Features the best, most provocative reviews, interviews, columns, and essays by Chuck Eddy - a singular critic
The best, most provocative reviews, interviews, columns, and essays written by the entertaining, idiosyncratic, and influential music writer Chuck Eddy over the past twenty-five years.
Features the best, most provocative reviews, interviews, columns, and essays by Chuck Eddy - a singular critic
The best, most provocative reviews, interviews, columns, and essays written by the entertaining, idiosyncratic, and influential music writer Chuck Eddy over the past twenty-five years.
Chuck Eddy is one of the most entertaining, idiosyncratic, influential, and prolific music critics of the past three decades. His byline has appeared everywhere from the Village Voice and Rolling Stone to Creem, Spin, and Vibe. Eddy is a consistently incisive journalist, unafraid to explore and defend genres that other critics look down on or ignore. His interviews with subjects ranging from the Beastie Boys, the Pet Shop Boys, Robert Plant, and Teena Marie to the Flaming Lips, AC/DC, and Eminem's grandmother are unforgettable. His review of a 1985 Aerosmith album reportedly inspired the producer Rick Rubin to pair the rockers with Run DMC. In the eighties, Eddy was one of the first critics to widely cover indie rock, and he has since brought his signature hyper-caffeinated, hyper-hyphenated style to bear on heavy metal, hip-hop, country-you name it. Rock and Roll Always Forgets features the best, most provocative reviews, interviews, columns, and essays written by this singular critic. Essential reading for music scholars and fans, it may well be the definitive time-capsule comment on pop music at the turn of the twenty-first century.
“"You can predict what Eddy will think of something, and you'll often be wrong, but what he actually thinks will always make more sense, will fit Eddy's written persona better, than what you had in mind. Eddy's taste has a deep coherence that's close to unique among rock critics. . . . [F]or an Eddy fan, it's a kick getting to read about his favorite music in-depth in these pages, especially when he's in its first flush of Chuck-love. Will to Power, the Lordz of Brooklyn, Banda Bahia, and White Wizzard are all here, because who else was going to write about them?" - Josh Langhoff, Los Angeles Review of Books”
"This smart, very funny anthology includes some of the best work by any writer on country, metal, teen pop, Eighties hip-hop and Eminem. It's the only book you'll ever read that compares Jay-Z's The Blueprint to Huey Lewis' Sports - and means it as a compliment." Jody Rosen, Rolling Stone "Eddy won me over. How glad I am to see the publication of Eddy's new song(s) of himself Rock and Roll Always Forgets: A Quarter Century of Music Criticism (Duke University Press). Glad, first, because it's truly a representative selection, tracing the slithery paths of Eddy's enthusiasms from Marilyn Manson to Mindy McCready just to stick with the "M"s, with tart new intros that set up reprints of some of his greatest hits. And glad, second, that there exist publishers still willing to release anthologies of rock writing, since so much great rock criticism remains uncollected, neglected, less forgotten than never known to a wider audience." Ken Tucker, Entertainment Weekly "Rock critic Chuck Eddy is one of the world's great music fans. For the past 25 years, his writing for The Village Voice, Creem, Rolling Stone, Spin, and other outlets has kept Eddy at the center of pop music conversations...At his paid and unpaid best, that's what Chuck Eddy has done for 25 years. He don't give a damn what other people think. What do you think about that?" Josh Langhoff, Los Angeles Review of Books "Eddy has a written voice as distinctive as the music he critiques. He wears his affection as well as his distaste on his sleeve, and this collection of his work from the 1980s until 2010 (first published in the Village Voice, Rolling Stone, Spin, and elsewhere) is a perfect capsule of his eternal enthusiasm." Peter Thornell, Library Journal "Chuck Eddy's Rock And Roll Always Forgets: A Quarter Century of Music Criticism captures a singular critical voice from, arguably, the last great period in which criticism (and physical publications) still mattered." Bill Holdship, Metro Times "Chuck Eddy's Rock And Roll Always Forgets: A Quarter Century of Music Criticism captures a singular critical voice from, arguably, the last great period in which criticism (and physical publications) still mattered." Bill Holdship, Metro Times "Chuck Eddy glides through music criticism like a grumpy fanatic. Each article included in Rock and Roll Always Forgets - culled from Eddy's vast back catalogue of music journalism articles, beginning with the early 1980s - is packed with cultural references, touchstones, facts, witty asides, a dash of snark, and acknowledgments of once-obscure acts. Yet, he approaches each band like he's the first to have discovered it. He's a musical anthropologist, but also, archeologist, digging up the remains of musicians past, lest we forget." Emily Savage, San Francisco Bay Guardian "Few longtime pop music critics have been as fearlessly unhip in both their likes and dislikes, have been so willing to accept oft-ignored music on its own terms and have been as rock 'n' roll as