Everything changed when John Seabrookās son got to ride shotgun. Seabrook had always controlled the car radio, but then his son switched the channel to Contemporary Hits Radioāformerly known as Top 40. Instead of changing the channel again, Seabrook decided, as a bonding exercise, to listen to pop music with his son. This interest led to various articles published in The New Yorker, now gathered with new material as a book titled (W.W. Norton).
Seabrook describes how most hits are like industrial products āmanufacturedā by star producers who engineer rhythmic tracks or beats as the basis for a song. Then ātop lineā singers are called in to create melodic hooks even before complete lyrics are drafted. A star singer finally swoops in to contribute the vocal track.
The book traces the current āsong machineā to Sweden and to a former DJ known as Denniz PoP, who managed to blend ābeat-drivenā music played in European dance clubs with radio pop music. As one commentator noted, Denniz gave us āABBA with a groove,ā a style followed most notably by Max Martin, the Swedish producer who has had scores of number-one hits with singers such as Katy Perry and Taylor Swift.
Seabrookās book made me think of how contemporary pop music has invaded my music-listening life. The problem is I canāt remember exactly when that process began.
Was it the Jason Derulo song my son asked me to buy with my iTunes account? Or when the kids all pleaded to switch from my favorite independent radio station (āfolk, blues, jazz, rock, and world beatā) to āall the hits, all the timeā? Or the moment I realized half of the presets on the car radio had been changed? Maybe it was the entire season of American Idol the family watched together.
I also wondered why I listen to pop music, even when I know itās neither musically deep nor poetically profoundāand even when I am in the car without my children.
Hit music, explains Seabrook, is like āsnack foodā that provides a moment of bliss, but āleaves you feeling unsatisfied, always craving for more.ā Through repeated listening, you become emotionally attached to a hit, and āit doesnāt matter what you think of the song.ā
Like Seabrook, I will try to cultivate a more critical approach to hit radioās engineered beats and hooks, a critical approach that can also be applied to contemporary country, rap, and Christian pop. Overall, I am resolved to maintain a more balanced musical diet.
About the Author
Otto Selles teaches French at Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Mich., and attends Neland Avenue Christian Reformed Church in Grand Rapids.