I received a free electronic copy of this memoir from Netgalley, Paul Dodgson, and Unbound publishing. Thank you all for sharing your hard work with me. I have read On the Road Not Taken of my own volition, and this review reflects my honest opinion of this work.
Paul Dodgson was a child who loved music and envisioned himself as a musician, dreamed of making music and sharing his art with the world - except for that massive, unfaceable stage fright that he couldn't seem to get past. We travel with him, from his youth in the tiny community of Hythe, Kent, England in the 1960's, through his breakthrough in the 2010's when he actually starts finishing some of the songs he started as a youth, learning to complete those songs of his youth on the guitar, and found 'the' guitar - the instrument he was meant to have. He did make a career around music, writing plays and music for BBC Radio, for the stage, for television. He was even a 'Voice' in demand on the radio. And then in 2015 after attending a concert by Frank Turner, he knows he has to get out there, to at least TRY to share his music with the world the way he had always wanted to do. Maybe just a little world, but share he must. It would not be easy. But he would do it...
I found it interesting that Paul Dodgson is a southpaw but was taught to play conventional guitar. Some of the best guitarists from the US were left-handed but played conventionally. Jimi Hendrix. Stevie Ray Vaughn. Hendrix's unique sound is created as he plucked up, rather than strummed down on the strings. It will be interesting to watch Paul Dodgson as he matures as an artist. Our boys died much too young. Will be nice to see an older southpaw rocker...
Pub date changed to Sept 5, 2019
pub date August 22, 2019
Unbound publishers
Reviewed on August 26 at Goodreads, Netgalley.
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