ABSTRACT

More than 90 record companies release over 9,000 pop records each year-a staggering total of 52,000 songs. Each one competes for the gold record, the recording industry's symbol of success that certifies $1 million worth of records have been sold. Solid Gold explains why, for each record that succeeds, countless others fail. This book follows the progress of a record through production, marketing, and distribution, and shows how a mistake made at any point can mean its doom. Denisoff suggests that a drastic shift in the demographic makeup of the pop music audience during the sixties has resulted in a broader listening public, including fans at every level of society.

chapter |43 pages

What is Popular Music: A Silly Question?

chapter 2|48 pages

In the Grooves: The Performer

chapter Chapter 3|52 pages

He Vinyl Crap Game: He Record Companies

chapter 4|72 pages

The Cop Out: Inside the Record Company

chapter 5|67 pages

The Gatekeepers of Radio

chapter 6|40 pages

Prozines and Fanzines

chapter 8|45 pages

Thie Radical Right and the FCC

chapter 9|52 pages

The Folks Out There