Some People are Crazy: The John Martyn Story
By (Author) John Neil Munro
Foreword by Ian Rankin
Birlinn General
Polygon An Imprint of Birlinn Limited
10th September 2019
Reissue
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Music: styles and genres
782.42166092
Paperback
288
Width 130mm, Height 195mm, Spine 23mm
275g
Described by Empire Magazine as 'Britain's best ever blues singer', John Martyn was one of rock music's last real mavericks. Despite chronic addiction to alcohol and drugs, he produced a string of matchless albums. Loved by fans and critics, loathed by ex-wives and managers, he survived the music business he despised for forty years.
This book documents his upbringing in Glasgow and rise through the Scottish and London folk scenes of the 1960s, his many career highs and lows, and his friendships with the great lost souls of British rock music, Nick Drake and Paul Kossoff.
John Neil Munro was born in Campbeltown and raised in Stornoway. He studied modern and economic history at Glasgow University then completed a postgraduate journalism course in Cardiff during the late 1980s. His previous publications include The Sensational Alex Harvey.