Preludio
1
Part One
The Perfect Sound
11
Part Two
I Started Out on Stereo
55
Part Three
Tubeworld, 1
127
Part Four
Tubeworld, 2
163
Part Five
It’s My Life
209
Part Six
Wandering Rocks, 1
255
Part Seven
The First Amplifiers
283
Part Eight
Talking Heads and Singing Platters
345
Part Nine
Wandering Rocks, 2
401
Part Ten
Among the Bohemians
433
Outro
495
Acknowledgments
519
Notes on Sources
521
GARRETT HONGO was born in Volcano, Hawai'i, and grew up on the North Shore of O'ahu and in Los Angeles. His most recent books are Coral Road- Poems and The Mirror Diary- Selected Essays. A regular contributor to SoundStage! Ultra, Hongo lives in Eugene, Oregon, and is Distinguished Professor in the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Oregon.
Oregon Book Awards Finalist for Creative Nonfiction
“His book is a stereo recording, with autobiography in one channel
and his search for the best sound in the other. . . . Mr. Hongo’s
telling is gripping.” —The Wall Street Journal
“Hongo’s work embodies ekphrasis. . . . His roving intellect plants
surprises on every page.” —The Washington Post
“The Perfect Sound has a characteristic timelessness and dazzlingly
encyclopedic sweep. . . . Memories of [Hongo’s] father secure the
emotional architecture of the book.” —International Examiner
“Perfect in tone and pitch as a memoir can be. . . . Hongo writes
as passionately and clearly about technology—speakers, turntables,
CDs, and more—as he does about class, race, and ethnicity.” —New
York Journal of Books
"One of Planet Earth's great writers, Garrett Hongo is also a music
lover and audiophile. . . . As Garrett shares his life journey, he
artfully weaves in his perceptions of the world, his remembrances
of times past, family, stories of love and loss, and searching for
meaning in life, in audio, and in music. . . . A brilliant book.
Literally brought tears to my eyes as I was moved to reverie about
forgotten life moments." —Jeff Day, Positive Feedback
"In many ways, [The Perfect Sound] reminds me of one of the baroque
symphonies of Johann Sebastian Bach: a masterwork of themes,
counterpoint, and ornamentation that carries the reader on an
expanse of pure aesthetic pleasure. As a writer, Hongo’s prose is
to be envied." —The Hawai'i Review of Books
“If as Walter Pater famously claimed, ‘all art constantly aspires
towards the condition of music,’ Hongo’s acclaimed new memoir, The
Perfect Sound, shows why his own resonant writing so often achieves
it.” —Oregon ArtsWatch
“Hongo’s prose is so lush and evocative that the reading experience
is exhilarating.” —Honolulu Magazine
“Monumental and magnificent . . . The Perfect Sound is not a single
narrative but rather several narratives in one: a history of music
and recording across time and genre; a son’s reminiscence of his
father; a social history of California, Hawaii, and America since
the 1950s; and perhaps more importantly, a poet’s notes on how he
found his voice.” —Alta
“Hongo’s memoir mixes audiophile obsession and cultural history to
provide a warm resonance of human relationships to recorded music
and voices” —Library Journal
“Soulful . . . Hongo delivers a memorable memoir on reflection and
artistry, as rendered through his audiophile tendencies . . . As he
describes in lyrical, fervent passages, his penchant for spinning
vinyl on cheap turntables would eventually become a love for
elaborate equipment, amplifiers, speakers, and vacuum tubes . . .
[A] paean to the power of music.” —Publishers Weekly
“Music throbs in the background throughout this spirited memoir . .
. Along the way, the author offers a history of the invention of
the vacuum tube, amplifiers, and the various permutations of the
phonograph. A memoir of self-discovery via homage to the richness
of sound.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Contrary to Marcel Duchamp’s quip that one can look at seeing but
cannot hear hearing, in The Perfect Sound we hear the proverbial
juice flowing, or blood rushing, in the soul of a poet acutely
attuned to a world of sounds. From his first soundscape of ocean
surf in Oahu to Rabelais’s fantastical sea of frozen words, from
cicada to Aeolian harp, from La Bohème at La Scala to the Heart
Sutra at a Kyoto temple, Garrett Hongo ingeniously mixes personal
memoir with cultural history and offers us an indispensable guide
for the search of acoustic truth.” —Yunte Huang, author of Charlie
Chan
“Garrett Hongo is among writers who believe you can save
everything, everyone—if only their music put into written words.
Obsessively building and rebuilding audio machines, he recovers his
Hawaiian childhood, his gone family, and the ancestors. The Perfect
Sound is an enlightening read. —Maxine Hong Kingston, author of The
Woman Warrior
“Garrett Hongo is a master, but be advised: this memoir will have
you spending hundreds of dollars on audio devices, and hours of
delight and even awe as you read. It is not all about stereos—it is
an aria of living, hearing, feeling, writing. Masterful.” —Luis
Alberto Urrea, author of The House of Broken Angels
“Journeying with this gifted memorist into the heart of the
‘perfect sound’ is to engage with special harmonies of ecstasy and
heartache. Erudite, sensual, frank and delightful, Garrett Hongo
has always been for his devoted readers a singular kumu mele, our
spirit guide to lovely song.” —Chang-rae Lee, author of My Year
Abroad
“‘Exuberance is beauty,’ says William Blake, and this is a truly
exuberant book: exuberant about music, about language, about life.
Read and drink in its spirit!” —Mark Edmundson, author of The Fine
Wisdom and Perfect Teachings of the Kings of Rock and Roll
"A quest organizes the telling of a life. In his memoir, The
Perfect Sound, Garret Hongo’s deeply informed and passionate quest
to bring recorded music to life ingeniously parallels his
development as a poet seeking a voice that will become his recorded
identity." —Stuart Dybek, author of Childhood and Other
Neighborhoods
“Picking up where he left off in Volcano, Hongo shifts the focus in
this new memoir from Hawaii to the wide-ranging soundtrack of
his long life, well lived on three continents. His clean,
poetic prose and dry sense of humor about his quest for the
hypermaximal gear to hear it all anew are two of this book’s
many pleasures.” —James McManus, author of Positively Fifth Street
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