cover image The New Rolling Stone Album Guide: Completely Revised and Updated 4th Edition

The New Rolling Stone Album Guide: Completely Revised and Updated 4th Edition

Nathan Brackett. Fireside Books, $29.95 (944pp) ISBN 978-0-7432-0169-8

""How do you make an album guide that fits in a book bag?"" Bracket asks in the introduction to this door-stopping compendium. ""Selectively,"" he answers. To trim down the possibilities, the editors of this book decided to limit their entries to domestically released recordings currently available through major online stores. This makes it easy for consumers to buy what they want, as long as they want the latest mainstream music. Roughly 70 percent of the writing in this guide is new; Brackett notes that the editors chose artists who ""have made a lasting, undeniable contribution to pop music."" There are extra-long entries for Miles Davis, Dion, John Lee Hooker, B.B. King, Elvis and Muddy Waters, but a few baffling oversights (e.g., George Harrison is missing while the maligned Paula Abdul remains). The Guide is not intended for popular music historians, but a comparison with earlier editions reveals much about trends in popular music commentary: Chicago's recordings, once ahead of their time, are now ""schlock;"" a Rolling Stone reviewer has realized that Yes made some good records; and Tony Bennett merits triple the space he occupied in 1992. The new edition's 72 authors (vs. the four in 1992) produce a tone and style less consistent than in past editions. Some things have not changed: the best-selling albums generally get the highest ratings, and punks and bluesmen are demigods. Often entertaining, the guide offers comprehensive album lists and usefully ranks the innumerable collections available for many artists. (Also welcome is the short section on anthologies and soundtracks.) However, readers seeking lengthy reviews of individual albums would probably be better off looking elsewhere.