Rock and Roll Cage Match by Sean Manning: Download Cover

    Rock and Roll Cage Match: Music's Greatest Rivalries, Decided by Sean Manning

    BUY THIS EBOOK

    • $13.95 List price
      $11.16 eBook price
      (Save 20%)
    • Buy Now
    • About buying eBooks
    • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=9780307449658&productCode=ER&maxCount=100&threshold=3

    Available for Download

    These items ship to U.S. addresses only.

    Works with the eReader you already own Learn More

    Get Free Sample

    Start reading a sample of this eBook for free! Learn More

    Get Free Sample

    Also works with nook

    Welcome to the world’s most advanced eBook reader. Get your favorite books, newspapers and magazines, plus exclusive reads from Barnes & Noble all delivered via fast and free wireless.

    Discover nook
    Works with Nook

    Digital (eBook) Learn more

    • Pub. Date: August 2008
      More Formats 
      Paperback$13.25
       
      • Overview
      • Editorial Reviews

      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: August 2008
      • Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
      • Format: eBook

      Synopsis

      Music defines us. To return the favor, we’ll stick up with zealous passion for the performers and bands that we love . . . and heap aspersions and ridicule upon people who dare to place their allegiances above our own. In Rock and Roll Cage Match, today’s leading cultural critics, humorists, music journalists, and musicians themselves take sides in thirty of the all-time juiciest “who’s better” musical disputes.

      Marc Spitz on the Smiths vs. the Cure: “If the Smiths are its James Dean, the Cure are the Marlon Brando of modern rock.”

      Gideon Yago on Nirvana vs. Metallica: “Here is why Nirvana will always be a better band than Metallica. It’s not because they hit harder (they do). It’s not because they are tighter (they’re definitely not). . . . It’s because Metallica is fundamentally about respecting rules—of metal, of production, of technicality—and Nirvana is about breaking those rules down in the pursuit of innovation. Metallica was metal. Nirvana was something else.”

      Touré on Michael Jackson vs. Prince: “[Prince] was the wild son of Jimi, the younger brother of Rick James and Richard Pryor, the ultrasexual black Casanova who told you up front that he had a dirty mind . . . Michael held the opposite appeal. His music was often about escaping through dance or being hopeful about the world, and he came across as super-innocent.”

      Russ Meneve on Bruce Springsteen vs. Bon Jovi: “I really, truly mean it when I say, Mr. Springsteen, no disrespect . . . you are a legend. But in the Battle a da Jerz, when that thick chemical-waste smokeclears and the overly sprayed mall hair parts, the Jov man is the last man rockin’.”

      Whitney Pastorek on Whitney Houston vs. Mariah Carey: “Frankly, dry recitations of figures are just too easily negated by simple things like, say, bringing up someone’s horrible taste in choosing movie roles. Watch, I’ll do it right now: Yes, Mariah has seventeen number one singles, and Whitney only eleven. But Whitney made The Bodyguard, which is basically a classic, and Mariah starred in Glitter, a colossal suckfest of crapitude that should disqualify her on the spot.”

      Publishers Weekly

      Providing journalists, humorists and artists the opportunity to weigh in on rivalries across the music spectrum, this compendium from Manning (The Show I'll Never Forget: 50 Writers Relive Their Most Memorable Concertgoing Experience) tackles match-ups obvious (Elton John vs. Billy Joel, Van Halen vs. Van Hagar, Britney Spears vs. Christina Aguilera) and idiosyncratic (Ennio Morricone vs. Bernard Herrmann, Devo vs. Kraftwerk, Michael Jackson vs. Prince), if not downright agenda-driven (former Bob Marley publicist Vivien Goldman pitting her client and friend against Bob Dylan). The impressive range of acts is matched by its variety of styles, from Matt Diehl's academic approach to Radiohead vs. Coldplay, to the rock snobbery of Marc Spitz's The Smiths vs. The Cure, to the stand-up comic ramblings of Russ Meneve on a Bruce Springsteen-Bon Jovi "Battle a da Jerz." Though some essays suffer from overkill (Katy St. Clair's nonsensical Abba vs. The Bee Gees, the graphic novel treatment given The Album vs. The Single by Daphne Carr and Scott Gursky), well-executed pieces like Manning's intimate Phil Collins vs. Sting pick up the slack. Sure to start more arguments than it settles, this is a fun book for music fans with a broad palette.
      Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

      More Reviews and Recommendations

      Biography

      SEAN MANNING is the editor of The Show I’ll Never Forget: 50 Writers Relive Their Most Memorable Concertgoing Experience. His writing has appeared in New York Press, The Brooklyn Rail, and BlackBook.

      Customer Reviews

      • Reader Rating:
      Be the first to write a review!