Substance: Inside New Order By Peter Hook

Audio Book Substance: Inside New Order with Free PDF EDITION Download Now!



Kindle Store,Kindle eBooks,Biographies & Memoirs Substance: Inside New Order Peter Hook
 4,7


Related Ebook :


Read
Best Edition Patrimony: A True Story with Free MOBI EDITION Download Now!

Read Audio Book Becoming Sister Wives: The Story of an Unconventional Marriage with FREE MOBI EDITION Download Now!

Read Audio Book Living with the Monks: What Turning Off My Phone Taught Me about Happiness, Gratitude, and Focus with FREE MOBI EDITION Download Now!

Read Mobi Witness: For the Prosecution of Scott Peterson with FREE MOBI EDITION Download Now!

Read Audio Book Son of the Morning Star: Custer and The Little Bighorn with FREE PDF EDITION Download Now!

Read Special Edition Fallout: The Hiroshima Cover-up and the Reporter Who Revealed It to the World with FREE PDF EDITION Download Now!

Read Best Edition Elizabethans: The Sunday Times bestseller, now a major BBC TV series with Free EASY Reading Download Now!

Read PDF The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner with Free PDF EDITION Download Now!

Read Mobi John F. Kennedy, A Life (Lives Briefly Told) with FREE EASY Reading Download Now!

Read Mobi Kennedy's Avenger: Assassination, Conspiracy, and the Forgotten Trial of Jack Ruby with FREE MOBI EDITION Download Now!

Audio Book Substance: Inside New Order with Free PDF EDITION Download Now!


Includes full set lists not included in the physical edition. In this final installment of his internationally bestselling three-part memoir—including The Hacienda and Unknown Pleasures—British rocker Peter Hook focuses on the 1980s New Wave and Dance Punk scene and the rise of one of the most influential bands of the Second British Invasion: New Order.1980. Resurrected from the ashes of Joy Division after the suicide of its lead singer, Ian Curtis, New Order would become one most critically acclaimed and important bands of the decade and beyond. With their hits "Bizarre Love Triangle", "Perfect Kiss", and "Blue Monday"—the biggest-selling 12-inch single of all time—Peter Hook and company quickly rose to the top of the alternative music scene. Widely regarded as the godfathers of electronic dance music, their sound would influence Moby, The Chemical Brothers, The Postal Service, The Killers, and other acts that followed in their wake.Hook tells the complete, unvarnished story of New Order’s founding and evolution; the band’s experiences in the New York City club scene and rapid rise to international fame, its impact on house music, techno, and rave; and its eventual rancorous dissolution. Full of Hook’s "gleefully profane" (Entertainment Weekly) humor and vivid, witty storytelling, Substance is the most important and certainly the most controversial part of his story, emanating with drugs, booze, and sex. Complete with timelines, discographies, gigographies and track-by-track analysis, and exclusive photographs and archival images from Hook’s personal collection, it is the definitive, comprehensive history of New Order and a compelling snapshot of the '80s cultural scene in all its neon-hued glory.

At this time of writing, The Mobi Substance: Inside New Order has garnered 10 customer reviews with rating of 5 out of 5 stars. Not a bad score at all as if you round it off, it’s actually a perfect TEN already. From the looks of that rating, we can say the Mobi is Good TO READ!


Audio Book Substance: Inside New Order with Free PDF EDITION!



