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Van Morrison: No Surrender by Johnny Rogan β€” book cover
Pop Rock, Folk/Country/Southern Rock, Soft Rock, R&B/Soul, General & Miscellaneous Irish History, Rock Music - Biography, Pop, Rock, & Soul Musicians - Biography, Singers - Biography

Van Morrison: No Surrender

by Johnny Rogan
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Overview

In Van Morrison: No Surrender, Johnny Rogan has produced a provocative and revelatory biography of the musician, analysing the sense of place in his work and the tortuous journey that took him from local fame in Belfast to international success. Set against the cultural and political backdrop of Belfast, before, during and after the Troubles, No Surrender offers a unique and penetrating perspective on Morrison’s long career and the times that made him.

Synopsis

Definitive, provocative and revelatory, Johnny Rogan has produced a comprehensive portrait of an endlessly complicated man, his music, and the place he comes from.

Morrison grew up in 1950s Belfast at a time of an explosion in youth culture and the emergence of a beat scene second only to Liverpool, a vibrant period before the descent into sectarian conflict. For Morrison, whose personality seemed to typify the “No Surrender” Unionist mentality, this was a time of inner discovery and musical experiment.

He was an unlikely star and a publicist’s nightmare: short, with plain looks, wavy red hair and a potbelly, he gave fractious interviews and fell out regularly with friends and management. After a period of local success in Belfast clubs, and chart success with his band, Them, his great solo break came when he moved to America and recorded Astral Weeks, an album that was the start of a period of huge musical and commercial achievement and secured him the status of modern music icon.

Over the last five decades, his music has embraced rock, folk, blues, country and jazz, and he remains a hugely influential artist as well as a conundrum of a man. Van Morrison is the definitive biography of this great musician.
Johnny Rogan has been called pop’s most eccentric biographer, a fanatical searcher after truth. He is the author of sixteen books on musicians, including the Byrds, Roxy Music, the Kinks, the Smiths, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, and John Lennon. His work has been acclaimed endlessly in print and on radio and television.

The Times

No biography is likely to tell you more about Van Morrison.

About the Author, Johnny Rogan

Johnny Rogan has been called “Pop’s most eccentric biographer, a fanatical searcher after truth.” He is the author of books on the Byrds, Roxy Music, the Kinks, the Smiths, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, and John Lennon. His work has been acclaimed endlessly in print and on radio and television.


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Editorials

The Guardian

Rogan's book certainly sheds new light on the life and times of this puzzling and reclusive performer.

The Times

No biography is likely to tell you more about Van Morrison.

Kirkus Reviews

Nearly breath-by-breath biography of the influential Irish musician who has made a dent in rock, blues, folk, country and jazz. This comprehensiveness is particularly impressive considering that, in the more than 600 pages from music biographer Rogan (Neil Young, not reviewed), there is nary a word directly from the reclusive Morrison's lips. Rogan's analyses of Morrison's musical palette, critical standing and public image are exhaustive yet never exhausting. Juggling social, political, musical, psychological and personal elements, he creates a shape-shifting portrait of the artist, whom he notes is, at his core, obdurate, independent, passionate, adventurous, blunt and spiritually uneasy. Among the book's many riveting topics: Morrison's embryonic intensity and raw, bluesy sexuality; his interlude in Woodstock while the Bogside burned; his gypsy apotheosis; and his Janus-like qualities. Most fascinating, however, is the author's exploration of Morrison's hometown, Belfast, which informed the musician's "no surrender" attitude. This child of the '60s, who has displayed "poor communication skills, aggressive impatience, and absence of empathy," hoped for peace between his Catholic and Protestant neighbors and is not, in any case, a political animal. It was all about the music, singing with the ache of gospel and the joy of love, sharing the deep-running sentiment of his youth. Sprightly despite its amplitude, a narrative of propulsive drive that is also a reflective, associative piece of social history.

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2006
Publisher
Random House UK
Pages
640
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780099431831

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