Audiobook9 hours
The Song Machine: Inside the Hit Factory
Written by John Seabrook
Narrated by Dion Graham
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
4/5
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About this audiobook
New Yorker staff writer John Seabrook tells a fascinating story of creativity and commerce that explains how songs have become so addictive.
Over the last two decades a new type of song has emerged. Today's hits bristle with "hooks," musical burrs designed to snag your ear every seven seconds. Painstakingly crafted to tweak the brain's delight in melody, rhythm, and repetition, these songs are industrial-strength products made for malls, casinos, the gym, and the Super Bowl halftime show. The tracks are so catchy, and so potent, that you can't not listen to them.
Traveling from New York to Los Angeles, Stockholm to Korea, John Seabrook visits specialized teams composing songs in digital labs with novel techniques, and he traces the growth of these contagious hits from their origins in early '90s Sweden to their ubiquity on today's charts.
Featuring the stories of artists like Katy Perry, Britney Spears, and Rihanna, as well as expert songsmiths like Max Martin, Ester Dean, and Dr. Luke, The Song Machine will change the way you listen to music.
Over the last two decades a new type of song has emerged. Today's hits bristle with "hooks," musical burrs designed to snag your ear every seven seconds. Painstakingly crafted to tweak the brain's delight in melody, rhythm, and repetition, these songs are industrial-strength products made for malls, casinos, the gym, and the Super Bowl halftime show. The tracks are so catchy, and so potent, that you can't not listen to them.
Traveling from New York to Los Angeles, Stockholm to Korea, John Seabrook visits specialized teams composing songs in digital labs with novel techniques, and he traces the growth of these contagious hits from their origins in early '90s Sweden to their ubiquity on today's charts.
Featuring the stories of artists like Katy Perry, Britney Spears, and Rihanna, as well as expert songsmiths like Max Martin, Ester Dean, and Dr. Luke, The Song Machine will change the way you listen to music.
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Reviews for The Song Machine
Rating: 3.966666676190476 out of 5 stars
4/5
105 ratings9 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5It is good but relies too much on anecdotes and interviews for my taste. It is not a description of the music industry, it is more a series of snapshots, and quite a few of those are not very interesting.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Really awesome look into what’s going on in the last couple of decades of the hits making industry. And the narrator is banging.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Four stars is probably a bit too high but I do feel like I learned a lot from this book. I'm not a big music person, in that I don't really listen to a ton of music. But what I do listen to is mostly pop and I do have somewhat of an interest in how stuff like film scoring works. This book was an interesting look at that industry.
I thought there were good parts and bad parts to this book. I don't want to just repeat but other reviewers have said but there are gender (and age) imbalances in this industry that Seabrook never really dives into. Sometimes, I didn't have as much of a problem with it. I think that style is really just a holdover from his New Yorker stuff. This sort of presentation journalism is very common in their long-form stories. All sides are laid out and interviewed and quoted from and the reader is left to decide what they think about the story. So rather than describing a scene where there is sexism and then having the narrator point it out, the sexism is described and then the reader has to notice it or not. Your mileage may very on how well you think this works. I thought it failed a little in the Kesha and Dr. Luke but worked fine in other places. I guess what I'm saying is that not diving deeper into the sexism in this industry seemed to me to be less about Seabrook's ignorance and more of a journalistic style choice.
There isn't always clear through-line for all these parts. There are kind of two things going on with this book: an examination of Swedish hit creators and their ilk and the rise of streaming services and the fall of album sales. Obviously, there is some overlap there but I felt like all the stuff about Spotify could have been cut. I thought the K-pop chapter was interesting because I know nothing about that and I don't listen to it but it was not connected to anything else. I think there would maybe be more to write about K-pop now considering that there has been an emerging western market but within this book the chapter is mostly useless. I think I liked the beginning of this book the most where there is an examination of the start of boy bands like the Backstreet Boys. After then first section, it did fall off a bit.
I would recommend this book for people interested in pop. It's not perfect but it's interesting and it does give you a glimpse at what the process of creating a hit can look like. There's no music theory in here, no real examination of the songs and why they work musically but it is an interesting look at the people responsible for those hits. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5audiobook - nonfiction/music industry
I listened to a few hours of this, but wasn't able to absorb very much (my auditory processing isn't always the greatest and a lot of the pop culture and music history references go over my head), but the topic is potentially interesting for those who want to know more about the business side of the industry. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Terrifying.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The music industry is a strange beast. Not only is it fickle and flighty, but it has changed dramatically from even twenty years ago. Gone are the A&R men finding that individual with the perfect voice that they can sign and promote with the hope of getting the hits. Now we have a machine that can almost produce hits to order, almost being the key word… There are producers out there who have the ability to write songs that have what they describe as ‘hooks’, those little parts of a track that are so catchy, so addictive, that they stick in your head. These men, and it still is almost exclusively men, are still rare, but that ability to turn a song from one that would have only sold thousands to one that sells millions makes them worth a fortune.
Earworm: a catchy song or tune that runs continually through someone's mind.
Seabrook has written an interesting book, smearing away some of the gloss and glamour from the music industry, to reveal details of its inner workings. He describes just how these talented individuals pull together a song, finding those hook’s that make people want to listen more and the bridge moment when they divert from the original melody and rhythm and slot something else in. I have known that they manufactured music in the same way that they create groups, for ages, but I didn’t realise quite how strong the Swedish influence was in the global music industry. There were some interesting chapters on how Napster wreaked havoc with the business model of the music industry, how streaming has changed how they operate, how they use topliners and that the only way that a star can now make any money is to be continually touring because of the grip that the music industry has on them. It was an interesting book overall on a global industry that has as many secrets as glitterballs. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Song Machine is a fairly well written history of the deterioration of the pop song, the record industry, and the decline of artistry in all of it. I realize that I detest the music to the extent that it probably clouded my appreciation of the book a bit, but it is difficult to take serious an entire range of songs largely cloned (sampled is the clever word they came up with to hide their thievery) from every song that came before it, singers whose voices are so computer-enhanced that they sound more like alien robots than vocalists, and a stable of "producers" all going by silly, made-up names who largely serve more as experts at some software program (including Pro Tools) than as song-people. In the meantime, record companies continue to bite the dust, front-men (the "singers") are so interchangeable that no one can really tell them apart or even much care, and The Song dies a little more every day.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The best part of this book might be the song lists in Spotify that the author has created. Do not miss listening to the music!.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I'm not into pop music at all, and really could care less about the latest Rihanna or Britney Spears hits. Yet somehow this book was oddly compelling. It takes an in-depth look into the entire process of how hit music (read: vapid pop) is made. From straight-up songwriters to people who only provide rhythms, to those who only do melodies, to those who only remix what the previous 3 people do (yes, it's surprisingly complicated), all kinds of hidden aspects of creating pop music are created. I loathed hearing the Backstreet Boys on the radio all the time back in the late 90's, but it was quite interesting to hear how they came to be "a thing". Recommended for all people who enjoy ilstening to any sort of modern music.