Black Postcards: A Musical Romance
by Dean Wareham (Goodreads author!)
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 256)
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
galaxie 500 fans, indie music fans.
Dean Wareham, former lead singer of the bands Galaxie 500 and Luna toured multiple countries over the course of the last two-plus decades. Now he's committed to paper a compelling set of his own recollections in Black Postcards.
I grew up on Galaxie 500. they were ‘the’ band for me, in many respects. They gave voice to all that teenage loneliness and angst; But the non-gothic, non-emo, variety. Less dramatic.
The kind you mostly kept to yourself.
The kind where you just quietly en...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommended to Kirstie by:
Bradrecommends it for: fans of Luna, Galaxie 500, Dean and Britta, music autobiographies
This book gives a great deal of insight into the mind of Dean Wareham, lead singer of Galaxie 500, Luna, co lead in Dean and Britta. It reads much more like an autobiography of a person in bands than anything else. Like true autobiographies, it begins in childhood back in New Zealand. Dean talks about his family, most notably his brother who gets into all sorts of trouble throughout his life, and all of the music he listens to. That was one of the fun things about the book-we get to see how h...more
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bookshelves:
misc-nonfiction
Read in May, 2008
Dean Wareham - the frontman for Galaxie 500, Luna and most recently, Dean & Britta - has compiled his thoughts and diary excerpts since the beginning of his interest and participation in music history. His autobiography is quite frank, from the break-up of Galaxie 500 in the early 90s to the break-up of his marriage due to the hot bassist he had hired for Luna. Throughout he drops names of some big names in the music industry and others not so well known, making the read both interesting a...more
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Read in May, 2008
This doesn't seem like it should be a five-star book--a memoir by an indie rock also-ran? Yet it's a great read, start to finish. It helps to be a fan of Wareham's music, either with Galaxie 500 or Luna, but for anyone who was fan and follower of late '70s punk/new wave and then '80s and '90s indie rock, this is like a roadmap of the reader's musical life. Wareham listened to, played gigs with, or crossed paths with just about every noteworth indie musical act you could name during that period, ...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommended to Simone by:
We Sometimes Read book clubrecommends it for: music fans
I had not heard of Dean Wareham or Luna when I started reading this book. I took it on as a bit of a burden simply because it was this month's book club book and I try to be a good member, even though reading is not compulsory.
I have to say though, this book won me over pretty much right away. There was a great ease with Wareham's story telling that kept me engaged and interested without a lot of great explosive events to keep it going. I really liked that, for something I had no interest in...more
I have to say though, this book won me over pretty much right away. There was a great ease with Wareham's story telling that kept me engaged and interested without a lot of great explosive events to keep it going. I really liked that, for something I had no interest in...more
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This book is everything you want from a rock n roll page-turner. Dean writes in a way that makes him feel like he could easily be your friend- he's flippant yet affable. He doesn't hold back on his opinions about other bands, the industry, his friends, and his loves or trysts, which is exactly what you want from this sort of book. None of that candy-coating, boring placating stuff that famous people tend to do.
Perhaps it's called a Musical Romance because while reading this you can't he...more
Perhaps it's called a Musical Romance because while reading this you can't he...more
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I’m a long-time Dean Wareham fan and an avid reader of rock autobiographies, so I guess it makes sense that I loved this book. But I have to admit that I was nervous about reading it. After I read a few reviews and I saw how Penguin was marketing Black Postcards, I was worried it would focus too much on Dean's failing marriage and his romance with Luna bassist Britta Phillips. Thankfully, this book covers what I really wanted to read about: Dean Wareham's bittersweet affair with rock music....more
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Read in June, 2008
Maybe I'm being too harsh with my review, but I don't think so-- many of the features that would make you think a Dean Wareham book a lay-up of pure pleasure are missing here. The man is known through his lyrics for being funny and suave, quick with a good natured sizing up and pinning down, an acute social observer, but there's little of that here, aside from some occasionally funny asides, like comparing Eddie Vedder's vocal style to Cher's. But there are far too few moments like that in this ...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
fans of Luna, Galaxie 500, Wareham, indie rock fans, people who have been in a band
I think only a fan of Galaxie 500/Luna would give this book 4 stars, but I think any rock fan would enjoy it some.
A few things I wish I could say to Wareham:
1) I don't have a lot of patience for people who leave their family when they have a small child. I wish you had given more of a reason than "I had a crush on Britta." And I think you're fooling yourself when you say your romance started after the Boulder, CO show. I said to my husband that night that there was somethi...more
A few things I wish I could say to Wareham:
1) I don't have a lot of patience for people who leave their family when they have a small child. I wish you had given more of a reason than "I had a crush on Britta." And I think you're fooling yourself when you say your romance started after the Boulder, CO show. I said to my husband that night that there was somethi...more
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Read in May, 2008
recommends it for:
Galaxie 500 fans, Luna fans
Over the last 15 years whether with Galaxie 500, Luna, or Dean & Britta, Dean Wareham has been been one of my favorite artists.
Having been a huge Galaxie 500, Luna, and Dean & Britta fan over the past 15 years, I was really excited to sit down and read Wareham's recent autobiography.
