Eugene Wei

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Even at the dawn of the American music business, to make a song a hit, a memorable melody was secondary to an ingenious marketing campaign. “In Tin Pan Alley, what publishers understood was that no matter how clever, how catchy, how timely a song, its [success] depended on its system of distribution,” music historian David Suisman wrote in Selling Sounds: The Commercial Revolution in American Music.
Hit Makers: Why Things Become Popular
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