
Description
Product Details
Publisher | Michigan State University Press |
Publish Date | January 01, 2020 |
Pages | 362 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781611863369 |
Dimensions | 8.9 X 6.0 X 1.4 inches | 1.9 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"An incredible book. Comprehensive. Panoramic. And makes a case for Detroit being the greatest music city in the United States."
--Steve Wynn, singer, songwriter, and guitarist for The Dream Syndicate
"So many lines and stanzas emblematic of Detroit's poetry and music resonate in R E S P E C T, edited by Jim Daniels and M. L. Liebler, and Kim D. Hunter's homage to the late Faruq Z. Bey personifies the collection. His horn, Hunter writes, 'was just another / way to breathe.' And this is a breathless assemblage of the city's most gifted voices."
--Herb Boyd, Black Detroit: A People's History of Self-Determination
"Both Liebler and Daniels have what can only be called musical rolodexes (an old-fashioned way of keeping contact information) that are a mile deep and a country wide. As an example, there aren't many books that can boast work from the poets Phillip Levine, June Jordan, Rita Dove, Nikki Giovanni or Melba Joyce Boyd."--Bill Castanier "Lansing City Pulse" (1/23/2020 12:00:00 AM)
"It's the history of music in Detroit. Certainly goes back, at least touches into, the early 20th century with some blues. . . . In this book, you've got lyrics by some of the great songwriters: Fats Dominos, Billy Bragg, Robbie Robertson, Gordon Lightfoot, Jack White, Eminem, and a bunch of others. Then there's some poems of the great dead poets of Detroit: Robert Hayden, Philip Levine. Then there are poets of great national reputations who are either from Detroit or came through here and spent time here: Nikki Giovanni, Toi Derricotte, Edward Hirsch. And then there's a bunch of the rest of us who just sort of hang out here, including me."-- "Michigan Radio NPR" (1/10/2020 12:00:00 AM)
"This stirring collection of poetry captures decades of Detroit's genre-spanning music legacy, from jazz to R&B to techno. Each stanza's beats, rhythms, and grooves evoke the sounds of the city's clubs, streets, and scenes with passion and pleasure. The inspiring selection of voices reveal the mystery of The D's musical spirit, and Daniels and Liebler deliver a significant contribution to its lyrical arts."
--Roberta Cruger, former CREEM magazine staff writer/editor (1970-1974)
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