I'm not disappointed...he tells so many great stories about his influences, the rigors of touring, and of trying to maintain friendships (and a marriage) while living the life of an indie rock n' roll...more
Having been a huge Galaxie 500, Luna, and Dean & Britta fan over the past 15 years, I was really excited to sit down and read Wareham's recent autobiography.
I'm not disappointed...he tells so many great stories about his influences, the rigors of touring, and of trying to maintain friendships (and a marriage) while living the life of an indie rock n' roll...more
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Read in June, 2008
Galaxie 500 is one of my all time faves and one of the few bands I feel like I discovered on my own and never really shared with anybody, so I had to get this book.
It starts off so poorly, though. Wareham should know that we want to read a memoir and not a full blown autobiography, but the first chapter quickly gets down to explaining his great-grandparents and working its way up to Wareham's birth and then a year by year account of his elementary schooling. Pretty unnecessary, I'm thinking....more
It starts off so poorly, though. Wareham should know that we want to read a memoir and not a full blown autobiography, but the first chapter quickly gets down to explaining his great-grandparents and working its way up to Wareham's birth and then a year by year account of his elementary schooling. Pretty unnecessary, I'm thinking....more
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Read in April, 2008
recommended to Megan by:
liz phair
Liz Phair reviewed this memoir by Galaxie 500/Luna frontman Dean Wareham for the NY Times Sunday Book Review. ("I was flying into Chicago at night .....And I was pretending that I was in a Galaxie 500 video.") It's a good exercise in early '90s nostalgia but his writing is not terribly revealing and did not move me. I found the most remarkable thing to be Wareham's perfect recall of what music was playing during every significant and insignificant moment in his life. He gives the r...more
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Read in May, 2008
I wasn't a big fan of Luna and I had never even heard of Galaxie 500 but someone at work recommended this, so I decided to give it a whirl. It's a fantastic book that walks you through the life of an indie band in pre- and post-Internet America. We all have a sense of what it's like for successful bands and most people have some kind of connection to a failed band of some kind, but it's pretty amazing to read about a band that's almost successful (although Luna's longevity is very, very i...more
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Read in March, 2008
This was lovely. I've always been very fond of Dean and his band, admired him even, for his suave detachment and oblique lyricism. This book humanizes him in ways good and bad, but it doesn't make me like him any less. It makes me miss Luna a whole lot more, though, at the same time that it makes me wonder how they could have stuck at it for so long without really ever getting paid. We obviously didn't appreciate them enough while they were around. I wish I'd paid more for all of my tickets...more
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Read in April, 2008
I love Luna and Galaxie 500, so of course I asked for this for my birthday! It's not as gossipy and scandalous as Liz Phair's NYTBR review led me to believe, but Wareham honestly assesses his asshole-ness - a prostitute? ew! Still, the book is mainly a reminder that even bands that seem to have it good (compared to others in the indie world) really don't have it that good, that touring can suck and band meeting are boring and recording can be a pain in the ass. And if you have friends in bands, ...more
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Read in June, 2008
As a huge fan of all things Wareham, I was thrilled when I heard about this book. I devoured it in less than 24 hours. I loved all the details he shares about making the records, being on tour & the reality of the music business (which we all know by now sucks). But the one thing I wasn't expecting but I was pleasantly surprised by, was his willingness to admit he has on more than one occasion been a cad. I always have a soft spot for any person that can acknowledge that they are not perfect...more
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Read in March, 2008
Written by Dean from Luna, which is one of my favorite all time bands. After reading this book (which I scarfed down in one day), I feel like I know Dean as an intimiate friend - all of his life was opened to full display, including the drugs, sex and rock & roll. I recommend this book for folks interested in reading a first hand account of indie vs major label deals. Dean doesn't glorify indie labels, but he does glorify the 'Neil Diamond'.
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Read in March, 2008
Just finished this book. Luna was my all time favorite band in the 90's. Dean Wareham, founder, singer, songwriter of said band wrote a book about his experience. Painfully frank, wonderfully cynical and full of detail about what is like to be in a band. A band with a strong following on a major label that eventually gets dropped and breaks up. This book gave me a lot of closure and effectively extinguished and lingering fantasies about running off to be a rock star. I read this book in one week...more
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I thoroughly enjoyed this book by the former G500/Luna man. The fact that I've been listening to his deadpan delivery for half my life may have something to do with my positive impression. Reading Dean's recollections brought back many old memories. It also made me want to pick up my guitar and hit the road. For the non-fan, the book still offers a great peak inside the world of rock and roll, particularly the strange world of 1990's alternative/modern rock/indie/whatever. Also some great reflec...more
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Read in June, 2008
unlike most rock 'n' roll books, dean wareham's memoir talks about what it's like to spend a decade plus in bands that nearly made it.... sleeping on floors after playing shows to 11 people in belgium, getting fawned over by labels and then dropped, and spending hours and hours in an econoline van. well written and full of great advice if you ever play in or plan to play in a band while also achieving the difficult task of explaining why it might be worth it in the end.
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