A work of high-concept genius--the most original rock memoir ever written. Sir Ray Davies--the mastermind behind The Kinks and the poet laureate of British rock--doesn't do "traditional." In this subversively brilliant, one-of-a-kind memoir, the man who gave us "Waterloo Sunset" and "Lola" deconstructs the very idea of the rock autobiography. X-Ray is not a standard autobiography. It is a psychological interrogation disguised as a rock-and-roll odyssey. Through the "X-Ray" lens of a narrator you can't quite trust, Davies deconstructs his own myth--from the jagged, distorted riffs of "You Really Got Me" to the pastoral melancholy of The Village Green Preservation Society . This one-of-a-kind rock memoir captures the friction between Ray and his brother Dave, the crushing weight of the music industry "Moneygoround," and the melancholic genius of a man who was always Not Like Everybody Else . For fans of David Bowie, Bob Dylan, and literary rock history, X-Ray remains a gold standard of the genre.
In a chillingly familiar near-future, a global "Corporation" controls the narrative of history. Their latest assignment for a young, nameless investigator: extract the truth from R.D.D.--an aging, reclusive cultural icon known to the world as Ray Davies. As the investigator probes deeper, the lines between the 1960s London "Swinging" scene and a sterile, controlled future begin to blur. This is a story of two brothers at war, a band banned from the very country they helped define, and a songwriter who predicted the corporate takeover of the human soul decades before it happened. Why this is essential reading: The Original Rock Meta-Memoir: Experience the experimental narrative structure that predated the modern "post-truth" era.
A Prophet of the Ordinary: Revisit Davies's uncanny social commentary on British identity, suburban isolation, and the "Moneygoround" of the music industry. Beyond the Music: A literary achievement that's ripe for rediscovery, proving that Ray Davies was always Not Like Everybody Else . "In an age when everybody's in show business and writes a lousy book about it, Ray Davies is to be honored for not doing the usual thing." -- Rolling Stone.