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Crying in the Rain

The Perfect Harmony and Imperfect Lives of the Everly Brothers

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Crying in the Rain

By: Mark Ribowsky
Narrated by: Steve Menasche
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About this listen

The Everly Brothers—aka Don and Phil to fans with an intimate appreciation for them—seemed to exist almost as an apparition. Emerging within the formative era for young Baby Boomers during the blandly regimented '50s, they were a ubiquitous presence, clad in snug suits and skinny ties, hair neatly Brylcreemed, never raising their voices when they sang. The two prim-looking country boys with dark, curiously penetrating eyes and perfectly merged, honey-dipped harmonies, were oddly but comfortably settled as sentimental, soothing, sometimes lovelorn voices of a still-uncharted cultural turf.

Magnificent as the duo was, they have until now never received a definitive biography. In Crying in the Rain: The Perfect Harmony and Imperfect Lives Of the Everly Brothers, the details, small and great, roll along on the mighty "Mississippi," in near novel-like fashion, revealing facts drawn from exhaustive research and first-hand interviews that trace the character and influences of these hardy but flawed men who grew from teenagers to old men before our eyes. Mark Ribowsky's authoritative book serves as a fitting companion to an unforgettable collection of songs-heard on countless albums, and covered literally thousands of times-whose recording was a long time gone but that will never be forgotten.

©2024 Mark Ribowsky (P)2024 Tantor
Entertainment & Celebrities History & Criticism Music
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This is a very strange book and an equally strange reading of it. On the one hand, it provides far too much information for the general reader (endless lists of session musicians and songwriters, too many song lyrics pointlessly dissected for hidden meanings) and too much gossip/rumour/misinformation for the more devoted fan of the Everly Brothers' songs. (The 1965 'revival' of their career in the UK is skipped over as if it never happened.) They definitely deserved a better biography than this.
As for the audiobook reading by Steve Menasche, he clearly has no personal knowledge of the Everly Brothers, their music or the people around them and, as a result, too many words and names are mispronounced. Worst of all - to my English ears, at least - every mention of the word 'guitar' is rendered as 'quitar'. It's enough to drive any listener crazy and just adds to the overall disappointment.

Imperfect indeed

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