THURSTON MOORE is a founding member of Sonic Youth, a band born in New York in 1981 that spent thirty years at the vanguard of alternative rock, influencing and inspiring such acts as Nirvana, Pavement, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, My Bloody Valentine, and Beck. The band’s album Daydream Nation was chosen by the Library of Congress for historical preservation in the National Recording Registry in 2006. Moore is involved in publishing and poetry and teaches at the Summer Writing Workshop at Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado. He divides his time between the USA and England.
A Vanity Fair Favorite Book of 2023
Named a Most Anticipated Book of the Fall by Vogue, The Chicago
Tribune, and The Guardian
"Both a herculean work of research and a love letter—to Moore’s
youth, to underground rock, and to a band that formed in downtown
Manhattan in 1981 and went on to change music forever... an
exuberantly detailed account... Sonic Life is a big book and it
feels like a whole life is poured into it."
—Vogue
“Electrifying… At its most evocative when describing the downtown
music scene of the late 1970s and ’80s New York.”
—Mark Yarm, The New York Times
"An edgy valentine to ’80s punk... Few musicians have more indie
rock credibility than Thurston Moore... Moore writes self-assuredly
and aware but without conceit."
—The San Francisco Chronicle
"Vivid… This memoir finds its room tone when [Moore] meets
Kim Gordon… It’s a terrific love story…. He’s a good observer
of other people, always a good sign in a memoirist… [An] excellent
memoir.”
—Dwight Garner, The New York Times
"A rich and strange tableau of the music world . . . Sonic Life
roars along with the runaway-freight-train passion of a true
believer."
--The Wall Street Journal
"Moore’s nightlife testimony becomes a memorial to the lost petri
dish of a downtown scene that made Sonic Youth possible."
--The Washington Post
"The tale of a record collector geek made good, a seeker after new
sounds who in turn became a key architect of experimental rock in
the two decades that followed. . . an engaging memory piece
through a golden era of busted toilets and secondhand smoke that
now seems as distant as Montparnasse in the 1920s."
--The Los Angeles Times
"In taking readers along his musical trajectory—from idolizing the
likes of Patti Smith, Iggy Pop, and Ron Asheton to
sharing stages with them—Moore simultaneously charts rock’s
decades-long evolution through punk and hardcore, new wave and no
wave, indie and grunge."
--Vanity Fair
"A microscopic look at how [Moore's] interests in punk, art, and
guitar experimentalism fueled his contributions to one of
alt-rock’s most daring bands. . . Moore’s memories of being a New
York band on SST, the Year Punk Broke, and the horror he felt
following Kurt Cobain’s death document turning points both in his
life and in the evolution of underground rock with vivid
detail."
--Rolling Stone, Best Music Books of 2023
"Sonic Life is a deeply researched account of the music and culture
that formed Moore’s persona as the godfather of the alt-rock
movement."
—Shondaland
"[Sonic Life] is perhaps as subversive as Sonic Youth themselves
were: the memoir of a well-read, thoughtful music fan, unsaddled by
drugs 'n' drink, who came out the other side synapses intact. God
bless him (and them) for that."
—Clinton Heylin, Spectator (UK)
"Downtown scientists rejoice! For Thurston Moore has unearthed the
missing links, the sacred texts, the forgotten stories, and the
secret maps of the lost golden age. This is history—scuffed,
slightly bent, plenty noisy, and indispensable."
—Colson Whitehead, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The
Underground Railroad and Harlem Shuffle
"I thoroughly enjoyed Thurston Moore's trip down the gauntlet of
memory lane, dodging beer bottles and pools of blood as he balances
the demands of art and survival. Plus I'm a sucker for anyone who
name-checks Saccharine Trust. A raw, rollicking document."
—Nell Zink, author of Avalon and Doxology
“Thurston Moore has always been a great artist, expansive in his
knowledge of, and commitment to, new sounds and visions. Now, added
to his expert musicianship, are his very real gifts as a memoirist
and cultural historian. Filled with wonderful insights about the
New York–based cultural landscape that made him, Moore's Sonic Life
is essential reading—a moving meditation by a creative force.”
—Hilton Als, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of White Girls
“Sonic Youth was the lodestar of alternative rock, pushing
boundaries and providing inspiration to a generation of renegade,
free-thinking bands. In this candid memoir, Thurston Moore
traverses his journey from ardent fan to revolutionary instigator,
sharing his love of transgressive soundscapes and finding ever new
guitar tunings for his celebration of song.”
—Lenny Kaye, guitarist, producer, and author Lightning Striking:
Ten Transformative Moments in Rock and Roll
“All rock-n-roll begins in the thrall of fandom. Thurston
Moore shares his origin story, a love story like no other, about
the ‘mystic deliverance’ of music and art. It is a moving
portrait of an artistic life, but it is also an inspiring and
astute insider history of New York as the epicenter of so much
outsider and subversive culture. Generous, joyful, beautifully
written, this book is a heart ripper.”
