For anyone curious about what the rest of the book covers, here's a chapter rundown:
ONE: NO!: The Origins of No Wave
TWO: From Ten to One: Mars and DNA
THREE: Dissatisfied: Lydia Lunch and James Chance
FOUR: Theoretical Music: The Soho Contingent (Theoretical Girls, Gynecologists, UT, Rhys Chatham, Glenn Branca, and more)
FIVE: The Offenders: No Wave Cinema
SIX: Too Many Creeps: The Aftermath of No Wave (Lounge Lizards, Don King, Bush Tetras, ESG, Sonic Youth, Swans, Live Skull, and more)
Sprinkled in between chapters are sidebars delving in more detail into some fascinating crevices of No Wave. These include sections on Dark Day (Robin Crutchfield's post-DNA band), Lydia Lunch's surreal solo album Queen of Siam (which included
Also included are a foreword by No Wave archivist/expert Weasel Walter, and a ton of photos like the ones seen on Pitchfork today - we have illustrations on every page including live pictures, flyers, film stills, film scripts, and all other types of images, many never seen in a book before. Watch this space for samples of those in the coming months...
3 comments:
Since you're publishing this, it's worth pointing out that your article (as reproduced on Pitchfork) mentions Brian Eno's album "Here Comes The Warm Jets". But it's "Here Come The Warm Jets".
Billy Ver Planck did arrangements on Queen of Siam by Lydia Lunch. He did not write any of the songs.
Good catch, halfpear. Rest assured we got this detail right in the book...and fixed now here, thanks!
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