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A Multitude of Sins: "Golden Brown", "The Stranglers" and "Strange Little Girls"
 
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A Multitude of Sins: "Golden Brown", "The Stranglers" and "Strange Little Girls" (Hardcover)

by Hugh Cornwell (Author)
3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Entertainment (4 Oct 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0007190824
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007190829
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 16.2 x 3.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 378,400 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

Autobiography by the singer and creative force of 70s rock group The Stranglers. This will be the first autobiography by any leading figure from the punk era and the first to be written by the author, drawing from his own unique and unforgettable experiences. Hugh was lead singer, guitarist and main songwriter with The Stranglers, and now brings his unique style, humour and insight to describe the story of his life. The book begins with a chapter about Hugh's decision to leave The Stranglers in 1990, and explains, in full and frank detail, why this key moment in UK music history has never been fully explained. The book will also covers the heady days of early punk in London, described by someone who was at its epicentre, along with the Sex Pistols, the Clash and the Damned. The life and times of the Stranglers, one of the most notorious and gifted rock groups of the 70s and 80s, are described in detail, including the drug busts, fights, prison terms and -- in one case -- the tying up of journalists. Throughout this time Hugh encountered a host of other extraordinary people, who are now household names: Malcolm McClaren, Joe Strummer, Kate Bush, Debbie Harry and Hazel O'Connor, to name a few, and he will recount the outrageous times he lived through with them. His 'inside take' on the other members of the Stranglers will be of special interest to the huge fan base of the era, which enabled The Stranglers' -- Greatest Hits album to sell one million copies in the UK on its release in 1990, and which continues to be discovered by the younger music generation of today.


About the Author

Hugh Cornwell was born in 1949. He attended Bristol University to study Biochemistry and went on to work as a laboratory assistant at Lund University in Sweden, from where he soon returned to pursue his music career. He was one of the founding members of The Stranglers, releasing hits such as 'Golden Brown', 'Skin Deep' and 'No More Heroes'. He is accredited by many for having introduced the dark and subversive undertones that made the band such a huge success and so influential to contemporary and modern rock and punk music alike. He left The Strangler in 1990, attempting to form several bands before returning to his solo career in 1993 with the release of his third solo album. He has continued to release hugely successful albums and make numerous high-profile appearances to the present day.

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9 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.1 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A MUST FOR ALL FANS OF HUGH AND THE STRANGLERS!, 30 Oct 2006
Quite simply, this is the closest we've had yet to knowing the inner workings of The Stranglers, the 'Enfants Terribles' of the punk scene. Hugh writes with great wit and his anecdotes are very entertaining. Highly recommended.
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56 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A MULTITUDE OF SINS - A PLATITUDE OF SLOTH, 3 Oct 2004
Hugh Cornwell
A Multitude Of Sins: The Autobiography
HarperCollins ISBN 0 00 719082 4

This was one book I was really looking forward to reading this year.
Unfortunately I was left wondering who Hugh Cornwell really was.
And this was his autobiography!

As leader of outrageous former punk protagonists The Stranglers, Hugh was a formidable front man. A stream of quirky hit songs gave the one time most despised band in the world a successful career above and beyond fellow new wavers long-since fallen by the wayside. For me. The Stranglers were the best band in the world - and Hugh's atonal vocals chords were responsible for the hits Peaches, the anthemic No More Heroes and the snarling Nice 'n' Sleazy, as well as anodyne Golden Brown, which reached Number 2 in the UK charts in 1982.

Sixteen years on, (with three years shaved off in the back jacket inner) after a total of ten hit studio albums and over twenty hit singles, Hugh left the band in 1990. It followed a lacklustre live performance that I was (un)fortunate enough to witness at Alexandra Palace in North London. Like Hugh, I had also sussed something was not right on the night. While The Stranglers plodded on sans Hugh, Mr. Cornwell has quietly pursued a lower league solo career. But fourteen years on, evidence of the bitter acrimony existing between the two camps is well documented to this day.

