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The Gospel of the Hold Steady

How a Resurrection Really Feels

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An oral history (with photographs) of the greatest American bar band of the twenty-first century.

"Plenty of rock bands treat their fans like congregants. But, not many shine a light on the arrangement. Fewer still go as far as The Hold Steady, whose lead vocalist and lyricist, Craig Finn, has a disarming way of combining humility and exultation." —New York Times

On January 22, 2003, four men stepped onto a stage in Brooklyn and did something no one else was doing at that time, in that place. They played rock 'n' roll: old-fashioned rock 'n' roll with skyscraping riffs and sloppy solos, topped with extraordinary lyrics about an out-of-focus America, blurred by pills and powders, of crime and fear and desperation and redemption.

Twenty years later, The Hold Steady are one of America's most beloved rock bands, famed for live shows that turn unbelievers into converts, and for a catalog filled with some of the most exciting yet poetic music of the twenty-first century. To mark those twenty years, The Hold Steady tell their full story in The Gospel of The Hold Steady: How a Resurrection Really Feels.


An oral history, based on interviews with everyone who has played in the band, and those who have worked with them over the course of their career, The Gospel of the Hold Steady addresses all the triumphs and setbacks of The Hold Steady's career in the band's own words—from high times to near deaths, from the brink of splitting to their current renaissance. The volume also includes over 200 photographs and images.

The Gospel of The Hold Steady is completed by essays about America's greatest bar band by writers Rob Sheffield, Laura Barton, Isaac Fitzgerald, and Michael Hann, as well as the thoughts and memories of "The Unified Scene"—the fans who have helped define the band's identity over the years. This is a book for everyone who loves The Hold Steady, and anyone who understands that the magic of rock 'n' roll happens on a stage in a small room, with voices raised from the crowd.

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    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2023
      A colorful montage of stories about and photographs of American rock band The Hold Steady, by both members of the group as well as dedicated fans. "The Hold Steady didn't change my life, it is my life," writes the band's frontman, Craig Finn, in the introduction. "And if you've read this far, it's likely yours too." The band formed in 2003, when Finn moved from Minnesota to New York City following the breakup of his and guitarist Tad Kubler's previous band, Lifter Puller. This book's publication coincides with The Hold Steady's 20th anniversary. "We're all about to hit fifty or well into our fifties," says guitarist Steve Selvidge, "so there's not a lot of room for bullshit or drama at this point." Much of the "the gospel" features new interviews--compiled by Hann, a former music editor at the Guardian, to read as conversational dialogue--with band members, notably Finn, Kubler, and bassist Galen Polivka: "It was never a chore to practice," says Finn, "because we were gonna get a bunch of beer and have a party with the instruments on"; "If you put that much booze into people who are having fun," Polivka says, "it's going to invariably get weird"; "We're terrible communicators," notes Kubler, "and I think part of it is just being a bunch of guys from the Midwest who are not comfortable talking about how they feel." The text covers the band's history, loyal following, and plenty of alcohol. Chapters of dialogue are interspersed with a handful of reverential essays by music journalists, including Rob Sheffield and Hann, who writes, "The Hold Steady no longer spend shows drinking like they're at a Hold Steady show." The book closes with dozens of testimonials from devotees--e.g., "Their shows were the closest I'd come to a religious experience." A must-have for admirers of the band and a good choice to fans of bar rock.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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Languages

  • English

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