Rumours of My Demise: A Memoir - Evan Dando BOOK
Rumours of My Demise: A Memoir - Evan Dando BOOK
Couldn't load pickup availability
Shipping & Delivery
Shipping & Delivery
- All available items are in stock at our shop and ready to ship (excluding pre-orders)
- We ship daily Monday to Friday
- Orders placed before 12pm are likely to ship the same day
- EU orders under 150 euros (approx £120) are shipped with IOSS and prices include tax / customs duty
UK Xmas Posting Deadlines
UK Xmas Posting Deadlines
- Thu 18th Dec via Royal Mail 48 or 24 Tracked
- Mon 22nd Dec via Special Delivery (Ā£9.95)
These are based on Royal Mail's recommended posting deadlines and are not guaranteed. Expect delays at this time of year, please order early and use Tracked 24 or Special Delivery if a late delivery is going to ruin Christmas.
Evan Dando spills the true story of his band's tumultuous history and what it was like to be famous in the pre-internet days in this candid, colourful, and unputdownable memoir.
After Kurt Cobain died in 1994, everyone thought Evan Dando was next. The Lemonheads' frontman and songwriter had leapt from Boston's mid-80s punk scene into international grunge royalty. Two gold records, acting roles, glam photo shoots and a roster of celebrity drug buddies made Dando quickly into a poster boy for 90s analogue excess. He was so deep in it, some people believed a fake report that he had died from an overdose.
Rumours of My DemiseĀ is Evan Dando's story - raw, wild, unfiltered and straight from the source. A privileged kid who snuck into gigs and crashed on whatever floors he could find. A stunningly gifted rocker who propelled his high school band into the highest reaches of indie fame. The industry's favourite 'alternahunk' until he wasn't, who all the same burned through the 90s like he owned them. A guitarist and singer who racked up struggles punctuated by some striking successes in the internet hashtag decades that followed, before making a wholly new home and life in Brazil.
But you won't find a redemption arc here, and just a few regrets. At the end of it all, it's a manifesto. In this memoir, Evan Dando explains how and why he has always lived for the music.
