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Top Eight: How MySpace Changed Music
Barnes and Noble
Top Eight: How MySpace Changed Music
Current price: $24.99
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Barnes and Noble
Top Eight: How MySpace Changed Music
Current price: $24.99
Size: Audiobook
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"A brilliant and addictive chronicle of a pop explosion that helped shape our moment. An absolute delight to read."
—
Rob Sheffield
, bestselling author of
Love is a Mix Tape
,
Dreaming the Beatles
, and other books
In extensive interviews with scene pioneers and mainstays including Chris Carrabba (Dashboard Confessional), Geoff Rickly (Thursday), Frank Iero (My Chemical Romance), Gabe Saporta (Midtown/Cobra Starship), and Max Bemis (Say Anything), veteran music journalist Michael Tedder has crafted a once-in-a-generation exploration of emo and The Scene that is as forthright as it is tenderly nostalgic, taking to task the elements of toxic masculinity and crass consumerism that bled out of the early 2000s cultural milieu and ultimately led to the implosion of emo's first home and the best social media network, MySpace.
When MySpace thrived, the Internet was still fun.
Top Eight
recalls the excitement and freedom of the era, an unprecedented time when a generation of fans were able to connect directly with the bands and musicians they idolized, from Colbie Caillat to Lil Jon.
MySpace changed everything, and
gives major voices of the era the chance to tell us why it couldn't last.
—
Rob Sheffield
, bestselling author of
Love is a Mix Tape
,
Dreaming the Beatles
, and other books
In extensive interviews with scene pioneers and mainstays including Chris Carrabba (Dashboard Confessional), Geoff Rickly (Thursday), Frank Iero (My Chemical Romance), Gabe Saporta (Midtown/Cobra Starship), and Max Bemis (Say Anything), veteran music journalist Michael Tedder has crafted a once-in-a-generation exploration of emo and The Scene that is as forthright as it is tenderly nostalgic, taking to task the elements of toxic masculinity and crass consumerism that bled out of the early 2000s cultural milieu and ultimately led to the implosion of emo's first home and the best social media network, MySpace.
When MySpace thrived, the Internet was still fun.
Top Eight
recalls the excitement and freedom of the era, an unprecedented time when a generation of fans were able to connect directly with the bands and musicians they idolized, from Colbie Caillat to Lil Jon.
MySpace changed everything, and
gives major voices of the era the chance to tell us why it couldn't last.