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The Hours Are Long, but the Pay Is Low

A Curious Life in Independent Music

Rob Miller

$53.99

Paperback

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English
University of Illinois Press
25 November 2025
The hard-won pleasures of putting heart over brains, conviction over caution, and madness over market share""The music business is not a meritocracy: it is a crapshoot taking place in a septic tank balanced on the prow of the Titanic, a venal snake pit where innovation, creativity, and honest business practices are actively discouraged.""

Rob Miller arrived in Chicago wanting to escape the music industry. In short order, he co-founded a trailblazing record label revered for its artist-first approach and punk take on country, roots, and so much else. Miller's gonzo memoir follows a music fan's odyssey through a singular account of Bloodshot Records, the Chicago scene, and thirty years as part of a community sustaining independent artists and businesses.

Hilarious and hundred-proof, The Hours Are Long, But the Pay Is Low delivers a warm-hearted yet clear-eyed account of loving and living music on the edge, in the trenches, and without apologies.
By:  
Imprint:   University of Illinois Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 235mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   454g
ISBN:   9780252088964
ISBN 10:   0252088964
Pages:   304
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Rob Miller is the cofounder and former co-owner of Bloodshot Records.

Reviews for The Hours Are Long, but the Pay Is Low: A Curious Life in Independent Music

""Lingering Inland explores the richness and diversity of the Midwest as no other book has managed to do, through the celebration of the region's many and divers writers and the places they've been. What a marvel of landmarks, these birthplaces, museums, houses, burial sites, and roadside attractions! What a tapestry of American prairies, rivers, marshes, caves, deserts, dumps, and empty lots! These are the places that mattered to America's fictionists, poets, playwrights, abolitionist newspapermen, and speech writers, and they matter to the authors of these remarkably intimate essays. In these pages, we explore the edges of the Midwest, where it rubs up against the south (in Twain's Hannibal, MO) and the west (in L'Amour's North Dakota), and to the north (via the Ambassador bridge to Canada). The essays stand as a magnificent protest against the erasure of monuments and voices, continually under threat by what passes for progress. Read this book to find out about the past and present of this vast and remarkable region, its natural features, its architecture (its cornbelt cubes, shacks, cabins, camps, and ruins), and, of course, its literature. I have never been so enthralled by my own part of the world, my Midwest."" --Bonnie Jo Campbell, author of The Waters: A Novel ""This is an absolutely charming book, utterly original and appealing in all ways. Whether you are from the Midwest or not, you will find yourself drawn to these very personal and illuminating profiles of writers in their Midwestern home places--it's a book to give to everyone you love in the entire region and elsewhere. As a child, my class was bussed up to Mark Twain's home in Hannibal and to poet Eugene Field's home in south St. Louis. I recall weeping both times, feeling stirred to my roots by tales of children who departed and left their toys behind or daughters who died in a bathtub, with grieving fathers who could also continue being humorists. To feel writers as our neighbors on all sides, honoring love and loss, was a gift to a young reader. This book is a huge gift to everyone, and I hope the entire Midwest rejoices."" --Naomi Shihab Nye, author of Fuel: Poems


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