Published 02/04/2020 | Paperback / softback,
Description:
‘Hepworth’s knowledge and understanding of rock history is prodigious … [a] hugely entertaining study of the LP’s golden age’ The TimesThe era of the LP began in 1967, with ‘Sgt Pepper’; The Beatles didn’t just collect together a bunch of songs, they Made An Album. Henceforth, everybody else wanted to Make An Album. The end came only fifteen years later, coinciding with the release of Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller’. By then the Walkman had taken music out of the home and into the streets and the record business had begun trying to reverse-engineer the creative process in order to make big money. Nobody would play music or listen to it in quite the same way ever again.
It was a short but transformative time. Musicians became ‘artists’ and we, the people, patrons of the arts. The LP itself had been a mark of sophistication, a measure of wealth, an instrument of education, a poster saying things you dare not say yourself, a means of attracting the opposite sex, and, for many, the single most desirable object in their lives.
This is the story of that time; it takes us from recording studios where musicians were doing things that had never been done before to the sparsely furnished apartments where their efforts would be received like visitations from a higher power. This is the story of how LPs saved our lives.

Girl, Woman, Other
England & Wales Island Bagging
365 Days of Wonder
May At 10
Night Games
Transcription
Whites
Buying Silence : How oligarchs, corporations and plutocrats use the law to gag their critics
Alison : a stunning and emotional graphic novel for fans of Sally Rooney, from an award winning illustrator and author
9 Lessons in Brexit
The Secret Commonwealth
Sea Change
The Robin
Walking the Old Ways of the Black Mountains & East Breconshire
Drums In The Distance : Journeys Into the Global Far Right
Why I'm No Longer Talking To White People About Race
Look Out Butterfly! : Band 00/Lilac
Collins Pocket French Dictionary
George's Marvellous Medicine
Windswept
Doughnut Economics : Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist
The Eternal Return of Clara Hart
One Two Three Four: The Beatles in Time


