Showing posts with label MTV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MTV. Show all posts

Monday, July 3, 2023

The Number Ones

The Number Ones: Twenty Chart-Topping Hits that Reveal the History of Pop Music by Tom Breihan, 342 pages

This reads like a book of non-fiction short stories. Like a VH1 Behind The Music episode for the literary crowd. Each chapter focuses on a seminal single from the Billboard Hot 100, which began in 1958 and still continues today. Every single is an outlier; a song that came from nowhere to dominate the charts and influence the culture. Breihan, senior editor at the music blog Stereogum, dives briefly into the backstory of hit songs like Chubby Checker's The Twist, Prince's When Doves Cry--all the way up to Korean pop phenomenon BTS and their hit "Dynamite." As with most behind-the-scenes stories, there are so many interesting anecdotes and trivia-like bits of information that really help inform the popularity of a song. Some notable surprises for me included Vanilla Ice inadvertently funding the label Death Row Records, Brian Wilson spending $13,000 to record "Good Vibrations," (at the time the most expensive single ever made), and the  runaway success of Michael Jackson's "Billie Jean" finally forcing MTV to play more African-American music. You can follow along with Breihan as he continues to blog about every #1 Billboard hit in history, but this book is a really fun dive into some songs we all know and love. 

Thursday, July 28, 2016

Party of One

Party of One: A Memoir in 21 Songs by Dave Holmes, 274 pages

In Party of One, native St. Louisan Dave Holmes offers up his coming-of-age memoir, spanning from his days as a Catholic school kid through his awkward college years and straight into his stint as an MTV VJ. Throughout the awkwardness, Holmes figures out how to accept his homosexuality, and "find his people" (those people being music nerds like himself). Holmes presents his story through immensely relatable episodes (yes, we've all made absolute fools of ourselves in front of our friends and those we might like to impress), as well as some less relatable (I don't know that any of his readers will have their own stories about hosting ill-fated MTV contests and the soothing power of Nick Lachey), but all are spurred on by the pop music that was influencing him at the time. All of the anecdotes are well-told, candid, and laced with a wry humor. Definitely a memoir worth reading!