Always Magic in the Air: The Bomp and Brilliance of the Brill Building Era
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Always Magic in the Air: The Bomp and Brilliance of the Brill Building Era

Always Magic in the Air: The Bomp and Brilliance of the Brill Building Era
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Always Magic in the Air: The Bomp and Brilliance of the Brill Building Era

by Ken Emerson
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) (2006-09-26)
ISBN: 0143037773
EAN: 9780143037774
Dewy Decimal #: 781.6409747109045
Paperback: 352 pages
SKU: V042BYVD
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: Clean unmarked pages. Clean unmarked cover. 100% satisfaction guaranteed. All orders include an e-Book about starting your own Internet Business in PDF format. FREE Domestic DELIVERY CONFIRMATION! We ship daily Mon-Sat and will let you know when your item has shipped along with your e/DC number. [HI, AK, PR, VI, GUAM, SAIPAN & West Coast customers, please use Expedited Shipping, otherwise it may take longer than the estimated 14 business days.] Items are from a smoke free and air conditioned environment.


Editorial Reviews


Product Description
During the late 1950s and early 1960s, after the shock of Elvis Presley and before the Beatles spearheaded the British Invasion, fourteen gifted young songwriters huddled in midtown Manhattan’s legendary Brill Building and a warren of offices a bit farther uptown and composed some of the most beguiling and enduring entries in the Great American Songbook. Always Magic in the Air is the first thorough history of these renowned songwriters—tunesmiths who melded black, white, and Latino sounds, integrated audiences before America desegregated its schools, and brought a new social consciousness to pop music.


Customer Reviews


+1/2 -- Detailed but unsatisfying chronicle of '60s pop songwriters
Rating (3)
Date: 2007-12-03

1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful


Ken Emerson's detailed history of seven pairs of writers (Leiber & Stoller, Bacharach & David, Sedaka & Greenfield, Mann & Weil, Goffin & King, Pomus & Shuman, and Barry & Greenwich) is a detailed chronicle of the Brill Building's seminal place in the history of pop music writing. Unfortunately, Emerson's pedantic writing style and his inability to find narratives makes this a less than lyrical read. His collection of vignettes fails to lift the writers off the page or deliver a feel for the arcs of their careers. Most ironically, his university professor prose is riddled with ten-dollar words ("perdurable," "routinized," "auguries," "lamasery," "rumbustious," "subalterns," "roisterous," etc.) that are at odds with the vernacular exalted in these songwriters' work.

Worse yet are Emerson's writing tics, which his editor should have stamped out in the first draft. He repeats the phrase "the Brill Building and 1650 Broadway" throughout the book, rather than pointing out the importance of the sister building once and then using the colloquial "Brill Building." He rotates the attribution of the songwriting pairs -- "Goffin and King" on one page, "King and Goffin" on the next -- as if using the formal credit by which they're famously known would slight the second named partner. His prose is filled with distractions and the occasional pointless aside, and he supplements the academic treatment with 34-pages of end notes that source the quotes in the 270-page main text. That's 11% end notes that could have been posted on a website, rather than sold in paper to every casual reader of this book.

The presentation is a shame, because much of the research, both original interviews and reuse of existing materials, is excellent. Emerson provides a good look at these writers' roots, their beginnings in the music business and their individual paths to greatness. His discographical research provides interesting detail about who wrote what for who, extending well beyond the signature hits of each songwriting pair. He not only digs up surprise associations of songwriters and musical acts, but chronicles a good deal of the musical chairs played between the well-known pairings. Of particular interest are scenes that show how music publishers (particularly Don Kirshner) and song pluggers served as conduits from songwriters to sympathetic producers and musical acts, and how records found their way onto the radio.

Particularly illuminating are descriptions of what happened after Don Kirshner sold his publishing company (Aldon) and record label (Dimension) and eventually abandoned his songwriters at Colpix. The continued influence of these songwriters during the British Invasion - a time when groups were becoming more self-contained - is quite enlightening. Less so are the textual descriptions of songs, which tend to the clinical and provide a poor substitute for actually hearing the music. Readers would do well to pick up a collection of Brill Building hits (e.g., "The Songmaker's Collection: Music from the Brill Building" and "The Colpix-Dimension Story"), selections from the Daisy and Tiger labels (e.g, "The Daisy/Tiger Records Story: Everybody Come Clap Your Hands!"), and a compilation of Red Bird releases (e.g., "The Red Bird Story").

Putting a sour tag on the book are the end chapters' weak dismissals of all things bubblegum. Emerson trots out the standard canards about The Monkees, misses the brilliance of Jeff Barry's work for The Archies, and undervalues Andy Kim's output on the Steed label. They're unnecessary pot-shots at an era that he either doesn't get, or simply doesn't like. Ironically, he sounds like the old guard who dismissed the brilliance of the Brill Building's work at the start of the book. Emerson clearly loves the music of the Brill Building era, and there's enough original material here to merit a read, but don't expect it to delight you as does the Brill Building's music. 3-1/2 stars, if allowed fractional ratings. [©2007 hyperbolium dot com]


Very detailed account of early rock music
Rating (4)
Date: 2007-07-06


The amount of detail in this book is amazing. Not for the casual music listener, but great for those of us who grew up in the golden age of rock and roll. This book fills in many of the blanks for us hard core music fans who want to know the stories behind the songs.


Good Book About The Era
Rating (4)
Date: 2007-06-16

1 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful


Just a couple of things to add to the other comments here:

Writer must have a grudge against Steve Lawrence/Eydie Gorme as he insults them every 10 pages.

Very little is said about the actual musicians in the book, only the songwriters.

But a couple of incredible nuggets, that several Bacharach-David tunes had drummers using one stick and one brush. And that "A House Is Not A Home" refers to a bordello.

In the coda, book makes a brief note about Carole King's Tapestry, which is still one of the biggest selling records of all time. Carol, more than anyone besides Sedaka, bridged gap between songwriter and performer.



Back in the Day
Rating (4)
Date: 2007-05-12

1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful


This "just the facts ma'am" book chronicles a fascinating time when songwriting made the leap from tin pan alley sentimentality to sophisticated pop (hard to believe they called it rock and roll!) with many fascinating personalities and future pop stars. If early rock and roll history is your bag, dude, then this is fun, well researched book.


Briefly, a hit
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-01-21

3 out of 3 customers found this reveiw helpful


The other reviews are so long, I thought I'd sum them up. They're right.

If you think you'd like this, you will. You're guaranteed to pick up some interesting new details, while getting a context for the creation of many of rock n' roll's most enduring songs.

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