Extremely engaging and intelligently written, "Substance" manages to be, in equal measures, factually detailed, very funny and surprisingly poignant. As an overview, then, "Substance" might be best described as a hybrid of auto-biography and a sort of sociology of the music business. Peter Hook has the story-teller's gift of engaging you by mixing technical details with fun facts/vignettes that keep you turning the page (I conquered the first third of the book in a morning, because I could not put it down). And the fun to be had includes, as marginalia/side notes, some true "Easter eggs:" Top-ten lists (Top 10, no, Top 11, hotels in the world; Top 10, no, Top 16, slogans written on bass cabinets, etc.); a running list of New Order gig dates (with some interesting summaries of his memories of particular gigs); and, for those like me who love the technical details, quite a few "geek" alerts (explanations of what terms such as "fold backs," gaffer tape" and "producers' points" mean, as well as an equipment summary that details what guitars, compressors, pedals, cabinets, etc. Hook utilized to create his famous over-driven, chorused bass sound (best I can tell from the book, he went through three major set-up changes throughout his career).As a consequence of this two-fold structure (personal/social), there is much for both the fan and the casual reader alike to enjoy. If you are looking for TMZ-style sex, drugs and rock-'n-roll it is there in spades. New Order might have aped the Continent for their artistic sensibilities; but at the height of their popularity (and fully 3/4 of the book focuses on the 1980s), they could hold their own against the Rolling Stones and Van Halen and the like for pure excess. In fact, the staunchly blue-collar Salford sensibilities of Peter Hook (his own characterization of himself) come through in quite a few places. Without spoiling the details, let's just say Peter was no stranger to the fast life, and unlike, say, Van Halen (and this is the blue-collar part), he would have fit right in in a Bakersfield, California bar brawl, giving as good as he gets. No gentle daisy to be found in that garden, ladies and gents. But for all of that, there is definitely a heart in this man (more on that below).For the fan, of course, it is in the end about the music. And the details are also there in spades and worth noting. Hook details the song writing, recording and mixing process, taking careful note of the influences along the way (Kraftwerk, Hammett, Baker, et al), as well as the very different functions the band members played, say, in 1980-1982, as opposed to later (say, 1990s at the time of Republic) where relations (and, as a consequence, functions) had changed quite dramatically. But Hook also branches out into the larger eco-system of the business, discussing the changes in technical means (say, the shift from the use of the DR-5, Moog Source and Sumner's early home-made sequencers in Strawberry (studio), through the ARP Quadra/Pro One phase, the Yamaha phase, to their later use of SSL/DSP mixing desks in such top-notch studios as Real World); the promoters (Ruth Polsky); the clubs (Danceteria, etc) and the rival bands, fans and audiences along the way. In the same vein, he also takes a fairly balanced view (or perhaps it is an ambivalent view) of the effect that this particular career has had on his relationships. His dalliances are depicted in rather blunt fashion. However, age has its effects on rhetoric, and what could come off as juvenile (if not outright sexist) is rather presented by Hook as it likely is: a weird mix of, "I can't believe I get to live this life: parties and beautiful women everywhere," and, "This is not the person I aspire to be."Indeed, if there is a thread that runs through this book it is ambivalence: on the one hand, great pride in creating a whole new style of melodic bass playing; pride in telling the A&R people to pound sand, while creating a whole new genre of music that was played internationally; great pride in grabbing the bull by the horns and riding it as far as one can--the life of no regrets. This is rock-'n-roll Lemmy Kilmister-style, if you will. On the other hand, the later tragic circumstances of many of the people one meets earlier in the book are discussed, as are the horrid financial practices of Factory Records (see his other book for a full description of that); and the toll that living the rock-'n-roll life does have on everyone (roadies included . . . there are some eye popping stories about them as well) involved. Wives, girlfriends, business partners, become, in a very real sense of the word, collateral damage. His discussions (in the latter part of the book) of his relationship to "Caroline" I found especially poignant and are in marked contrast to the bombast that can be found elsewhere.In that vein, if there was one element I found a little off-putting, it was his discussions of his fellow band members. Hook does (and I want to underline this) give great credit to Sumner and Morris (and even, Hammett, who otherwise takes a bit of a beating in this text) for having some truly original ideas and propelling the band forward. That said, Hook often writes as if it is “Peter Hook v. The Other Three.” Gilbert, for example, is a peripheral figure, at best, in the book; and what he does have to say is occasionally dismissive of her contributions to the band. Morris is given quite a bit of technical credit. But as a personality, he too is at the margins of the narrative. However, being placed at the margins is a better position to be in than Sumner finds himself. Hook's style is brutally honest and straightforward; but also, well thought out and not geared toward cheap-'n-easy calculated inclusions/omissions . . . with one exception: When comes to Sumner, this reader could not help but feel that (occasionally) a story was a set up to take a bit of a swipe at Sumner. We get it. A band break up is like a divorce (and H & S are still in litigation as I write). But do you have to remind the reader of that every ten pages or so (in a book with 724 pages of narrative)?!That said, no text is perfect, and I highly recommend this one. And, on a final note, if you are a fan of Hook's other projects (like Revenge and Monaco; or his production work for the Stone Roses), they are also discussed (albeit much more briefly--this is, after all, "Inside NEW ORDER").


Related Ebook :


Read Audio Book The End of Your Life Book Club with FREE MOBI EDITION Download Now!

Read Best Edition Bill Marriott: Success Is Never Final—His Life and the Decisions That Built a Hotel Empire: Success Is Never Final--His Life and the Decisions That Built a Hotel Empire with Free MOBI EDITION Download Now!

Read Audio Book Alan Turing: The Enigma: The Book That Inspired the Film The Imitation Game - Updated Edition with Free PDF EDITION Download Now!

Read Special Edition The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick with Free MOBI EDITION Download Now!

Read Audio Book Serial Killer Trivia: 500 Insomnia-inducing True Crime Facts and Details to Keep You Up All Night (True Crime Fanatics Book 1) with Free MOBI EDITION Download Now!

Read PDF Biography of God with Free EASY Reading Download Now!

Read Special Edition The Secret Life of Dorothy Soames: A Memoir with Free MOBI EDITION Download Now!

Read Audio Book Girl in the Woods: A Memoir with FREE MOBI EDITION Download Now!

Read Special Edition The Doctor Who Fooled the World: Science, Deception, and the War on Vaccines with Free PDF EDITION Download Now!

Read PDF Trust Within: Letting Intuition Lead with FREE PDF EDITION Download Now!


Post a Comment