Songs in Ursa Major

Emma Brodie

Book - 2021

The year is 1969, and the Bayleen Island Folk Fest is abuzz with one name: Jesse Reid. Jesse Reid's intricate guitar riffs and supple baritone are poised to tip from fame to legend with this one headlining performance. That is, until his motorcycle crashes on the way to the show. Jane Quinn is a Bayleen Island local whose music flows as naturally as her long blond hair. When she and her bandmates are asked to play in Jesse Reid's place at the festival, it almost doesn't seem real. But Jane plants her bare feet on the Main Stage and delivers the performance of a lifetime, stopping Jesse's disappointed fans in their tracks: A star is born. Jesse stays on the island to recover from his near-fatal accident and he strikes up ...a friendship with Jane, coaching her through the production of her first record. As Jane contends with the music industry's sexism, Jesse becomes her advocate, and what starts as a shared calling soon becomes a passionate love affair.

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Emma Brodie (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"This is a Borzoi book"--Title page.
Physical Description
323 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780593318621
9780593312377
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Jane Quinn was raised in a matriarchal family on a remote tourist island off the coast of Massachusetts. Bayleen Island is home to a famous folk music festival, which, in the summer of 1969, draws teen idol Jesse Reid to Jane's hometown. Jane's band, the Breakers, serendipitously meets and ends up touring with Jesse, thus sparking Jane and Jesse's incendiary love affair. Jesse believes wholeheartedly in Jane's talent, and pushes her to write her first solo album, Songs in Ursa Major. Unfortunately, their love is ill-fated: their youth, family secrets, and the demands of record label contracts prove to be too much. Jane wants her talent to be valued apart from her connection to Jesse; Jesse simply wants Jane as his life's companion. Set in the grooving 1970s music world, this sprawling novel follows Jane and Jesse through the epic highs and lows of their careers. Moving from New York to Los Angeles to Greece to the Grammys, then always back home to the island, Brodie's debut is a furious page-turner, meditating on the glittering beast of fame.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Brodie's breezy debut draws on the American soft rock music scene of the 1960s and '70s to mixed results. In the summer of 1969, "heir apparent of folk rock" Jesse Reid is supposed to perform at a famous festival on an island off the coast of Massachusetts that bears more than a passing resemblance to Martha's Vineyard. When Jesse is suddenly sidelined by a motorcycle accident, local band The Breakers, led by 19-year-old Jane Quinn, takes his place, to resounding success. Soon, Jesse's manager offers to make Jane a star, and Jane visits gorgeous, tormented Jesse at his parents' island mansion, where he is recovering from his injuries. After Jane and her band get a record contract and start touring with Jesse, Jane and Jesse become romantically involved, and she becomes aware of his increasing dependence on drugs. Brodie's narrative is at its best when focused on the mechanics and politics of music production, which emerge from the perspectives of the band's manager and sound engineer. Brodie also has a clear grasp of the hurdles faced by Jane as a female musician, but the romantic and erotic aspects of the novel are less convincing ("his hands gripping her hips like handles on a plow"). In the end, this riff on A Star Is Born doesn't transcend its well-worn origins. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

DEBUT Opening in July 1969, this entrancing debut novel takes readers through the career of Jane Quinn, a young singer/songwriter from Bayleen Island, MA. Jane, who inherited her mother's musical abilities, is part of a folk rock band called the Breakers. When the Breakers are the warm-up act for a local performance given by prominent guitarist/singer Jesse Reid, Jane's career becomes entwined with Jesse's. Fame awaits when the Breakers get a recording contract, but the band eventually breaks up as each member moves in a different direction. Jane evolves into a formidable solo artist, more strident in her lyrics, even as she becomes more creative and virtuosic. VERDICT Inspired by the folk rock scene of the late '60s and early '70s--and reputedly by the relationship between James Taylor and Joni Mitchell--this superbly crafted debut novel immerses readers in a story of family, love, and music from the first page. Brodie makes a point about the destructive force of drug abuse, and bears witness to unsavory business practices in the music industry. This book would make a wonderful movie; readers will long for an album of Jane's songs to go with it.--Lisa Rohrbaugh, Leetonia Community P.L., OH

