Jason Molina: Riding with the Ghost
Jason Molina: Riding with the Ghost book cover

Jason Molina: Riding with the Ghost

Hardcover – May 15, 2017

Price
$140.00
Format
Hardcover
Pages
240
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1442268678
Dimensions
6.25 x 0.5 x 9.5 inches
Weight
1.15 pounds

Description

The anecdotal details from Jason Molina: Riding with the Ghost are what ring most vividly, exposing a side of Molina that rarely came through in his melancholic music.... Riding with the Ghost also enriches his songs, illuminating their characters in their own words and supplying context to the places they were set. ― MTV Among Riding with the Ghost’s most memorable passages are instances of Molina’s fandom, from his unconditional love for Sade and his evangelizing of Kraftwerk to Damien Jurado, to his edict to bandmates to study Neil Young’s After the Gold Rush. Molina’s passion rings through these pages, nowhere more distinctly than in the retelling of the fateful interaction that launched his career while studying at Oberlin College (where he was known as 'Sparky'). ― Pitchfork Media Inc. Jason Molina: Riding with the Ghost delves into each period of the artist’s life: from his first high school punk band Chronic Insanity, to his last days with heralded alt-country act Magnolia Electric Co., and the numerous iterations of his beloved folk-leaning band Songs: Ohia, as well as solo material and unreleased demos unkown to fans. It’s a fascinating look at one of the last pre-internet indie successes and the underground music scene that supported his meteoric rise. The book also examines the origin story of Bloomington, IN-based Secretly Canadian, and how the record label and Molina became inexorably linked in a nearly 17-year run as label and artist, despite major ideological and technological shifts in the landscape of independent music. It’s a book not just for Molina fans, but for music fans — a story for the ages that explores the triumphs and pitfalls of a very pure artistic spirit. ― Glide Magazine Jason Molina: Riding With the Ghost absolutely communicates just what Molina’s life meant to family, friends, collaborators and fans.... Osmon does an excellent job of painting a nuanced portrait of a complex human being.... Her interviews with former band members and those involved with the production process yield a lot of wonderful insight into Molina’s singular and demanding creative process and his prolificacy.... It was already clear from his immense output that there is endless meaning to be gleaned from Jason Molina’s body of work, but Osmon takes the story of his short, bright time on Earth, warts and all — just like a Songs: Ohia record, 'no overdubs!' — and puts it in the context of a real human life. And that unveils depths to his music that we’re only now able to explore. ― Winnipeg Free Press Osmon's biography is a must read for anyone who has more than a casual relationship with Molina's work; which, in my guess, would be anyone who has heard Molina's work.... Osmon pulls back the curtain and shows us Molina the man. ― 37 FLOOD Never short on details, it’s a ravenous fan’s dream.... Osmon provides the deepest of glimpses into Molina’s worlds. All the trinket-filled mysteries left behind by one of the greatest songwriters who ever wrote a note are captured here.... Thanks ... Osmon for a guided tour of Molina’s mythological palette, warts and all. ― Popmatters If Jason Molina has ever been important to you, then you need to read the book, because Osmon did a magnificent job detailing Molina’s life, struggles, music, and demise. So many lingering questions are answered, and questions you’d never considered are answered as well. Read it. Now. ― Third Coast Review In her new book, Riding With the Ghost, writer Erin Osmon accomplishes a tricky feat regarding the late Jason Molina... She presents Molina, whose work can so often mythic, as if carved from ancient stone, fully as a person, with faults, desires, humors, and failings. She doesn’t strip his songs of their mystery or allure, but rather illustrates the idiosyncratic and personal details that led to his remarkable words and melodies. In doing so, she gives us the gift of more fully knowing Molina, as well as his companions and friends, those who traveled alongside him through life. ― Aquarium Drunkard Riding With The Ghost...captures the heaviness and levity that coexisted in Molina’s personality, and it enriches a moving and inexhaustible artistic legacy. ― Decoder Magazine [E]mpathetic and informative.... Erin Osmon is a great biographer, writer and critic. She has used new interviews to weave an empathetic and informative story around Molina and his music, without turning him into a martyr, without trying to make him even more of a cult figure than he has become. She does not condone or condemn, simply tells it straight. Here is the story of one creative spirit who could not cope. Here is how he lived and made the music he left behind. Read and listen: it is the story of how music is made. ― International Times Erin Osmon paints an empathetic and deeply human portrait of Jason Molina, both the artist and the man. A biography that's as beautifully haunting as one of his songs. -- Bob Mehr, author, "Trouble Boys: The True Story of the Replacements"In Jason Molina: Riding with the Ghost, Erin Osmon gives us a riveting biography not only of a great musician whose work deserves to be much wider known, but a well-rounded portrait of a fascinating human being, as well as a glimpse into the creative process. It's a ride well worth taking. -- Jim DeRogatis, co-host, "Sound Opinions," and author, Let It Blurt: The Life and Times of Lester BangsDuring his all-too-short lifetime, Jason Molina created some of the most emotionally stirring, soul-enriching, and thought-provoking rock this side of Neil Young, Lou Reed, and Nick Drake. First time author Erin Osmon has crafted a meticulously researched biography infused with both passion and a keen analytic eye. During his lifetime, Molina was criminally under recognized. In a perfect world, Osmon’s loving tribute will play its part in rectifying this. -- Rob Bowman, Grammy Award–winning author, Soulsville U.S.A.: The Story of Stax RecordsJason Molina: Riding with the Ghost accomplishes a tremendous feat—an examination of Molina's life and work as rich, complex, and fearless as the music he made. Erin Osmon unpacks the mythology and gives us a portrait that is human, tangible, and deeply moving. -- Jessica Hopper, author, The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic Erin Osmon is a Chicago-based writer and the former music editor of Time Out Chicago. Her work has appeared in The Pitchfork Review, SPIN Magazine, Chicago Magazine, Chicago Reader, Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun-Times, Time Out Chicago, The A.V. Club, revered catalogue record label the Numero Group and Taschen’s retrospective of iconic rock and roll album covers titled “Rock Covers.” Her fascination with Jason Molina began in high school in 1997, when she discovered The Black Album after hitching a ride to Kentucky to buy records at ear-X-tacy.

