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Revision as of 06:01, 13 May 2023
Article Draft
Daisy Jones & The Six (book)
Author | Taylor Jenkins Reid |
---|---|
Publisher | Ballantine Books |
Publication date | March 5, 2019 |
ISBN | 9781524798628 |
Daisy Jones & The Six is a historical fiction novel written by author Taylor Jenkins Reid. It was first published in March of 2019 by Ballantine Books.[1] It tells the story of a 70's band that gives individual interviews about their final show and subsequent breakup as a band. It is loosely inspired by Fleetwood Mac and their recording of Rumors.[2]
Plot Structure
Daisy Jones & The Six is told in an oral history format, with interview from the band members being the guiding force of the novel. Additionally, there are relevant emails, song lyrics, and transcripts.[3] Each section is split into years that contain critical events leading up to the band's success and eventual demise.
Plot
A yet unknown interviewer has compiled together video interviews of the band as well as family and friends that they took, transcripts of interviews throughout the years, text from books written about the band, and other relevant sources to piece together how a band as successful as Daisy Jones & The Six could fall apart.[3][4]
The Groupie: Daisy Jones (1965-1972)
Daisy Jones is introduced to the audience. She is born to wealthy socialites in living in Hollywood, though spends much of her childhood alone. Around age 14 she starts sneaking into clubs and bars on the Sunset Strip. She loses her virginity to a much older man, a random famous drummer. She meets an older disco star, Simone Jackson, and becomes fast friends with her. They would go to parties hosted by famous musicians. This is Daisy's first introduction to drugs. But Daisy is a talented singer and songwriter. She starts writing her own music after she noticed other people using her ideas in their own hits.
The Rise of the Six (1966-1972)
The Six, originally the Dunne Brothers, started by brothers lead singer Billy and lead guitarist Graham Dunne in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. As they began to grow, with Billy writing more and more songs, they brought other people into the band – drummer Warren Rhodes, rhythm guitarist Chuck Williams, and Bassist Pete Loving. They began to play small shows at bars. They then play a wedding, where Billy meets his future wife, Camila Martinez. Then Chuck gets drafted for the war, and Pete's younger brother Eddie Loving replaces him until Chuck can come back. But Chuck never comes back – he dies in Cambodia.
In 1970 the Dunne Brothers (as they were still called at this point) were offered a spot as opener for a band called The Winters. Here they meet their keyboardist Karen Sirko (known as Karen Karen). She was a keyboardist for The Winters, but left due to the way she was treated. After Karen joined, the band officially changed their name to The Six.
They start playing bigger shows. At a show in New York they meet a man, Rod Reyes, who will become their manager. He pitches ideas to the band to help them grow. They start playing shows all over the east coast, gaining an ever-increasing fanbase. This is where trouble starts. Being the lead singer, girls throw themselves at Billy, and he is unsure how to respond. Him and Camila start fighting, but he writes a song to show that he still loves her. But the band wants to go out west, and Camila wants to stay east. So she dumps Billy, and the band moves out to California. There, they meet Teddy Price, a producer who produces their first studio album.
After they get the contract to record an album, Billy proposes to Camila. She says yes and moves out to California to be with him.
It Girl (1972-1974)
Daisy begins to write and perform her own music. People start to ask her to record a demo, she gets a manager named Hank Allen, and she is signed to a record label. However, the label doesn't like her songs, and writes songs for her to record. She continues to take drugs.
Debut (1973-1975)
The Six move into a house in LA together. Billy and Teddy get to writing the first album. In the process, Billy takes control of the bands sound in an extreme manner. The Six begin to record the album, which would be self titled The Six. When it was released, it created a stir. The album was enough of a success for the band to go on tour. Right before they leave for tour, Camila tells Billy that she is pregnant, and they get married. This is the beginning of a bad time for Billy.
They go on tour, and the first show goes badly. They are still growing a bit of a following, so it ends up being alright. Billy starts drinking, doing more drugs, and sleeping with other women. Camila finds out, but refuses to leave him. She tells him he has until the day before the baby is due to get his act together. He continues, and even ups his level of alcohol and drug use, eventually getting to the point where the whole band is constantly worried for his life. When Camila goes into labor early, Teddy drags Billy to the hospital, but he does not go in to meet his daughter, Julia. He goes to rehab, and The Six cancel the rest of their first tour.
First (1974-1975)
Daisy refuses to show up to her recording sessions because they won't let her record her own music. Teddy Price shows up at her door and tells her that none of the songs she has written are finished and she needs to record the album that they have written for her. Therefore, Daisy's debut album First was released in early 1975. While not as big a success as The Six, it got her name recognition.
Seven Eight Nine (1975-1976)
After Billy comes back from rehab, he begins writing songs for a second album, 10 songs that would become SevenEightNine. This album however, was not as well received by Sound City (the record label that they were signed to). Teddy suggests making one of their songs a duet, bringing in a female voice. The one he finally gets the band to agree to is none other than Daisy Jones. She comes into the studio to help them record the song – Honeycomb – and changes up the lyrics that Billy had written, flipping the whole song on its head. Honeycomb was the true beginning of Daisy Jones & The Six's rise to fame.