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A young musician rises and falls and rises again in the 1970s music industry. Inspired by the folk rock scene of the late 1960s and '70s, Brodie's debut novel follows Jane Quinn, an ethereal and talented musician, as she navigates love, loss, and stardom. A seventh-generation native of Bayleen Island, off the coast of Massachusetts, Jane has always led a life imbued with music; her mother was a minorly successful songwriter before her disappearance a decade ago, and Jane is the lead vocalist and guitarist in the Breakers, a local band. The novel opens in 1969 at the annual Island Folk Fest, where Jesse Reid--music's unassuming, blue-eyed, and handsome megastar--is set to headline. After an accident leaves Jesse unable to perform, Jane and the Breakers are unexpectedly thrust into the spotlight of the main stage--and their lives change forever. As Jesse recovers on the island, he and Jane are drawn to each other through their mutual passion for music and shared sense of loss. After recording their new album and making a few high-profile enemies, the Breakers hit the road as the opening act for Jesse's 1970 tour. Jane insists on keeping her relationship with Jesse a secret because she wants to be known for her music above all else: "She feared that, if the world knew her as Jesse's love interest before she'd ever opened her mouth on a national stage, that was all she'd ever be." When Jane makes a shocking discovery on tour, her life is blown up, and she returns to the island. As she comes to terms with long-kept secrets, she throws herself into her music and writes her magnum opus, Songs in Ursa Major. Throughout the novel, Brodie thoughtfully probes the different ways men and women were treated in the music industry: the men coddled and protected in the face of their faults while the women (especially rule breakers like Jane) were taken advantage of, undercut, and vilified. If the plot feels formulaic at times, Brodie's writing--about music, family, and grief--elevates the novel. An enjoyable debut that will appeal to fans of this iconic era. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 Island Folk Fest Saturday, July 26, 1969 As a stagehand cleared the dismantled pieces of Flower Moon's drum set, the last shred of daylight formed a golden curve around the cymbal. It winked at the crowd; then the red sun slipped into the sea. In the gathering dusk, the platform shimmered like an enamel shell, reverberating with the audience's anticipation. Any minute now, Jesse Reid would go on. Curtis Wilks stood about thirty feet from the platform with the rest of the press. There was Billboard's Zeke Felton, sharing a joint with a Flower Moon groupie in a beaded kaftan; Ted Munz from NME, reading over his notes under the nearest floodlight; Lee Harmon of Creem, trading stories with Time's Jim Faust. The Flower Moon groupie approached Curtis with the joint between her lips, eyeing the pass around his neck. It showed a picture of Curtis's face--­which Keith Moon had once compared to "a homeless man's Paddington Bear"--­printed above his name and the words Rolling Stone. The groupie offered Curtis the joint. He accepted it. His exhale became a brushstroke inside an Impressionist painting; swirls of smoke rose in the salty air, tanned limbs and youthful faces interweaving like daisy chains across the meadow. He handed the joint back to the girl and watched her skip into a ring of hippies. Someone had a conga; thrift-­store nymphs began dancing to an asynchronous rhythm. Curtis had cut his teeth as a correspondent on the festival circuit. Berkeley, Philly, Big Sur, Newport--­none of them could touch Bayleen Island for atmosphere: the hike up the red clay cliffs, the wildflower meadow, the view of the Atlantic Ocean. There was something magical about having to take a ferry to get to a show. As he watched the girls dance, Curtis felt a wave of premature nostalgia. There was a sense in the industry that folk was on its way out; the Vietnam War had been dragging on so long, the protest songs that had made Dylan and Baez what they were now felt empty and tired. Curtis had come to see what they'd all come to see: Jesse Reid ushering in a new epoch for the dying genre. As if on cue, the dancing girls began to sing Reid's breakout single, their voices tremulous with excitement. "My girl's got beads of red and yellow, Her eyes are starry bright." Their feverish giggles recalled Curtis to the time a young Elvis Presley had played his high school in Gladewater, Texas, back in '55. Eighteen-­year-­old Buddy Holly-­obsessed Curtis had watched girls he'd known since kindergarten openly weep, swept away by the fantasy that Elvis might choose them. The full Bye Bye Birdie. That was the power of