Oh dear.
This puts me in a terrible quandary.
His manager was kind enough to send me a copy, and when it arrived I was
touched and gratified to see that it was signed by Patrick Campbell-Lyons
personally. They have been very kind and
very nice. This is why I am in
quandary.
The writing is excellent, just as one would
expect from such a literate and erudite songwriter. He paints a gripping picture of life in De
Valera’s Ireland in the grim
decade or so after the dissolution of the Irish Free State . The way this erudite young Irishman came to London just in time to
see it swinging is amusingly and sensitively written, and I can’t fault
it.
The way that he met up with a young Greek
musician and formed the immortal Nirvana which produced some of the most
gloriously psychedelic pop music of the 1960s is fascinating. He met Hendrix, the Rolling Stones, Mickie
Most, and even played on stage together with Salvador Dali. The story of how he met Hendrix in a pub, and
Hendrix rhapsodised lyrically about sexy Sylvia, their cellist was, and then
got the name of the group wrong – thinking they were called Nevada, is
priceless. Some of the most entertaining
parts of the book take place in Morocco and Paris, and the reader is taken on a
gloriously psychedelic journey with lysergic fingerprints writ large everywhere.
It talks about drugs, sex, the new equality of swinging London town in the
mid-60s, and the time when all you needed was
love, and is one of the best memoirs of that time that I have ever read.
So why the quandary?
The layout is – I am afraid – absolutely
horrible. I am not saying that because I am a book designer myself, but the
enormous typeface, double spacings, grainy pictures and spelling errors are
unforgivable and do this otherwise lovely little book a great injustice. On
pages 232 and 233, for example, there are entire lines in italics for no
reason, and – all the way through – I was itching to re-master it myself.
Am I going to recommend this book to you?
Damn tooting! It is a remarkable book, and I hope lots of you go out and buy
it, but I just wish it had been presented better.
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