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Amp'd: A Fathers Backstage Pass

Amp'd: A Fathers Backstage Pass
Author: Gary Fincke
Publisher: Michigan State Univ Pr
Category: Book

List Price: $19.95
Buy Used: $0.02
You Save: $19.93 (100%)



New (18) Used (27) from $0.02

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
Sales Rank: 712798

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1st
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 544
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 5.6 x 0.6

ISBN: 0870137298
Dewey Decimal Number: 787.87166092
EAN: 9780870137297
ASIN: 0870137298

Publication Date: July 1, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Small stickers. Ships Next Business Day!

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Amp'd follows a four-year timeline with Gary's son, Aaron, the guitarist in the bands STRANGERS WITH CANDY, LIFER, and BREAKING BENJAMIN. During this time, Gary traveled to more than 50 shows, hung out with the bands before and after they performed, and talked intimately with band members, managers, and fans.

I was curious about what my son was doing, says Gary. I wanted to disappear into what was going on so I could listen and observe and get a more honest look at this world.

Set against a backdrop of aggressive rock, frenzied fans, moshing, stage diving, crowd surfing, security brutality, and occasional outright violence, Amp'd: A Father s Backstage Pass follows four years in the life of Gary Fincke s son, Aaron, a rock- and-roll guitarist. From bands such as Breaking Benjamin (signing with Hollywood Records and releasing CDs in 2002 and 2004), Strangers With Candy (winning MTV's Ultimate Cover Band Prize in 2000), to Lifer (signing with Universal/Republic Records and releasing a national CD in 2001), Fincke gives a unique perspective to the bizarre and fantastical world of commercial rock and roll.

Aaron s rock life is chronicled first-hand by his father, who attends more than fifty shows, spends time with the bands before and after shows, follows them to national tour sites, and talks intimately with his son as well as the members of the bands and some of their fans and managers.

Amp'd emphasizes the character and life of the band members through the eyes of a widely published writer, college professor, and father who immerses himself in the high-adrenaline world of contemporary rock and roll. This is not only a page-turning first-hand account of a lifestyle about which many fantasize, but also a literary narrative that examines the larger issues of celebrity, success, and family.



Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Amp'd - Amazing   May 9, 2008
I'll be honest-I bought Amp'd solely to learn more about the roots of the band Breaking Benjamin, and member Aaron Fink. What I received, however, was much more. Gary Fincke delivers a captivating, suspenseful, and beautifully written story in Amp'd. Spanning from Aaron's high school band to 2003 Breaking Benjamin, Professor Fincke recounts his son's transformation as a musician and human being. Amp'd is filled with anecdotes that are sure to make you chuckle, and in some cases, experience a strangely authentic fearful sensation. Even though I am an avid Breaking Benjamin fan, Aaron's success did not seem assured throughout the story; I had serious trouble putting the book down.

To summarize, Amp'd is a powerful account of Aaron Fink's rise to stardom. Its captivating narrative is sure to engage any reader-fan of Breaking Benjamin or not. 5/5 for an amazing work of literature.



5 out of 5 stars Easily one of the best books I read in 2006.   January 3, 2007
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

Gary Fincke, Amp'd: A Father's Backstage Pass (University of Michigan Press, 2004)

Breaking Benjamin are one of the country's most exciting rock and roll bands presently working. And luckily (for us, anyway), their guitarist happens to have an award-winning poet for a father who really, really digs alternative rock. Said father turns in a quasi-biography quasi-memoir on five years of his son's rock and roll life, from Strangers with Candy (winners of MTV's Ultimate Cover Band contest) to Lifer to Breaking Benjamin. And it's great, great stuff. Fincke takes as much (if not more) pleasure in chronicling his family and friends' reaction to his love of the music as he does in chronicling the music itself, and the chronicling of the music spends as much time talking about the drudgery of day-to-day life as a "rock star" as he does about dealing with labels and being on stage.

