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Awopbopaloobop Alopbamboom: The Golden Age of Rock

Review

Awopbopaloobop Alopbamboom: The Golden Age of Rock



Today, Nik Cohn is a well-regarded novelist and scribe of
contemporary culture. But in 1968, he was a brash, 22-year-old rock
critic before the term was coined and wrote this, one of the first
rock history books. Published in 1970, revised in 1973, republished
in 1996, and now out with yet another edition, Cohn's primer has
had more lives than The Who has had farewell tours.

Unfortunately, it should have --- like Keith Moon --- been laid to
rest long ago. Read in 2002, AA (and no, I'm not going to spell
that title out again…) seems like a curious historical
document given its very narrow frame of reference in coverage.
Think of a modern I. T. analyst reading the operations manual for
the first Apple computer.

Cohn himself (or at least the 22-year-old model) is not short of
opinions, and many of his observations are either charmingly
naïve or downright laughable: lumping in the great '50s
Doo-Wop groups with momentary teen sensations; descriptions of Bob
Dylan as "pretty" and Dionne Warwick as a "negress"; calling Eric
Clapton's decision to sing "a mistake"; and praising Creedence
Clearwater Revival while blasting Led Zeppelin, though both
utilized a standard musical formula. Most curiously, he carps at a
legacy for the Beatles, dismisses Paul McCartney as a "no talent"
and professes with a straight face a fondness for Ringo's solo
work. His love for the Rolling Stones and their integrity as
performers was obviously written long before their flirtations with
disco, $300 concert seats, and a stadium tour sponsored by a
cosmetics company.

But by far his biggest youthful blunder --- which he even owns up
to in an endnote to the 1973 edition --- was to suggest that the
pop and rock industry would always be limited to the whims of young
teenagers and that no meaningful adult audience would develop. He
suggests that fogies in their 20s would not buy records. But the
then-new presence on the scene of singer/songwriters like James
Taylor, Joni Mitchell, and CSNY proved him wrong, and the ensuing
decades would not only see several generations of rock fans stay
with their music but have just as many teens turned on by the
artists of Cohn's youth as the current chart toppers.

As a native Brit, Cohn also discusses acts little known on US
shores (Tommy Steele, Sandie Shaw, Screaming Lord Sutch) and, in an
attempt to be as complete as possible, sums up entire performers
and their music in a couple of paragraphs, sometimes managing to
cover three to a single page! Read today, the information seems
fluffy and brief and wanting when compared to even the most basic
and hack-written rock history tomes written more recently.

Groundbreaking for the author and its subject matter at the time,
today Cohn's book comes across as naïve and simple as a Chuck
Berry riff or Little Richard's scream. And though those two
trademarks of rock and roll have stood the test of time, Cohn's
prose does not.

Reviewed by Bob Ruggiero on January 21, 2011

Awopbopaloobop Alopbamboom: The Golden Age of Rock
by Nik Cohn

  • Publication Date: November 4, 2001
  • Genres: Nonfiction
  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Grove Press
  • ISBN-10: 0802138306
  • ISBN-13: 9780802138309