"High-spirited, funny and informative, this sheds a radiant light on how 1980s British pop stars transformed the author’s Irish homeland. "
Calling anyone interested in the intersection of music, culture and social change. Sharing the fascinating story of how British musicians transformed 1980s Ireland to a state of confidence, Damian Corless’ Tax, Drugs and Rock'n'Roll is a rollicking ride of a read.
The book kicks off with an amusing anecdote in which Corless shares the pivotal moment “Bono crashed his car into a telegraph pole outside our house” in 1981, which set off “a freakish chain of events that left both my parents in hospital”.
While this was “far from a happy accident” for his parents, it turned out to be seminal for Corless as it set him thinking there must be more to life than the teaching job he was about to pursue. Falling into a rock music writing job saw him change the course of his life, and gave him a front row seat to witness revolutionary changes rung in by musicians in Ireland from the 80s.
Covering Status Quo and The Police, through to Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Spandau Ballet, Def Leppard, and more, these pages reveal that while many musicians might have come for Irish tax breaks, the impact they ushered in had huge impact. In fact, with refreshing verve, the author argues that “Ireland’s colony of rock stars” transformed Dublin “from a dreary backwater into a hip and happening capital city worthy of being called a capital”.
Straddling personal memoir territory as it covers shifting cultural and political landscapes in Ireland, Tax, Drugs and Rock'n'Roll is written with all the vitality and tempo of a rock'n'roll classic.
Primary Genre | History |
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