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Main Lines, Blood Feasts, and Bad Taste : A Lester Bangs Reader

Main Lines, Blood Feasts, and Bad Taste : A Lester Bangs Reader

List Price: $15.00
Your Price: $10.20
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: better than dung vol.1
Review: i don't know what some other reviewers are talking about, this is better than Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung, this book has some great early writing by lester about america during the time of bobby kennedy's assasination, also has some great writing about the evolution of the punk scene and what exactlly is punk, and his love (lust) letter to Cherie Currie is one of the funniest things i have ever read...

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: More Bangs for your bucks
Review: Its a rock n roll tragedy that it's taken this long for more Lester Bangs to be collected under a book cover. John Morthland's offering doesnt quite match up to Marcus' "Psychotic Reactions" in that it doesnt tell a(his) story;it's "The Best Of Lester That Wasn't In Psychotic Reactions..." instead. Which is not a bad thing at all;you get Lester's first review of the MC5's "Kick Out The Jams" album, scathing dissections of Bob Dylan and the Beatles' sociological signficance in the wake of their breakup,and his ironic pining for Anne Murray. Also on heightened display here is his utter negativity and despair during the seventies that characterized most of his output during that period. Im reading Meltzer's "Whore Just Like The Rest" now, and even though Im getting into it more, Meltzer may have been the firstest, but Lester was the bestest. Youngins who think rock selling out is a new concept better take a listen to Lester and realize the rock ship was sinking before she even got out of the dock.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Back With A Bangs
Review: Lester Bangs is back from the dead with a companion piece to the cult 1987 collection of his writings, Psychotic Reactions And Carburettor Dung. And this new collection is just as good.

MLBFABT eschews the tack that editor Griel Marcus took in PRACD, ie telling Lester's tragically truncated life story through pieces that explained his life and drug-fueled outlook. Here editor John Morthland simply includes new pieces that he thought should not have been missed out from PRACD - heretic pieces on Bob Dylan and the Rolling Stones, a great section of Lester's infamous cough syrup-enhanced teenage novel Drug Punk - and cobbles together an excellent new tomestone for Lester's incredible linguistics ability.

If you liked (or, like me, LOVED) PRACD you simply HAVE to have this new volume. You will love it - it's as simple as that. Jim DeRogatis, writer of Bangs bio Let it Blurt, complains on his site ... that there are many pieces not in this new chaotic emotional compendium that he would have included from Lester's estate. This simply says one thing to me: there is room for another volume after this one.

And I for one cannot wait for it.

Lester Bangs RIP, man. You could write like an inkspiller wordplayboy-a-go-go m'main manic maniac man.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Find a better waste of time
Review: Not much to say here, John Morthland may aspire to be a rock critic on par with Greil Marcus, but when it comes down to it, he just comes across as bitter and incompetent, especially in the field of rock and roll.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good writing, good consumer info
Review: OK, I don't recommend getting an Anne Murrayy album...but othe than that, you get leads on some cool (and fairly obscure) Jazz, Reggae, and hardcore. Also some classic rock and Heavy Metal. The album reviews are 95% right on if you like the wilder music. He thinks ELP is garbage, but Black Sabbath is pretty cool-if that's your take on classic rock, this is your conumer guide for 1969-1982.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Living / Loving Life a Little Too Hard
Review: Once at an allergist appointment to treat my asthma I had to use a nebulizer, a machine to help my medication get deep into my lungs. There were two end results: I started breathing better and was high on oxygen and I got more medication into me than normal and got high on that. Basically, I was high as a kite for an hour or two and then it wore off. But for that brief period of time, I was happy and did everything at warp speed and was lovin' life.

Lester Bangs, for those of you not familiar with him, was a rock critic who was lovin' life a lot of the time, but he wasn't being supplied with happy, legal drugs from his allergist. When you read his work, you don't have to be told, though he does tell you, that he often wrote under the influence of a myriad of things. Sometimes his reviews don't make a stitch of sense. Other times they are pure genius.

