Book Cover
Book
Author Sanjek, Russell.

Title Pennies from heaven : the American popular music business in the twentieth century / Russell Sanjek ; updated by David Sanjek
Published New York : Da Capo Press, 1996

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  338.4778164 San/Pfh  AVAILABLE
Description xx, 769 pages ; 23 cm
Summary The technological and economic revolutions of the twentieth century have transformed the music business many times over. Pennies from Heaven is the definitive account of those transformations, from Thomas Edison's cylinders to Digital Audio Tape, from the rise and fall of vaudeville to the advent of the huge entertainment conglomerates, from the sale of sheet music to the marketing of music videos, from house organists for silent movies to soundtracks which sell in the tens of millions. Along the way, the book describes the workings of the performing rights organizations ASCAP and BMI; the demise of Hollywood's dominance of popular music after World War II; the growth of new genres, from rhythm-and-blues to rap and metal; the transformation of music radio from AM to FM; the establishment of "top 40" and the methods used to collect the necessary data; the rise of rock and its multi-billion-dollar business; the changes in copyright law; the strange career of the FCC; and trends to watch for in the music business as it enters the twenty-first century. The product of years of research, Pennies from Heaven undoubtedly ranks as one of the most essential and comprehensive books on American popular culture
Notes Rev. ed. of: American popular music and its business. v. 3, From 1900 to 1984. 1988
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 685-724) and index
Subject Music trade -- United States.
Popular music -- United States -- History and criticism.
Author Sanjek, David.
Sanjek, Russell. American popular music and its business
LC no. 96023223
ISBN 0306807068 (alk. paper)
Other Titles American popular music business in the twentieth century