The Lost Tribes Of Pop
Goths, folkies, iPod twits and other musical stereotypes
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Little, Brown Book Group
Published:1st Oct '09
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
An entertaining collection of muso-stereotypes' The Sunday Times
Few things tell us more about ourselves than the music we listen to, a fact that Tom Cox has demonstrated brilliantly in his acclaimed Observer column, The Lost Tribes of Pop. Extended from that column, Cox's beautifully illustrated book presents a unique and hilarious vision of the current pop climate, via the people who really make it what it is: the fans.
From Dave, the Old School Goth, and Charlie, the iPod Twit, to Nancy, the Rave Mom, and Margot, the First-time Gigger, Lost Tribes is an endlessly entertaining and curious mix of social stereotypes, in all their flawed, obsessive, identity-searching glory. Some are idiotic.
There are plenty of books about people behind the music. The Lost Tribes of Pop is different: it's a book about the people in front of it. It's the work of a major writing talent, and a must-have for any music fan.
Anyone who doesn't recognise themselves in this forensic, witty, all-too-true social document is either lying, or should get out more. * Andrew Collins *
Every record company should keep a gold-bound copy to remind them who it is that keeps them in business. * Simon Napier-Bell *
ISBN: 9780749951061
Dimensions: 140mm x 200mm x 15mm
Weight: 366g
128 pages