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The History of Music Production

  • Author: Burgess, Richard James

Book

$48.00

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Contents

  • CONTENTS
  • PREFACE
  • INTRODUCTION
  • CHAPTER ONE
  • Beginnings:
  • Understanding Sound
  • Toward Recording
  • The Phonograph
  • The First Producers
  • CHAPTER TWO
  • The acoustic period:
  • Acoustic Recording
  • International Expansion
  • The Third Major Label
  • The Sooys
  • Documentation of Cultural Expression
  • The End of an Era
  • CHAPTER THREE
  • The Electric period:
  • Toward Electric Recording
  • Better Sound
  • Country Music
  • Further Technological Foundations
  • The Calm before the Storm
  • The Thirties and Forties
  • Radio, Film, and Tape Innovations
  • CHAPTER FOUR
  • Economic and Societal Overlay:
  • Cyclical Decline
  • One Thing after Another: The Thirties through the War
  • Recovery
  • CHAPTER FIVE
  • The Studio is Interactive
  • Toward Greater Control
  • Magnetic Tape Recording
  • Defining Some Terms
  • Mastering
  • Editing
  • Sound on Sound
  • Overdubbing
  • Summing up of Tape's Impact
  • The Microgroove LP
  • CHAPTER SIX
  • The Post World War II Reconstruction of the Recording Industry
  • After the War
  • The Boom in Independent Labels
  • The Fifties
  • Radio DJs
  • CHAPTER SEVEN
  • Mobile Music
  • More Music for More People
  • Music Anywhere: Radio on the Move
  • My Music on the Move
  • My Music Anywhere
  • CHAPTER EIGHT
  • Expanding the Palette
  • Electric Instruments and Amplifiers
  • Synthesizers
  • Genre Hybridization
  • CHAPTER NINE
  • Some Key Producers
  • The Objective
  • Review of Early Producers
  • Mitch Miller
  • Leiber and Stoller
  • Phil Spector
  • Sam Phillips
  • Steve Sholes
  • Norrie Paramor
  • Joe Meek
  • Brian Wilson
  • George Martin
  • Holland, Dozier and Holland
  • Teo Macero
  • King Tubby
  • Prince
  • Rick Rubin
  • Quincy Jones
  • Robert John Mutt Lange
  • Dr Dre
  • Max Martin
  • CHAPTER TEN
  • The Sixties and Seventies
  • Cultural and Creative Revolution
  • The Sixties
  • Mix Automation
  • The Seventies
  • CHAPTER ELEVEN
  • Toward the Digital Age
  • Digital Recording:
  • Hip Hop:
  • The State of the Eighties:
  • The Sound of the Eighties:
  • The Look of the Eighties:
  • Shiny Silver Discs:
  • Singles:
  • Mixing:
  • Dance Music:
  • Remixes:
  • Further Eighties Developments
  • Mergers and Acquisitions
  • The Internet and the World Wide Web
  • CHAPTER TWELVE
  • The Nineties
  • The Corporate State
  • The Charts and SoundScan
  • Alternative Rock
  • Toward Music Online
  • Progress with Digitized Data
  • Digital Radio
  • Millennials
  • Preparing the way for Napster
  • CHAPTER THIRTEEN
  • Periods of standards and stability
  • Proprietary versus Open Systems
  • Standards
  • CHAPTER FOURTEEN
  • Deconstructing the Studio
  • Democratizing Technologies
  • Improvised Environments
  • When is a Home not a Home?
  • Freedom
  • CHAPTER FIFTEEN
  • Random Access Recording Technology
  • Why Random Access?
  • The Beginnings of Random Access for Producers
  • Drum Machines, Next Generation Sequencers and MIDI
  • The Beginnings of Random Access Digital Recording
  • Convergence and Integration
  • CHAPTER SIXTEEN
  • Transformative/Disruptive Technologies and the Value of Music
  • Definitions of Terms
  • The Industry at the Turn of the 21st Century
  • Missed Opportunity
  • Oh wait.
  • No Big Surprises
  • What a Great Idea
  • What Happened to Vertical Integration?
  • An Idea Whose Time Had Come
  • Denial and Inaction
  • The Consequences
  • The Digital Disruption and Producer Income
  • Performance Royalties
  • Direct versus Statutory Licenses
  • CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
  • Post-Millennial Business Models
  • American Idol
  • Downloads
  • Streaming Audio
  • Non interactive streams
  • Streaming on demand
  • Web 2.0, Social Networking and Social Media
  • Commonalities
  • CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
  • The Unfinished Work
  • Sampling, Mash-ups and Remixes
  • Using Records as Raw Material
  • Disco
  • Hip hop
  • Adapting compositions
  • Adapting Recordings
  • The Question of Creativity
  • The Question of Legality
  • CONCLUSION
  • ABOUT THE AUTHOR