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Sympathy for the Drummer: Why Charlie Watts Matters is both a gonzo rush--capturing the bristling energy of the Rolling Stones and the times in which they lived--and a wide-eyed reflection on why the Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Band in the World needed the world's greatest rock 'n' roll drummer.
Across five decades, Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts has had the best seat in the house. Charlie Watts, the anti-rock star--an urbane jazz fan with a dry wit and little taste for the limelight--was witness to the most savage years in rock history, and emerged a hero, a warrior poet. With his easy swing and often loping, uneven fills, he found nuance in a music that often had little room for it, and along with his greatest ally, Keith Richards, he gave the Stones their swaggering beat. While others battled their drums, Charlie played his modest kit with finesse and humility, and yet his relentless grooves on the nastiest hard-rock numbers of the era ("Gimme Shelter," "Street Fighting Man," "Brown Sugar," "Jumpin' Jack Flash," etc.) delivered a dangerous authenticity to a band that on their best nights should have been put in jail.
Author Mike Edison, himself a notorious raconteur and accomplished drummer, tells a tale of respect and satisfaction that goes far beyond drums, drumming, and the Rolling Stones, ripping apart the history of rock'n'roll, and celebrating sixty years of cultural upheaval. He tears the sheets off of the myths of music making, shredding the phonies and the frauds, and unifies the frayed edges of disco, punk, blues, country, soul, jazz, and R&B--the soundtrack of our lives.
Highly opinionated, fearless, and often hilarious, Sympathy is an unexpected treat for music fans and pop culture mavens, as edgy and ribald as the Rolling Stones at their finest, never losing sight of the sex and magic that puts the roll in the rock --the beat, that crazy beat!--and the man who drove the band, their true engine, the utterly irreplaceable Charlie Watts.
Product Details
Publisher | Backbeat Books |
Publish Date | August 01, 2021 |
Pages | 272 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781493059812 |
Dimensions | 7.2 X 5.5 X 0.8 inches | 0.7 pounds |
About the Author
Mike Edison is the former editor and publisher of High Times magazine. His books include the celebrated memoir I Have Fun Everywhere I Go, the sprawling social history of sex on the newsstand, Dirty! Dirty! Dirty! and the deliciously filthy political satire Bye, Bye, Miss American Pie. Edison is also a noted musician who spent much of the 1980s and '90s seeing the world from behind a drum set, opening for bands as diverse as Sonic Youth, Sound Garden, and the Ramones. He has written extensive liner notes for, among others, Iggy Pop, and the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, and has contributed to numerous magazines and websites, including Huffington Post, the Daily Beast, the New York Observer, Spin (writing about the Rolling Stones), Interview, and New York Press, for which he covered classical music and professional wrestling. He speaks frequently on free speech, sex, drugs, and the American counterculture. Edison lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.
Reviews
"A wild ride through six-plus decades of music history... An illuminating and massively entertaining book." -- Dan Epstein, authorBig Hair and Plastic Grass
"Proof positive that one can be both edgy and erudite, lowbrow and literate, and take joy in the unbridled pleasures of the id without sacrificing the higher mind." --PopMatters
"Sympathy thankfully is not a ponderous academic treatise, and while Edison occasionally leans into gonzo flights of fancy, he takes the reader on a grand tour of forty years of Watts' contributions to the Rolling Stones... As Keith Richards has said, "No Charlie, no Stones," and Edison wrote the book to prove it."-- Modern Drummer"
"A remarkable achievement." -- Pop Matters
"A verbal roller coaster ride through rock and roll, blues, jazz, drums, voodoo, sex, magic, and everything else that's truly important in life... insightful passion that jumps off the page... irresistible and infectious, and essential." -- Culture Sonar
"Edison is a gifted writer with a deft hand for making complex musical ideas relatable and enjoyable for the non-musician rock fan, and Sympathy for the Drummer is not just an interesting read, it's also often quite a funny one as well." -- The Recoup
"Fanf**ckingtastic." -- Kenny Aranoff
"Flamboyant, funny, and frisky... supremely entertaining." -- The Stranger
"Utterly fascinating... Edison's words go way beyond the norm of rock and roll writing... it is impossible not to be moved by all Edison believes." -- Americana Highways (Book of the Year)
"A great voice of authority and knowledge, dispensed with free-wheeling fluidity. Super entertaining, and right on." -- Katherine Turman, coauthor, Louder Than Hell: The Complete Oral History of Heavy Metal
"A marvelous snare-crack of a book." -- Hot Press (UK)
"A remarkable achievement... insightful, passionate, knowledgeable, funny, fresh and astute... Sympathy for the Drummer is hard to beat." -- International Times
"An imaginative consideration of the Rolling Stones, one which will let you hear utterly familiar tracks with entirely fresh ears." -- Ira Robbin
"Charlie Watts is the backbone of the Rolling Stones. In this affectionate yet unflinching biography, Mike Edison shows how integral his jazz sensibility makes them a true band: keeping time, creating space, and hitting the crash cymbal at just the right moment." -- Lenny Kaye, guitarist, author of You Call It Madness: the Sensuous Song of the Croon
"Edison's style captures the effortless nature of Watts' drumming... you come away with new respect for the man behind the small kit, and I guarantee you'll blast a Stones cut when done. Highly recommended."-- The Big Takeover
"Exhilarating... magnificent insouciance... Edison writes like Charlie Watts drums: with panache.""-- Planet Rock
"Fanf**kingtastic."-- Kenny Aranoff
"It's not hard to fathom why a former editor of both Screw and High Times magazines would find writing about the Rolling Stones, one of the most dissolute champions of sex and drugs, right in his conceptual wheelhouse. But Edison takes a unique approach by focusing his investigation on Charlie Watts, the woefully underappreciated lynchpin of the Stones sound. This book is a delightful look at the Stones through the eyes and the beats of their most reticent member. Finally someone gave this drummer some." -- Larry "Ratso" Sloman, author On the Road with Bob Dylan
"Mike Edison's libertine prose swings and hits like Charlie Watt's right hand." -- Meredith Ochs, author Rock-and-Roll Woman
"Rollicking ... highly engaging ... essential." -- Classic Rock
"Sympathy for the Drummer is so much more than an incisive appreciation of Charlie Watts, it is an effusively infectious tribute to art in all of its myriad forms. Edison's insights into the Rolling Stones are backed up by a fluent scope of cultural historicity, and peppered with an array of no-nonsense broadsides. Compelling evidence to convince even the most non-partisan reader that Charlie is indeed the WORLD'S GREATEST ROCK'N'ROLL DRUMMER!" -- Jim Sclavunos, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
"Sympathy thankfully is not a ponderous academic treatise, and while Edison occasionally leans into gonzo flights of fancy, he takes the reader on a grand tour of forty years of Watts' contributions to the Rolling Stones... As Keith Richards has said, "No Charlie, no Stones," and Edison wrote the book to prove it."-- Modern Drummer
"The most colorfully graphic and, arguably, the most accurate description extant of the Rolling Stones at the absolute pinnacle of their career."-- All About Jazz
"The most fun and evocative Stones book since Keith Richard's Life." -- Record Collector (UK)
"Charlie Watts lays it down, and the others follow. He is the Law. This book explains why." -- Clem Burke, Blondie
"Required reading for any Stones fan." -- Bun E. Carlos
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