Chuck Eddy, writer, former Village Voice music editor, self-described curmudgeon, ex-Army captain and hair-metal expert." Randall Roberts, Los Angeles Times "...Its 350 pages contain some of the best, most infuriating, provocative, silly, subversive and hilarious bits of music criticism published over the past quarter century." Kembrew McLeod, Little Village "I don't always agree with Chuck Eddy. In fact, I only occasionally agree with Chuck Eddy. But I'm always sure he cares, which I can tell not just because I know him, but because I love reading him. For more than twenty-five years he has been an original and indefatigable voice whose openness to new and unheralded music is legendary." Robert Christgau, Dean of American Rock Critics "I'm highly recommending this collection. You can't know music criticism unless you know Chuck Eddy." W. Scott Poole, Popmatters.com "He has run full speed against conventional wisdom and critical consensus, leaving a Chuck Eddy-shaped hole in the rock critical dialogue." Joe Gross, Statesman.com "When Chuck hears a pop song, it's like he is the first person who has ever heard it; he's certainly aware of what the rest of the world already wants to believe, but those pre-existing perceptions are never convincing to him... More than any other critic, Chuck Eddy showed how the experience of listening to music was both intellectually limitless and acutely personal. There was no 'correct' way to hear a song, and there were no fixed parameters on how that song could be described in print, and if that song made you reconsider abortion or the Oakland Raiders or your father's suicide, then that intellectual relationship mattered because your engagement was real." Chuck Klosterman, from the foreword "This wide-ranging collection of essays (from the Voice, Rolling Stone, Spin, etc.) captures Eddy's cantankerous, spirited, enthusiastic, and forceful takes on music from rap to country and musicians from Michael Jackson to Brad Paisley...Eddy's far-reaching insights into rock music push the boundaries of the rock criticism, showing why he remains one of our most important music critics." Publishers Weekly "Eddy shows that music is not only something to be audibly enjoyed but something limitless intellectual possibilities, something that can grow organically from one genre to the next and shape future sounds...Chuck Eddy has created a stunning portfolio of sometimes gracious and impressed comments and brutally honest and painful criticisms. Rock And Roll Always Forgets is a wonderful collection of some of his most controversial and well constructed works." Verbicide "Eddy's eccemtricity is not only refreshing and entertaining; it's also valuable... This is a vital counterbalance to the critical herd-mind, and a reminder of how much music making and music fandom exists outside the media radar, and never makes it into the official narrative." Bookforum "...it's a mother-lode of vibrant writing that captures the passionate energy of having a long-term love affair with America's most unruly and pervasive art forms" Marc Campbell, DangerousMint.net "...there's never any doubting Eddy's passion for music" Greg Beets, The Austin Chronicle "Eddy's unflinching ability to connect the dots between what he's hearing and what he's living makes Rock and Roll an electric read. It should trip wires in the minds of not just aspiring and current critics but also casual listeners who might not realize how much is below the surface of what they're hearing." - Michael Hoinski, Village Voice "[T]his new compendium of pieces by Eddy ... reads like an alternate history of pop's last 25 (or so) years, in which album-oriented rock is saved from itself by the Ramones' Too Tough To Die, latter-day Def Leppard isn't rendered irrelevant by Nirvana, and horn-rimmed consensus about indie darlings Animal Collective is just a bad dream." - Greg Beets, Austin Chronicle "[P]ure joy... [G]et on RARAF: There is plenty of fun strut and 4 a.m. deepness here, perhaps more than most University Press books ever have contained within. Even if you still have stacks of those old rags, and remember those cranky lines Eddy could italicize (where most would cowardly spit them out sideways). Rock and roll may always forget, but Chuck Eddy's work should often be causing trouble in mind." - Chris Estey, KEXP "One of the most energetic and engaging critics in the United States. Eddy might well be the last of the breed of music writers who are as interesting as the musicians they cover." - Alison Fensterstock, Times-Picayune "... Rock And Roll Always Forgets is entertaining and thought-provoking as only Eddy can achieve." - Rev. Keith A. Gordon, Blurt
Chuck Eddy is an independent music journalist living in Austin, Texas. Formerly the music editor at the Village Voice and a senior editor at Billboard, he is the author of The Accidental Evolution of Rock ’n’ Roll: A Misguided Tour through Popular Music and Stairway to Hell: The 500 Best Heavy Metal Albums in the Universe. Chuck Klosterman is a freelance journalist and the author of numerous books, including Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs: A Low Culture Manifesto and Fargo Rock City: A Heavy Metal Odyssey in Rural North Dakota.
This item is eligible for free returns within 30 days of delivery. See our returns policy for further details.