The bottom line is, if you consider yourself music savvy, you should know who Lester Bangs is. If you need an introduction to his work, Mainlines, Blood Feasts, and Bad Taste: A Lester Bangs Reader is a great place to get it. The reader is a collection of Bangs' writing, edited by friend John Morthland. Most of the reviews are written as Bangs must of spoke. In fact, I often found myself reading his work out loud because they sounded better than they read. He would write an accent - not in a Zore Neale Hurtson I-spell-out-dialect sort of way, but in a William Shakespeare rhyme-and-meter-are-everything sort of way. It's magic.

Some of the reviews in Mainlines, Blood Feasts, and Bad Taste: A Lester Bangs Reader are tedious and near impossible to get through. He often refers to music that is most likely inaccessible to you, because, let's be frank, the man was a music snob. Snobbery or no, he knew his stuff and his developed completely original creative ways to write reviews.

Bangs loved life a little too hard and died of an overdose in 1982. He is still remembered in movies like Almost Famous and his mark is left on music / rock criticism everywhere.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Supercharged rock writing
Review: The rock writer Joh Morthland has compiled a companion volume to Psychotic Reactions And Carburettor Dung, the first collection of the writings of Lester Bangs, rock 'n roll's most influential critic and the one who defined the genre.

The book is divided into the following sections: DRUG PUNK, including previously unpublished writings on Andy Warhol and autobiographical ruminations on Bangs' adolescence; HYPES & HEROICS includes pieces on the MC5, Beatles, Bob Dylan, Grace Jones, Patti Smith's album Horses, Wire and Jello Biafra.

PANTHEON contains pieces on The Rolling Stones, Miles Davis, Captain Beefheart, Nico's Marble Index album, Brian Eno, Jim Morrison and Lester's famous review of Lou Reed's notorious Metal Machine Music album. TRAVELOGUES includes impressions of his trips to Paris, Jamaica, Austin and California.

The last chapter is titled RAVING, RAGING AND REBOPS and contains writings on the roots of punk, The Mekons (Bad Taste Is Timeless) and an excerpt from the previously unpublished All My Friends Are Hermits from 1980.

Lester's adrenalin charged writing has lost none of its appeal. He wrote with an enthusiasm that transcends the decades. I highly recommend this book to all rock fans that are passionate about the music. I also recommend the great biography by Jim DeRogatis, titled Let It Blurt: The Life And Times Of Lester Bangs and The Dark Stuff by Nick Kent.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Supercharged rock writing
Review: The rock writer Joh Morthland has compiled a companion volume to Psychotic Reactions And Carburettor Dung, the first collection of the writings of Lester Bangs, rock `n roll's most influential critic and the one who defined the genre.

The book is divided into the following sections: DRUG PUNK, including previously unpublished writings on Andy Warhol and autobiographical ruminations on Bangs' adolescence; HYPES & HEROICS includes pieces on the MC5, Beatles, Bob Dylan, Grace Jones, Patti Smith's album Horses, Wire and Jello Biafra.

PANTHEON contains pieces on The Rolling Stones, Miles Davis, Captain Beefheart, Nico's Marble Index album, Brian Eno, Jim Morrison and Lester's famous review of Lou Reed's notorious Metal Machine Music album. TRAVELOGUES includes impressions of his trips to Paris, Jamaica, Austin and California.

The last chapter is titled RAVING, RAGING AND REBOPS and contains writings on the roots of punk, The Mekons (Bad Taste Is Timeless) and an excerpt from the previously unpublished All My Friends Are Hermits from 1980.

Lester's adrenalin charged writing has lost none of its appeal. He wrote with an enthusiasm that transcends the decades. I highly recommend this book to all rock fans that are passionate about the music. I also recommend the great biography by Jim DeRogatis, titled Let It Blurt: The Life And Times Of Lester Bangs and The Dark Stuff by Nick Kent.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Big Bangs
Review: This + PRACD = essential purchases for Lesterphiles. Trying to choose between the two is like trying to choose between "In a Silent Way" and "Fun House". or "The Ramones" and "The Clash". It's ALL essential. Be greedy.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Big Bangs
Review: This + PRACD = essential purchases for Lesterphiles. Trying to choose between the two is like trying to choose between "In a Silent Way" and "Fun House". or "The Ramones" and "The Clash". It's ALL essential. Be greedy.


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