Killing time with a few good songs
It's evident from I Shot A Man in Reno that author Graeme Thomson possesses an undying obsession with songs of mortality. To pursue the subject through such terrain as murder ballads, gangsta rap and '50s teen schmaltz, and to make it a topic of conversation with musicians ranging from Ron Sexsmith to Ice T, one almost has to. Though at times it comes off as a magazine think piece that's vastly outgrown its 3,000-word slot, the book becomes increasingly compelling with each grim avenue it explores.
Thomson's well-organized essays provocatively plumb everything from
rock 'n' roll's self-destruction myth to funeral top 10s (really!), but
the book is at its strongest when the author supports his own thoughts
with those of his interviewees. (Richard Thompson almost deserves
co-authorship credit for his perceptive contributions.)
While the casual, colloquial prose is far from deathless, better
musical surveys are hard to find, and the results are positively
life-affirming.