Details of their association with Andy Warhol and The Factory and of their on-off reunion in France in 1990 and their subsequent more permanent reunion in 1992.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
As perfect of a document as we are likely to have,
By
This review is from: Up-Tight: The Velvet Underground Story (Paperback)
Some 20 years after it's first publication, UP-TIGHT remains the definitive history of The Velvet Underground, and is also one of the essential glimpses into the social and creative world of Warhol's Factory.Very well illustrated, with many black and white photos documenting the era, Bockris compiles and edits an oral history of the time, with valuable input from all of the key players. Highly recommended for those with any interest in the Velvets, or Warhol, and an essential snapshot of America's 60s cultural landscape. -David Alston
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
She couldn't believe what she heard at all ....,
By
This review is from: Uptight (Classic rock reads) (Paperback)
A concise biography that details the trajectory of the Velvet Underground month-by-month, year-by-year, as the group evolves from Lou Reed's pop-rock roots to Andy Warhol patronage and art-rock noise, through a subdued, confessional third album and finally, "despite all the amputations," to rock'n'roll. Victor Bockris has written a witty, detailed story with first-person accounts, full of the band's personal turmoil, drug use, and ego-fueled confrontations. The interviews illuminate the art of the music and the band's struggle for commercial success in equal measure, two opposing goals that lead to the inevitable end of the band with centrifugal force. Great black-and-white photographs capture a band as interested in its own look as in its music. This is much more than a fan's book, and the Velvets' highwire act performed without a net ought to dispel any notion of the monolithic "peace and love" image of Sixties' music.
14 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Intelligent & entertaining approach,
By A Customer
This review is from: Uptight: The Story of the Velvet Underground (Classic Rock Read) (Paperback)
An intelligent and entertaining approach to one of the most influential (read: they didn't sell a lot of records in their heyday)rock bands ever. Great pix too. The Velvets epitomized a time when artists didn't feel narrowly compelled to practise any ONE discipline, but rather people were less afraid to combine ideas, cross genres and disciplines. The spirit of the time, to me, suggests Possibility. Yes, Warhol et al. could drift into pretention, but that's the price (and it's really not such a costly one) you pay for being daring. You may go too far sometimes, and by today's (stupid?) standards, perhaps some of the VU "happenings" might appear contrived. But I don't think so! Altogether, VU rules. Way ahead of their time, and before it too. And beside it.Buy this book, but more importantly, buy into the Underground.
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