The Numbers Tour (1976-1977)
The Six gear up to play a national tour, with Daisy opening. Prior to the tour, she plays an electric show with them in LA that gets people talking. Billy brings Camila (who is pregnant with twin girls) and their daughter Julia on tour with him. Honeycomb peaks at number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100. The band's fanbase continues to grow, but Billy finds it harder and harder to stay sober. Daisy also continues her use of drugs. Additionally, Daisy was sleeping with her manager, Hank, and finally decides to drop Hank and join The Six's manager, Rod. Daisy and Billy start to come to an understanding. Graham and Karen start up a fling.
Hank leaves and takes Daisy's band members with him. But instead of cancelling her opening act, Eddie goes out and plays guitar for her. Right after, Billy comes on stage, takes Eddie's guitar, and Daisy and him sing Honeycomb together, just the two of them. Tensions between Eddie and Billy rise. That night, a Rolling Stone journalist hangs out with them to write a piece about The Six. The idea for Daisy joining the band is planted.
The band debates the pros and cons of Daisy joining the band. They eventually decide on one album with her, see how it goes. Camila and Billy's twins are born, and Billy struggles with the fact that he missed Julia's birth. He writes a new song, "Aurora" for Camila. Graham moves in with Karen, but they still don't tell anyone.
With Daisy on board, things in the band begin to change. Graham starts helping make more decisions, and everyone else wants to be more in charge of their own musical parts – a change from the last two albums, where Billy took the lead on everything. The name of the band is officially changed to Daisy Jones & The Six, much to the displeasure of everyone involved.
Aurora (1977-1978)
The newly named Daisy Jones & The Six being recording their next album. Billy plays them "Aurora" and it is clear that this is the song they'll build the album around. Daisy and Billy start writing together. While writing they open up to each other about their past and their fears. The rest of the band experiments with their sound, which makes Billy uncomfortable, but he learns to accept it. After recording Aurora, the whole band felt the song was going to be a hit. Tensions between Billy and Eddie continue on, so much so that Rod puts feelers out for new guitarists. Graham and Karen continue fooling around. Daisy continues to use pills, and Billy writes a song about her, makes her sing it. Karen tells Camila about her and Graham.
The album starts to come together really fast, with songs being turned around within weeks. Daisy and Billy really start to find a groove in writing together. The rest of the band feels that they are on the sidelines. After spending hours recording together, Billy and Daisy nearly share a kiss. Billy decides to name the album "Aurora," after the song they built the album around, the song about Camila. The cover of the album ends up being centered on Billy and Daisy. After the album is finished recording, the band goes their separate ways before the tour to do their own thing. Daisy goes to Thailand, where she meets an Italian prince, Nicky. He has no idea who Daisy is. They fly to Italy together and get married.
When the band gets back together to listen to the finished album, Daisy is not there. While listening, it comes to light that Billy and Teddy had changed a bunch of things from the original recordings. Everyone is annoyed. Eventually, Simone – Daisy's best friend and disco star – convinces her to come back to the States. Nicky joins her a little while later. It becomes clear that Nicky is even more addicted to pills than Daisy. Jonah Berg (the Rolling Stones writer) comes back to do another piece while tensions are really high among the band. The article ends up being primarily about the relationship between Daisy and Billy. As much as the band hated the article, it was a key to their success. The album Aurora
Aurora World Tour (1978-1979)
text
Chicago Stadium (July 12, 1979)
text
Then and Now (1979-present)
text
One Last Thing Before I Go (November 5th, 2012)
text
Background
Editions
Daisy Jones & The Six was released in hardcover on March 5th, 2019 by Ballantine Books
Reception
This book received positive reviews. The New York Times called it "her most sophisticated and ambitious novel."[5]
Adaptations
Television Adaptation
On July 25th, 2019 it was announced that Amazon had ordered a limited series based on the book.[6] The series was written by Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber and produced with Reese Witherspoon and Reid herself along with Amazon Studios.[6] Filming occurred from September 2021 to May of 2022, and was released on Amazon Prime March 3rd, 2023.[7][8]
Changes From Book to TV
References
- ^ Khatib, Joumana (2019-02-28). "12 New Books to Watch for in March". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-04-27.
- ^ "Daisy Jones and the Six wins the 2020 Goldsboro Books Glass Bell Award". FMcM. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
- ^ a b Reid, Taylor Jenkins (2019). Daisy Jones & the Six : a novel (First edition ed.). New York. ISBN 978-1-5247-9862-8. OCLC 1040232894.
{{cite book}}
:|edition=
has extra text (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ "Daisy Jones & The Six: Recap and Summary". The Bibliofile. 2020-09-29. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
- ^ Henderson, Eleanor (2019-03-04). "A Rock Band Novel — and a Snapshot of the Bell-Bottomed 1970s". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-05-12.
- ^ a b Otterson, Joe (2018-07-25). "Amazon Orders 'Daisy Jones & The Six' Series Adaptation With Reese Witherspoon Producing". Variety. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
- ^ Mboho, Edidiong (2022-05-07). "'Daisy Jones & the Six' Adaptation Wraps Filming in New Orleans, Confirms Stars Riley Keough and Josh Whitehouse". Collider. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
- ^ "A Love Triangle Takes Centerstage in New 'Daisy Jones and the Six' Trailer". Harper's BAZAAR. 2023-02-15. Retrieved 2023-05-04.