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Needle in the Groove
 
 
Needle in the Groove (Paperback)
by Jeff Noon (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars 26 customer reviews (26 customer reviews)

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Product Description
Amazon.co.uk Review
we make music down there, all the week/and I have to say, away from the club, the band is even better/we make a noise like I've never known, just this one great stripped-raw channel of searching out/for the first time in years, I'm actually playing something/all the smalltown dregs of flair get magnified and yer know what, I can't help falling in love with the whole idea of being brilliant/to be myself at last, lost in the rhythm
Needle In The Groove, Jeff Noon's fifth novel, follows his short story collection Pixel Juice and confirms him as one of the most inventive and exciting of modern British writers. Set, like his previous books, in a slightly futuristic, reimagined Manchester (where, in this novel, streets are named after musicians and bands such as Joy Division, The Fall, 808 State and A Guy Called Gerald), the book follows Elliot Hill, a bass player and ex-junkie trudging the pub-rock circuit, who is invited to join a new band: fusing DJ artistry, voice and rhythm section, the group's hypnotic groove creation is augmented by a startling new recording technology. The band seems bound for success--until one of them vanishes. Elliot's subsequent search draws him into a secret history of music that stretches back 40 years and into his own past.

Noon's admitted affinity for music over literature as a source for inspiration takes concrete form here: the book takes the idea of the remix as it's formal--and thematic--principle. Where William Burroughs, in the 1950s and '60s, looked to collage--to formal innovation in the visual arts--as inspiration for his textual cut-ups, Noon's spur for rethinking modern prose is the revolution in music in the last two decades: the sample, the mix and the manipulation of sound provide the lexicon and grammar for his experiments with language. Although by no means the first to rethink writing in this way (Kodwo Eshun's "conceptual engineering" in More Brilliant than the Sun or Simon Reynolds' take on dance music in Energy Flash apply sonic invention and mixology to music criticism), Noon's use of musical techniques genuinely attempts to extend the possibilities of fiction. Love, desire, the metaphoric architecture of literature are all reimagined through his "liquid dub poetics": by taking near-clichés of fiction--the tensions between father and son, the (bizarre) love triangle--and subjecting them to the interference of linguistic experiment, Noon balances a compelling, straight narrative against the warped logic of the mix. It reads like a technologised, nervy version of Modernist stream of consciousness, punctuated by the backslash, that ubiquitous partitioner of URLs and familiar of Web-surfers everywhere. Pulp fiction meets dub? Just get into the groove. --Burhan Tufail --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Book Description
Jeff Noon's most daring, original and accessible book yet --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews
26 Reviews
5 star: 53%  (14)
4 star: 23%  (6)
3 star: 19%  (5)
2 star: 3%  (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Compulsive chemical fiction must-read, 9 Mar 2002
By Jay Oh! (London, UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
Y'know the old adage that writing about music is as pointless as dancing about architecture? It's a lie, and 'Needle in the Groove' is a near-perfect countermeasure to the cliché. There are moments in this book which capture the vitality of music accurately and beautifully, explaining why so many people love it with a surprising universality of insight. If you've ever played bass until your fingers bleed or just devoted hours of your life trying to find a particular record you think you heard in a club, 'Needle in the Groove' is necessary reading. In a sense it's like the music it describes; Noon's fluid 150 beats-per-minute style drives the story relentlessly onward, pulling the reader into the book in the same way that you can't not dance to certain records.
Perhaps the themes of the characters' relationships aren't new, but there's never any sense of familiarity to Noon's writing. If he has to be categorised it should be part of the underground of young dynamic writers emerging in the territory between Irvine Welsh and Neal Stephenson, collected together in 'Disco Biscuits' and 'Disco 2000' [ed. Sarah Champion].
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Just Beautiful..., 31 May 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Needle in the Groove (Paperback)
Finally there comes a book which depicts modern music and it's culture in all their (somewhat dubious) glory. From chilled-out ambience and dub through to frenetic funk, banging house/garage and drum 'n bass, the text follows these styles as it is remixed.

At first it is not easy to follow this radical new literary concept, but once you have slipped into James Joyce [on acid] mode, you won't be able to put the book down. Indeed - the narrative encourages the reader to lose themselves in just the same way as if they were losing themselves to the groove of a DJ tunes in a club... You can see it in their eyes, and one can't help but feel sorry that unlike a DJ, Jeff Noon can't see his readers eyes.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great novel for beatheads, 16 May 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Needle in the Groove (Paperback)
Luckily I came to this novel free from any expectations, being largely new to Jeff Noon. And as a music lover somewhat bemused by how few good imaginative books ever seem to get written about music, I think it's got lots going for it.

The style of writing is clipped and condensed yet powerfully resonant. The plot similarly so. Both of which allow the reader to spend time savouring the milieu - Manchester music and all that fuels it (drugs, misery, love, ambition).

Ian McEwen it clearly ain't. This novel reads like it issues from a shady and undocumented part of the human psyche, and is packed with imagination as well as atmosphere... personally I suspect this is a bit of a classic.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Noon has written better
Vurt and Pollen and two of my most favourite books of all time so I had high expectation with the first of a pile of Noon books I had missed. Read more
Published 3 months ago by David Hampson

4.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant
A great book that explores drugs and modern music in Jeff Noons typically futuristic and ever changing Manchester. Dark and gritty, with alot of rain. Read more
Published on 26 Sep 2004 by mogroth

4.0 out of 5 stars All about the music?
Jeff Noon, as the initiated will know, is as much concerned with wordplay as he is a good plot. Fortunately, he manages to achieve both with a good degree of success in Needle In... Read more
Published on 15 Sep 2004 by Matthew Mella

5.0 out of 5 stars Liquid Fiction
Noon has written a fine and adventurous book. A book about father's and sons, reality and illusion and (of course) sex and drugs and rock and roll. Read more
Published on 11 Jun 2003 by J. Skade

4.0 out of 5 stars A fine piece of dub fiction.
This is a good story, well written. Noon uses language like no one else - this book is seriously lacking in punctuation and grammar, yet you always understand what's going on... Read more
Published on 4 Dec 2001 by Stuart Whitby

2.0 out of 5 stars Lightweight Waffle
I haven't read Noon's other books, but I got this because I was looking for something daring and inventive in contemporary fiction. I was quite disappointed. Read more
Published on 27 Jul 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Astonishing
A hypnotic book. Don't compare it to Vurt, accept that authors move on and that's even more exciting. You get lost in this the same way you do in music. Read more
Published on 4 May 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Imagination to be envied.
How fundamental is music? Is there a race or group of people, anywhere in the world, which does not use music (in the widest possible sense of the word) in some way? Read more
Published on 19 Mar 2001 by matt_white71

5.0 out of 5 stars Proving you don't need punctuation to be a fantastic writer.
Anyone who has ever played a musical instrument or ever been caught in the emotion of a concert needs to read this book. Read more
Published on 24 Feb 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars out of the shadow of vurt at last
As any and all of the reviewers on this page will tell you, Vurt is a wonderful book. In my opinion though, Needle In The Groove is better. Much better. Read more
Published on 6 Jan 2001

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