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The Well-Red Bear Review of Books

Author: Roy Christopher

I marshal the middle between Mathers and McLuhan. Editor of Boogie Down Predictions (Strange Attractor, 2022), author of Dead Precedents (Repeater, 2019) and The Medium Picture (UGA Press, 2025), among others.
Reviews · Videos

The Eternal Sonic Youth

June 28, 2009 Roy Christopher

Sonic Youth is not a band. It is an institution. Where other bands who manage to stay together for over a quarter of a century (or much less) become legacy bands (i.e., bands that are only known and revered for a part of their careers long past), Sonic Youth continue to push themselves and their… Continue reading The Eternal Sonic Youth

Reading Lists · Reviews

Summer Reading List, 2009

June 25, 2009 Roy Christopher

At long last, 2009’s Summer Reading List is collected, compiled, and complete. Inside you will find book recommendations from friends and usual suspects such as Richard Metzger, Cynthia Connolly, Steven Shaviro, Gareth Branwyn, Peter Lunenfeld, Gary Baddeley, Dave Allen, Patrick Barber, and myself, as well as newcomers David Silver and Josh Gunn. If you’re like… Continue reading Summer Reading List, 2009

Essays · Reviews

Race for the Prize: 90s Music Biographies

June 14, 2009 Roy Christopher

The music scene of the 1990s was confused. At the turn of that last decade, Hip-hop was displacing Metal as the top-selling genre, and Nirvana was allegedly setting off the so-called “alternative revolution,” yet Guns ‘N Roses was all over MTV with opulent, twelve-minute videos and all over the charts with an epic double CD.… Continue reading Race for the Prize: 90s Music Biographies

Essays · Reviews

The End of Print

May 29, 2009 Roy Christopher

Magazines have always been my favorite form of media. Having grown up in rural areas of the South, I found the window to my interests opened in their glossy pages. The big photos and words from other worlds kept me connected to all that I wanted to be a part of. If this sounds a… Continue reading The End of Print

Reviews · Videos

It’s Better to Burn Out Than to Fade Away.

February 8, 2009 Roy Christopher

Darby Crash had the perfect punk-rock plan: takeover the L.A. punk scene in five years, commit suicide, and become immortalized as a legend. Little did he know that Mark David Chapman would derail that plan very shortly after Darby followed through. Biggie Smalls never had such a plan, but after a five-year ascent to the… Continue reading It’s Better to Burn Out Than to Fade Away.

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