A Cure For Gravity, A
Condition: SECONDHAND
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In this accomplished autobiography, Jackson describes his early days, long before he became a household name. In describing his childhood in Portsmouth and the early classical training in music that changed his life, he manages to convey both the excitement and liberation he felt as a youth when he realised he was musically gifted and the take he has on it with the benefit of hindsight, now that he is older and wiser. ackson brings this time to life, writing about doomed bands, personality clashes between band members and playing the piano in rough pubs, driving a decrepit van for hundreds of miles to play in front of a handful of people. But this is no gig-by-gig list of events or songs, it's a simply a wealth of good stories of tough or discouraging nights, as well as the fulfilling ones. Always in the forefront is his conviction that, whatever it brings, music is his life. An excellent raconteur, he also has a dry, understated sense of humour. His portrayal of his own insecurity and shyness just emphasises how personal and revealing A Cure For Gravity is. orming an effective spine to the book is Jackson's personal musical philosophy, which basically comes down to- play what y
Author: Joe Jackson
  Format: Paperback, 320 pages
  Published: 1999, Transworld Publishers Ltd, United Kingdom
  Genre: Autobiography: The Arts
  
                
                  Description
                  
                
                
In this accomplished autobiography, Jackson describes his early days, long before he became a household name. In describing his childhood in Portsmouth and the early classical training in music that changed his life, he manages to convey both the excitement and liberation he felt as a youth when he realised he was musically gifted and the take he has on it with the benefit of hindsight, now that he is older and wiser. ackson brings this time to life, writing about doomed bands, personality clashes between band members and playing the piano in rough pubs, driving a decrepit van for hundreds of miles to play in front of a handful of people. But this is no gig-by-gig list of events or songs, it's a simply a wealth of good stories of tough or discouraging nights, as well as the fulfilling ones. Always in the forefront is his conviction that, whatever it brings, music is his life. An excellent raconteur, he also has a dry, understated sense of humour. His portrayal of his own insecurity and shyness just emphasises how personal and revealing A Cure For Gravity is. orming an effective spine to the book is Jackson's personal musical philosophy, which basically comes down to- play what y
             
         
      A Cure For Gravity, A