MUSIC BOOK REVIEWS... Sssshhhh! it's a library. Let us recommend a good read. These are the best books we know on DJs and dance music.

music_book_reviews_Boys_own.jpg

Boy's Own: The Complete Fanzines 1986-92

The Boy's Own crew were having so much fun that in six years they only managed to loose off 12 issues. But these 440 pages depict acid house culture – the slang, the parties, the tunes, the humour – better than anything, as captured in the words of Farley, Mayes, Weatherall, Oakenfold and many more key players. As well as every page of every fanzine there’s a great interview with all the Boys.
DiscoFilesCover.jpg

The Disco Files 1973-78: New York's Underground, Week By Week – Vince Aletti (2009)

With reviews of every disco record worth knowing about, weekly reports from New York’s club scene, classic magazine articles and 800 contemporary club charts, this is the definitive chronicle of disco. It's the personal memoir of Vince Aletti, the very first writer to cover the emerging scene, bringing to life the clubs, the characters, and above all the music. The first book from DJhistory.com
music_book_review_onceinlifetime.jpg

Once In A Lifetime: The Crazy Days of Acid House and Afterwards – Jane Bussmann, 1998

Acid house told as sitcom, packed with memories, stories, clippings, flyers, photos, quotes and tons of priceless details you'd forgotten about. Bussmann recalls the all-out nuttiness of the summer of love better than anyone. She went on to write for The Fast Show and South Park, so prepare to laugh your eyebrows off. A brilliantly messy scrapbook with a genuine piss-yourself moment on every page.
All Hopped Up and Ready to Go: Music from the Streets of New York 1927-77.jpeg

All Hopped Up And Ready To Go: Music From The Streets Of NYC 1927-77 – Tony Fletcher (2010)

An epic book that begins with The Cotton Club and ends at Studio 54. In between there's jazz, mambo, folk, doo wop, rock'n'roll, the Brill Building, girlgroups, the Velvets, disco, punk and hip hop. Is there another city in the world that could lay claim to such a bewildering variety of music? Told with the emigrant's zeal of his adopted city (Fletcher is British), this is a love letter to NYC.
berghain-saturday-lost-sound-cover1.jpg

Lost and Sound: Berlin, Techno and the Easyjet Set – Tobias Rapp (2010)

7 out of 10 tourists go to Berlin for rave tourism, or as it is commonly known: to get battered in Berlin. Rapp's book delves deep into the city's nocturnal playground, it's not primarily about music, instead it investigates the explicit social dynamics of a city where a club like Berghain can exist and where Bar 25 could stay open for so long on land owned by the Berlin sanitation department.
music_book_review_hacienda_hook.jpg

The Hacienda: How Not to Run a Club – Peter Hook (2009)

“We had a fookin' blast, if only we'd known it was our own money.” Hooky manages to rewrite this sentence enough times to fill a whole book. There are great anecdotes and much detail (a complete events list, including some DJ set lists). But as he sets the record straight, and you wade through talk of licensing boards, bar managers and operating costs, you realise you kind of preferred the legend.
arthur-russell-cover.jpg

Hold On To Your Dreams: Arthur Russell & the Downtown Music Scene 1973-92 – Tim Lawrence (2009)

This book confirms that Arthur Russell could be a reet pain in the backside to work with. Who spends an entire day getting a drum sound just right? Arthur Russell does. Undoubted genius, small town boy, bright lights big city, amazing music! It's all here and Lawrence tells a tale rammed with anecdotes and with passion and gusto. Russell was disco's revenge, a true character and a great read.
Raving345.jpg

Raving ’89 – Neville & Gavin Watson (2009)

1989 was the year it all changed – when raving took the country by storm and British dance culture as we know it exploded into being. Gavin Watson's photos capture the revolution like no others, with intimate portraits of people having their lives changed forever. For sheer nostalgia this collection can't be beaten. It's all here: the smiles, the lasers, the villains, the crimes against fashion...
Music_book_review_stormingheaven.jpg

Storming Heaven: LSD and the American Dream – Jay Stevens (2000)

From Aldous Huxley sitting around like a right gent tripping on mescaline, to depictions of Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters dressed like proto nu-ravers causing a ruckus wherever they went. Intellectual study, College parties, Buddhist retreats and getting “bemushroomed” in Mexico, Stevens tells a truly terrific tale, reminding us that a Tab was once more than a can of pop.
music_book_review_waxpoetics2.jpg

Wax Poetics Anthology: Vol 2

Vol 2 meets more of the powerhouse musicians who've been dug and sampled, plus the intense-looking beatmasters who’ve done the digging and sampling. Collector-stiffening pieces on Sun Ra, Deodato, Randy Muller, rap A&R wunderkind Dante Ross, and much more. Danny Krivit picks out 12s and DJ Premier confesses he’s a Smiths fan. Mind you, I still think “Wax Poetic” would have been a cleverer name.
music_book_review_waxpoetics1.jpg

