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OverviewYou know that feeling that the music you love is also somehow exploiting you? That your favourite songs are also ads. That your playlists know too much about you. That the artists you care about are getting screwed while someone else gets rich. That feeling is accurate. This book explains the machine that produces it. Pump It Up is not a history of popular music. It's an investigation into the industry that captured it - the specific infrastructure that emerged in Anglo-America at the turn of the twentieth century, became the global template for how recorded and broadcast sound is owned, distributed, and monetised, and now dominates how most of the world hears music through streaming platforms. From minstrel stages where Black sound was first stolen and sold, through parlours, radio towers, vinyl plants, MTV studios, and server farms, popular music has been progressively transformed from collective human expression into a planetary grid for organising time, capturing feeling, accumulating catalogue wealth, and training populations in the rhythms of managed consumption. This book traces that transformation across 125 years and asks a simple question: Who's really calling the tune? Drawing on declassified intelligence documents, court records, financial filings, investigative journalism, and academic research, Pump It Up follows seven investigative threads through five historical phases: The threads: State-sponsored cultural warfare - from Jazz Ambassadors to platform-government partnerships Policing and criminalisation - from cabaret cards to drill lyrics prosecuted as evidence Live music cartels - from vaudeville circuits to Ticketmaster's monopoly Catalogue financialisation - from Tin Pan Alley to billion-dollar IP funds Platform power - from radio formatting to algorithmic mood management Nightlife under siege - from speakeasies to venue closures as gentrification tool Occult panic and real class power - what Illuminati theories get wrong, and what they accidentally point toward The phases: Formation (1900-1945): How the extraction template was built on racial theft Capture (1945-1980): Cold War weaponisation abroad, COINTELPRO at home, rebellion packaged and sold Enclosure (1980-2010): MTV discipline, CD windfalls, live cartel formation, catalogue as asset class Grid (2010-present): Platforms as factories, surveillance nodes, and soft police stations Terrain (present-forward): Where the cracks appear and struggle becomes possible Pump It Up is ruthless toward the owners and respectful toward the people - listeners, musicians, workers - navigating a structure they didn't build. It names the racial extraction at the industry's foundation. It tracks the state-corporate alignment without conspiracy theory. It shows how your personal refuge became their behavioural infrastructure. And it shows where the walls are weakest. If you've ever felt that something was wrong with how music works - that the joy was real but so was the trap - this book will show you the whole picture. Once you see it, you can't unsee it. And once you see it, you can start to fight it. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jason WardlePublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.771kg ISBN: 9798278030270Pages: 586 Publication Date: 09 December 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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