Great rock biographies

  • Books about rock and roll history
  • Best rock biography audiobooks
  • Best music biographies goodreads
  • Required Reading: 79 Rock Memoirs

    The life of a rock 'n' roll artist involves a lot of ups and downs, trials and tribulations.

    Many memories are naturally made along the way. Some are positive: the first record deal a grupp lands, the first time they scored a great opening gig or their first No. 1 hit song. Others can be a little less rosy: complicated lineup changes, shifty managers and bandmates lost to drug addiction or other circumstances.

    Most rock artists spend a huge portion of their lives on the road, a nomadic existence that inevitably makes life seem like it's running at top speed all the time. After decades of carrying on like this, it can be intriguing to look back at everything, which many have done in the form of personal memoirs.

    Some of the artists in the below list of Required Reading: 79 Rock Memoirs don't feel like they need to put their lives down in a book. Robert Plant, Mick Jagger and Ringo St

  • great rock biographies
  • The 50 Greatest Rock Memoirs of All Time

    So many CBGB-era punk memoirs out there, but Richard Hell’s is unique — poetic yet never pompous, bemused without corny punch lines. As a year-old Kentucky kid, he runs off to NYC to be a poet, but ends up a rock & roller. “‘Sacred monster’ is definitely the job description,” Hell writes. “Being a pop star, a front person, takes indestructible certainty of one’s own irresistibility. That’s the monster part.” He depicts his music comrades — Tom Verlaine, Robert Quine, Patti Smith, Lester Bangs — and all the girls he’s loved before. (Hell was the punk Leonard Cohen in that department.) He quips about his popularity with critics, “because they were predisposed to favor noise, intellect, and failure.” In the final scene, he runs into his old nemesis Verlaine for the first time in years — flipping through the dollar bins outside the Strand Bookstor

    Best rock star biographies and memoirs: it&#;s pure debauchery

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    We're talking sex, drugs and bloody good stories

    Rock stars of yesteryear had all the fun. The best rock star biographies shed light on those glory days, answering questions you didn’t know you wanted answering.

    From tales of debauchery to gritty insights into life on the road, the best biographies share the low points as well as the highs. Teasing details about their lives, many of these access-all-areas biographies allow you to be a fly on the vägg for some of the most dramatic moments in musical history.

    UPDATE: We've added a couple more key picks from the world of rock autobiographies. Elton John's Me makes the cut for the sheer style of its retelling of one of the iconic careers in rock music. And for those after a les