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Author
Marc Masters

Editor
Rob Young

November 2007
Paperback
192 pages
220 b/w and colour ills
27.0 x 22.0 cm
10.5 x 8.5 in
ISBN13: 978 1 906155 02 5
More Praise for No Wave

No Wave has been reviewed on US radio station WFMU's blog. Kurt Gottschalk calls the book 'a great document of the time'. Read the full review here

No Wave author Marc Master is appearing at a number of events across the West Coast in support of the book:

Saturday May 24, 2pm
@ Amoeba Records, 1855 Haight St., S.F.
NO WAVE book signing and DJ set with Marc Masters & Weasel Walter

Saturday May 24, 9pm
@ 21 Grand, 416 25th St, Oakland
NO WAVE reading and discussion with Marc Masters & Weasel Walter
plus performances by DEATH SENTENCE: PANDA and ETTRICK

Sunday May 25, 5pm - 7pm
@ ATA, 992 Valencia St at 21st., S.F.
NO WAVE reading and videos with Marc Masters & Weasel Walter



More Praise for No Wave

Marc Masters' No Wave has been reviewed on the Dusted magazine website. Here is a quote from the review:

"Nihilism notwithstanding, this pissed-off declaration of independence ignited a positive explosion of creativity and a thoughtful reaction against the sheep-in-wolf’s-clothing fakery of commercial new wave. Despite its rapid demise (curmudgeons claim no wave died the minute the media invented a name for it), the scene’s influence has endured. Its collision of conscious primitivism, fearless amateurism, perverted technique, and conceptual mischief opened up vast auditory possibilities."
Dusted magazine

Read the full review here.




See More News for this book


No Wave

Buy Now: UK £19.95 | US $29.95

No Wave traces the history of this noisy and uncompromising genre, from its most famous names down to its many offshoots and sidetracks. From early pioneers like Suicide and Richard Hell, to forgotten treasures like Red Transistor and Bush Tetras, and descendents like ESG and Sonic Youth, No Wave charts all the cracks and crevices of a surprisingly diverse movement.


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Flashing through the New York underground in the late 1970s, No Wave was the ultimate anti-movement. Its bands consisted of artists and poets untrained in music, looking to explode rock and disappear before the smoke cleared. No Wave tells the fascinating story of this radical, anarchic and hugely influential musical movement.

Best known for short songs and even shorter life-spans, No Wave bands fused disparate styles to fashion abrasive, rhythmic songs that were completely original and utterly compelling. The primary perpetrators – Lydia Lunch’s howling Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, James Chance’s skeletal Contortions, the dark-noise groups Mars and DNA – all drew on primitivism, performance art, and the avant-garde.

The book also delves into No Wave cinema, where pioneers like Amos Poe, Eric Mitchell, and Beth and Scott B. translated the aggression and innovation of No Wave music to the screen. Musicians often starred in these films, and figures like Jim Jarmsuch and Steve Buscemi first cut their teeth in this vibrant scene.

Illustrated with rare and previously unseen concert photos, record covers, and other ephemera of the times, and featuring exclusive interviews with key protagonists from the scene, No Wave is the definitive guide to a genre whose sounds and ideas still vibrate through alternative culture today.