John Cale's Paris 1919
By (Author) Mark Doyle
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
6th March 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
Music reviews and criticism
782.42164092
Paperback
144
Width 121mm, Height 165mm
John Cales enigmatic masterpiece, Paris 1919, appeared at a time when the artist and his world were changing forever. It was 1973, the year of Watergate and the oil crisis and the end of the Vietnam War, and Cale was at a crossroads. The white-hot rage of his Velvet Underground days was nearly spent, and he was struggling to find a path forward. He needed to lay to rest some ghosts, but he couldnt do that without scaring up others. Paris 1919 was the result. In this vivid, wide-ranging book, Mark Doyle hunts down the ghosts haunting Cales most enduring solo album. There is the ghost of the Velvet Underground, whose abrasive sound and ethos Cale nearly managed to exorcise. There is the ghost of Dylan Thomas, a fellow Welshman who haunts not just Paris 1919 but much of Cales life and art. There are the ghosts of history, of a failed peace and a cold war, and of Christmas, a surprising visitor who lends the proceedings a nostalgic, childlike air. With erudition and wit, Doyle offers new ways to listen to an old album whose mysteries will never fully be resolved.
Mark Doyle is Professor of history at Middle Tennessee State University, USA. He is the author of The Kinks: Songs of the Semi-Detached (2020), Communal Violence in the British Empire (Bloomsbury 2016), and Fighting Like the Devil for the Sake of God (2009).