Live!: Why We Go Out
Robert Elms. Unbound, $26.50 (288p) ISBN 978-1-80018-282-0
BBC radio broadcaster Elms (The Way We Wore) delivers an effusive if haphazard ode to concerts and other live musical performances. Casting a wide net, he rhapsodizes over the pleasures of clubbing as a teenager (“You watch each other rather than a band... the music is the soundtrack to your story”); bemoans a disappointing show during which Al Green spent most of his time “handing out roses ‘to the laydees’ and praising the Lord”; and reflects on a more recent Paul Weller concert that fostered “a tangible feeling of unity, which gets so much rarer as we get older, more distanced, more alone.” Such moments vividly capture the appeal of live music, though they’re hampered by the author’s tendency to name-drop (Amy Winehouse sent him a platinum copy of Back in Black as thanks for having her on his radio show) and veer into tangents, including a series of strained comparisons between music and soccer. The result is more a hodgepodge of anecdotes than the focused study the title suggests. Readers will need patience to separate the wheat from the chaff. (Apr.)
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Reviewed on: 04/30/2024
Genre: Fiction