Here Comes the Night: The Dark Soul of Bert Berns and the Dirty Business of Rhythm and Blues
₱1,384.00
Product Description
I don’t know where he’s buried, but if I did I’d piss on his grave.” Jerry Wexler, best friend and mentor.
Here Comes the Night: The Dark Soul of Bert Berns and the Dirty Business of Rhythm and Blues is both a definitive account of the New York rhythm and blues world of the early 60s, and the harrowing, ultimately tragic story of songwriter and record producer Bert Berns, whose meteoric career was fueled by his pending doom. His heart damaged by rheumatic fever as a youth, doctors told Berns he would not live to see twenty-one. Although his name is little remembered today, Berns worked alongside all the greats of the era Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, Ahmet Ertegun and Jerry Wexler, Burt Bacharach, Phil Spector, Gerry Goffin and Carole King, anyone who was anyone in New York rhythm and blues. In seven quick years, he went from nobody to the top of the pops producer of monumental r&b classics, songwriter of Twist and Shout,” My Girl Sloopy” and others.
His fury to succeed led Berns to use his Mafia associations to muscle Atlantic Records out of a partnership and intimidate new talents like Neil Diamond and Van Morrison he signed to his record label, only to drop dead of a long expected fatal heart attack, just when he was seeing his grandest plans and life’s ambitions frustrated and foiled.
Review
“Selvin’s tale…rights a historical injustice, shining a light on an overshadowed great man and deepening our understanding of a history we continue to dance to.”
New York Times
“[a] compelling biography of a man who wrote and produced records in a fever. It’s also an unvarnished account of the often-sordid world of East Coast music publishers, tunesmiths, record hustlers, label executives, gamblers, studio engineers, rack-jobbers, dee jays and leg breakers. This book belongs in the esteemed company of groundbreaking exposes […] Selvin has told the story of a tortured soul of worthy of the Deems Taylor Award.”
Downbeat Magazine
“Joel Selvin’s new book makes a claim to greatness. In the world of glaringly and exhaustively over-examined star bios, the San Francisco-based journalist not only exhumes a lost soul in the pantheon of 60s pop and soul (along with capturing rock n’ roll’s burgeoning eruption), he also creates as engaged and energetic a narrative as any so-called serious writing can contain.”
Paste Magazine
“The author provides a vivid, character-filled picture of the wild west atmosphere of the New York music biz, often branching out into narrative detours that are consistently entertaining and enlightening”
Austin Chronicle
“Selvin has such great fun telling tales about off-kilter, unscrupulous record-biz
denizens […] the book is both an informative history of a wild time in the music business and a compendium of acerbically delivered gossip”
Maclean’s
“[…] a detailed insider’s look at 20th-century music.”
San Jose Mercury News
“Berns is simply a hook for a larger history of the business of rhythm and blues in the 1960s. Here Comes the Night paints this milieu unscrupulous businessmen shilling teenybopper hits”
Los Angeles Review of Books
“Here, Selvin chronicles in delicious detail the golden era of the early 1960s rhythm and blues music scene and the turbulent, hard-knuckle world of record-making behind the glitzy, gold foil façade of rock and roll success and glamor.”
Cleveland Plain Dealer
“Here Comes the Night makes a strong case for Berns as the consummate record man, not just another white guy trolling to world of NYC independent R&B looking for a buck but a passionate believer in music…. Selvin takes a labyrinthine tale involving hundreds of characters and tames it… It’s a classic a’60s music story as any. And Selvin tells it with period-appropriate style… In the 400-plus pages […] Selvin also proves a shred salesman: by the end you’ll have bought into the idea that Bert Berns, for all his flaws, was truly one of the great ones.”
Mo
₱1,384.00