I was wondering when you would get to this in your McCullough retrospective. It is notorious, of course. As I remember it, Tony Wilson and the surviving band members were furious. And there is no denying that the last two paragraphs - in particular, the first sentence of the penultimate paragraph - are catastrophically ill-judged. But I think overall it is better than its reputation suggests. He's writing with raw feelings that are genuinely powerful, and incline me to forgive the points where he gets carried away and goes too far. And he situates Curtis in a place and time better than any other writer before or since. A work of flawed genius.
Borges to death
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Reading *Charlie Warzel*'s piece at *The Atlantic* about "*monitoring the
situation*" - and specifically about a website that turns your screen into
a s...
Street (in)credibility
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Don't want to do any spoilers but this pettishly flirtatious encounter
between Russell Harty and Adrian Street takes a dramatic turn...
An earlier p...
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*qualification when talking about anything aesthetic is a huge no no. never
do it.*
*everything has to be the greatest thing that ever happened or the
s...
Futuromania - the paperback
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The paperback edition of Futuromania has just come out
Older eyes will recognise the graphic design's nod to this best-seller of
the 1970s
...
Books of Note
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Far be it from me to encourage you to buy any music book this year that
isn't called Still In A Dream.... But I concede that there are some other
interesti...
Hertfordshire massive, part 17
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Everyone knows about Moving Shadow coming from Stevenage
But I hadn't realized that *Ruff Kut! Record*s was from there
As in *The Good 2Bad &...
Sad Songs
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Quite some time ago, Glen Goetze asked me about sad songs, for which
publication I cannot remember,
*1. What are your earliest memories of music?*
The ...
angel delights
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https://rada-ve.bandcamp.com/track/saturn-rings-songs
*Go on* - listen to that gorgeous bubble bath of synthtronica!
Another vintage release, with a vi...
I was wondering when you would get to this in your McCullough retrospective. It is notorious, of course. As I remember it, Tony Wilson and the surviving band members were furious. And there is no denying that the last two paragraphs - in particular, the first sentence of the penultimate paragraph - are catastrophically ill-judged. But I think overall it is better than its reputation suggests. He's writing with raw feelings that are genuinely powerful, and incline me to forgive the points where he gets carried away and goes too far. And he situates Curtis in a place and time better than any other writer before or since. A work of flawed genius.
ReplyDeleteYes it's overwraught but absolutely forgivable in the circumstances I think - and authentic in its heroizing impulse.
ReplyDelete