1st Edition

Brown Eyed Handsome Man The Life and Hard Times of Chuck Berry

By Bruce Pegg Copyright 2002
    344 Pages
    by Routledge

    344 Pages
    by Routledge

    Brown Eyed Handsome Man: The Life and Hard Times of Chuck Berry draws on dozens of interviews done by the author himself and voluminous public records to paint a complete picture of this complicated figure. This biography uncovers the real Berry and provides us with a stirring, unvarnished portrait of both the man and the artist. Berry has long been one of pop music's most enigmatic personalities. Growing up in a middle-class, black neighborhood in St. Louis, his first major hit song, "Maybellene," was an adaptation of a white country song, wedded to a black-influenced beat. Thereafter came a string of brilliant songs celebrating teenage life in the '50s, including "School Day," "Johnny B. Goode," and "Sweet Little Sixteen." Berry's career rise was meteoric; but his fall came equally quickly, when his relations with an underage girl led to his conviction. It was not his first (nor his last) run in with the law. He scored his biggest hit in the early '70s with the comical (and some would say decidedly lightweight) song "My Ding-a-Ling." The following decades brought hundreds of nights of tours, with little attention from the recording industry. Bruce Pegg offers the definitive, though not always pretty, portrait of one of the greatest stars of rock and roll, a story that will appeal to all fans of American popular music.

    Acknowledgements, Prologue: Grand Avenue, 1. The Ville, 2. De Sun Do Move, 3. Maybellene, 4. Breaking White, 5. Deliver Me from the Days of Old, 6. Windermere Place, 7. Club Bandstand, 8. The Mask, 9. St. Louis Blues, 10. Never Saw a Man So Changed, 11. Mercury Falling, 12. Back Home, 13. The Whole World Knows the Music, Nobody Knows the Man, 14. Wentzville and St. Charles, 15. Johnson vs Berry, Epilogue: Blueberry Hill, Discography, Notes, Works Cited, Index

    Biography

    Bruce Pegg teaches in the writing program at Syracuse University. He has received numerous grants to research the life of Chuck Berry, and has spent several extended periods in St. Louis conducting interviews and doing archival research. He lives in Canastota, NY.

    "Pegg's scholarship is tidy, his writing is clear and straightforward." -- The Los Angeles Times