Tag Archive: Henry Rollins


GIRL IN A BAND – A MEMOIR by Kim Gordon (Day Street Books, 2015)

The somewhat reductive title is surely intended to be ironic since Kim Gordon’s autobiography is most certainly far than that of just another  ‘girl in a band’.

This is evidenced by the fact that the postscript defines her as an “artist, musician, producer, fashion designer, writer and actress”. Not only that but she is even a little dismissive of her musical prowess : “I’ve never thought of myself as a singer with a good voice or even as a musician”, she reveals.

Most of the time her desire to be a name in contemporary art world seems more important than being a rock star.

Despite this, Gordon is best known as founder member of post No Wave , pre-Grunge and super cool experimental rockers, Sonic Youth. This is a band who, she writes,“could only have come out of New York’s bohemian downtown art scene and the people in it”.

But anyone seeking a straight bio of the band will be disappointed by her non linear recollections. What dominates the plot is her relationship and marriage to Thurston Moore, the rise and fall of which parallels that of the band they founded together. The first chapter is entitled ‘The End’ and refers both to Sonic Youth’s final concert and the messy marital breakdown. Continue reading

I was born in the Midlands and lived in Birmingham for five years so I’ve always had a soft spot for local heroes Black Sabbath.

I saw them once at Birmingham Odeon in the mid 1970s around the time of the Sabbath Bloody Sabbath album and remember balancing on the back of a seat flashing the peace sign back at Ozzy Osborne for almost the whole show –  the closest I’ve ever come to being a headbanger.

It was, along with Hawkwind at the same venue, one of the loudest concerts I’ve experienced and it took me two days for my hearing to get back to normal.

For this reason, I couldn’t resist watching a one-hour BBC Classic Album documentary about the making of Paranoid in 1970.

It  was both highly entertaining and a case study in how to demystify of the record making process. Sabbath have never claimed to be sophisticated or innovative but almost by accident stumbled upon a winning formula that became a blueprint for metalheads everywhere.

Continue reading