Fincke's style is very much indulgent father, and there's rarely a critical eye to be found anywhere in the book, its only weakness. But as far as the whole vastly overdone memoir genre goes, this is by far the best of the lot I've encountered. In fact, one of the best books I've read this year, in any genre. ****



3 out of 5 stars better left as a family journal?   September 13, 2005
 1 out of 4 found this review helpful

It is definitely an intriguing concept for a book: a rural PA father's account of his son's rock life as the son gets signed by a major label not once, but twice - and has two national CDs released within 8 months of each other. For a guy who is a professor of English and Creative Writing at Susquehanna Univ., the book is (strangely) not that well-written or compelling. There is hardly any time spent on how both of those bands got signed, the management and politics behind two major-label bands struggling to "make it," and he misspells Lynyrd Skynyrd and Isle of Q several times(!) As the dad, Gary seems to forget that unless you're a family member it's hard to follow who is who and most of his accounts are descriptions of the crowds and bouncers from the shows and surface-level conversations with his son. Although the book is billed truthfully as a father's observation of his son's life, it was frustrating that the book didn't provide more insight into the bands as they tried/try to navigate careers in the music business. Gary's "research" amounts to driving to shows and he pretty much admits that. It *is* interesting to see a dichotomy unfolding: Lifer's demise from outside forces to internal chaos and Breaking Benjamin's slow rise to success from inside out.

Having said all that, it's interesting reading for anybody in the NE PA and Lehigh Valley music scenes and for any young fan who wouldn't be distracted by the mediocre writing and who would salivate at this supposedly "intimate" look at their favorite band (Aaron is the handyman type! The band goes to media training!). I think BB is a great band and singer Ben Burnley is an excellent songwriter. He turns out to be the quirkiest, most-interesting person in the book. It's weird to read a book and know a number of the people and places.



5 out of 5 stars If you're a fan of Breaking Benjamin...   July 31, 2005
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

or are a fan of any band, this book will give you a fathers' insight to how it all begins, and goes along the way.

Gary Fincke doesn't hold anything back in his experience as the guitarists' dad in Breaking Benjamin. If you have never heard of this band, you seriously need to find a radio. They are breaking into the world of Rock and Roll.

You hear a fathers' thoughts,comments, and emotions as the band goes through many changes. An EXCELLENT book for the rocker!!!

I ordered it, and received it 2 days later! AWESOME reading when you have to "limit" yourself to a chapter a night!



5 out of 5 stars One of the best Rock Books I've ever read   October 21, 2004
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

Your typical book about a rock band is a knock off and a turn off. Some hack writer grabs a stack of promotional blurble and interview pull-quotes together, then rushes a volume out. Often without even nominal assistance of the artist involved, these books are the equivalent of pulp junk food, aimed squarely at the fan for whom even a tiny scrap of information is like sugar. They are also usually dumped into the market place long after the band has become successful, so the quotes are practiced and edited as to present their topics in the best light (or not, depending on the author's agenda). We will also not discuss the fact that most of these books are thrown together by people that simply can't write to save their word processing arses.

Not so with "Amp'd." Dr. Gary Fincke is a Professor of English at a college in central Pennsylvania, a published poet, and story teller. He also loves rock with the passion of most adolescents. So when his guitarist son Aaron began playing guitar and being serious about it, Dad began writing about his kid the musician. As it turns out, Aaron is one of the lucky talents. His band, "Strangers With Candy," won a nationally televised MTV contest, morphed into Lifer and released Lifer. Like most bands in the music business world, they discover that getting a record out is not the key to the kingdom, but then Aaron joins Breaking Benjamin, and lightning struck twice. Breaking Benjamin got signed to Hollywood Records and now have three great rock albums out, "Saturate," "We Are Not Alone" and "Phobia."

Like most bands and musicians, Aaron finds himself being first a local star, then trying to climb the ladder to bigger things. The difference between "Amp'd" and other books about rock bands is there is a minimum of hyperbole involved. Dr Fincke watches from the sidelines as his son plays dive clubs, weird local festivals where I'm sure shouts of "Freebird!" were more to the norm than a bunch of young and aggressive year 2000 rockers would be, and venues that, as Senior Fincke describes them, have fewer sinks and toilets than his house. It's that kind of attention to detail that makes you really (and I know it's an overused phrase) feel like you're right their with him and the bands Aaron becomes involved in.

Perhaps the freshest thing about "Amp'd" is that it isn't an "insiders" view of the music industry, where people that have been working the same deals and scams for years on end try to act like they haven't already been there and done that. Nor is it a disconnected outsider doing emotionless research. It is obvious that Aaron loves making music and Dr. Fincke is equally fascinated by the process. Some of the book's best moments are when Dr Fincke tries to persuade his University colleagues to listen or watch some of Aaron's work, then describes their reactions. These range from mild enthusiasm to utter disdain.

There is also a strong message here in the amount of support that Dr. Fincke and his family invests in Aaron. Where most parents are probably yelling down to the basement to "turn it down," you'll discover that Aaron's family kicked in with money for T-shirts and early CD demos. "Amp'd" is a great read, a fine journal of the creative process and a testament to a family's willingness to let their children explore their creativity. Even if you don't like hard rock, you should be reading "Amp'd."


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