Features & Highlights

  • Erin Osmon presents a detailed, human account of the Rust Belt–born musician Jason Molina—a visionary, prolific, and at times cantankerous singer-songwriter with an autodidactic style that captivated his devoted fans. The songwriting giant behind the bands Songs: Ohia and Magnolia Electric Co. had a knack for spinning tales, from the many personal myths he cultivated throughout his life to the poems and ballads he penned and performed. As with too many great musicians, Molina’s complicated relationship with the truth, combined with a secretive relationship with the bottle, ultimately claimed his life.Jason Molina: Riding with the Ghost details Molina’s personal trials and triumphs and reveals for the first time the true story of Molina’s last months and works, including an unpublished album unknown to many of his fans. Offering unfettered access to the mind and artistry of Molina through exclusive interviews with family, friends, and collaborators, the book also explores the Midwest music underground and the development of Bloomington, Indiana–based label Secretly Canadian.As the first authorized and detailed account of this prolific songwriter and self-mythologizer, Jason Molina provides readers with unparalleled insight into Molina’s tormented life and the fascinating Midwest musical underground that birthed him. It’s a story for the ages that speaks volumes to the triumphs and trials of the artistic spirit while exploring the meaningful music that Molina’s creative genius left behind.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(131)
★★★★
25%
(55)
★★★
15%
(33)
★★
7%
(15)
-7%
(-16)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Required reading for any major Molina fan

I started this book at 11pm, thinking I'd read for an hour or so before bed. Before I knew it, I'd reached the end of the book and it was 4am. Jason Molina has been my all-time favorite musician since I first discovered him in 2005. I knew all the words to all the songs, and I'd derived my own meanings for them, but I often wondered what the circumstances were that caused them to be written. This well-researched book answered many of the questions that I had. Osmon breaks down several song lyrics and ties them to individual events in his life, which is just what I'd always been curious to know.