Wax Poetics Anthology: Vol 1

If DJhistory smoked bigger doobies, knew Pete Rock, lived in Fort Greene and did capoeira at the weekend it would be Wax Poetics. We’d be kicking back with Idris Muhammad, Bernard Purdie, the RZA, Prince Paul, cat’s like that. We’d have James Brown’s drummers, graffiti nostalgia, and acres of record porn. The best of the studious magazine’s first six years. Fine, detailed, earnest and pure.
music_book_review_SocialDancing.jpg

Social Dancing in America vol 1 & 2 – Ralph G Giordano (2007)

The author’s passion is clear, so it’s a shame he’s written this epic two-volume history in a style so neutral it might be aimed at Vulcans (at one point he even defines “house party”). From 1607 up to the twist, it’s an unbeatable academic reference, packed with social context and cultural insight. There’s not much thread to pull you along however, and it creaks badly once it reaches disco.
music_book_review_17.jpg

The 17 – Bill Drummond (2008)

“All recorded music has run its course...” writes Drummond in his latest philosopho-biographical ramble, attempting a Year Zero in the face of music’s devalued digital ubiquity. He aims to reconnect us with the primal force of improvised communal singing, with Soviet male voice choirs ringing in his mind. The experience sounds marvellous but he fails to entice enough people (the reader included).
Music_book_review_DJculture.jpg

DJ Culture – Ulf Poschardt (1998)

I was a wanker when I was a student; this book has much the same faults: it believes everything that it’s read on the subject, adds nothing new, regurgitates it with the best pseudo-intellectual vocabulary it can lay its hands on, and expects you to admire it for being original. Anyone who references Hegel and Descartes to explain DJing is not really at the same party as everyone else.
music_book_review_perfectingsound.jpg

Perfecting Sound Forever: The History of Recorded Music – Greg Milner (2009)

Captured or created? The real thing? Or better? The story of our relationship with recorded music, filled with great thoughts and amazing tales. As well as a very human perspective on the history there's great war-reporting from the digital vs analogue crusades, and a warning that the industry’s obsession with volume is marching us into a world of over-compressed flatness. Fascinating and poetic.
music_book_review_sataninthedance.jpg

Satan In The Dance Hall – Ralph Giordano, 2008

Once they'd hoodwinked the country into banning alcohol, America’s fundamentalists targeted dancing. Lincoln Nebraska outlawed eye contact between dance partners, while many cities banned “animal" (ie black) dances, like the scandalous Charleston. Forgive the lifeless academic prose, this is a book of amazing revelations, leaving no doubt that jazz culture was more threatening than punk.
music_book_review_modulations.jpg

Modulations: Electronic Music, Throbbing Words on Sound – Peter Shapiro (ed), 1999

The least inviting book I own – actually a “multi-media exploration.” If martians read this they’d think dance music was an industrial process done in vacuum chambers by academics in white coats and Polyveldt shoes. There might be some interesting things in it: interviews with Robert Moog and Giorgio Moroder perhaps, but the layout is designed to appeal to barcode machines so I have no idea.
music_book_review_leigh_bowery.jpg

Leigh Bowery: The Life and Times of an Icon – Sue Tilley (1997)

I saw him “give birth” at Heaven. Some Italian boys were so horrified they were flicking lit cigarettes at him. Now that’s an impact! From Club Kids to nu-ravers, so many have fingered Bowery’s ideas, we lose sight of how revolutionary he was. A fearless explorer, he did for dressing up what Picasso did for painting, or the drum machine did for dance music. An affectionate biog by his best friend.
music_book_review_lastparty.jpg

The Last Party: Studio 54 Disco and the Culture of the Night – Anthony Haden-Guest, 1997

Debonair Vanity Fair hack Haden-Guest details the monied world of upper-crust New York clubbing in a history that climaxes the day Bianca Jagger rode a horse into Studio 54. It's the full saga of Studio itself, populated largely by people with titles, racehorses and Truman Capote’s phone number; then Palladium, Limelight and other gossipy spots. Best picture caption: “Andy Warhol is in the rear.”
music_book_review_lastnightsparty.jpg

Last Night's Party – Merlin Bronques (2008)

“It's for a magazine/website/really important wank – could you pull your knickers off, snog your friend and smear vodka on your boobies.” For Merlin Bronques it not only gets him laid, but thanks to lastnightsparty.com it’s made him famous. Slutty images of kids wasted at Williamsburg parties; with better tattoos, stronger drugs and skinnier, more expensive genes than you'll ever fit into.