Don't Stop Believin': How Karaoke Conquered the World and Changed My Life
|
| List Price: | $16.00 |
| Price: | $6.08 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
14 new or used available from $3.03
Average customer review:Product Description
Armed with a keen eye and a terrible singing voice, writer Brian Raftery sets out across the globe, tracing karaoke's evolution from cult fad to multi-million dollar phenomenon. In Japan, he meets Daisuke Inoue, the godfather of karaoke; in Thailand, he follows a group of Americans hoping to win the Karaoke World Championships; and in New York City, he hangs out backstage with the world's longest-running heavy-metal karaoke band. Along the way, Raftery chronicles his own time as an obsessive karaoke fan, recalling a life's worth of noisy relationships and poor song choices, and analyzing the karaoke-bar merits of such artists as Prince, Bob Dylan and Fugazi.
Part cultural history, part memoir, Don't Stop Believin': How Karaoke Conquered the World and Changed My Life is a hilarious and densely reported look at the liberating effects of a good sing-along.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #333261 in Books
- Published on: 2008-12-08
- Format: Bargain Price
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 232 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
What some condemn as an aesthetic crime is actually the most direct form of music appreciation that now exists, contends this indulgent tribute to a dubious art form. Entertainment journalist and karaoke connoisseur Raftery celebrates the medium as both a democratization of our overprofessionalized entertainment culture and a kind of therapy that transforms shamed self-consciousness into brazen, talentless self-acceptance. He traces the industry's history from its early struggles to cajole club goers into making spectacles of themselves to its rise as mockery-proof nightlife mainstay. Delving into the stringent engineering of instrumental backup tapes, he explains why Bobby Brown's On Our Own (from Ghostbusters II) is a greater karaoke song than Dylan's Like a Rolling Stone. Intertwined in his world tour of karaoke bars is a personal saga of singing badly for drunken audiences from Manhattan to Tokyo, a habit that eased the forming and breakup of relationships and prodded him into a blissful state of not caring about how I look or sound. Raftery vividly evokes the boozy, semimelodic pathos that makes karaoke a profound group-bonding rite, while acknowledging—nay, toasting—its tackiness. The result is an entertaining, exuberant homage that's anything but off-key. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
“The author’s obsession [is] delineated in colorful, mostly engaging prose…Interspersed with [Raftery’s] personal story is a loose-limbed, entertaining history…Lively, amusing, irreverent and often scattershot—in other words, perfect bathroom reading material.”
“Raftery vividly evokes the boozy, semimelodic pathos that makes karaoke a profound group-bonding rite, while acknowledging—nay, toasting—its tackiness. The result is an entertaining, exuberant homage that’s anything but off-key.”
“In this waggish memoir, Raftery chronicles his journey (heh) across the world, rocking karaoke joints.”
Spin, 12/08
“A delightful and ultimately moving read.”
Spin,12/08
“A personal look at the sing-along phenomenon.”
Shelf Awareness, 12/10/08
“[A] breezy paean to the ‘empty orchestra’ (the literal translation of ‘karaoke’)…Raftery writes…with brisk humor…Raftery’s enthusiasm for [karaoke] is endearing—and ultimately infectious…A light, informative and highly entertaining history of karaoke from a writer who can’t stop himself from singing along.”
"Delves into the tangled history of the art form (and yes, it is an art form), from its rocky start in 1970s Japan to its embrace by everyone from trendy indie rock bands to Midwestern brial parties...A love letter to a hobby that became an obsession."
Wired
"Reminds us that belting out tunes with all your heart can be fun, wrenching, and ultimately very satisfying."
LibraryJournal.com, 12/19/08
"This book is for people who take karaoke seriously and know just the right songs to sing. fans of pop culture and the writing of Chuck Klosterman will enjoy Raftery's style. highly recommended for popular collections in all public libraries."
"[The] definitive book on Karaoke...Hilarious and just plain fun to read...I liked this book an awful lot. if you've got an inner-Karaoke guy in you dying to be let loose, chances are you will like it, too. if not, it still makes a reat gift for that friend of yours prone to singing badly at parties and other forms of lampshade wearing fun."
Blogcritics.org, 12/21/08
“Hilarious.”
Orlando Sentinel “Word Count”, 1/2/09
“[An] ode to the pastime…Like essayist Chuck Klosterman, Raftery is an unabashed nerd…There are some fantastic performance tips in here too, dissecting with hilarious accuracy what makes an otherwise bad song perfect for karaoke and vice-versa.”
Reference and Research Book News, 2/09
“[Raftery] goes far beyond merely recording required behavior, fashion trends, and counting drinks. Instead he comments on collective memory, competitiveness among and within nations, the ratio between aspiration and talent, and the evolution from casual participant to fanatic…The result is a mystery tour married to a serious ethnography.”
