Another
year has come to an end, and now it's time to take a look back at our
favourite books of the 2025, according to us, the most captivating,
notable, brilliant, an exciting in terms about music, photography, art, & fashion statement; we hope you love 'em:
1. Mike Joyce "The Drums" (New Modern)
Mike Joyce, the last member of the band to release their
autobiography and this is his no-holds-barred story of what it was like
to play the drums in the Smiths. Throughout his honest and witty
reflections, Mike answers the question he and bassist Andy Rourke used
to often ask each other: ‘Where did it all go right?. In The Drums,
Mike Joyce finally gives us the perspective of the self-confessed
biggest Smiths fan in the world who from the start was just some lad
from the suburbs of Fallowfield who played the drums. This book truly conveys what it felt like to be a member of
the Smiths.
2. Scott Schuman "The Sartorialist MILANO" (Taschen)
Fashion’s original social media master Scott Schuman, aka The Sartorialist, hits the streets of one of Europe’s most stylish cities for this tailor-made collection of Milano’s visually charismatic people. Schuman, who now calls Milano his home, combines portraiture with dazzling cityscapes and revealing reportage.
3. Paul McCartney "Wings: The Story Of A Band On The Run" (Allen Lane)
This is the story, in their own words, of a band that came to define a generation. Wings: The Story of a Band on the Run tells
the madcap history of Paul McCartney and his newly formed band, from
their humble beginnings in the early 1970s to their dissolution barely a
decade later. Drawn from over 500,000 words of interviews with
McCartney, family and band members, and other key participants, with a
cast of characters including John Lennon, Ringo Starr, George Harrison,
Chrissie Hynde, Mick Jagger and more, Wings
recounts the musical odyssey taken by a man searching for his identity
in the aftermath of The Beatles’ breakup. Soon joined by his wife –
American photographer Linda McCartney – on keyboard and vocals, drummer
Denny Seiwell and guitarist Denny Laine, McCartney sowed the seeds for a
new band that would provide the soundtrack to the decade.
4. Paul Vallely "Live Aid: The Definitive 40-YearStory" (New Modern)
For the first time, Vallely gives his full eye-witness account
of those 40 years. The book, which has a foreword by Bob Geldof, is
crammed with stories of how pop, poverty, politics and power are
interwoven in the Live Aid story. Geldof encounters presidents, prime
ministers and popes as well as the pop heroes who adorned his bedroom
wall as a boy. Bob drinks late-night whisky with Margaret Thatcher, is
forced to write a grovelling apology to Bill Clinton and meets Vladimir
Putin on a boat in the Mediterranean. He pressurises The Who, sweet
talks Pink Floyd, and is awestruck by Bowie. Is Bob Geldof a bully or a
charmer, saint or ‘white saviour’, or simply a force of nature?
5. Jonathan Gould "Burning Down The House: Talking Heads And The New York Scene That Transformed Rock" (Mariner Books)
New Yorker contributor Jonathan Gould offers an authoritative,
deeply researched account of a band whose sound, fame, and legacy
forever connected rock music to the cultural avant-garde. From their art
school origins to the enigmatic charisma of David Byrne and the
internal tensions that ultimately broke them apart, Gould tells the
story of a group that emerged when rock music was still young and went
on to redefine the prevailing expectations of how a band could sound,
look, and act. At a time when guitar solos, lead-singer swagger, and
sweaty stadium tours reigned supreme, Talking Heads were precocious,
awkward, quirky, and utterly distinctive when they first appeared on the
ragged stages of the East Village. Yet they would soon mature into one
of the most accomplished and uncompromising recording and performing
acts of their era.
6. Charlie Burchill, Graeme Thomson & Jim Kerr "Our Secrets Are The Same: Friendship & Fame At The Heart Of Simple Minds" (Constable)
A candid, moving and kinetic story of self-realisation through the power of music, Our Secrets Are The Same
is the remarkable joint memoir by Simple Minds' founder members, Jim
Kerr and Charlie Burchill. It not only reveals the inner workings of one
of the most innovative and successful British bands of the past
half-century, but the deeply personal tale of an extraordinary
friendship which powered teenage dreams into visionary action
7. Dan Jennings "Paul Weller: Dancing Through The Fire" (Constable)
Across musical history, certain artists have transcended their
craft to become cultural icons, leaving an indelible mark on the world
of sound and style. Paul Weller, the legendary British musician, singer
and songwriter, stands among the select few whose influence spans
generations. His enduring popularity, traversing the explosive energy of
The Jam to the sophisticated sounds of The Style Council and a prolific
solo career spanning over thirty years, underscores the timeless appeal
of his work. Weller also holds a unique position in music history: he
shares the rare distinction with Lennon and McCartney as one of the few
artists to achieve Number 1 albums in five consecutive decades. Dancing Through the Fire
explores the fascinating narrative of Paul Weller's musical career,
weaving together never-before-told stories, intimate insights and
perspectives from the man himself and those who have been integral to
his remarkable journey.
8. Debsey Wykes "Teenage Daydream: We Are The Girls Who Played In A Band" (New Modern)
Debsey Wykes was the bass playing singer in the first all girl
punk group Dolly Mixture. Thrown into the musky, misogynistic, male
dominated world of the UK music industry in the late 1970s, they enjoyed
unlikely #1 success alongside Captain Sensible of The Damned on1982’s
even unlikelier cover version of ‘Happy Talk’, whilst fame and success
on their own individual terms alluded them. Debsey
went onto greater prominence with Saint Etienne with who she has
performed since 1992, whilst in 2025, desirable Dolly Mixture reissues
sell out around the world as quickly as they are printed.
9. Hans Werner Holtzwarth "Georg Baselitz" (Taschen)
From existential paintings and motifs painted upside-down to rough-hewn wooden sculptures and remixes of earlier paintings—the art of Georg Baselitz is consistently challenging. With 400+ images from 1960 to the present, this updated monograph presents the full range of his work in stunning depth and detail.
10. Evan Dando "Rumours Of My Demise: A Memoir" (Faber & Faber)
Rumours of My Demise is Evan
Dando's story - raw, wild, unfiltered and straight from the source. A
privileged kid who snuck into gigs and crashed on whatever floors he
could find. A stunningly gifted rocker who propelled his high school
band into the highest reaches of indie fame. The industry's favourite
'alternahunk' until he wasn't, who all the same burned through the 90s
like he owned them. A guitarist and singer who racked up struggles
punctuated by some striking successes in the internet hashtag decades
that followed, before making a wholly new home and life in Brazil.

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