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Growing up in the Boston suburbs, Tom Werman was deeply affected by
pop music from a young age. He long dreamed of a career in music --
first as Elvis, then as the next George Harrison -- but it almost
turned out very differently. Dutifully following the path his
parents had laid out for him, he obtained an MBA from an Ivy League
university and took a plum job in an industry he came to despise.
Then, in 1970, a chance letter sent to CBS Records boss Clive Davis
led to a new opportunity . . . and a place in rock and roll
history. As an A&R man at Epic Records, Werman helped introduce
the world to REO Speedwagon, Boston, Ted Nugent, and Cheap Trick;
he also discovered KISS, Rush, and Lynyrd Skynyrd, but his record
label passed on all of them. Then, as an independent producer, he
oversaw landmark albums by Motley Crue (Shout At The Devil),
Twisted Sister (Stay Hungry), Lita Ford (Dangerous Curves), Jeff
Beck (Live With Jan Hammer), Poison (Open Up And Say ... Ahh!), and
many more. All in all, his record-making resume includes
twenty-three gold- or platinum-selling albums and cumulative sales
of more than fifty-two million copies. After bearing witness to
several sea changes in the music industry, Werman retired from
producing in 2001 and reinvented himself as an award-winning
innkeeper in the Berkshire Hills of Massachusetts. And that might
have been that, until an off-the-cuff rebuttal to a disparaging
critique of his role in making the Motley Crue album Girls, Girls,
Girls on a music website led to a fortnightly column and now this
book -- an honest and engaging insider account on how some of the
best-loved albums of the 1970s and 80s came to be. A must for
anyone interested in the glory days of rock and metal, Turn It Up!
offers valuable insights into the recording process, the recording
studio, the role of the producer, and the production values that
are essential to the creation of a hit record.
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