a true rock star. Soft-­spoken Jesse Reid's persona couldn't have been more different from Elvis's, but Reid seemed to inspire the same devotion in his fans. He had the cowboy baritone of Kris Kristofferson (but Reid's sounded effortless), and the lyrical guitar skills of Paul Simon--­plus, he was taller than both, with blue eyes that, according to Curtis's guilty pleasure Snitch Magazine, were "the color of medium stonewash Levi's." "She makes me feel so sweet and mellow, She makes me feel all right." "Sweet and Mellow" was a Snickers bar of a song; to hear it was to crave it. Hands down the hit of the summer, it had been holding in Billboard's top ten for eighteen weeks. Curtis had been tracking Reid since he opened for Fair Play at Wembley Stadium the previous year--­but this single from Reid's self-­titled album had turned him from fringe hero to mainstream sensation overnight. And tonight, Reid would take his place as the heir apparent to folk rock. The crowd broke into applause as a bald man with a gray beard shuffled onstage--­Joe Maynard, the Festival Committee chair. The longer the audience clapped, the more pained Maynard looked. Curtis's news radar bristled. "Yes, hello, my beautiful friends," he said. Maynard quieted the cheering with his hands. "Well, there's no easy way to say this, so I'm just going to say it," he said. "I'm afraid Jesse Reid won't be performing tonight." Curtis felt a stab of disappointment as his mental list of feature headlines turned to ash. A visceral shock wave passed through the crowd. One by one, dreamy expressions began to wilt, a field of dandelions turning white with anger, ready to blow. And then they did. Cries of outrage rang the twilight like a bell. The girls who had been singing and dancing a moment before collapsed into sobs. Maynard shrank behind the mic. "But we've got a great act for you up next--­it'll just be a few minutes now," he said, sweat gleaming at his temples. A second roar from the crowd buffeted him into the wings. Curtis edged toward the platform. Something must have just happened--­he'd seen Reid's A&R man backstage after Curtis had interviewed Flower Moon. Maybe Reid had gotten too drunk to go on. Maybe he'd lost it backstage. The festival tonight was performance number thirty-­six in a sixty-­arena global tour. Sometimes artists just cracked; Curtis had seen it before. He spied Mark Edison passing from the backstage area into the audience and caught his eye. Edison was a reporter for The Island Gazette, a local independent daily. Most of the Fest's press corps found his snide antics insufferable, but he had always been useful to Curtis. The audience's initial dismay had given way to movement. Amidst cries from the most stalwart Reid fanatics, lines had begun to form through the crowd, pushing toward the exits. Edison reached Curtis. He offered Curtis his flask--­warm gin. They both drank deeply. "What's happening back there?" said Curtis. "Where's Reid?" Edison shook his head. They stepped aside as two girls thundered by, ripping up the peace love jesse sign they carried like a banner. Curtis did not envy the band about to perform to this mob. "Who's going on?" said Curtis. "Someone from tomorrow's lineup?" Mark shook his head. "It's a local band--­the Breakers," said Mark. "I don't know them," said Curtis. "What's their label?" "Label?" said Mark. "They don't have one. They're just a bunch of kids. They were scheduled to play at the amateur stage down the hill, and the committee just scooped them up. The biggest show they've ever played is forty, fifty people." "Holy shit," said Curtis. This was going to be a train wreck. As he spoke, three young men began to set up onstage. They couldn't have been more than twenty. The drummer looked the most filled out, with a chiseled jaw, shoulder-­length black hair, and almond-­toned skin. He and the bassist were clearly related; the bassist looked younger, hair shorn around his chin, a red bandanna tied across his brow. The guitarist was paler, with boyish features and a somber manner. His sandy hair flopped in front of his eyes as he tuned. "We want Jesse!" a girl shrieked from over Curtis's shoulder. Curtis began to wonder if it wasn't better just to head back to town. The Elektra producers had rented a yacht and were hosting an after-­party for industry folk. Bayleen Island was only five miles from international waters, which meant good drugs; he could be flying within the hour. "Jesse Reid, Jesse Reid," a chant rose up in the crowd among the faithful. As the boys checked their equipment, Curtis noticed a figure plugging in to the amplifier behind the drum set. As she straightened up, the spotlight caught her yellow hair, which hung down to her waist in a bolt of golden silk. Her clothing was simple: jean cutoffs and a white peasant shirt, an acoustic guitar strapped across her back. Her tanned