other titles...

Graeme Thomson

Under the Ivy : The Life and Music of Kate Bush

paperback book - £12.99 | Pre Order
The critically acclaimed definitive biography of Kate Bush, revised and updated for 2024, with a new foreword by Sinead Gleeson.
Graeme Thomson

Small Hours : The Long Night of John Martyn

paperback book - £12.99 | Buy
[An] excellent and necessary biography - As well as displaying a love and understanding of his subject's finest music, the author is clear-eyed' - Guard...
Graeme Thomson

The Resurrection Of Johnny Cash

paperback book - £14.95 | Buy
"The Resurrection of Johnny Cash" tells the story of perhaps the most remarkable turnaround in musical history.
Themes for Great Cities - A New History of Simple Minds

Graeme Thomson

Themes for Great Cities - A New History of Simple Minds

constable/little brown book group
  • paperback book

    Released: 22nd Jun 2023

    £10.99
    Buy

An illuminating new biography of one of Britain's biggest and most influential bands, written with the full input and cooperation of Simple Minds, shedding new light on their dazzling art-rock legacy.

'Nobody owes us anything, but the Simple Minds story has been too condensed. After Live Aid and 'Don't You (Forget About Me)' there hasn't been quite the credit for those first few records. I think they contain some really special music. I can hear the flaws but there's something about the spirit and imagination in them that feels good. They draw from such a wide range of influences ... but the spirit of it was always Simple Minds.' Jim Kerr, to the author An illuminating new biography of one of Britain's biggest and most influential bands, written with the full input and cooperation of Simple Minds, shedding new light on their dazzling art-rock legacy. Themes for Great Cities features in-depth new interviews with original band members Jim Kerr, Charlie Burchill, Mick MacNeil and Derek Forbes, alongside key figures from within their creative community and high-profile fans such as Bobby Gillespie, James Dean Bradfield and Mogwai's Stuart Braithwaite. The book reclaims and revivifies the magnificence of Simple Minds' pioneering early albums, from the glitchy Euro-ambience of Real to Real Cacophony and Empires and Dance to the pulsing, agitated romance of Sons and Fascination, New Gold Dream and beyond. Emerging in 1978 from Glasgow's post-punk scene, Simple Minds transitioned from restless art-rock to electro futurism, mutated into passionate pop contenders and, finally, a global rock behemoth. They have sold in the region of 60 million records and remain a worldwide phenomenon. The drama of their tale lies in these transformations and triumphs, conflicts and contradictions. Themes for Great Cities tells the inside story of a band becoming a band. Inspiring, insightful a