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The Song Machine: Inside the Hit Factory Hardcover – October 5, 2015

4.5 out of 5 stars 94 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company; 1 edition (October 5, 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0393241920
  • ISBN-13: 978-0393241921
  • Product Dimensions: 6.5 x 1.2 x 9.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (94 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #22,540 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Kindle Edition
Seabrook's book will appeal to at least two types of readers. First, it may appeal to those who grew up in the mid-late 1990s and the 2000s, when a new teen pop invasion began (led by Britney Spears and the Backstreet Boys), and when Jay Z began his ascent to music-biz tycoon. (Or, if you aren't a Millennial, perhaps the music of Katy Perry, Rihanna, Justin Timberlake, and Taylor Swift scratches an itch for you, and you'd like a peek behind the curtain to learn how it's made). Another group of readers who may be attracted to 'The Song Machine' are the music nerds and musicians who are intimately familiar with how records were made during "the golden age of recording"--the kind of people who watch documentaries like "The Wrecking Crew" and "Muscle Shoals". People curious about who the modern-day Phil Spectors and Brian Wilsons are, and how the hits are being made in the digital age. I'm not sure the book will wholly satisfy either group of readers, but I think it's an import piece of reporting that will be read in 50-100 years by historians of music and pop culture.

For the fans of this music (particularly fans of female chart-toppers from Britney S. to Kesha), you'll get a look at how the industry finds unknown teens with musical ambition and molds them into superstars. You'll learn how this is taken to even greater extremes by the South Koreans, whose pop marketplace places much less value on "authenticity," rebelliousness, and individuality. There is a discussion of how "American Idol" affected today's record business.
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Format: Hardcover
Very informative work by Mr. Seabrook and excellent audio narration by Dion Graham. Enjoyable and ultimately satisfying from a factual standpoint. Disheartening in that most artists are reduced to glam shots and non-musical media hype. While their promoters hire people named Lukasz Sebastian Gottwald , (Dr Luke,) and Europeans Martin Karl Sandberg(Max Martin) and Dag Krister Volle (Denniz Pop) to write their songs. I guess globalization applies to the music industry too.
Fascinating how they us use algorithms and computer generated visual overlays of to see what parts of other hits have in common so they can create the perfect uninspired “hit” within the modern pop culture matrix.
Contrary to another reviewer, I found chapters on KPOP (Korean Pop Machine) interesting in a bizarre sort of way (Korean artists totalitarian discipline and in some cases having their jaws surgically broken and reformed to conform to Western beauty standards.)
I was a bit puzzled by the author’s transformation in musical taste within the narrative framework of him and his son listening to the car radio, and his acceptance of the “machines” commercialistic output. In one chapter he mentions research done by Carlos Silva Peirera in an abstract called Music and Emotions in the Brain: Familiarity Matters. One definite truism about any kind of music, whether classical, jazz, pop, or what have you, is that the more it is repeated the more it has a chance of being commercially viable. This goes back to Payola days and Clear-Com, etc. I figured I would put this to the test with “Roar”. I listened and replayed it a dozen times and only became increasingly dyspeptic with each listening. My granddaughter, on the other hand, loves it, so I guess this makes my point moot.
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
Overall I enjoyed this book about one aspect of our modern culture. It actually is fairly accurate commentary on the way things actually work in the real world as opposed to the romanticized notion most of us have about the ways we think it does work. The writer is clearly well informed about the "inside" operations of making pop hits in this day and age. My only small criticism is that he some times overwhelms the reader with too much inside information like the endless parade of names of behind the scenes people that were involved in each pop star's rise but that we in the general public don't really care too much about. It's true in every entertainment genre of course but in fact it does takes tons of talented people to make each "hit" happen that you never hear about.

I will say this is almost a must read for anyone interested in pop culture. Knowing who many of the top people are who work in those behind the scenes jobs is interesting and can give many aspiring music creators, technical people, songwriters, etc. a necessary introduction into that business.
It's a true fact that most of us will never be those "vocal personalities", the term he gives to the Pop stars of today but that does not mean there are not tons of useful and interesting jobs available in those businesses. This book can help them in their journeys and is a well informed guide to the history and people of the pop music business.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
I enjoyed learning about how pop tunes are constructed for the mega stars (and soon to be stars). The author explains how endless combinations of hooks and bridges are toyed with by multiple talented people to construct songs. The industry if full of risk and randomness, and the formula's are constantly changing. I leaned a lot from this book.

Many of the artists in this book appeal to the mass market. I enjoy listening to the mega stars on movie soundtracks and on Youtube, but I am not their audience. N'Sync, Britney, Rihanna (fascinating story), and Jay Z songs, are fun to listen to with friends, dance to at weddings, and chant along with during loud basketball games. This is not the music that gets my undivided attention. Mega Pop Stars's attract a huge audience, and I give them credit for their accomplishments.

There are certain bands who I can listen to over and over, year after year. Arcade Fire, Of Monsters and Men, BabyMetal, Bring Me the Horizon, Sigur Ros, early Bowie and Queen, Pink Floyd, and Radiohead, come to mind. These bands are my day to day soundtrack. I love songs that age well over time. I hope John does a follow up book on the alternative music business. He is an excellent writer.
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