Cheap Me, the Mob, and the Music: One Helluva Ride with Tommy James and the Shondells Discount Review Shop
To start with I have to admit that I am a huge TJ fan and have seen TJ and his various bands at least a dozen times since 1970. I have every album to date and love TJ's music so I was really happy he wrote this book. It's a quick read and does have a nice flow, but I wanted more. Tommy isn't just another "lucky" one hit wonder or forgotten recording artist that had a few hits and was resigned to the oldies circuit. Tommy James has had an incredible career and is still writing, recording and out there on the road headlining his own tours.
Tommy James is one of the few recording artists from the 60's who could offer a great overview of the many changes in music both artistically and technically through the years. Tommy wasn't just a singer/guitar player he also wrote and produced his own records and took advantage of each new advancement of recording technology to improve the sound of his recordings. Tommy James helped pioneer new techniques in studio throughout the 60's and 70's. He went from the mono one track reel to reel recordings of the original Shondells to todays unlimited digital recording studios yet not a word in the book mentions any of this. Listen to Tommy's 1977 album "Midnight Rider". It is one of finest state-of-the-art recordings to have come out of that period. A technical masterpiece, yet there is barely a mention of it in his book.
Tommy's career went from small club column PA systems and the "in-house" PA systems of gymnasiums and theaters to the huge and elaborate systems he uses today. Tommy more than any artist still out there playing today has seen so many changes in his career I was hoping for a little more of that perspective. Maybe that's a subject he is keeping for his 2nd book. This book centers on his time with Roulette Records and that is pretty much it. His career after his first couple of solo hits is written more as a quick overview of the past 30 years of his career with hardly a mention of the great things he has done since.
Still, something is better than nothing. What there is is good. I just want more.
Available at Amazon
Cheap "Me, the Mob, and the Music: One Helluva Ride with Tommy James and the Shondells" Discount Review Shop
"Me, the Mob, and the Music: One Helluva Ride with Tommy James and the Shondells" Feature
- ISBN13: 9781400116324
- Condition: New
- Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed
"Me, the Mob, and the Music: One Helluva Ride with Tommy James and the Shondells" Overview
Customer Reviews
+1/2 - The education and seduction of a rock `n' roll hit maker - hyperbolium - Earth, USA
Tommy James came of age just as pop was giving way to rock `n' roll. Elvis Presley's performance on Ed Sullivan provided the initial epiphany, and five-days-a-week of American Bandstand, a job in a record store, junior high school talent shows and a prototypical garage band steeped him in both music and the music business. The early pages of this autobiography provide a great sense of what it was like to be in a rock `n' roll band in the summer of 1963, from the joy of making music to the grind of trying to make a living. But once "Hanky Panky" caught fire in 1966, James was introduced to most of his fans as a fully-formed star; here you get to read about the dues he paid.
James' rise to fame has been told before, but the details of his first single's belated success - its initial failure, fluke resurrection in Pittsburgh, and canny national reissue on Roulette - is a great story. It's also the lead-in to the book's main thread: the difficult, father-son-like relationship between James and Roulette founder Morris Levy. In contrast to his co-dependency with Levy, his relationships with wives, children and band members weren't nearly so sticky. James' first wife and their son are ghosts in the narrative, nearly abandoned in his move to New York and divorced as he takes up with the Roulette Record secretary who eventually became his second wife. His second wife eventually meets a similar fate as he cheats on her and eventually moves on.
He forms and dispatches several iterations of the Shondells, with little expressed emotion. He fires half the band after they fight for monies owed in the wake of "I Think We're Alone Now," and is complicit in helping Levy cheat songwriters Ritchie Cordell and Bo Gentry by demanding songs they were pitching to artists whose labels would actually pay royalties. As with the affairs presaging his divorces, these episodes seem to be evidence of a self-centeredness learned from Levy rather than explicitly cruel behavior. But there's surprisingly little remorse offered here, and what there is - five sentences when his first wife reappears for a divorce - doesn't measure up to the affronts. Perhaps James wasn't ready to share his innermost thoughts and personal feelings in an autobiography.
His telling of stories from the music side of his life is a great deal more compelling. Threaded throughout - and really, most successful musicians' careers - is a surprising amount of luck; for James this includes the revival of "Hanky Panky" in Pittsburgh, the discovery of songs for two follow-up singles, a chance meeting with songwriter Ritchie Cordell, the creation of "Mirage," and the incidental knowledge of arranger Jimmy Wisner. What you realize is that James put in the work from a very young age, studied and rehearsed, and put himself in a position to make these opportunities pay off. The crossing of paths may have been serendipitous, but the knowledge and ability to execute was hard-earned. The writing is more anecdotal than nuts and bolts accountings of music making, but you get a good feel for how James navigated changes in the industry to maintain a hit-making career across two decades.
As one might expect from a book entitled "Me, the Mob and the Music," James spends a great deal of time writing about his relationship with Levy and his underworld associates. It's not clear if he fully understands why his relationship with the godfather of the music industry became the center of his adult life, but it's evident how it tainted his relationships with friends, wives, family and associates. Now twenty-four years sober and drug free, James seems at peace with who he was (characterizing his second divorce with "she was a good person, I was a flaming []"), and he's still exciting fans with regular gigs. This isn't the most personally revealing rock `n' roll biography, but it adds some welcome detail to the career of Tommy James. 3-1/2 stars, if allowed fractional ratings. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]
Hanky panky - Pen mightier than sword -
A kid who becomes an overnight success falls into the hands of a mob-connected record producer. Getting out isn't easy no matter how unhappy Tommy James is with what he sees happening around him.
Addiction to pills quickly follows success; doctors prescribe them, so what could be wrong with them? Popping pills wasn't like shooting heroin. Such was the thinking back then.
I've always loved this guy's music, and I was interested in the story behind the songs. Part of writing an autobiography is being honest, and anyone who does that will come off as far less than perfect.
I'm sorry that as a kid I bought so many records at the store that the book links to the evil record producer.
It's a great read for someone interested in the entertainment business - Drumming Man -
Tommy James gives a great account of his recording career at Roulette records. Anyone involved in the music business will appreciate this narrative.
Available at Amazon
Cheap "Me, the Mob, and the Music: One Helluva Ride with Tommy James and the Shondells" Discount Review Shop
No comments:
Post a Comment