Research Catalog

True love cast out all evil : the songwriting legacy of Roky Erickson

Title
True love cast out all evil : the songwriting legacy of Roky Erickson / [edited by] Brian T. Atkinson ; forewords by Billy Gibbons and Henry Rollins.
Publication
College Station : Texas A&M University Press, [2021]

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library ML420.E733 T78 2021Off-site

Details

Additional Authors
  • Atkinson, Brian T.
  • Gibbons, Billy F., 1949-
  • Rollins, Henry, 1961-
Description
xx, 240 pages, 36 pages of plates : illustrations; 25 cm.
Summary
""Transcendence came with a price," Brian T. Atkinson writes in his introduction to this collection of reflections by and about pioneer psychedelic rocker Roky Erickson (1947-2019). The singer and songwriter who fronted the 13th Floor Elevators burst onto the Texas music scene in 1966 with the release of "You're Gonna Miss Me," the band's only charting single, which featured Erickson's primal vocal stylings. The band attracted considerable regional attention, including interest from a young Janis Joplin, who considered joining the group before opting to go to San Francisco instead. Through his interviews with those who were there and presentation of Erickson's own words, Atkinson chronicles how Erickson was haunted for most of his life by mental illness, likely compounded by his liberal usage of hallucinogenic and other drugs. Despite that, however, his influence on Texas musicians of various genres is vast. As Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top attests in his foreword, "He stands alone to this day and is revered as an artist because he had the gift of a wonderful voice." As with his previous books on Townes Van Zandt, Ray Wylie Hubbard, and Mickey Newbury, Atkinson has recorded hours of interviews with veteran and upcoming musicians who were impacted by Roky Erickson. Along with the insights of long-time music journalists like Joe Nick Patoski and the bittersweet recollections of friends and family members like Mikel Erickson, brother of the singer, this work includes poetry and lyrics written by Erickson during his confinement at Rusk State Hospital in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The picture that emerges is that of a brilliant, troubled mind and an artist whose influence extended far beyond the period of his greatest notoriety, continuing even beyond his death"--
Series Statement
John and Robin Dickson series in Texas music
Uniform Title
John and Robin Dickson series in Texas music.
Subjects
Genre/Form
  • Biography
  • Interview
  • interviews.
  • Biographies.
  • Criticism, interpretation, etc.
  • Interviews.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes discographies and index.
Contents
The psychedelic sounds of the 13th floor elevators -- The interpreter.
ISBN
  • 9781648430435
  • 1648430430
  • 9781648430442 (canceled/invalid)
LCCN
2021030134
OCLC
  • on1256627777
  • 1256627777
  • SCSB-14080679
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library