Great musician biographies
You might know all the songs and albums of your favorite musicians, but do you know the experiences and inspirations behind their work? Luckily, you can find out by listening to some great musical biographies on Spotify.
With picks that include memoirs from legendary stars including Dave Grohl, Billie Eilish, Gucci Mane, and Dolly Parton, you can discover all the wisdom these greats have to share.
The Storyteller: Tales of Life and Music
Written and narrated by Dave Grohl
Dave Grohl’s autobiography, The Storyteller, sheds light on what its like to be a kid from Springfield, Virginia, who goes on to live out his craziest dreams as a musician. The rock icon reflects on everything from hitting the road with Scream at 18, to his time in Nirvana and the Foo Fighters. He remembers jamming with Iggy Pop and dancing with AC/DC and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band. He tells stories about drumming for Tom Petty and meeting Paul McCartney at Royal Albert Hall. Grohl even recounts unexpected moments like bedtime stories with Joan Jett to a chance meeting with Little Richard.
The Sporty One: My Life as a Spice Girl
Written and narrated by Melanie Chisholm
After five women answered a newspaper ad, the Spice Girls were born. They recorded their first single, “Wannabe,” and nearly overnight, Melanie “Melanie C” Chisholm went from small-town girl to Sporty Spice.
The Sporty One follows the meteoric rise of Melanie C and The Spice Girls, from the incredible highs of playing at Wembley, conquering the BRITs, and closing the Olympics, to the difficult lows. For the first time ever, Melanie C talks about the pressures of fame, the shaming and bullying she experienced, the struggles she has had with her body image and mental health, and the difficulty of finding herself when the whole world knew her name.
Dolly Parton, Songteller: My Life in Lyrics
Written by Dolly Parton, Robert K. Oermann
Narrated by Dolly Parton Do you want to start by giving an introduction to how you chose these biographies? I think you have quite strong views about how to approach the history of music as a writer. Maybe you could start by telling us about that. It’s very difficult to write about music because, as one of my favorite musicologists, Wilfrid Mellers, once said, if you’re not writing technically about music, you’re not writing about music at all. You’re writing about something else. I’ve always taken that to heart and tried to keep it in mind when I write about music. The problem is that in order to write technically about music, there is all of this jargon, and most readers don’t understand the jargon. So you have to try, somehow, to either explain the jargon along the way or avoid it and try to use everyday terms. The jargon is a time saver for people who understand it. That’s why it’s there, it’s a series of shortcuts. But there’s no point in using it if you’re writing for a general audience, which isn’t going to understand it. And it’s really only general audiences that I’m interested in writing for. So biography was important to your approach in writing The Shortest History of Music? I wrote about what I thought were the important ways we have used music as a society and the way in which music has developed in different ways, in different places, at different times. All you can do is give some examples, and a lot of those examples are biographical. I needed to hit upon some key figures, not necessarily the greatest musicians who ever lived, not necessarily even the most interesting ones, but the ones who helped me to tell the story, because they were doing something at a particular moment that exemplified what other people were doing. It was the same with pieces of music. There are so many famous pieces of music that are not mentioned in the book. The ones that I chose are not my favorites and not the ones that I think are the greatest. Some So many CBGB-era punk memoirs out there, but Richard Hell’s is unique — poetic yet never pompous, bemused without corny punch lines. As a year-old Kentucky kid, he runs off to NYC to be a poet, but ends up a rock & roller. “‘Sacred monster’ is definitely the job description,” Hell writes. “Being a pop star, a front person, takes indestructible certainty of one’s own irresistibility. That’s the monster part.” He depicts his music comrades — Tom Verlaine, Robert Quine, Patti Smith, Lester Bangs — and all the girls he’s loved before. (Hell was the punk Leonard Cohen in that department.) He quips about his popularity with critics, “because they were predisposed to favor noise, intellect, and failure.” In the final scene, he runs into his old nemesis Verlaine for the first time in years — flipping through the dollar bins outside the Strand Bookstore — and walks away in tears, musing, “We were like two monsters confiding.” [Find the Book Here] Like words, music moves us. Most of us have a song or an artist that will instantly take us back decades, bring us to tears or make us dance in our seats. With such a close tie to our heartstrings, it’s no wonder music makes us want to learn more about it’s creator. And most musical artists have quite a story to tell—from humble beginnings to glittering stardom to the tough realities of life on the road. When you combine the magic of music with the power of storytelling, readers get a VIP pass into the green room and a look at the life behind the lyrics. Spanning classic rock n’ roll, country, pop, blues, hip hop and more, these memoirs and biographies from famous music legends take us on a wild ride through the highs and lows of their careers and will strike a chord with anyone wanting to learn more about their favorite stars. Borrow them on the Libby reading app from your library. Behind the Seams: My Life in Rhinestones by Dolly Parton () Global superstar Dolly Parton shares, for the first time, the full story behind her lifelong passion for fashion, including how she developed her own, distinctly Dolly style, which has defied convention and endeared her to fans around the world. The Woman in Me by Britney Spears () In June , the whole world was listening as Britney Spears spoke in open court. The impact of sharing her voice— her truth— was undeniable, and it changed the course of her life and the lives of countless others. The Woman in Me reveals for the first time her incredible journey and the strength at the core of one of the greatest performers in pop music history. Surrender: 40 Songs, One Story by Bono () In his unique voice, Bono takes us from his early days growing up in Dublin to U2’s unlikely journey to become one of the world’s most influential rock bands, to his more than 20 years of activism dedicated to the fight against AIDS and extreme poverty. Writing with candor, self-refle The Best Music Biographies
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