Rumors of my demise A memoir

Evan Dando

Book - 2025

After Kurt Cobain's passing in 1994, everyone expected Evan Dando to be next. The Lemonheads front man, songwriter and actor started in the '80s hardcore scene and went on to become a '90s icon. Think of Evan Dando, and you think of heroin chic, grunge, and celebrity burnout. Perhaps known as much for his partying and boyish good looks, after two gold records and the kind of fame that you just can't enjoy anymore, the Lemonheads cooled off and life went on. Dando grew up in Boston, the son of a lawyer and a model, and attended the prestigious Commonwealth School. Fame was never what motivated him but the lure of the wild life proved trickier to refuse. From sneaking into concerts as a child, to sleeping on floors in the ...punk rock days, to crashing at Johnny Depp's place in Hollywood, he was right there in the thick of it. So much so, that social media once reported his death. Now, very much alive, sober, and enjoying a life in South America when he's not on the road, Evan Dando is going to tell his own story. His memoir will remind readers what was so great about the pre-internet '90s: the innocence, the access, and the anonymity. Reclaiming the purity and exuberance of his early days and encapsulating the spirit of the era, this candid autobiography presents a portrait of an artist who lives wholly for his music, and one that makes no apologies for doing so.

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Gallery Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Evan Dando (author)
Other Authors
Jim Ruland (author)
Edition
First Gallery Books hardcover edition
Item Description
Subtitle from cover.
Physical Description
290 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781982175221
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A singer-songwriter reflects on his life in the (too) fast lane. The title of this memoir by the Lemonheads frontman is wry but fitting. The indie rocker has long had his fans worried about him--in the 1990s, he was open with reporters about his heroin and crack use, which, he writes, continued until recently and once cost him $400 a day. Dando revisits both his lows and highs, beginning with his early years in Massachusetts, where he was an unenthusiastic student but an eager music fan. Dando writes, "I remember singing along to 'One Way Out' by the Allman Brothers and my dad said, 'Your voice sounds good, Griff!' My dad called me Griff, short for Griffith, which is my middle name. 'Maybe you're the rocker of the family!'" Dando and two friends founded the Lemonheads while they were still in high school (rejected band names included Yipes Stripes!, Popcorn Fucks, and the Piggy Popcorn Queers). The band took off quickly, which Dando attributes to their onstage antics: "They came to see a bunch of guys getting drunk and playing loud and fast. Part of the appeal of the Lemonheads was that it could all fall apart at a moment's notice." Fall apart it did, many times, with the lineup often changing, and while the band gained worldwide attention for its cover of Simon & Garfunkel's "Mrs. Robinson" (about which Dando is ambivalent), the fame didn't last, especially with Dando high and unreliable much of the time. The author writes with disarming candor and vulnerability, admitting that his actions hurt people; at one point, he writes, "If I could go back in time and give a bit of advice to myself, I'd say, 'Evan, don't be such a dick.'" He is also quite funny at times: "Opiates help you go to sleep. Sometimes they help you drop your face in your carbonara at a fancy restaurant. That's not a good look." An amiable--and sometimes dark--self-portrait of a self-deprecating artist. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.