Skip to main content

So Here It Is by Dave Hill #BlogTour

At the risk of singing THAT song in October I couldn't resist the chance to read So Here It Is by Dave Hill, Slade's co-creator and guitar player. Hill is the one who wore the outfits, had the haircut and the platforms and still plays in the band (or a version of it) today.

The 70s is very much a hidden decade for me, it was the era of my parents and the parents of my husband who still groans when ELO come on the radio. Not being born until the 80s my knowledge of Slade was pretty much limited to THAT song and my standard answer to a 70s music question in a pub quiz was 'Mud' (it didn't yield me many points). I was therefore keen to learn more. What other songs did Slade sing? Where did the name come from? and was Slade even English?

Hill was brilliant at explaining all this and more. I particularly liked the opening chapters describing Hill's early life, he really captured what it was like to grow up in post war England. I didn't expect depression to be such a feature of the book and praise not only a rock legend but a bloke from Wolverhampton in his 70s for coming forward and talking about it. His mother's depression was particularly expertly written and I loved how Hill went at length to point out he did not blame his mother for her illness and the impact this had on him. 

As you would expect from a member of a 70s rock band Hill racked up many experiences over the years and many of them are included in the book. Yet despite the gold Rolls Royce and the Top of The Pops appearances it was the experience of buying a house that resonated with me the most. The worry as to whether you can afford it and the problems associated with moving up the social ladder are ones that we can all relate to, even if we aren't being mobbed by girls from the neighbouring school!

Many issues Hill touched upon in the book were relate-able, the importance he placed on putting his career first and missing out on his children growing up and how we only seem to realise this as we age was particularly poignant and something I know I have struggled with.

I think my knowledge of the 70s let me down slightly. Although well detailed, certain names were lost on me and I had to Google certain references. You Tube came in handy with the songs mentioned and it turns out I am familiar with quite a few of Slade's back catalogue!

Given that the only thing I knew of Slade beforehand was THAT song I was surprised how little So Here It Is featured in the book and actually liked how Hill handled it. The book demonstrates there was so much more to Slade's story than a Christmas hit and it was right that only a small part of the book was dedicated to it.

Being an autobiography a number of pictures are featured, there is a forward written by Noddy Holder and the paperback copy even includes an extra chapter. I'm really pleased I read it and was surprised how much I got out of it being a non Slade expert. I plan on passing it on to my father in law who is a fan and indeed it would make a brilliant Christmas present for lovers of that era. Only 67 days to go people!

My thanks go to Unbound via Anne Cater's Random Things Through My Letterbox website who provided me with a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.


Comments

  1. Thanks you so so much for this fabulous Blog Tour support x

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Lock down book club - books from a different country

So we continued with the Zoom version of book club this month and it was lovely to see so many of us tackle it. The theme was books set in a different country (if you can't travel, let a book take you).  I read The Accident on the A35 by Graeme Macrae Burnet, a detective story with an element of tricksy fiction set in France. I really enjoyed it and you can read my full review here. We travelled to America a couple of times most interestingly to see whether Hilary Clinton (or Bill for that fact) would have made President if they had not got married. Rodham by Curtis Sittenfeld is out in hardback now. Norway was a popular spot - Norwegian Nights by Derek B Miller about a retired american marine who moves to Norway and intervenes to save a young boys life sounded interesting. So much so that at least one member of the group has gone on to buy the first in the series, American By Day. We even made it as far as Japan and Botswana (and discovered a Scottish connection for Alexander McCa

Mount by Jilly Cooper #inbetweeny

I'll start this blog with a warning, this post does contain spoilers. So if you haven't read the book then please don't read this blog, yet. Of course you should read this post just wait a little while until you've read the latest installment of Rupert Campbell Black (RCB). Warnings out of the way I'll begin. I was massively looking forward to reading this book having hugely enjoyed the previous ones. RCB is my (not so) secret trashy pleasure and has been for many years. This book had all the ingredients of a classic, pages of wonderfully named characters, a few tortured souls and of course RCB with all his horses, dogs and now grandchildren. The book got off to a good start full of characters from old but also plenty of new ones to mix it up a bit. The horse's really played a starring role in this book but I also really loved Gav and at first Gala. Yep only at first as she went strongly down hill and I bet you can guess why. RCB. Here is where I fell o

When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanthi

I expected to be emotionally drained after reading this one and to be honest (in a weird kind of way) I didn’t mind the thought that I would be. This was backed up by the introduction describing a brilliant young man whose writing was breath taking and whose story was devastating. Emotional rollercoaster of epic proportions was surely in store. I didn’t mind the beginning of the book although I was slightly surprised when we delved so deeply into Kalanthi's past in what was only a slim book. I was willing to gloss over the large number of references to his search as a youth to finding the meaning of life and what makes us, us as after all this was written by someone forced to ponder that very question. I also found the medical training he did vaguely interesting, I appreciated the reverence he placed in relation to the cadaver he was required to cut open as part of his medical training. However when it became apparent the actual portion of the book to do with him receiving hi