What do you think?
Rate this book


384 pages, Hardcover
First published October 6, 2009
In '61, [Lou] Adler moved to Orange Ave. off Hollywood Blvd. and became very involved with The Crickets, The Everly Brothers, Snuff Garrett, and Liberty Records because Jan & Dean were on Liberty. Adler met [D.J.] Art Laboe when he first started working with Jan & Dean.It was especially irksome when it would be a whole lot of name-dropping and I didn't know half (or more) of the names. The sections on 40s- and 50s-era jazz and newer music from the 90s and more recently were particularly bad for me in that respect, since I'm not familiar with that music. If some explanation had been given, even a sentence or two on the big names saying who did what and why that was important, it could have been an interesting hook to get started exploring that era's music. As it was, it was more like listening to your tipsy uncle rambling about people you've never heard of for pages at a time without being able to get a word in edgewise. But even the sections on the music I know and like were hard to follow and contained very little in the way of actual information. You'd be better off reading biographies (or even Wikipedia articles) of the bands you're interested in, because at least those would have some semblance of organization.
"I had gone to his events at Scrivner's as a customer," Adler reminisces. "You would bring him records. We used to have groups play roller rinks. Phil Spector and the Reddy Bears did roller rinks. In East L.A. I grew up on R&B and jazz. I was into pop music and went to jazz concerts. One of my first big dates was going to Ciro's. I took a nurse. I was working at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital and going to Los Angeles City College.
"For me at three o'clock in the morning I was at Pink's Hot Dogs eating a hot dog, a hamburger, and a tamale. But I should be credited for bringing meals from the Villa Capri to the recording studio."