



Limited Edition of One
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4.7 • 14 Ratings
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
The more I thought about it, the more I realised my career has been unusual. How did I manage to do everything wrong but still end up on the front cover of magazines, headlining world tours and achieving Top 5 albums? How did I attract such obsessive and fanatical fans, many of whom take everything I do or say very personally, which is simultaneously flattering but can also be tremendously frustrating? Even this I somehow cultivated without somehow meaning to. My accidental career.
Limited Edition of One is unlike any other music book you will ever have read.
Part the long-awaited memoir of Steven Wilson: whose celebrated band Porcupine Tree began as teenage fiction before unintentionally evolving into a reality that encompassed Grammy-nominated records and sold-out shows around the world, before he set out for an even more successful solo career.
Part the story of a twenty-first century artist who achieved chart-topping mainstream success without ever becoming part of the mainstream. From Abba to Stockhausen, via a collection of conversations and thought pieces on the art of listening, the rules of collaboration, lists of lists, personal stories, professional adventurism (including food, film, TV, modern art), old school rock stardom, how to negotiate an obsessive fanbase and survive on social media, and dream-fever storytelling.
Customer Reviews
Great book
I really liked this book. Porcupine Tree + Steven Wilson’s other projects are among the top 5 of my favorite bands/groups/whatever you want to term it and it was great reading more about Steven Wilson, and everything else surrounding him. Even if it’s not really my kind of book that I usually read.
I don’t normally buy books by musicians about their careers or whatever. There’s only one other musician that I have read books by (Scott Ian) because while I consider myself a huge fan of PT, or Steven Wilson, or other bands I’ve never felt a need to go searching for more because the music is enough for me. Buying their albums, the occasional shirt, and seeing them live are the best parts.
It was a great read in any case. It was great to read more about the guy who’s music I’ve been listening to for the past 20 years after stumbling upon someone raving about In Absentia on the Something Awful forums.