Rock Stars at Home

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Pub Date Jan 15 2019 | Archive Date Feb 22 2019

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Description

WATERMARKED PDF ONLY 


The first-ever guide to the most ostentatious and over-the-top homes in rock ’n’ roll history. 

You can tell a lot about people from the way they live, and rock stars are no exception. From Graceland to Neverland, private planes to island hideaways, Rock Stars at Home takes you inside the houses, pools, planes, music rooms, playgrounds, and more of the biggest names in rock and pop and some of the most extravagant home comforts ever known. 

Thirty homes are featured inside and their stars homeowners are history’s best from the 1950s through today. Elvis Presley, the Beatles, David Bowie, the Jacksons, Prince, Ozzy Osbourne . . . they’re all here. Packed with great photos throughout and eye-opening stories of wild behavior and even wilder interior décor, including insider accounts from those in the know, Rock Stars at Home is an entertaining and informative guide to living life like a rock star. 

In addition to 200 glorious photos, entries give insight into each star’s life (how they spent their time when at home), from Elvis’s extraordinary down-home diet to the wild parties hosted by Keith Richards at Redlands, scene of the famous 1967 drug busts that led to the arrest of Richards, Mick Jagger, and art dealer Robert Fraser. Features throughout focus on specific topics, from the Beatles’s psychedelic interiors to the extravagant styles of the MTV Cribs generation.

WATERMARKED PDF ONLY 


The first-ever guide to the most ostentatious and over-the-top homes in rock ’n’ roll history. 

You can tell a lot about people from the way they live, and rock stars are no...


A Note From the Publisher

Authors are available for interviews, blog tours, autographed tours, autographed book giveaways, contests, and book club discussions

Authors are available for interviews, blog tours, autographed tours, autographed book giveaways, contests, and book club discussions


Marketing Plan

About the Authors:

CHRIS CHARLESWORTH has worked as a music writer for over forty-five years, including spells on the staff of Melody Maker and as editor-in-chief of Omnibus Press. He has written and edited numerous books on rock and pop music, and many of his magazine articles can be found on rocksbackpages.com. Perhaps best known for his close association with The Who, about whom he has written extensively, Chris posts on a blog called Just Backdated. To learn more or connect with the author, please visit Charlesworth on Twitter.

EDDI FIEGEL is a freelance journalist and author based in London. She writes on music, arts, and travel for newspapers and magazines including the Independent on Sunday, the Independent, and Scotland on Sunday, among many others. She is the author of the acclaimed biographies Dream a Little Dream of Me: The Life of Mama Cass Elliot and John Barry: A Sixties Theme. She was a BBC radio reporter for many years and still presents and contributes on BBC radio and TV. To learn more or connect with the author, please visit Fiegel on Facebook or eddifiegel.com.


BRYAN REESMAN is a music and pop culture journalist and has contributed to over one hundred media outlets and written over one hundred cover stories across twenty different publications. The author of Bon Jovi: The Story, Bryan has also written liner notes for AC/DC, Judas Priest, Black Sabbath, 311, and dozens of other rock music luminaries, is a decade-long voting member of the Recording Academy and has contributed to six books on music. To learn more or connect with the author, please visit Reesman on Twitter or bryanreesman.com.


COLIN SALTER has written extensively on popular music and musicians, particularly American jazz and soul music of the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s. He wrote the US soul section for The Definitive Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rock, and the booklets for a series of CD compilations of early soul and rock’n’roll. Colin was a major contributor to the song-histories The Girl in the Song and The Boy in the Song, and to Classic Rock Posters, a comprehensive graphic art retrospective. To learn more or connect with the author, please visit Salter on Facebook or colinsalter.co.uk.


SIMON SPENCE collaborated with Rolling Stones manager and producer Andrew Loog Oldham on the classic memoirs Stoned and 2Stoned and is author of the highly acclaimed 2012 biography The Stone Roses: War and Peace and the recent Happy Mondays: Excess All Areas. He has written for NME, Dazed & Confused, The Face, i-D, the Independent, Japan Times, International New York Times, and Q. To learn more or connect with the author, please visit Spence on Twitter or wordsonmusic.co.uk.

