Solid, if short, book on Lou Gramm’s take on his life and career
What I liked about this book was Lou Gramm’s attempt to be as honest as possible while looking back over his career and in explaining why he made the decisions he did. I think Foreigner fans would have liked Gramm to have been a part of Foreigner for a longer period of time, particularly in his younger years before his brain surgery, because it would most probably have produced even more excellent and memorable music for us to appreciate and listen to. Gramm’s journey through his life and music has been his own, however, and it is interesting to learn the whys and wherefores of his decisions and the path he chose to follow. Thanks to him for that. I would have liked more of an in-depth look than this small book gave into the window of his soul and his days l, and nights, including friendships with fellow musicians, but I get a sense that Gramm is perhaps too private of a person to share much more than he did. Now that I’ve read the digital version of Juke Box Hero, I think I’d like to buy a hardback version in order to peruse the photographs taken throughout the years of his career to get an even better sense of his life as he lived it, and those he lived it with.