|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewMaybe you caught a few exhilarating seconds of ""Teen Age Riot"" on a nearby college radio station while scanning the FM dial in your parents' car. Maybe your friend invited you to a shabby local rock club and you ended up having a religious experience with Neutral Milk Hotel. Perhaps you were scandalized and tantalized upon sneaking Liz Phair's Exile in Guyville from an older sibling's CD collection, or you vowed to download every Radiohead song you could find on Limewire because they were the favorite band of the guy you had a major crush on. However you found your way into indie rock, once you were a listener, it felt like being part of a secret club of people who had discovered something special, something superior. In Such Great Heights, music journalist Chris DeVille brilliantly captures this cultural moment, from the early aughts and the height of indie rock, until the 2010s as streaming rocks the industry and changes music forever. DeVille covers the gamut of bands and in the vein of Chuck Klosterman's The Nineties, touches on staggering pop culture moments like sharing music recommendations via AOL Instant Messenger and the life-changing OC soundtrack. Nerdy, fun, and a time machine for millennials, Such Great Heights is about how subculture becomes pop culture, how capitalism consumes what's ""cool,"" about who gets to define what's hip and how, and how an ""underground"" genre shaped our lives. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Chris DeVillePublisher: St Martin's Press Imprint: St Martin's Press Dimensions: Width: 14.70cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 22.00cm Weight: 0.444kg ISBN: 9781250363381ISBN 10: 1250363381 Pages: 368 Publication Date: 26 August 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviews""In the future, when the history of early 21st century indie rock is taught in schools, children will need a textbook to educate them in the ways of The Shins, Death Cab For Cutie, and Clap Your Hands Say Yeah. And those adorable cybernetic babes decked out in space suits will reach for one learned text: Chris DeVille's Such Great Heights."" --Steven Hyden, author of There Was Nothing You Could Do and Long Road ""For those of us who lived through the indie boom and obsessed over every new micro-scene and major release, Such Great Heights is as passionate and comprehensive as that cultural moment deserves -- but even the blog-agnostic will find tons to latch onto in Chris DeVille's writing, which is at once funny, authoritative and full of touching anecdotes. Such Great Heights is a wonderful read, and the type of snapshot that any type of music fan will find accessible."" --Jason Lipshutz, executive director of music at Billboard and author of It Starts with One ""What does indie mean to you? A '90s Pavement fan, a Millennial Seth Cohen devotee, and someone who owns every vinyl variant of Taylor Swift's Folklore--they'd all have vastly different definitions, but they're passionate just the same. In this anthropological exploration of 21st century indie, Chris DeVille chronicles the genre's ascension from blogs and bars to conquering pop's stratosphere. Or wait--did pop conquer indie? The truth lies somewhere in between, with this book as your guide to every iconic album and preposterous crossover moment from Kid A to when Grizzly Bear captivated Jay-Z."" --Chris Payne, author of Where Are Your Boys Tonight?: The Oral History of Emo's Mainstream Explosion, 1999-2008 ""After its Nineties apex, alternative rock scattered in every imaginable direction. With Such Great Heights, Chris Deville provides a detailed road map for music fans wanting to track its subsequent peregrinations. A sure-fire candidate for the rock-book canon."" --Tom Beaujour, New York Times bestselling coauthor of Lollapalooza and Nöthin' But a Good Time ""Chris DeVille not only writes a super entertaining and detailed history of our favorite music, he manages to tell the story of our lives over the last three decades, as the monoculture splintered into a million microcultures. Best New Reading, 9.5, docking a half a point only for how many times I had to put it down and queue a song up."" --Dave Holmes, former MTV VJ and author of Party of One ""Indie is a nebulous, baffling term that arguably means nothing anymore but still means everything to the rapt 21st-century music lovers exhilarated by every hot new band, every chaotic new subgenre, every bomb-throwing new blog, every rhapsodic Pitchfork rave or cruel Pitchfork takedown. Whether you think you know everything or worry you don't know nearly enough, Chris DeVille is a super-smart, tough-minded, but resoundingly empathetic critic and deep thinker with an encyclopedic knowledge but an infectious zeal that can make you hear your favorite song in an entirely new way. This book is a 10."" --Rob Harvilla, host and author of 60 Songs That Explain the '90s ""Such Great Heights is a smart, visceral and deeply detailed recounting of one of the most impactful movements in music. Chris DeVille brings a critic's eye, a music fan's heart and the insight only someone who lived and loved this music could. A must for both the ""before they were famous"" fans and new audiences alike."" --Marissa R. Moss, author of Her Country ""Chris's book is much more than just nostalgia for the remembered aughts. It's a valuable document of an era that transformed the way we think about and consume music and culture."" --Bill Barnwell, ESPN writer and host of The Bill Barnwell Show Author InformationCHRIS DEVILLE is the managing editor at Stereogum, where he has written extensively about the full spectrum of indie music for the last ten years. In 2014, he launched The Week In Pop, a column exploring mainstream music from an indie fan's perspective. Chris has also been featured in outlets like The Atlantic, The Washington Post, and Rolling Stone and prominent digital outlets like The Ringer, Deadspin, and The Verge. He lives with his family in Columbus, Ohio. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
||||