Hugh is a gifted and creative artist. He was always sharp and acerbic, and although he was no hard man, he provided the threatening, the brooding jagged edge to The Stranglers menace. His famed onstage quips were omnipresent from the late 70s until the mid 80s. In my huge Stranglers collection I have a multitude of live recordings smattered with his dry humour and bad jokes. In press interviews he came across as a highly intelligent character keen to explain his weltanschauung to the world.

As an avid record collector of many styles, I bought everything the band ever released, yet Hugh's guitar lines were the cleverest, most angular. His nasal vocal tones are still instantly recognisable today - it is claimed that Golden Brown is being played somewhere in the world at any one moment.

So, as you can see - I relished the chance to read 'A Multitude Of Sins' to find out his life before, during and since The Stranglers.

However, having just put the book down, I must confess that I know even less about the man than I did before.

Which wasn't much in the first place.

There was no evidence of Hugh's personality, only a small peak into his music biz persona. Little wit, no hint of hurt, no insight - nothing that explains what makes this man tick. No tetchiness, no anger, no warmth, only a hint of intelligence and just one joke. And a very, very bad one at that. The back cover spiel hints at the backdrop of drug dependency and in-fighting, but juicy anecdotal snippets are just sanguinely breezed over with all the emotion of a bank statement.

Then suddenly you come across the "CUT TO HERE..." and the "CUT TO THERE..." segments that are evidence of lazy writing. These are minutaie-free, bland, dull recalls of past moments in time, randomly pasted in. The only sin in multitude was the never-ending name-dropping of minor celebrities made my eyes glaze over several times. "I did this with him, or I did that with her, he came over to me at this restaurant, and then I took some of that..."

...Wow!

Fans like me will get hold of it undoubtedly if they haven't already, and it will sell lots. But Stranglers anoraks will not learn anything new here. Only brief overviews. But once you have read it, I would strongly recommend checking out The Stranglers 'No Mercy: The Authorised And Uncensored Biography' by David Buckley (Hodder & Stoughton) - followed by 'Song By Song' by Hugh Cornwell & Jim Drury (Sanctuary).

Somewhere between the three books probably lies the truth.

Perhaps even some of the real Hugh Cornwell. You never know!

Gary

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fragmented but hugely entertaining., 17 Dec 2006
By Mulch Diggums (N. Ireland) - See all my reviews
A very entertaining book, it reads more like a series of anecdotes than a continual start to finish book. Hugh's style of jumping from one story to the next and dropping in information not directly relevant to the story he is relating, instead of detracting from the book actually adds to it. An easy book to read due to the fact it is not one long story, it is certainly a must for all fans of Hugh and/or The Stranglers and an entertaining slice of music history for those who are not.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars For die-hard fans only
In the opening few pages, Hugh Cornwell makes it clear this is not a book about the Stranglers. They were just a phase in his life, an important phase, but not the necessarily... Read more
Published 21 months ago by ComicalGeeza

5.0 out of 5 stars Great book by a great man.
After having read the whole book from start to finish in less than a week (which is an achievement for someone of my ilk that doesn't list reading as one of their hobbies)I am... Read more
Published on 10 Feb 2007 by Baronvon

3.0 out of 5 stars One book too many for Cornwell
Song by Song is good and so is the No Mercy bio. This is not. It starts off well but then loses it. Read more
Published on 28 Aug 2005

1.0 out of 5 stars Where's Hugh?
Other reviewers have pointed out the numerous flaws in the style of the book, which i didn't find too off-putting. Read more
Published on 19 Aug 2005 by iludicrous

1.0 out of 5 stars No more heroes any more
I was initially very excited to get hold of this book, having been a big time Stranglers fan back in 1977/78 and was looking forward to an inside view of the band. Read more
Published on 12 Dec 2004

4.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable read - well worth a look
Hugh Cornwell will forever be linked to his old band The Stranglers. So it is only natural that a good proportion of his autobiography covers his time in the band. Read more
Published on 30 Nov 2004

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