—Dana Spiotta, author of Wayward and Stone Arabia
“Thurston Moore’s all-embracing memoir Sonic Life works the way
Sonic Youth did, with raging appetite for experience, with velocity
and nerve, with a total devotion to making art from the resolute
stance of starry-eyed fan and unabashed permanent novice. His
recall is as amazing as his generosity.”
—Jonathan Lethem, National Book Critics Circle Award–winning author
of Motherless Brooklyn
"Were you there? Well this is as close as it gets! Thurston Moore’s
compelling and spirited account of the streets, the songs, the
clothes, the clubs and the contenders! A sensitive and authentic
testimony to Moore’s commitment to life lived through art and
music. Beats with the heart of a true artist and mutineer."
—Viv Albertine, author of Clothes, Clothes, Clothes. Music, Music,
Music. Boys, Boys, Boys
"[An] exuberant and widescreen memoir...that details Sonic Youth’s
New York City origin story in a fascinatingly fine-grained way—and
fans will devour every page… A vivid recollection of a lost
world."
—Vogue
“The best kind of music memoir, an act of cultural excavation.”
—Chicago Tribune
"Sonic Life is an absolute joy, a memoir populated by misfits and
magicians, the dreamers and the demented, full of vivid imagery and
fabulous anecdotes, fired by an insatiable appetite for adventure,
experiences and new noise. For anyone similarly consumed by music,
it offers a fascinating documentation of the genesis and growth of
America's alternative rock scene, by one of its key players. It's
also an unabashed love letter to New York, in all its messy,
chaotic magnificence, and the best book about rock music in the
city since Please Kill Me."
—Louder
“Moore is a rock historian and a brilliant writer. His poetic
sentences evoke New York’s East Village from 1980 through 2000
perfectly. We experience East Village diners and delis, historical
music venues, tenement buildings, and railroad apartments. He also
writes mellifluously about the commitment required to be in a band.
He places us right there with him in vans, planes, and trains to
experience a Sonic Youth tour. In Sonic Life, Moore not only tells
the story of a burgeoning music scene and an original band, but he
also transports us to a time when artists lived their lives on
their own terms, just like Sid Vicious and Joey Ramone did.”
—Alternative Press
"Moore, a founding member of Sonic Youth, is among the more
creative guitarists (along with bandmate Lee Ranaldo and Kim
Gordon) during a period in rock music filled with folks exploiting
sonic possibilities... Moore’s word choice remains measured,
thoughtful... a book for the Sonic Youth fan."
—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
"Moore’s meticulous new memoir uses unvarnished, highly readable
prose... Pages whiz by with jolting anecdotes."
—Under the Radar
“Fascinating...Moore conjures the grit and atmosphere of 1980s New
York with ease.”
—Town & Country
"Sonic Life largely reads like a post-punk coming-of-age story,
tracing its protagonist’s journey from scrawny Connecticut fringe
kid to New York alt-rock titan... Reading through Sonic Youth’s
as-it-happens process made me want to pick up my guitar and create
something weird... Sonic Life succeeds in the places where it
conjures this effect: of walking through hell alongside someone who
has survived it."
—Pitchfork
“A love letter to to the New York underground music and art scenes
of the 1970s and 80s...Moore's prose suggests he could have had an
alternative career as one of the few great music journalists to
have become a household name.”
—The Wire
“[Moore] writes about music in a breathless gush of hyperbole that
proves almost too infectious… Moore’s depiction of
pre-gentrification Manhattan’s post-punk bohemia is richly
evocative and Sonic Life’s highlight."
—The Guardian (UK)
“Sonic Life will be every alt-rocker's binge-read this winter.”
—Mojo (UK)
"A fascinating chronicle of music, art, life on the road—and a
vanished New York City."
—The Millions
"A literate, absorbing account... A self-aware, charmingly
rough-and-tumble tale of the rock ’n’ roll life."
—Kirkus Reviews (starred)
"Vivid... Encyclopedic and capacious, Sonic Life is no less than a
history of U.S. underground arts and culture... a prismatic view on
the musical democracy that was Sonic Youth."
—BookPage (starred)
"Fascinating...Moore conjures the grit and atmosphere of 1980s New
York with ease.”
—Publishers Weekly
"An expansive autobiography... [Moore is] a patient and methodical
storyteller, providing rich context for the artists who shaped and
intersected with his career. Moore’s dual perspective as both music
industry insider and obsessive fan and collector results in a
vibrant piece of cultural history."
—Booklist
“Vastly entertaining . . . Sonic Life’s enthralling anecdotal
content should easily earn it a spot on your bookshelf—especially
its main course: a vivid and elaborate slideshow of Thurston’s
coming of age in late-70s No Wave Manhattan. A more mythic artistic
adolescence-slash-storybook New York success story couldn’t be
imagined. . . a punk, hardcore, no- and new wave Library of
Alexandria.”
—SPIN
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