A Very Irregular Head: The Life of Syd Barrett
Autor Rob Chapmanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 aug 2012
“I
don't
think
I'm
easy
to
talk
about.
I've
got
a
very
irregular
head.
And
I'm
not
anything
that
you
think
I
am
anyway.”—Syd
Barrett’s
last
interview,Rolling
Stone,1971
Roger
Keith
“Syd”
Barrett
(1946–2006)
was,
by
all
accounts,
the
very
definition
of
a
golden
boy.
Blessed
with
good
looks
and
a
natural
aptitude
for
painting
and
music,
he
was
a
charismatic,
elfin
child
beloved
by
all,
who
fast
became
a
teenage
leader
in
Cambridge,
England,
where
a
burgeoning
bohemian
scene
was
flourishing
in
the
early
1960s.
Along
with
three
friends
and
collaborators—Roger
Waters,
Richard
Wright,
and
Nick
Mason—he
formed
what
would
soon
become
Pink
Floyd,
and
rock
’n’
roll
was
never
the
same.
Starting
as
a
typical
British
cover
band
aping
approximations
of
American
rhythm
’n’
blues,
they
soon
pioneered
an
entirely
new
sound,
and
British
psychedelic
rock
was
born.
With
early,
trippy,
Barrett-penned
pop
hits
such
as
“Arnold
Layne”
(about
a
clothesline-thieving
cross-dresser)
and
“See
Emily
Play”
(written
specifically
for
the
epochal
“Games
For
May”
concert),
Pink
Floyd,
with
Syd
Barrett
as
their
main
creative
visionary,
captured
the
zeitgeist
of
“Swinging”
London
in
all
its
Technicolor
glory.
But
there
was
a
dark
side
to
all
this
new-found
freedom.
Barrett,
like
so
many
around
him,
began
ingesting
large
quantities
of
a
revolutionary
new
drug,
LSD,
and
his
already-fragile
mental
state—coupled
with
a
personality
inherently
unsuited
to
the
life
of
a
pop
star—began
to
unravel.
The
once
bright-eyed
lad
was
quickly
replaced,
seemingly
overnight,
by
a
glowering,
sinister,
dead-eyed
shadow
of
his
former
self,
given
to
erratic,
highly
eccentric,
reclusive,
and
sometimes
violent
behavior.
Inevitably
sacked
from
the
band,
Barrett
retreated
from
London
to
his
mother’s
house
in
Cambridge,
where
he
would
remain
until
his
death,
only
rarely
seen
or
heard,
further
fueling
the
mystery.
In
the
meantime,
Pink
Floyd
emerged
from
the
underground
to
become
one
of
the
biggest
international
rock
bands
of
all
time,
releasing
multi-platinum
albums,
many
that
dealt
thematically
with
the
loss
of
their
friend
Syd
Barrett:The
Dark
Side
of
the
Moon,
Wish
You
Were
Here,andThe
Wallare
all,
on
many
levels,
about
him.
InA
Very
Irregular
Head,
journalist
Rob
Chapman
lifts
the
veil
of
secrecy
that
has
surrounded
the
legend
of
Syd
Barrett
for
nearly
four
decades,
drawing
on
exclusive
access
to
family,
friends,
archives,
journals,
letters,
and
artwork
to
create
the
definitive
portrait
of
a
brilliant
and
tragic
artist.
Besides
capturing
all
the
promise
of
Barrett’s
youthful
years,
Chapman
challenges
the
oft-held
notion
that
Barrett
was
a
hopelessly
lost
recluse
in
his
later
years,
and
creates
a
portrait
of
a
true
British
eccentric
who
is
rightfully
placed
within
a
rich
literary
lineage
that
stretches
through
Kenneth
Graham,
Hilaire
Belloc,
Edward
Lear,
Lewis
Carroll,
John
Lennon,
David
Bowie,
and
on
up
to
the
pioneers
of
Britpop.
A
tragic,
affectionate,
and
compelling
portrait
of
a
singular
artist,A
Very
Irregular
Headwill
stand
as
the
authoritative
word
on
this
very
English
genius
for
years
to
come.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780306821431
ISBN-10: 0306821435
Pagini: 472
Ilustrații: 8 pages of b/w photos
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Ediția:First Trade Paper Edition
Editura: Hachette Book Group
Colecția Da Capo Press
ISBN-10: 0306821435
Pagini: 472
Ilustrații: 8 pages of b/w photos
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Ediția:First Trade Paper Edition
Editura: Hachette Book Group
Colecția Da Capo Press
Notă biografică
Rob
Chapmanhas
written
forMojo,The
Times,
Guardian,
Independent
on
Sunday,
Uncut,
Word,
and
the
dance
music
fanzineJockey
Slut.
He
is
the
author
of
two
books
of
nonfiction
and
a
novel.
He
has
compiled
and
written
liner
notes
for
CD
reissues
by
artists
as
varied
as
the
Last
Poets
and
John
Faley,
as
well
as
numerous
psychedelia
and
loungecore
compilations.