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New book: I Want My MTV: The Uncensored Story of The Music Video Revolution I hope I get this book for Christmas
here's an interesting excerpt..... A Look Inside I Want My MTV In their 2011 book I Want My MTV: The Uncensored Story of the Music Video Revolution, authors Craig Marks and Rob Tannenbaum revisit the “golden age” of music videos, from 1981 to 1992, based on interviews with more than 400 people. As they learned, sometimes bad videos happen to great songs. Here are ten examples. Psychedelic Furs, "Prett...984; 1986) Fleetwood Mac, “Hold Me” (1982)" Rick James, "Super Freak" (1982) Grandmaster Flash and th...” (1982) Bruce Springsteen, "Danc...rk" (1984) Billy Squier, “Rock Me...” (1984) U2, “Pride (In the Nam...” (1984) Prince, "Raspberry Beret" (1985) Aretha Franklin, “Free... (1985) Pixies, "Velouria" (1990)
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Book Description
Remember the first time you saw Michael Jackson dance with zombies in "Thriller"? Diamond Dave karate kick with Van Halen in "Jump"? Tawny Kitaen turning cartwheels on a Jaguar to Whitesnake's "Here I Go Again"? The Beastie Boys spray beer in "(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (To Party)"? Axl Rose step off the bus in "Welcome to the Jungle"? | |
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Book Review |I Want My MTV: Details make oral history of music network sing
Like almost every other teenager in the early 1980s, I wanted my MTV. So I’m smack in the center of the target demographic for I Want My MTV: The Uncensored Story of the Music Video Revolution by music journalists Craig Marks and Rob Tannenbaum. The book is an oral history, much like Tom Shales and James Andrew Miller’s excellent Live From New York, about Saturday Night Live. If I Want My MTV isn’t as riveting as such earlier books, the network itself is largely to blame. MTV and its ancillary cable networks (VH1 and MTV2 among them) have parsed the history so often in shows such as Behind the Music and Beavis and Butt-head — and in specials such as 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders — that we’re familiar with much of the material. MTV went live on Aug. 1, 1981. Many cable companies wouldn’t carry it, partly because of its rock ’n’ roll content. The network didn’t really crash into the national consciousness until 1983. Bands whose videos were played that year became famous almost overnight. When MTV started, there were so few music videos that the network scrambled for content. Many early videos came pouring out of Britain — from acts such as Duran Duran, A Flock of Seagulls, ABC, Joe Jackson and the Police — in a parade the early MTV executive Bob Pittman refers to here as “the second British Invasion.” Most of the European performers were the antithesis of long-haired American bands such as Lynyrd Skynyrd and Grand Funk Railroad, and they had an electric effect on young audiences. “They were dropping like bombs on the suburbs of Ohio and Texas — places that were so conservative,” John Taylor, the bass player for Duran Duran, says of the early videos. “For people that were a little different — maybe they didn’t yet know they were gay or didn’t know they were into art — the kinds of things that were on MTV were like life changers. All this stuff like Culture Club was the result of an underground, progressive, liberal London art-school sensibility." Cheap videos gave way to expensive ones. The channel made international stars out of Madonna and Michael Jackson, who was the first black artist given real airtime on MTV. Hair metal arrived, with its attendant cleavage, firebombs and sodden double-entendres. The authors deadpan: “Videos created ample work for Playboy playmates and for choreographers, dancers, mimes, animal trainers, pyrotechnicians, hairdressers, aestheticians, dry-ice vendors, coke dealers and midgets. (Midgets were a staple of music videos. Midget freelance work surely peaked in the ’80s.)” This book is packed with mea culpas from rockers who had dreadful haircuts or made career-defining dreadful videos during the 1980s. About one of her videos, Patty Smyth says, “I had no idea it would look like an off-Broadway version of Cats.” Billy Joel says he got this order: “Dance around with a wrench in your hand.” Details such as these pile up in I Want My MTV. Here are a few stray quotations, chosen almost at random: “I slept inside a chandelier last night. What’s your excuse?” “The cow flew out the back of the trailer.” “We fed Valium to a few cats and had them running around a table while we had a feast with sexy models and Playboy centerfolds, ripping apart a turkey.” “At one point I was drinking gin out of a dog’s dish.” In the late ’80s, bands began to run out of new ideas. MTV’s ratings sagged. Rap music helped for a while, creating in America what one record executive calls “the white homeboy nation.” In 1992, MTV had a hit with The Real World, an unscripted soap opera. Today, the network’s biggest star is Nicole “ Snooki” Polizzi. There’s a lot of hand-wringing about MTV today. One of the network’s former executives, Abbey Konowitch, puts it pretty well: “MTV was the last national radio station.” | |
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Interesting! | |
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Interesting,indeed
I was initially wary of the book's length (572 pages not including the index!), but it turns out it's been perfect for picking up, putting down, and skipping around depending on what stories seem most entertaining that day. Each chapter is broken up into short oral histories on a particular topic, so you can spend one afternoon reading about Madonna's early days as a skateboarding punk living in the LES, and another day on how MTV execs convinced Mick Jagger to say "I want my MTV" for $1. This book is totally about the details. Did you know that one of the hot chicks in ZZ Top's "Gimme All Your Lovin'" is now on the Real Housewives of Orange County?? Or that the car on the cover of the album Eliminator cost $250,000, so they put it in all their videos to get the tax deduction as a business expense? Pure gold, and totally addictive reading!! Would definitely recommend as a gift to anyone 30 and older who remembers those MTV days. | |
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