Peter Guralnick

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Peter Guralnick (born December 15, 1943, in Boston, Massachusetts) is an American music critic, writer on music, and historian of US American popular music, who is also active as an author and screenwriter.

Guralnick's first two books, Almost Grown (1964) and Mister Downchild (1967), were short story collections published by Larry Stark, whose small press in Cambridge, Larry Stark Press, was devoted to stories and poems. Mona Dickson, writing in MIT's The Tech (May 13, 1964) gave Almost Grown a favorable review. [1]

After Guralnick graduated from Boston University in 1971 with a master's degree in creative writing, he began writing books chronicling the history of blues, country, rock and roll and soul.

His two-volume biography of Elvis Presley, Last Train to Memphis in 1994, followed by Careless Love in 1999, placed the story of Presley's career into a rise and fall arc. Encompassing more than 1,300 pages (including 1,150 pages of text), the work countered earlier biographies such as Albert Goldman's Elvis from 1981 with an in-depth, scholarly examination of Presley's life and music. Guralnick had previously written on Presley in the The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock & Roll, starting with the first edition in 1976, said article having been reprinted for each subsequent edition.

Larry Stark Press published Peter Guralnick's second book in 1967. A first edition is currently valued at $200.
Larry Stark Press published Peter Guralnick's second book in 1967. A first edition is currently valued at $200.

In contrast to contemporaries such as Lester Bangs, Ian Penman and Nick Tosches, whose music writings are marked by idiosyncratic, self-referential and highly personal styles, Guralnick's writing is characterized by a colloquial approach that is clean and understated by comparison. In his best passages, he has an ability to simultaneously empathize and remain objective. Writing as a music fan, his enthusiasm powers his writing but doesn't overpower it.[citation needed]

Guralnick wrote the script for A&E's documentary, Sam Phillips: The Man Who Invented Rock 'n' Roll, narrated by Billy Bob Thornton, and he also scripted Sam Cooke - Legend, [2] narrated by Jeffrey Wright.

From the mid-70's through 1992, Peter Guralnick was also the director of Camp Alton, an all-boys mostly sports camp in Wolfboro, NH. Gurlanick decided to close the camp for unknown reasons following the summer of 1992.

[edit] Books

  • Peter Guralnick (1964). Almost Grown. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Larry Stark Press.
  • Peter Guralnick (1967). Mister Downchild. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Larry Stark Press.
  • Peter Guralnick (1971). Feel Like Going Home: Portraits in Blues, Country, and Rock 'n' Roll. ISBN 0876900465.  Reprinted 1999. ISBN 0316332720
  • Peter Guralnick (1979). Lost Highway: Journeys & Arrivals of American Musicians. ISBN 0-316-33274-7. 
  • Peter Guralnick (1982). The Listener's Guide to The Blues. New York: Facts on File, Inc.
  • Peter Guralnick (1986). Sweet Soul Music: Rhythm and Blues and the Southern Dream of Freedom. ISBN 0-316-33273-9. 
  • Peter Guralnick (1989). Searching for Robert Johnson. ISBN 0-452-27949-6. 
  • Peter Guralnick (1994). Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley. ISBN 0-316-33225-9. 
  • Peter Guralnick (1999). Careless Love: The Unmaking of Elvis Presley. ISBN 0-316-33297-6. 
  • Peter Guralnick and Ernst Jorgensen (1999). Elvis Day by Day : The Definitive Record of His Life and Music. ISBN 0-345-42089-6. 
  • Peter Guralnick (2005). Dream Boogie : The Triumph of Sam Cooke. Little, Brown. ISBN 0-316-37794-5. 

[edit] Interviews

[edit] External links