Since 2003, Jude Rogers has written about arts and culture for the Guardian, Observer, Sunday Times, Times Saturday Review, Daily Telegraph, New Statesman, The Word, MOJO, Q, NME, The Quietus, Wire and The Gentlewoman. She has made acclaimed documentaries for Radio 4, including the 2021 series 'A Life in Music', and presents the White Rabbit music books podcast, Songbook. She has interviewed artists from Paul McCartney to Dolly Parton, Damon Albarn to Billie Eilish, Laurie Anderson to Michael Stipe, Debbie Harry to the Pet Shop Boys.
Too often we treat popular music as wallpaper surrounding us as we
live our lives. Jude Rogers shows the emotional and cerebral heft
such music can have. It's a personal journey which becomes
universal. Fascinating
*Ian Rankin*
A stunning hybrid of memoir and music, soundtracking the indelible
nature of sound. Rogers' moving, lyrical sentences sing and stop
you in your tracks
*Sinéad Gleeson*
I absolutely loved this book. It's a fabulously moving memoir,
gorgeous and unique, and beautifully written - tender, funny,
nostalgic and insightful, elegantly revealing so much about the
power of music. It's given me a completely new take on the songs I
have loved in my life and why I love them. What a joy.
*Ruth Jones*
Moving and absorbing, The Sound Of Being Human mixes memoir,
analysis, anecdote and personal chronicle into a mosaic that evokes
what music means to the individual and the human tribe. A candid,
beautiful read
*Stuart Maconie*
I've not read a warmer, deeper or truer evocation of the intense
and unique connection between person and song. In untangling her
own life, Jude Rogers helped me understand mine. This book is truly
beautiful
*David Whitehouse*
A beautifully written memoir of love, loss and the ways in which
music can move us in unseen ways. Jude is a rare talent
*Sirin Kale*
Jude Rogers is one of our very finest music writers, and The Sound
of Being Human shows us exactly why: tender, whip-smart, passionate
and meticulous. All music fans will relish this book
*Laura Barton*
There are books that have made me cry and books that have taught me
about the psychological effects of music, but Jude's is the only
one that has done both. It's a wonderful thing - real food for the
heart and head. A book that lots of people will treasure
*Mat Osman*
Jude Rogers is one of my favourite writers and one of my favourite
people. Having been interviewed by her many times I'm always bowled
over by her constant passion for music, new and old, and the way
she can take you to a time and a place in a few words. This is a
beautiful memoir about how music can shape your life, sometimes
change your life, and I defy anyone not to have a little cry along
the way
*Sarah Cracknell*
Both heavy and light, dark and sweet - I very much like this
book
*Kristin Hersh*
Evocative, intelligent and touching. So brilliant on that rush you
get from the music that shapes, describes, soundtracks & changes
your life. I love Jude's writing and her power to conjure the
emotions you felt when you first heard a certain song
*Mhairi McFarlane*
Personal but universal, The Sound Of Being Human is a moving, funny
and very smart exploration of what music does to you and how it
does it
*Alexis Petridis*
Tracing the relationship between music, memory and emotions - Jude
Rogers has created a finespun weave of heartfelt memoir, keen
insights into the inner workings of pop music, merging into
mind-expanding chunks of science. An absorbing and poignant
book
*Philip Clark*
A beautifully written book offering fresh insight into the way the
mind processes music as well as giving a glimpse into Jude's own
life as a writer, mother and broadcaster
*Ralph Moore, Mixmag magazine/Worldwide FM*
Jude Rogers takes on one of the most intriguing questions of all:
how some songs come to mean so much to us, curling themselves
around our memories of that blissful summer or bleak winter. As I
read this warm and honest book, I realised its true subject is not
pop music, not really. It is rather an exploration of love - how it
is formed and maintained, and what it leaves behind
*Aditya Chakrabortty, Senior Commentator, the Guardian*
A brilliantly unjaded exploration of the power of songs to
intoxicate, enthuse and reassure
*Guardian*
Fascinating read, which, far from reducing music, enriches it
*Mojo*
A moving meander through Rogers' musical memories
*Big Issue*
Her writing brims with the lively, engaged intelligence of someone
who lives in her material
*Record Collector*
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