Using narrative accounts from a sample of 69 New York City-based musicians of various genres who are self-acknowledged heroin users, the book addresses the reasons why these musicians started using heroin and the impact heroin had on these musicians' playing, creativity, and careers.1. Introduction 2. Jazz 3. Rock 4. R and B 5. Latin and Caribbean Music 6. American Folk Music 7. Conclusion
The book read to me as a labour of love and is a model of scholarship. . .As such, it is a fine example for students of the imaginative use of secondary data and, rather like the board game Monopoly, is a methodology that could be copied to another big city, only with a comparative dimension to boot. - Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy
Spunt's study of heroin use amongst New York City's musicians is an exciting academic journey for those who appreciate the merits of qualitative research and especially scholars working in urban ethnography and cultural criminology. Readers will discover that Spunt's groundbreaking study engages the critical academic mind and also the human heart: this book confronts the reader with a vast human tragedy where many of our best musicians have ruined their artistic excellence with heroin. - Thaddeus Muller, Assistant Professor of Criminology, Erasmus University, The Netherlands
Spunt clearly and comprehensively demonstrates the connection between heroin and music and the need for a better understanding of that nexus. - Henry H. Brownstein, Senior Fellow, University of Chicago, USA
This work promises to make a unique contribution to the sociological literature on music and drug use. Spunt is eminently qualified to make this statement, having distinguished himself as a veteran ethnographer of the New York City heroin scene. His depiction of New York City heroin-using musicians is simply fascinating, sure to become a classic in the field. - Mark S. Hamm, Professor of Criminology alcé