DARYL EASLEA is a writer, DJ, and music consultant. He is at his happiest writing about African American pop or great musical eccentrics. He has written critically acclaimed biographies on Chic, Sparks, Michael Jackson, and Peter Gabriel. He broadcasts on www.sfob.co.uk and his work is published in Prog, Record Collector, and Mojo. To learn more or connect with the author, please visit Easlea on Twitter.

About the Authors:

CHRIS CHARLESWORTH has worked as a music writer for over forty-five years, including spells on the staff of Melody Maker and as editor-in-chief of Omnibus Press. He has written and...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781948062282
PRICE $24.99 (USD)
PAGES 176

Average rating from 13 members


Featured Reviews

This wonderful book explores the homes, hotels and family lives of many beloved rock stars, from Frank Sinatra to Led Zeppelin. The writing comes from many different journalists, who give us juicy details of the not so private lives of cultural icons. The photographs are fascinating and show the good, bad and the ugly of these celebrity homes.

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A fun book that provides insight into your favourite musicians.
Highly recommended as a gift. would be perfect for Christmas or Father's Day.
Enjoy

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The essence of people reflects in their domicile and how they function. of course if you are a rock star you tend to think of privacy but also creative textures. “Rock Stars At Home” [Chris Charlesworth/Apollo Publishers/176pgs] is a fascinating insight into people and how they live without being too intrusive. Complimented by interesting photos and very detailed descriptions at least of layout but also of design selections and landscapes within the houses, one gets a perspective of the people that lived in them, even for a short time. The most specific in the book that are detailed are The Rolling Stones and The Beatles for the most part. In watching how The Beatles struggled and then grew apart but also the balance really gives a perspective into what happened. Ringo Starr, George Harrison and John Lennon seemed to get along and even bought each other’s houses at times. Paul McCartney, even though some of his homes including a farm are discussed, really seems according to the book at times to be the odd man out which, as always, is a matter of perspective. The house where “Imagine” was filmed and which Ringo eventually bought gives a perspective into Lennon as does a lesser point The Dakota in NY. For The Stones, the infamous houses of Keith Richards and one of the early members that died before the advent of the 70s really give a perspective of how out-of-control those times were but never fully grotesque. Later in the book which is more in prose than visual form, the beginning lives of Motley Crue and Guns N’ Roses and their almost scavenger techniques are described on Sunset Blvd. years and above all really shows the underbelly of rock n roll as compared to the British Invasion. The stories are told from a multitude of perspectives of people who were around. Some of the more interesting takes are those rockers who definitely had a sense of real estate tactic to them, most specifically Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin. Though he seemed a little disheveled in the early 80s after the breakup of Zeppelin (mostly it seems also because of the OD of Bonzo [drummer John Bonham], his specificity to detail seems undeniable and plays into his current methodical element of remastering (which is why one more Zeppelin show per se especially considering his penchant for detail would be great). Robert Plant’s motivations might be different but his home is not shown in this book. Their planes and the charters that were used for many in the early 70s tours were interesting but it seems as if the plane wasn’t ownedd in comparison to today where celebrities own smaller G5s which cost infinitely more. The interesting aspect is that the perspective can be show for the older crowd. Granted certain stories of Sonny Bono & Cher’s as well as Barry Gibb, Neil Young and Bob Dylan among others really paint an aspect of idyllic elements but also of isolation and connection. The unassuming shots of Young and Dylan and how these places (like Johnny Cash’s home) truly enhance the creative properties but almost the internal vision of “the voice of a generation” (when they themselves privately integrated and debated thoughts of who they were and the stories they would tell) is fascinating. “Rock Stars At Home” is a undeniable look without pretentiousness (despite a bit of detail) that gives an interesting look into who these people are and were. Even though they might not say anything, their choice of details and of lifestyle speaks in many sectors to their aspect of being.

A

By Tim Wassberg

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