Om Rock's in My Head
Since first becoming a true believer in the power and importance of rock & roll as a boy in the 1950s, Art Fein has been immersed in music and the music business, taking on many diverse roles:Journalist: onetime music editor of Variety, contributor to the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Rolling Stone, Billboard and other publications
TV host: Art Fein's Poker Party, a talk-&-live-music public access cable show that ran for 24 years.
Band manager: Blasters, Cramps
Record company staffer: Capitol, Elektra, Casablanca
Music Consultant for TV and film: Roadhouse 66, Tour of Duty
Album Producer: L.A. Rockabilly
Author: The L.A. Musical History Tour
Blogger: Another Fein Mess
And: event promoter, photographer, record collector, and rock & roll historian.
In the memoir Rock's in My Head, drawing on 10,000 (!) pages of a journal he began keeping in the early 1970s, Fein recounts such incredible rock & roll adventures as:A week spent working with John Lennon and Yoko Ono
Touring the UK with rockabilly legend Ray Campi
Throwing wild New Year's Eve parties for hundreds of revelers with cars as door prizes
Cooking up an ill-fated album with Ringo Starr ("Twenty-six years later, I was chatting with Ringo and mentioned the rockabilly album we'd planned. He said, 'Did I do the album? Did I stay at your house? I was so drunk in those days.'")
In 1985, Fein did the one thing fans are always cautioned about: he befriended an idol, becoming part of legendary record producer Phil Spector's inner circle. That relationship--often gratifying, sometimes terrifying--lasted through Spector's murder conviction in 2009. Fein knows--and reports--startling and intimate details about Spector that have appeared nowhere else.
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