Since the release of his first best-selling album Look Sharp in 1979,
Joe Jackson has forged a singular career in music through his
originality as a composer and his notoriously independent stance toward
music-business fashion. He has also been a famously private person,
whose lack of interest in his own celebrity has been interpreted by some
as aloofness. That reputation is shattered by A Cure for Gravity,
Jackson's enormously funny and revealing memoir of growing up musical,
from a culturally impoverished childhood in a rough English port town to
the Royal Academy of Music, through London's Punk and New Wave scenes,
up to the brink of pop stardom. Jackson describes his life as a teenage
Beethoven fanatic; his early piano gigs for audiences of glass-throwing
skinheads; and his days on the road with long-forgotten club bands. Far
from a standard-issue celebrity autobiography, A Cure for Gravity is a
smart, passionate book about music, the creative process, and coming of
age as an artist.