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Reviews for The structure of the popular music industry

 The structure of the popular music industry magazine reviews

The average rating for The structure of the popular music industry based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-10-13 00:00:00
1973was given a rating of 3 stars Jack Williams
Lots of great stories and speculation about the business side of the American (and to some extent, British) music industry. Eliot takes us into a shadow world of music-biz players like Alan Freed, Dick Clark, Allen Klein, Berry Gordy, Albert Grossman, Brian Epstein, and Bill Graham and shows us how they really operated. From Edison's cylinders to the compact disc, this is a sometimes sordid, often myth-debunking history any fan will want to read. However, at least in the 1989 edition I read (the one pictured here is an updated version) there are some problems, such as misspellings of performers' names (Richie Havens, the Jaynetts, the Limeliters) and faulty information. (Bob Dylan's NASHVILLE SKYLINE was NOT the first LP he released after his alleged "motorcycle accident", and his debut album included two, not just one of his own compositions. Moreover, Eliot's and others' account of Dylan's legendary "going electric" performance at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival has since been disputed by the festival's organizer, who has audiotape evidence to back up HIS version of what happened.) Eliot also has an odd obsession with referring to singers as "mama's boys", even when, as with Dylan, little evidence is provided to justify this label. Despite these quibbles, if you want to know the real story behind the ASCAP-BMI rivalry in the 30s, the Musicians' Union recording ban of the mid-40s, the "payola" scandal of the 50s, the brief rise and rapid fall of rock festivals in the 60s, the coke-fueled corporate greed that led to the punk backlash of the 70s, and the commercialization of classic rock in the 80s--and plenty more--this is the book to read.
Review # 2 was written on 2010-03-21 00:00:00
1973was given a rating of 3 stars Richard Marion
Very interesting and detailed look at the music business. Lots of litigation! And ends in 1993 so no napster, itunes or (most importantly) Spotify!


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