Voices: How a Great Singer Can Change Your Life

Author(s): Nick Coleman

Music

"Voices isn't just illuminating and thought-provoking and clever; it is exciting." --Roddy Doyle, author of The Commitments

A personal exploration of what singing means and how it works, Voices is a book about our deepest, most telling relationships with music. Nick Coleman examines the act of singing not as a performance but as a close, difficult moment of hopeful connection. What does it do to us, emotionally and psychologically, to listen hard and habitually to somebody else's singing? Why is human song so essential to our lives? The book asks many other questions, too: Why did Jagger and Lennon sing like that (and not like this)? Billie, Janis, Amy: must the voices of anguish always dissolve into spectacle? What makes us turn again and again to a singing human voice?

The history of postwar popular music is often told in terms of its sociology, influence, or style. Voices offers a different, intimate perspective. In ten discrete but cohering essays, Coleman tackles the arc of that history as an emotional experience with real psychological consequences. He writes about the voices that have affected the ways he feels about and understands the world--from Aretha Franklin to Amy Winehouse, Marvin Gaye to David Bowie. Ultimately, Voices is the story of what it is to listen and be moved--what it is to feel emotion.


Product Information

"Voices isn't just illuminating and thought-provoking and clever; it is exciting." -- Roddy Doyle "A deeply personal hymn, aria, sea shanty and saloon bar serenade... Voices is not merely an elegantly written study of a parade of fabled artists, but a long, heartfelt song of gratitude. It's well worth hearing." -- Graeme Thomson * The Mail on Sunday * "Unusual and affecting... An elegant, controlled writer whose curiosity is as engaging as his whooping passion." -- Jane Graham * The Big Issue * "A brilliant read." -- James McNair * The National * "A fantastic writer." -- Lois Wilson * Mojo *

Following a brief spell as a stringer at NME in the mid-1980s, Nick Coleman was Music Editor of Time Out for seven years, then Arts and Features Editor at the Independent and the Independent on Sunday. He has also written on music for The Times, Guardian, Telegraph, New Statesman, Intelligent Life, GQ and The Wire. He is the author of The Train in the Night, which was shortlisted for the 2012 Wellcome Book Prize.

General Fields

  • : 9780224102513
  • : Random House
  • : Jonathan Cape
  • : 0.56699
  • : 25 January 2018
  • : 222mm X 144mm X 30mm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Nick Coleman
  • : Hardback
  • : English
  • : 782.42
  • : 320