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Rock Goes to College

The campus music scene that shaped a generation

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Pub Date 21 May 2026 | Archive Date 20 Jun 2026


Description

The hectic, hugely entertaining, and definitive story of the wonderful and entirely amateurish British university gig scene that launched the career of some of the world’s most famous bands

As rock exploded around the world, so young bands would sling their gear into their trusty Ford Transits and bomb up and down the new motorway system to university and polytechnic campuses all over the UK, honing their sound and hoping to get noticed.

A list of acts who put in the hard yards on this circuit reads like a Who’s Who of rock music: Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, the Who, Fleetwood Mac, Black Sabbath, Queen, the Kinks, Dire Straits, AC / DC, Genesis, Nick Drake, Joan Armatrading and Elton John all paid their dues in sweaty and badly ventilated dressing rooms in places like Leeds University and Regent Street Poly. Even Paul McCartney, after the Beatles fell apart, took his new band Wings out on the circuit to get them road tested.

Now, for the first time, seasoned music journalist Paul Sexton sets out to document this extraordinary moment in British music history. Tapping into his huge network of contacts in the music industry, Rock Goes to College is a fascinating, raucous ride of a book, crammed full of incredible, never-before-heard stories of the beginnings of some of the most famous acts on the planet.

The hectic, hugely entertaining, and definitive story of the wonderful and entirely amateurish British university gig scene that launched the career of some of the world’s most famous...


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9780008722432
PRICE £12.99 (GBP)
PAGES 320

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Average rating from 2 members


Featured Reviews

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It was not a glamorous life for rock bands who played UK universities and colleges in the 60s and 70s. Up and down the motorways in vans which frequently broke down, playing in halls and refectories for low fees, rarely given dressing rooms or anything to eat. Students were generally enthusiastic audiences, however, with cheap tickets giving them a chance to see up and coming rock bands booked by enterprising social secretaries and entertainments officers from the student unions. This book is a detailed account of how playing to colleges had a significant role in the careers of particular bands and musicians. It's a part of music history I hadn't read about before, so it was interesting to have a variety of perspectives on the topic, from the artists themselves, to the unions, promoters and gig-goers of the time.

I thought the narrative was most effective when each chapter focused on a particular band, but other chapters mentioned a lot of them and almost became a list of who played where, when and for what fee. I would have preferred one chapter per band so the influence of playing to students could be more easily traced. It's chronological, going from jazz, to rock'n'roll, prog rock and a little of punk and new wave at the end. The bands included The Who, Dire Straits, Wings, Elton John, Suzi Quatro and Pink Floyd. The observation that the state basically enabled many rock bands' careers was food for thought, because students got free tuition and grants. The era was also charmingly naive in some respects, with rugby students serving as security, students sitting cross-legged to watch some of the bands, and fire regulations often ignored. I expect the book will appeal most to people who were there at the time, but it's also worth reading for a unique cultural history.

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