New Kids on the Block's Hangin' Tough
By (Author) Rebecca Wallwork
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
21st April 2016
United States
General
Non Fiction
Musicians, singers, bands and groups
Composers and songwriters
782.421660922
Paperback
144
Width 121mm, Height 165mm
142g
Hangin Tough, the second album by the New Kids on the Block, has sold more than seventeen million copies worldwide since it was released in 1988. But the album and the band have also been dismissed, derided and deemed uncool by the music establishment. Almost thirty years later, the New Kids still perform the songs from Hangin Tough.Hundreds of thousands of grown women still flock to their concerts to hearand go bat-shit crazy forthe songs they first heard when they were teenagers. Is this mere nostalgia or can the science of music help explain the enduring success of Hangin Tough What is it about this album that made it so special Is the music any good or are there other factors at play too Journalist and New Kids fan Rebecca Wallwork sets out to analyze the quality of Hangin Tough with the help of music cognition experts, critics, producers and music industry pros. This is not a story about crazy fans, boy bands and truckloads of cheesy merchandise; it is an exploration of a watershed album and moment in pop culture history. It is a glimpse into the brain of not just New Kids fans, but into the minds and hearts of anyone who loves music.
Making the case for the slick-sounding albums place in music history seems a considerable undertaking. Yet author Wallwork presents more than enough plausible evidence about the bands place in pop culture through research and interviews with those who worked with the boys during its heyday. She aims to explain why this album still resonates with her and the bands mostly female audience (now in their 40s), and she tackles her subject on multiple fronts: the science, particularly the psychology, of why music from peoples teen years sticks with them well into adulthood; the genius of the bands creator, Maurice Starr, who was also responsible for its music; and the personalities, talents, and musical influences of the five band members. In some ways, this book is not so much a band biography or album history as it is a story about fandom. Even elitist rock fans who dont remember the New Kids fondly will find that Wallworks work may crack their hard, cynical shells. * Kirkus Reviews *
What makes Wallworks book so great is that you can use it to understand how YOU fell in love with that band from your teenaged years, and why you cant let them go, no matter how you think your tastes have changed. Wallwork refused to apologize for her fandom, and instead invited you along to understand why you feel the way you do about your version of New Kids on the Block. * Bearded Gentleman Music *
With this book, Wallwork isn't trying to convince readers to like New Kids on the Block. Rather she just wants to understand her own fandom. She wants to make sure she's not looking at it through the lens of nostalgia, something everyone has questioned at least once with something they remember fondly. Hangin' Tough will remind fans why they love NKOTB and will make others think differently about the group. * Examiner *
Rebecca Wallwork is a writer and content director based in Miami Beach.