosstown Traffic was originally written on an Amstrad PCW 8512 with NewWord 1.4 word-processing software. Author’s cigarettes by Lambert & Butler, lighters by Zippo, guitars by Fender, jeans by Levi’s, boots by Hi-Tec, overdraft by NatWest.
Now – move over, Rover, and let Jimi take over . . .
Acknowledgements to the Revised Edition
Needless to say, anyone who got thanked the first time round in the original edition stays thanked. Big ups to the following for contributing materially to the production of this one:
A gleaming ‘Major Player Award’ to my agent, Antony Harwood, for doing whatever it is that agents do with as much style and sympathy as any author, however flaky and insecure, could possibly desire. One just like it goes to Lee Brackstone at Faber & Faber in London, who steered the book through revision, redesign and republication. Big slobbering thanks also go out to all at Canongate Books for bringing Crosstown Traffic back from the grave . . . Especially John Seaton and Jamie Byng, who, I’m told, always wanted this book on the list. Well you finally got it, JB!
Portions of the new material in this edition first appeared, sometimes in radically different form, in Mojo , Guitarist , Guitar World , Revolver and the Daily Telegraph ; my thanks to commissioning editors Mat Snow, Paul Trynka, Neville Marten, Brad Tolinski, Tim Rostron and Caspar Llewellyn-Smith for enabling me to pursue the

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