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David Stubbs (2) (1962–)

Forfatter af Future Days: Krautrock and the Building of Modern Germany

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11+ Works 301 Members 8 Reviews

Om forfatteren

David Stubbs is a freelance British music journalist and author. As well as music, he also covers sport, film, literature and TV.

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Værker af David Stubbs

Associated Works

The Atheist's Guide to Christmas (2009) — Bidragyder — 356 eksemplarer

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Fødselsdato
1962-09-13
Køn
male
Nationalitet
UK
Fødested
London, England, UK

Medlemmer

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Not for me, I'm afraid - though I enjoyed the author's previous book on German music of a certain time.

The first three sentences of the previous review are a very fair sum-up of what I read before giving up in frustration not very far in. I'm sure there are juicy tid-bits which quote directly from musicians in this book. However. in what I read they seemed buried within a highly-flavoured sauce of opinionated writing that at times jumped to conclusions. As ever, others may feel differently.… (mere)
 
Markeret
ten_floors_up | 1 anden anmeldelse | Apr 12, 2024 |
A superb examination of the West German music scene that not only places krautrock within the context of West German society, but also places each individual band within its own local context. To any fan of krautrock with the slightest curiosity about the history and context of the genre and its players, this is essential reading.
 
Markeret
conchobhar | 1 anden anmeldelse | Aug 31, 2022 |
David Stubbs—the author of this book—wrote "Future Days: Krautrock and the Building of Modern Germany", an excellent recant of how "kosmische" music came about. In that book, he kept a narrow view of how things came to be, and founded much of his analysis on interviews with musicians.

This time, he has written a book that is both sprawling and, at times, probably verges into the fictional, at least where he digresses on actual words from musicians and theories on why they did things.

Having said that, this book does contain much information that is probably of importance both to persons like the perennially name-dropping Moby, and to persons who want to receive a skimpy version of electronic music history. The forté and pain of this book both lie in the fact that it skips over a lot of theory quickly. It's also sensationalistic, which is almost always a bad thing to myself, and to the facts.

The best about Stubbs's writing is undoubtedly his style:

Practically the moment it beams down, ‘I Feel Love’ feels like first contact: the slow opening of the spacecraft door, the blinding shaft of green light. This is … what is this? Brian Eno hears it and rushes straight into David Bowie’s studio, claiming to be holding the future in his hands. Sparks hear it and promptly decide to ditch their band, hit up Moroder and function as an electronic duo. And that’s just the start.


What’s also striking, and similarly depressing, is that pop hasn’t been this non-queer since the days of Rosemary Clooney, the early 1950s. Gay culture had always been one of the great underground drivers of rock and pop, from Little Richard right through to Hi-NRG, often necessarily coded in a world that was institutionally homophobic. And yet today, when gay rights, while by no means universally accepted, are more established in the Western world than ever before, queer pop has disappeared. The charts in 2017 are primarily an idyll of young, photogenic, heterosexual love, preferably experienced in a seaside environment.


A few weeks after I interviewed them, I was at a record-company bash. Though I had spent an hour in their company, when Bangalter flagged me down to say ‘Hi’ there was a mortifying second or so before I remembered who he and his partner, Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo, were. Daft Punk, however, had a grasp on the immediate future. ‘Today, it’s possible to make a record in your bedroom at a cheap price,’ said Bangalter. ‘Our album, Homework, is cheaper than nearly any rock album. No studio expenses, producers, engineers. We’re not saying there is a right way or wrong way to go about things, but this is certainly a way. When we started to make music, we were just trying to form the teenage band everyone wants to be in.’


For Futurists like Luigi Russolo, as well as visionary composers such as Busoni, Varèse and, later, Stockhausen, new electronic modes of music-making weren’t novelties, conveniences, cost-cutting devices or objects of tinkering fascination for gadget nerds who were less than human in their make-up. They were the means whereby music would exceed the bounds of mere scripted notation, explore infinite possibilities in tandem with a world whose technological leaps and bounds seemed limitless. In their wildest dreams, they truly believed that electronic music could soundtrack, or even by some occult means be the source of, an expansion of mankind’s capabilities.


Stockhausen’s mind was a brilliant one, operating with the strength of multiple lasers. He could speak – in detail and with a conviction lesser brains found hard to counter – of ancient Japanese ritual and musical custom, of horticulture, of Eastern mystical thought, of the all-embracing importance of spirals (an idea introduced to him by the English writer Jill Purce, with whom he liaised in the early 1970s), allude easily to philosophers like Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, as well as explain, to those with the ability to take it in, the workings of serial music, notions such as periodicity and harmonic perspective. He could out-converse most people across a range of topics, without even resorting to his first language.


‘You know people are going to laugh?’ the host warned Cage gravely – though that, of course, was the entire purpose of this TV exercise. Cage refused to play the stuffed avant-garde shirt. ‘I consider laughter preferable to tears,’ he said, to more laughter. The host referred to Cage as someone who dealt in ‘experimental sound’, only to be firmly corrected by Cage. ‘Experimental music,’ he said. He explained simply that since music was the production of sounds, and sounds were what he produced, then the result was music. It was that simple. He would demonstrate this to the audience with his presentation of ‘Water Walk’, so called because it featured the running of water and himself walking through the piece, event by event.


Even seventeen years later, Alan Vega couldn’t hide his bitterness at the success Soft Cell enjoyed. ‘Suicide finally get to go to Britain, in 1978. And sure enough, a year or so later, you’ve got this big techno-pop explosion. Soft Cell, who admit to being influenced by Suicide – one guy on vocals, one guy on keyboards. And what happens? Soft Cell go on to sell millions of records, Suicide sell squat. Soft Cell come to America, they’re huge, we come back, nada. To this day.’


The book goes from Schaeffer, Rossolo, Stockhausen, and Ligeti, all to Aphex Twin, Actress, and...it's a hyperkinetic mash-up; at times, it felt stressed and forced, other times it felt as though Stubbs's language and style really did the music and the artists a huge service. However, if you want a pop-ish view of the history of electronic music, I can't think of a better place to start than this book.
… (mere)
 
Markeret
pivic | 1 anden anmeldelse | Mar 21, 2020 |
Like a lot of books that purport to tell WHY something happens, this one just reports that things DO happen. &, I'm sorry to say, in this book David Stubbs doesn't even do that very well.

His understanding of art history is limited (as an example, the dynamic between photography and painting is a lot more complex than Stubbs claims) and a lot of his music references are not much deeper. A comparison of the general reception of contemporary visual art and contemporary music deserves more thought and study than is exhibited here.

And, yes, this has to be one of the most poorly proofread books to be released by a commercial publisher.
… (mere)
 
Markeret
hrebml | 2 andre anmeldelser | Sep 5, 2019 |

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Statistikker

Værker
11
Also by
1
Medlemmer
301
Popularitet
#78,062
Vurdering
½ 3.5
Anmeldelser
8
ISBN
42
Sprog
4

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