The Music Never Stops: What Putting on 10,000 Shows Has Taught Me About Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Magic

The Music Never Stops: What Putting on 10,000 Shows Has Taught Me About Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Magic

  • Downloads:6542
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-05-28 10:21:42
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Peter Shapiro
  • ISBN:0306845180
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

An engrossing and insightful memoir by Peter Shapiro, the best known and most influential concert promoter of his generation

Peter Shapiro is perhaps the most notable independent concert promoter since Bill Graham。 He owned the legendary Wetlands in Tribeca and has gone onto much bigger things, including Brooklyn Bowl (NYC, Las Vegas, Philadelphia, and Nashville), the Capitol Theatre in Portchester, producing U2 3D, and promoting the Grateful Dead's 50th anniversary tour ("Fare Thee Well") featuring the Core Four and Trey Anastasio。。。 and so much more。

In The Music Never Stops, Shapiro shares the inside story of how he became a tremendous powerhouse in the music industry--an island in an increasingly consolidated landscape of venues, ticketing and touring--through the lens of 50 of his most iconic concerts。 Along the way, readers gain insight into what it was like to work with some of the most celebrated bands in modern music, including not just the Grateful Dead and U2, but also Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Phish, Dave Matthews Band, Al Green, Ms。 Lauryn Hill, Jason Isbell, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, The Roots, Robert Plant, and many more。

Featuring never-before-published back-stage anecdotes, insights, and photographs of the biggest bands in the business and the concerts that later became legendary, The Music Never Stops is a perfect guide for anyone who wants to understand the modern entertainment industry。

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Reviews

Ruth

To compare rock impresario Peter Shapiro with the late Bill Graham would be appropriate, and he is doing for 21st century live music what Bill did for the 20th century。 But first and foremost, Pete is a zealous, obsessed music fan。 Especially a fan of live improvisational music。 His (first) autobiography, written with partner Dean Budnick, overflows with his enthusiasm for the music, the performers, and his work promoting them。 He clearly works from the viewpoint of the music fan, and all his de To compare rock impresario Peter Shapiro with the late Bill Graham would be appropriate, and he is doing for 21st century live music what Bill did for the 20th century。 But first and foremost, Pete is a zealous, obsessed music fan。 Especially a fan of live improvisational music。 His (first) autobiography, written with partner Dean Budnick, overflows with his enthusiasm for the music, the performers, and his work promoting them。 He clearly works from the viewpoint of the music fan, and all his decisions are based on the ethics of the jamband scene- kindness, inclusivity, and community。Peter tells his own story of attending Northwestern, where he met many of his current inner circle, and opening Wetlands, a club dedicated to the jamband scene in lower Manhattan。 From there, he describes orchestrating the surviving Grateful Dead members' final shows called Fare Thee Well, opening the Brooklyn Bowl franchise, the refurbished Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, the Lockn' Festival, and much much more。As he proceeds, he offers advice and reflections to aspiring promoters 。 His "nos turn to yeses', knowing when to leave early versus being the last person standing in the room, deciding when to propose an idea to an artist or to their management, being able to astutely read a room and/or situation are all practical and solid ideas。 The book abounds with them。 He often references sports ("The promotor's job is to deliver the assist。 The artist scores") , his own personal asides (he is prone to allergic reactions, and if you are he advises you carry Benadryl), and using music terminology to describe decisions ("I called an audible and went to this show")。 Many of his reflections seem like life lessons as well as business lessons ("Whenever you start something, all the calls are outgoing。 But if you build it right, you get the incoming")。 I found myself googling some of what, to me, were more of the obscure references ("they provided white label service for us on the back end") and became more knowledgeable about the music business in the process。A delightful and informative read for music fans and industry insiders alike。 Many thanks to NetGalley for the eARC。 。。。more