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19 February, 2026Print
An Insider’s Portrait Of Music’s Most Celebrated And Elusive Icons: Brian Cullman’s New Memoir, ‘How To Prepare For The Past,’ Out April 28 Via ZE Books
Behind-The-Scenes With Nick Drake, Lester Bangs, Chuck Berry, George Martin, Miles Davis And More
From An Historic Era Of Music, Myth, And Late-Nights
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Brian Cullman’s ‘How to Prepare for the Past: Travels In Music and Time’ will arrive April 28th via ZE Books. An acclaimed journalist and musician – and tenth-generation New Yorker – Cullman’s memoir is a literary odyssey through music, memory and place. Penned in Cullman’s poetic, incisive voice, shaped by decades of work for The Paris Review, Rolling Stone, CREEM, The Village Voice and more, he captures an era when music was pervasive and urgent.
Tracing his life in the bike lane through friendships and first-hand encounters with luminaries like Nick Drake, Lester Bangs, Tim Hardin, Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, George Martin, Miles Davis, Big Joe Turner and more, Cullman evokes the ghosts of songs and characters that defined an extraordinary time in history. He brings the reader inside the room: from playing guitar for Danny Fields in a candlelit downtown New York apartment while Edie Sedgwick looked on and Jim Morrison slept on the couch, to drifting through London flats and folk clubs alongside John Martyn, Sandy Denny, andRichard and Linda Thompson, and onward through Paris, Tangier, and into the mountains of Jajouka. A collection of essays that resurrect a time when discovery happened by accident, and music was ever-present and communal, Cullman’s writing pays homage to a vanished analog age. “[Cullman’s] new collection of tales is a candid earwitness account of artisans and their process, personal and revelatory,” says Lenny Kaye. “He was there at the epicenter of everything,” adds Linda Thompson.
In an excerpt from ‘How to Prepare for the Past,’ Cullman writes, “When people asked me my favorite song, I would say the radio…Smokey Robinson crying in the night like a flower with a hangover, The Ronettes, so carnivorous and tender, the sound of eternity in bed with the night: this was love and death and a ticket to places the buses don’t go; the dreams of the dead, the regrets of the living, stolen prayers from the broken church where God and the Devil relax after work and trade places. I went to sleep to it, woke up to it. The idiot announcers and jingles and calls from New Jersey, the news and the drums and guitars, all one. How can I choose my favorite part of the rain? I wanted to walk in it, dance in it. Get wet.”
Pre-order Brian Cullman’s ‘How to Prepare for the Past: Travels In Music and Time’ here: https://www.zebooks.com/books/how-to-prepare-for-the-past
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