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THE ROARING SILENCE

JOHN CAGE: A LIFE

Published to coincide with the 80th birthday of the controversial avant-garde composer, Revill's lengthy biography of John Cage may prove as puzzling to readers as the composer's musical experiments have proved to concert-goers over the years. Curiously reticent in presenting the details of his subject's personal life (Cage's homosexuality is airily dismissed, for example, as ``not important given the aims of this book''), Revill, a British musicologist, composer, and musician, devotes page after page to the minutiae of Cage's highly unorthodox methods of composition. For readers who are neither professional musicians nor well versed in math, these extended passages will prove heavy going. Cage himself, moreover, isn't a particularly appealing protagonist, coming off here as pontifical, intolerant, and emotionally detached yet given to faddish enthusiasms (the I Ching, macrobiotic diets, acupuncture, McLuhan's ``global village''). And much of his writing, at least as presented by Revill, has qualties of hand-me-down Gertrude Stein. During his long career, Cage has associated with such figures as Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Marcel Duchamp, Igor Stravinsky, John Lennon, and Yoko Ono. But in Revill's hands, these personalities remain sketchy, lifeless walk- ons in a narrative stuffed with lists of music festivals, academic seminars, and personal appearances that provide little insight into Cage's life or world. Revill swings from near-hagiography to surprisingly blunt criticism; neither cuts the mustard. (Thirty-six b&w photographs- -not seen.)

Pub Date: Sept. 1, 1992

ISBN: 1-55970-166-8

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Arcade

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 1992

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THE BEAUTIFUL ONES

A poignantly intimate, revelatory read for Prince fans and music lovers.

A legendary musician and the co-author he chose three months before his death sketch a tantalizing half-finished self-portrait in both words and images.

When Prince died in 2016, he left behind 30 pages of a memoir that his co-writer, Paris Review advisory editor Piepenbring (co-author: Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the Sixties, 2019), had annotated with the singer’s own expansions and that Prince had intended as a “handbook for the brilliant community: wrapped in autobiography, wrapped in biography.” Remaining scrupulously faithful to that vision, Piepenbring pieces together Prince’s memoir fragments with never-before-seen memorabilia the editor helped excavate from the singer’s Paisley Park vault in Chanhassen, Minnesota. The book opens with Piepenbring’s warm remembrances of their brief association and statement of mission. Though unfinished, the memoir, which is divided into four parts, was to have set forth what Prince called an “an unconventional and poetic journey” that celebrated the creative freedom he prized above all else. Prince remembers the glamorous parents who raised him and whose interpersonal conflicts later fueled much of his creative output. He also reminisces about his hometown, Minneapolis, his worship of his musician father, and his first loves, music being chief among them. The second section, “For You,” consists of photographed images—at once funny and supremely personal—of a scrapbook Prince kept in the years preceding his first album, For You (1978). In “Controversy,” Piepenbring traces the creative work that followed For You and preceded Purple Rain (1984) with images of both the singer and lyrics—complete with Prince’s doodles and corrections—to such classics such as “1999.” The final section, “Baby I’m a Star,” features both handwritten treatments for Prince’s semiautobiographical film, Purple Rain, and Piepenbring’s typewritten version. Laced throughout with quotations from Prince interviews, this visually stunning labor of love reveals the shy, vulnerable man behind the glitz and controversy without ever “punctur[ing] the veil of mystery around him.”

A poignantly intimate, revelatory read for Prince fans and music lovers.

Pub Date: Oct. 29, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-399-58965-2

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Spiegel & Grau

Review Posted Online: Oct. 29, 2019

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MY LIFE ON THE ROAD

An invigoratingly candid memoir from a giant of women’s rights.

A respected feminist activist’s memoir about the life lessons she learned as a peripatetic political organizer.

Until she was 10 years old, Steinem (Moving Beyond Words, 1993, etc.) grew up following two parents who could never seem to put down roots. Only after her stability-craving mother separated from her restlessly migratory father did she settle—for a brief time until college—into “the most conventional life” she would ever lead. After that, she began travels that would first take her to Europe and then later to India, where she began to awaken to the possibility that her father’s lonely way of traveling “wasn’t the only one.” Journeying could be a shared experience that could lead to breakthroughs in consciousness of the kind Steinem underwent after observing Indian villagers coming together in “talking circles” to discuss community issues. Once she returned to the United States, she went to New York City, where she became an itinerant freelance journalist. After observing the absence of female voices at the 1963 March on Washington, Steinem began gathering together black and white women to begin the conversation that would soon become a larger national fight for women’s rights. In the 1970s and beyond, Steinem went on the road to campaign for the Equal Rights Amendment and for female political candidates like 1984 vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro. Along the way, Steinem began work with Native American women activists who taught her about the interconnectedness of all living things and the importance of balance. From this, she learned to walk the middle path between a life on the road and one at home: for in the end, she writes, "[c]aring for a home is caring for one's self.” Illuminating and inspiring, this book presents a distinguished woman's exhilarating vision of what it means to live with openness, honesty, and a willingness to grow beyond the apparent confinement of seemingly irreconcilable polarities.

An invigoratingly candid memoir from a giant of women’s rights.

Pub Date: Oct. 27, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-679-45620-9

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Random House

Review Posted Online: July 6, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2015

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