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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Rock tell-alls don’t hold back

Mark Kennedy Associated Press

For those rock ‘n’ roll fans on your gift list this holiday season, there are plenty of new offerings to keep their heads bopping along happily into the new year.

There are fresh sounds from Eric Clapton, Sting, Genesis, Ronnie Wood of the Rolling Stones, Velvet Revolver guitarist Slash and Motley Crue bassist Nikki Sixx.

There’s just one twist: None are on CD racks.

All are on bookshelves – part of an unusual flurry of autobiographies out this winter by aging rockers with some hair-raising stories.

Clapton’s self-titled autobiography is already a hit, having sold 525,000 copies. Joining him on best-seller lists is “Slash,” “Ronnie” and Sixx’s “The Heroin Diaries.”

Why would wild rockers turn to that most stodgy of storytelling modes, the written word?

“I think there are a couple of motivations: One, they’ve lived their lives and it’s time to look back on them – the lived life is worth examining,” says Broadway Books Executive Editor Charlie Conrad, who worked on Clapton’s book.

“And also, from the standpoint of the public, rock figures are out there on the cutting edge – the knife edge. They live life to its extreme. And if they survived, they have a good story to tell.”

Those stories include tales of love, loss and friendship, but also nasty bouts with venereal diseases, scary strippers and mountains of controlled substances.

Clapton, who pushed aside a ghost writer in favor of penning his own book, discusses the death of his son Conor, his various addictions, and his love triangle with Pattie Boyd and George Harrison – a topic already broached in Boyd’s recent tell-all “Wonderful Tonight.”

Wood, who offers his own night bedding Boyd, also delves into his years freebasing cocaine and the time he had an armed face-off with Keith Richards, with both pointing guns at each other.

Sixx’s diary is an unvarnished look at his life on the road in 1987, when he struggled with addictions and depression.

There’s the time he woke up during an earthquake and ran outside, naked and clutching a crack pipe. In another entry, he writes: “This morning I woke up with my shotgun in bed with me.”

Not to be outdone, Slash, a founding member of Guns N’ Roses who makes several wicked cameos in Sixx’s book, has his own accounts of debauchery, delivered in a straightforward, often amusing way.

He tells of one night being kicked out of a Canadian hotel, drunk and soaked in his own urine. But to his surprise, he’s not as frozen as he feared.

“That’s a wonderful side effect of leather pants: When you pee yourself in them, they’re more forgiving than jeans,” he writes.

For the less squeamish reader, there’s always “Mosaic: Pieces of My Life So Far” by Amy Grant, which includes the singer’s lyrics, poetry and vignettes – all of a decidedly uplifting variety.

And Sting has published a book of his lyrics, complete with his more highbrow observations. Of the song “Synchronicity II,” he writes: “I was trying to dramatize Jung’s theory of meaningful coincidence.”

Publishers say the current crop of rock tell-alls owes much to the success of Bob Dylan’s 2004 autobiography “Chronicles: Volume One,” which sold 425,000 hardcover copies.

“We’re just starting to see the first fruit of that and there are some more coming. It’s just a category that seems to be very interesting,” says Elizabeth Beier, executive editor of St. Martin’s Press, which published the Wood and Genesis books.

Books mining the seamier side of rock are nothing new, of course. Recent notable titles include Anthony Kiedis’ “Scar Tissue”; “Hammer of the Gods,” about Led Zeppelin; “No One Here Gets Out Alive” on The Doors; and Motley Crue’s “The Dirt: Confessions of the World’s Most Notorious Rock Band.”

What seems new now is a renewed push for autobiography, publishers say. They point to the overall strong demand for memoirs as a reason more musicians are putting down their instruments and picking up pens.

They also note a slip in overall album sales.

“You have to wonder if they’re looking to books as a kind of exciting medium as the traditional record medium kind of goes to hell,” Broadway’s Conrad says. “Maybe they’re suddenly noticing there’s business to be done and advances to be paid.”

Sixx has taken that one step further. His book came out the same time his new band, Sixx: A.M., released a sort of soundtrack to the memoir, with each song tied to a book chapter.

The next big rock autobiographies on the horizon? One by Pete Townshend, and one by another Rolling Stone – Keith Richards, who was reportedly paid more than $7 million by Little, Brown & Company for his drug-fueled memories.

That may be a risky prospect. Conrad recalls band mate Mick Jagger also being under contract to write his autobiography many years ago, only for him to back out.

“There’s a great story about how he was signed up for all this money and then he just couldn’t remember anything,” says Conrad.

“And if he can’t remember, what about Keith? Let’s just hope his collaborator can do a lot of interviews.”