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The Marsh- About The Marsh themarsh.com | Marsh Tapped as Administrator for Portland Medical Center tristarhealth.com | John R. Marsh Cancer Center - Washington County Hospital washingtoncountyhospital.... | Dr. Daniel Marsh, Anatomy and Neurobiology Department, Dalhousie Universit anatomy.dal.ca |
Dave Marsh (born March 1, 1950, Detroit, Michigan) is an American music critic who briefly attended Wayne State University, became a formative editor of Creem magazine, wrote for various publications such as Newsday, The Village Voice, and Rolling Stone, and also edited Rock and Roll Confidential, a newsletter about rock music and social issues. Marsh is also a member of the National Advisory Board of PROTECT: The National Association to Protect Children. His other credits include being rock n roll entertainer Bruce Springsteen's self-proclaimed quasi-official biographer, with a total of four books published. Bestsellers include Born to Run and Glory Days. [1] Marsh is closely associated with Springsteen because his wife, Barbara Carr, is one of Springsteen's co-managers. Marsh is also closely associated with Jon Landau, a Springsteen manager and producer, for the same reason. Marsh has been credited as a performer in the "cult group" the Rock Bottom Remainders, a rock band which includes authors Stephen King and Amy Tan, and humorist Dave Barry, among others. Along with Rolling Stone magazine publisher Jann Wenner, Marsh has been involved organizing and maintaining the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio. However, Marsh has courted, at times, controversy with his style of maintaining selections and at one time was asked to resign. In 1979, Dave Marsh's now legendary review of the album Jazz by Queen was published in Rolling Stone, in which Marsh wrote "Queen may be the first truly fascist rock band." (Rolling Stone, Feb. 8th 1979). His opinion of Queen had softened when he wrote in the 1979 Rolling Stone Record Guide merely that "Jazz was another bombastic farce." Dave Marsh has two Sirius XM Radio shows, one called Live from E Street Nation, airing on E Street Radio and the second Kick Out the Jams, airing Sundays on eclectic-rock channel The Loft. The title references the well-known MC5 album, a record which does not appear in the aforementioned Marsh-edited Rolling Stone Record Guide. Marsh is a co-founder and trustee of The Kristen Ann Carr Fund [2], created in memory of his daughter who died in 1993 from sarcoma, a form of cancer. The Fund is dedicated to supporting research in the treatment and cure of sarcoma, as well as improving the lives of young adult cancer patients and their families. [edit] Publications
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