legs looked girlish as she strode center stage, but she had a woman's features: full lips, hollow cheekbones. She glowed. "Who is that?" said Curtis. "Jane Quinn," said Mark. "Lead vocals and guitar." As she got into position, the boys instinctively inched toward her. Their feet pawed the ground, like horses anxious at the starting gate. "We want Jesse!" a hysterical girl cried out. Jane Quinn stepped up to the mic. Curtis saw then that her feet were bare. "Wow," she said, flushed with excitement. "Quite a view from up here." The crowd ignored her. Those headed toward the exits continued walking, as if she wasn't there. A small contingent of Reid fans chanted his name like a descant over the din. "Jesse Reid, Jesse Reid." Jane Quinn tried again. "Hi, everyone," said Jane. "We're the Breakers." This had no impact; the crowd continued to chatter as though they were in a parking lot rather than at a concert. Onstage, the boys fidgeted in place. Jane exchanged a look with the guitarist. "Get off the stage," a shrill voice cried above the chaos. Jane glanced toward the drummer as though about to count off. She faltered. Curtis felt a wave of pity. How was this slip of a girl supposed to compete with one of the world's biggest stars? "Jesse Reid, Jesse Reid." Then Jane Quinn turned toward the crowd, squaring her shoulders. Her movements were slow and deliberate. She took a deep breath and placed a hand on the mic stand, closing her eyes. She stood perfectly still, listening. The crowd quieted half a decibel. When she opened her eyes, there was flint in her stare. She leaned toward the mic. "My girl's got beads of red and yellow." Curtis's heart skipped a beat as the chorus from "Sweet and Mellow" arched over the meadow like a silver comet. Jane's bandmates exchanged mystified looks. The crowd gasped. Had she really just done that? "Her eyes are starry bright." Jane Quinn surveyed the audience with self-­assurance, as though to say, I know you think you want Jesse Reid, but I'm about to show you something so much better. It was like watching someone hold a lighter up to a monsoon. The girl was bold as fuck. "She makes me feel so sweet and mellow." What a range--­a soprano, in the school of Joan Baez and Judy Collins, though not nearly as patrician-­sounding as Collins, or as embattled as Baez. There was an untrained edge in her voice, an almost Appalachian coarseness, that raised the hair on Curtis's neck. Just gorgeous. "She makes me feel all right." Jane glanced at her guitarist. He gave her a nod--­she had taken a leap, and they were right behind her. The root chords of the song were a simple A-major progression any practiced group could pick up. The drummer counted them in, and the Breakers began to play. Time slowed. "My girl makes every day a hello." When Jesse Reid sang "Sweet and Mellow," his voice intoned the melody: no ornamentation, just his pure baritone and his guitar. As Jane Quinn sang, she cast off any memory of Reid's rendition, adding runs and grace notes as she went, as though composing the song in real time. Curtis was astounded. She made choices no other musician would have--­or could have--­made. "Her eyes light up the night." The crowd couldn't help themselves--­they began to sing along. They had all come to witness a legend being born, and now they were: it just wasn't Jesse Reid. "She makes me feel so sweet and mellow." Curtis had been at Newport when Bob Dylan had walked onstage with his electric Fender Stratocaster. He'd been in Monterey two years later when Jimi Hendrix had lit his guitar on fire during "Wild Thing." Neither compared to this. An unknown taking over the headlining spot--­a girl. They'd be talking about Island Folk Fest '69 forever. "She makes me feel all right." Those who had been walking away turned back. Those who had been crying smiled. They whooped and cheered and kissed and hugged. When the song finished, they lost their minds. "Janie Q!" shouted Edison, applauding beside Curtis. Janie Q. "It really is a beautiful night," said Jane, as though continuing a conversation from earlier. With that, she counted the Breakers into their next song--­an up-­tempo original called "Indigo" that brought to mind "White Rabbit." Curtis couldn't catch the words, but the music was hot. The Breakers had a great sound--­a mix of art and psychedelic rock, all twisting notes and braying chords. Even so, Jane's voice stole the show. Her loveliness felt personal--­it was impossible to look at her and not take flight in some small part of you. As she sang, Curtis felt that true rock-­star feeling--­he wanted her to see him. She gave her shoulders a small shimmy, light refracting off the silken strands of her hair. Then it happened. Jane Quinn grinned right at him. He just knew it. Excerpted from Songs in Ursa Major: A Novel by Emma Brodie All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.