Art&DesignWinter2024
RECENTLY RELEASED | 41 ISBN: 978-0-7643-6796-0 Size: 10" x 11" (254 x 279 mm) Pages: 320 Price: $59.99, £54.99, 85.00 CAD Illustrations: 800 color and b/w photos Binding: hardcover BISAC: PERFORMING ARTS / Film / Genres / Westerns The Art of the Classic Western Movie Poster by Ed Hulse From silent-era “horse operas” to the 1960s “spaghetti westerns,” the story of the genre in more than 800 color images Images include vintage posters, lobby cards, promotional items, and rare behind-the-scenes photos Noted western film historian Ed Hulse has written numerous books about vintage motion pictures and their stars This illustrated guide celebrates the American motion picture’s first and most enduringly popular genre. Acknowledging the iconic, but with plenty of room for the rare and unfamiliar, The Art of the Classic Western Movie Poster presents a stellar selection of imagery charting the story of the genre from its early-20th-century beginnings to the late 1970s and is the most extensive book of its type ever published. As a filmhistorian, EdHulse has written numerous books about vintagemotion pictures and their stars. His columns, reviews, and articles have appeared in such outlets as Premiere Magazine , Entertainment Weekly , Variety , Video Business , the New Yorker , and the New York Times . ISBN 978-0-7643-6796-0 ISBN: 978-0-7643-6735-9 Size: 8 1/2" x 11" (216 x 279 mm) Pages: 256 Price: $45.00, £40.99, 64.00 CAD Illustrations: Over 520 color and b/w photos Binding: hardcover BISAC: MUSIC / Genres & Styles / Rock Teenage Wasteland The Who at Winterland, 1968 and 1976 by Edoardo Genzolini, Foreword by Joel Selvin An all-access account of the Who’s 1968 and 1976 appearances at the Winterland arena in San Francisco More than 500 never-seen-before photos from previously unreleased archives and private collections Author of the critically acclaimed and bestselling The Who: Concert Memories from the Classic Years, 1964 to 1976 This all-access look at the legendary Who presents a glimpse of what it was like to see the band in their prime at Bill Graham’s legendary San Francisco concert venue. In February 1968 and March 1976, the Who performed shows in the same venue, almost ten years apart: San Francisco’s Winterland. Generally considered as two marginal years in the Who’s career, they are only apparently so. These two years represent a screen grab of the band taken in its purest form: live, and harder than ever, right before and right after the huge success the Who struggled to live with in the years between. Edoardo Genzolini is an author, teacher, and filmmaker based in Perugia, Italy. His books are the results of meticulous archival research on musicians, photographers, and various music scenes of the 1960s and early 1970s. ISBN 978-0-7643-6735-9
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