Jason's work was largely autobiographical, but this book is a welcome insight from the other side of the story. To hear from the objects of his love songs was especially a treat. I finished this book with an incredible respect for Darcie Schoenmann. Having listened to his body of work, seen a couple of his performances, and briefly met the man, I'd gotten the impression that he was an intense personality. Through reading Osmon's book, I was able to learn exactly how intense of a personality Molina was and through that I was able to develop a new understanding of his life and work and a respect for the people who loved him.

There are a few typos and some issues that could have been resolved in another round of editing, perhaps, but it doesn't detract from the work in any way. Osmon has a great control of pacing and ability to construct a timeline, which makes the book very easy to read.
22 people found this helpful
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I had high expectations of this book but ended up being disappointed. First

As a huge Jason Molina fan, I had high expectations of this book but ended up being disappointed. First, this book needed a real editor at the helm. Aside from the typos, misused words, etc., there's a lot of repetition of both phrasing and information, which really interrupts the flow, and just plain clunky writing. I was splashing mental red ink on every page as I read. But my real problem with the book is that it is so consumed with the facts of Jason Molina's life that it never really gets at motives, meanings, and the music itself. And even the facts are often wanting, as when Osmon tells us that Jason bought a vintage Gibson. Any guitar player, like me, is surely left thinking, "A Gibson WHAT?" I learned a lot from this book, but I don't feel as if I have a deeper understanding of the music that Jason left behind or of the man himself. I think the book needed to be twice as long, with more discussions of Jason's songwriting, musicianship, and what his dark vision, tinged with hope, ultimately meant.
21 people found this helpful
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A halfway decent book about a great artist, perhaps exploitatively priced.

Does this book have value? Yes, as a hauntee of this thoroughly inspired and mysterious songwriter, I devoured every word of it as quickly as I could and will hold on to and even prize the book, as it's unfortunately the only one of its sort. At the end of all all that, though, did I feel that Erin Osmon and Rowman & Littlefield had earned the right to charge $35 for a slim hardcover about a tragically dead man? No, I feel like they exploited him and I and the rest of us a bit in that regard. For one thing, the book isn't even properly copyedited - it's chock full of obvious little typos and errors that you would seldom find in similar books that demand a lesser entrance fee. I don't suppose this can be attributed to Molina's penchant for only recording first or second takes either. These people aren't Jason Molina for one, and for another, the mistakes don't reveal any emotional content or added authenticity. They just make the process of honoring him feel a bit slapdash and careless; and to follow that with a demand to pay a large premium for the book seems arrogant.

That's the worst of it. I still suggest the book is worth reading for anyone who feels moved by the music. It can add several dimensions of understanding, although one must realize in advance: Osmon only unveils a very partial understanding of an inspired and troubled man, as partially and mis-understood by his bandmates and other relations. It doesn't appear she ever had an intimate conversation with Jason himself. Well; he was dead when she started writing it apparently. But if she had any kind of meaningful conversation with him before that, you'd be hard pressed to tell it. This is one man's story as told through other people, and through one journalist's interpretation of his music. It's not bad for that, but must remain forever woefully incomplete - unless you know how to convene with ghosts, as Jason apparently did.

By way of disclaimer, I have to admit that I came to this book with a strong dose of skepticism. Besides the dubious price, there is also Erin Osmon's social media presence. This presence is not very inspiring of confidence as it contains plentiful politically polarized, unreflective and bland common sentiments of one of America's well-developed political fundamentalisms. Now of course, writers are entitled to whatever points of view they want, but the very typicalness of it, the lack of any extra insight or spark, is not suggestive of any sort of great writer or shaper of culture in the making. Now, knowing that Jason went to Oberlin, it's completely unsurprising that people of a particular political persuasion surrounded him, and have not shame in tacking on to the music, unreflective mottoes or imperatives. If you watch enough concert footage, for example, you can hear bandmates telling people who to vote for in between songs. But Jason's music, whatever messages you take out of it, never stooped to such pat blandishments as answers to life's great problems. And it doesn't seem like he ever publically -or privately- attached his music to any kind of "movement." That's precisely an aspect of what makes his work stand out among the many imitators and half-artists society produces. He tells it like it is and leaves it up to us to figure it out. Unfortunately, though, carrying that burden all too often makes many of us very sick and wears us out as our culture loses harmony and structure. So it's understandable that some of us turn to 'movements' with 'right answers' as a coping mechanism. Jason probably wasn't either disposed or well enough to explain why you must avoid doing this with the art to some of the people around it. A very important point, though is that to her great credit, Osmon does not actually do this in the book. At the most obvious opportunity to do so, she dug a little deeper than taking an easy way of using a possible aspect of his untimely demise to score a political point, and told the plain truth. Kudos for that. That is the responsible way to honor the real story of a deceased person.

