Franklin Bruno's criticism has appeared in The Believer, Slate, Salon, Best Music Writing 2003 (Da Capo), and Listen Again: A Momentary History of Pop Music (Duke University Press). After several records as a member of Nothing Painted Blue and as a solo artist, his most recent musical project is Civics, the debut CD by The Human Hearts (Tight Ship); he is also a recording and occasional touring member of The Mountain Goats. He has taught philosophy at UCLA, Pomona College, and Northwestern University; currently, he is Visiting Assistant Professor at Bard College.
...Bruno's structure of alphabeticised installments allows him to
pursue the romantic and political brutality explored on Armed
Forces far and wide...the intelligent, slightly feverish companion
that Armed Forces deserves.
*Uncut*
I’m convinced that Franklin Bruno knows more about Armed Forces
than even Elvis Costello does. His dense interrogation of the album
traces its roots through punk back to Ray Charles and Burt
Bacharach, examining the nuanced integration of so many different
styles into something new, fierce, and idiosyncratic … As
contradictory and as caustic as his subject can be, Bruno
understands that Costello’s shortcomings only make him more
fascinating as a human and more compelling as a guy trying to
figure out how to rebel against the rock’n’roll establishment.
*Pitchfork*
I decided to give this book a try precisely because it’s by Bruno,
both a musician and a poet, which gave me hope that he could get
inside the music technically and yet communicate it beyond the
technical. Plus, who better than a poet to handle Costello’s gnarly
wordplay with aplomb? It was a good bet. Listening to Armed Forces
again for the first time in ages after having read Bruno’s
analysis, I could hear more in it.
*Hyperallergic*
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