Under the Radar, Winter 2009
“Deftly mix[es] cultural history with memoir…An endearing and intriguing case for an oft-maligned…er, art form.”
Buffalo News, 1/25/09
“[Raftery’s] style is at once serious, funny, respectful and aware, of both the ludicrousness of karaoke, and the real spirit behind it…Wonderful, sharp writing…Cheers to Brian Raftery, then, for doing so much with so little. It’s probably the best book ever written about karaoke.”
Cleveland Scene “Culture Jamming,” 2/15/09
“Part history lesson, part confessional…An amusing and often enlightening journey, highlighted by lists of the all-time best and worst karaoke songs.”
PasteMagazine.com, 1/27/09
“[A] lighthearted look at karaoke…Raftery didn’t disappoint. He’s got a wicked sense of humor, and he loves to make fun of himself, too…Raftery has a natural inclination to put on his journalist hat even when he’s talking about himself. The technique works well…Never have I seen such intriguing astuteness about some things I would never want to see. I’ve got to applaud him for taking his obsession all the way.”
TVLand.com, 1/9/09
“More than a discourse on the sing-along phenomenon…With wit, self-deprecation, and a combination of a reporter’s skills and a passion for his subject, Brian tells of his adventures in karaoke; its history, and its evolution from fad to phenom.”
“You can taste [Raftery’s] addiction. His passion is, like the collective yearning to sing Total Eclipse of the Heart, contagious.”
“As much memoir as it is history, and the story it tells—of how one pudgy, loveless music journalist learned to stop worrying and love the rush of performing—is an endearing one…Karaoke itself may not be to everyone's liking, but this bite-size book is a treat, like hearing a surprisingly competent singer offer her take on Milli Vanilli’s ‘Blame It on the Rain.’”
Forbes.com, 2/17/09
“Raftery, the most obsessive karaoke fan you could imagine, perfectly captures this exhibitionist thrill in his entertaining history of the art…The book is an elegy for his 20s, a fascinating look at the underbelly of the music business, a meditation on the nature of authenticity and a quest for the perfect karaoke song…In an age of digital piracy and ‘Guitar Hero,’ the future of karaoke is uncertain, but this rollicking and surprisingly informative account of a life lived with microphone in hand is a fitting ode to its joyful tackiness.”
Salt Lake Underground, 2/09
“Raftery’s text does the culture justice like no other.”
Relevant, April 2009
“[Raftery’s] Chuck Klosterman-esque writing will have you laughing and tempt you to belt out some Journey.”
Skyscraper, Spring 2009
“I have read many, probably too many, music books over the past decade but rarely has one made me laugh. But Don’t Stop Believin’ did—a lot…Brian Raftery’s book is a memoir and a love letter to everyone’s favorite narcissistic leisure activity, karaoke…Raftery’s gusto for championing the underdog (he being one of them) is contagious and his genuine love for this often-maligned pastime should be applauded and respected.”
Bookgasm.com, 5/19/09
“When Raftery digs deep into the history and social aspects of karaoke, it becomes an enthralling history book of a much-maligned art form…A great book.”
About the Author
Customer Reviews
Raftery's text does the culture justice like no other
I love Karaoke. I love it so much that I sang, among other things, M. Manson's "The Beautiful People" while aged strippers shook their thing a few feet away (aka Stripperoake) and braved a lethargic version of Radiohead's "Optimistic" just because I wanted to show off my Thom Yorke dance. A connoisseur, yes, but my participation and devotion to the art are nothing compared to Brian Raftery's, a former GQ and Spin journalist who spent years perfecting his craft. An equal mix of history (interviews with inventors, track production houses and members of live karaoke bands), the author's White Whale chases (i.e. Fugazi's "Waiting Room", "Thirty Songs I'll Never Find at Karaoke"), karaoke cruise ships and underlying sadness over age versus the desire to get up - and get your friends up - to rock, Raftery's text does the culture justice like no other.
Does karaoke justice!!!
I'm in the middle of reading this book, and I am impressed by the author's thoroughness and thoughtfulness of the karaoke experience. His coverage of the types of songs that are karaoke-worthy, the story of the business behind the CDGs that are produced, and even the theories as to why karaoke has become more acceptable as a social activity all resonate in the experience I have accumulated over the last 15 years that I have participated in and eventually hosted karaoke shows.
Little nuggets of the history of karaoke in the USA and, ultimately, of the origins from Japan help ground the book to general culture.
If I were to write a book, this would be a definite topic that I would have enjoyed researching first hand! A great read for karaoke lovers. Kudos to Raferty!



