A sleazy, neon- and grease-stuffed chronicle of London’s rock scene during the pivotal year of 1972—from Marc Bolan to the New York Dolls.
Elvis, Eddie, Chuck, Gene, Buddy, and Little Richard were the original rockers. Dylan, the Beatles, the Stones, and the Who formed rock’s second coming. As the 1960s turned into the 1970s, the crucial question was who would lead rock ’n’ roll’s third generation?
Pin-Ups 1972 tracks the London music scene during this pivotal year, all Soho sleaze, neon, grease, and leather. It begins with the dissolution of the underground and the chart success of Marc Bolan. T. Rextasy formed the backdrop to Lou Reed and Iggy Pop’s British exile and their collaborations with David Bowie. This was the year Bowie became a star and redefined the teenage wasteland. In his wake followed Roxy Music and the New York Dolls, future-tense rock ’n’ roll revivalists. Bowie, Bolan, Iggy, Lou, Roxy, and the Dolls—pin-ups for a new generation.
Author(s): Peter Stanfield
Publisher: Reaktion Books
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 343
City: London
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Introduction: First Is First, Second Is Best and the Third Generation Is Nowhere
1. Rock ’N’ Roll Underground: Mick Farren Looking Tough – Kicking Dogs
2. Dirty-Sweet: Marc Bolan – Pop Star
3. Ex-Patria: Iggy Pop and Lou Reed Exiled in London
4. Kill all your Darlings: David Bowie Running with the Thrill Kids and Fuck Girls
5. For your Pleasure . . . we Present Ourselves: Roxy Music – the Teenage Lifestyle Choice
6. Lobbing Molotov Cocktails into the Opera House: New York Dolls, Sixteen Forever
Conclusion: Oh, I Was Moved by a Teenage Dream
Note on Sources
References
Select Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Photo Acknowledgements
Index