Tag Archives: books

(book review) The Blood And The Sweat: The story of Sick Of It All’s Koller brothers

New York hardcore, or NYHC is one of my personal favorite genres of hardcore punk ever since I was a kid and Sick Of It All is a very important part and was in my music upbringing and becoming the man I am today. They were first international, let’s say big hardcore band I watched when I was a kid almost thirty years ago and I watched them more times since then and they never disappointed with their live shows or their records.

This is not ordinary boring biography book. This is a book done in kinda interview way, with Lou Koller, SOIA singer and his brother, guitarist Pete Koller tell their story through chapters thematically divided into some meaningful sense. Like you may have guessed it all starts with their childhoods and upbringing as being youngest of four brothers and growing up in Queens, first going to shows and discovering metal and hardcore, which made up their minds to form a band.

Then it goes through first ten years of hardships, with weekend tours and Mondays back to day jobs, fear how to make a living and struggles to overcome all life’s obstacles to days when they can live off touring, but that is not so secure life as we all witnessed last two years. I love how there are lots of anecdotes and unknown stories from touring with other bands I love, seeing some other side of some bands that I am not sure I like, because I idolized some of them. This is a book about positivity, about love for music and that’s what helped most of us continue through hard times and what gave us strength to continue. I recommend this one warmly, go read it.

(book review) David Gamage- A Hardcore Heart Adventures In A DIY Scene

Well, growing up as hardcore kid in the nineties I can totally relate to this book. This is a really big book which tells about David´s adventures as a guitarist for touring bands. What I always loved reading in fanzines is tour diaries and this book reminds me of just that. Touring. All the troubles, all the joy, all the problems with promoters, sound, van breaking down or having a puncture, job worries. David is best known as guitarist for UK melodic punk band Couch Potatoes but also being a part of the UK hardcore punk scene for more than three decades now. This book is in fact a document of this life and work, but also a tour de force document about history of UK DIY hardcore punk scene in the nineties and all the bands, I must admit that I found couple of that I never heard before and will definitely investigate and have a listen. This book is just hardcore from the heart, written by hardcore kid for hardcore kids. More than 600 pages topped with superb photographs and also flyers and gig posters. A document about time which may have passed but remains in heart, also a coming of age story.

(book) Rob Halford : Confess – The autobiography

Rob Halford is known to everyone as the singer of legendary metal band Judas Priest, where he still sings at 72 years old and the band celebrated fifty years in the scene so much respect and hats off to Rob and the crew for being there so long despite all the hardships, ups and downs and line-up changes. This book is one of the best books that I have read so far this year. This is Rob´s autobiography, from his childhood beginnings at Black Country, as they call the part of the UK from where he is from, to his beginnings with Judas Priest, glory and legendary albums and tours, to his exit from the band, outing as gay, projects after Judas, re-entering the band till these days and still being Metal God as they call him in the scene. What I love about this book that Rob tells his story with autoirony and humor, also there are lots of anecdotes from gigs and tours and cool stories. Other thing that breaks heart is Rob´s almost life long struggle to hide his sexuality being gay in the homophobe scene and coming out and shining on. Through tragedy, loss, sadness we become better people if we survive the hardships, this is something that I as a person still believe. This book and Rob Halford´s story teaches us just that. I recommend this book heartily.