In any case, I'm obviously torn about this book. It's clearly valuable to me and I appreciate deeply all the efforts of the writer and her sources that went into its making. I only wish that someone could have explained the premium price to me, and that the publisher would have done more to justify it by at least providing a reasonable standard of copyediting. I appreciate it, but it doesn't feel good to sense these hints of disgrace hovering about it. I don't suppose any of it was intentional. Surely the living have their own reasons and needs, and it's not unfair for a man's memory to do something for them as they do something for his legacy. I only wish it had been a little more careful, a little more insightful. At the end of the day only Jason could have told us the answers to some of the questions he left surrounding his work, so what that leaves you, perhaps quite appropriately, is the opportunity to engage at a deeper level with his work to reveal its meanings for you. This book could most probably help you do that as it does highlight many things the average fan would be unlikely to know about, and does reveal more about the artist as seen by those who spent the most time with him. It's valuable. It could have been done a little better. I hope Jason Molina's ghost is not entirely unhappy with it or with my review of it. Perhaps we'll find out, if and when he haunts us, what more we were supposed to discover.
20 people found this helpful
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No Heart or Soul in This Book

First, this book could have benefited from an competent editor. With mistakes like using "he" and "him" next to each other, and getting "sing" and "sign" confused, it's obvious nobody did a good read-through of the manuscript. Even worse, there is a mention of someone surrendering to Robert E. Lee at the Civil War's end, which I am certain did not happen. Otherwise, this bio is a clinical account of the life of an artist who was all soul and heart. I am quite disappointed, as I fear no one else will make their own attempt to chronicle Molina's life after this book. The best thing to do is listen to the music, and watch the videos.
4 people found this helpful
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Savoring every page.

This is truly a beautifully written book.
3 people found this helpful
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very much worth the read, if you are curious about the man and his art

I had a correspondence with Jason going on for 15 years, and this book helped round out (and at times explain) a bit about a man whose work I had come to love, whose efforts I had come to admire, and whose privacy I had always respected. I felt Ms. Osmon allowed me to learn things that rounded out his personality and helped me go deeper with some things I had never felt it my place to ask personally. The writing feels very sensitive to the man and his flaws, whilst not letting him off the hook. Obviously a fan of Jason's music, I felt she brought a fan's passion, and a researcher's eye for what was a tough read at times, but one that in the end left me feeling thankful for her efforts.
2 people found this helpful
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Well-written, well-researched and insightful

I love this author's insight into Molina's life. There is so much research and understanding behind what's written. I enjoyed it very much.
2 people found this helpful
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Jason Molina, Songwriter, Son, Brother, Husband

I've been excited about this book since I first heard it was being written over a year ago. I've been telling friends about it, some of whom wonder "Is there really a story to tell?" Well, yes there is. This book is deeply moving and really demonstrates the author's commitment to telling Jason's story. Her connection with his music is obvious, and her approach to its subject is both compelling and complete, pulling no punches while also giving Molina a respectful bio. The details are fascinating, and the thread that ties his whole life story together is rather impressive. I can't imagine a fan, or even someone interested in how a creative mind blossoms, struggles, and captivates all at once. Highly recommended
2 people found this helpful
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must have

important and authentic account of the most brilliant poet and performer of my time. a must read for all Molina fans.
1 people found this helpful
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Listen to his music instead

I wanted to love it because Jason Molina's music means so much to me. But this book feel empty and surface-level, the opposite of Molina's music. The writing is akin to a teenager writing a term paper on her favorite musician for an English class: a lot of telling, but no showing. I put the book down after 28 pages and went to listen to Molina instead.
1 people found this helpful