Short Book Albums: 333SOUND
'We Can Save The Albums'
Short books about albums started in 2003—right around the time the album was rumored to be cooling on a slab in the pop culture morgue, ready to be opened up and autopsied—there was no template for this kind of publication, no prescribed notions to fill. The books could take the shape of an essay, or a work of fiction, or even some odd hybrid of both. But whatever the format, these paperbacks are aggressively accessible: short, pocketsize, easily consumed during a few commutes. Perhaps more crucially, potentially anyone can write a 33 1/3 book: critics, academics, journalists, musicians, poets, assorted armchair commentators.
With more than 100 titles to its name, Stephen M. Deusner highlights the 33 1/3 book series' finest moments. The 33 1/3 series has revealed a way that we can save the album: by dislocating it from history and letting a new generation develop their own canon. Recently announced titles suggest this trend will continue, here are the 33 best 33 1/3 titles in alphabetical order by artist.
Citation: Article by Stephen M. Deusner via Pitchfork
333SOUND
Short books about albums. Published by Bloomsbury
― David Bowie, Changes
'We Can Save The Albums'
Short books about albums started in 2003—right around the time the album was rumored to be cooling on a slab in the pop culture morgue, ready to be opened up and autopsied—there was no template for this kind of publication, no prescribed notions to fill. The books could take the shape of an essay, or a work of fiction, or even some odd hybrid of both. But whatever the format, these paperbacks are aggressively accessible: short, pocketsize, easily consumed during a few commutes. Perhaps more crucially, potentially anyone can write a 33 1/3 book: critics, academics, journalists, musicians, poets, assorted armchair commentators.
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| Pitchfork: Article SMD |
Citation: Article by Stephen M. Deusner via Pitchfork
333SOUND
Short books about albums. Published by Bloomsbury
“I have heard the sound of the future. Turn and face the strange changes.”333SOUND - Short books about albums. Published by Bloomsbury
Okie from Muskogee Rachel Lee Rubin takes us inside Merle Haggard's career, the controversy and innovation of Okie from Muskogee, and the mark Haggard left on country music. Merle Haggard's Okie from Muskogee is now available-grab your copy here.
― David Bowie, Changes

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