From Publishers Weekly
A British acoustic-psychedelic entry into the ever-swelling hall of artists who died young, Nick Drake received little recognition during his short life. Yet more than 30 years after his death, his celebrity has never been greater and has been accompanied by reissues, documentary films and biographies—one Drake tune even rated a Volkswagen commercial. Born to a wealthy family, Drake showed early interest in music; by his university years he had developed a unique guitar style and brooding songs that had little to do with the hippie noodlings of the era. Heavy drug use and commercial failure pushed the already introverted Drake deeper into isolation and despair; he died of an overdose at the age of 26. To this day, questions swirl around every aspect of Drake's life, from his musical influences and sexuality to whether or not he intentionally killed himself. Unfortunately, Dann, producer of
Live Aid, brings little insight to the Drake mysteries. While he covers Drake's Cambridge years thoroughly, other aspects of the musician's life are barely mentioned; even interviews with Drake's closer friends reveal little—it just might be that no one really ever got close enough to him. By contrast, the book's discography is comprehensive and informative.
(Oct.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
Nick Drake, the English songwriter who has come to personify the young, sensitive, gloomy, and doomed composer of navel--gazing songs, released only three albums and 31 tracks of music before his fatal overdose in 1974 (he was 26). Ignored in his own time, his music gradually obtained a wider audience and a measure of popular acceptance. Dann sets out to reveal the person behind the virtuoso guitar playing and soft English lilt in this new biography. The problem is, his subject was elusive to those who knew him and remains so to his biographer. Nobody really knew Drake well, not even his friends. Too often Dann compensates by focusing on trivia (for instance, directions to Drake's Cambridge dormitory). By the end, we know things about Drake, but we don't know the man. Funny, then, how affected readers are by the loss when they arrive at the point of his death. Somehow, Dann captures enough of the shadow that was Drake that we care when the light is extinguished and the shadow lost. Given Drake's fierce reserve, this is no small accomplishment.
Jerry EberleCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.