The
Brill Building (built 1931) is an office building located at 1619 Broadway in New York City, just
north of Times Square. The Brill Building (named after the Brill Brothers, who owned a clothing store on the street level
and who later bought the entire building from its developer, A.E. Lefcourt) was intended as a financial office space for brokers
and bankers. In the midst of the Depression, the timing couldn't have been worse, and the owners resorted to renting space
to music publishers, as there were few other takers.
The "Big Band Era":Even before
World War II it became a centre of activity for the popular music industry, especially music publishing and songwriting. Scores
of music publishers had offices in the Brill Building. Once songs had been published, the publishers sent song pluggers to
the popular white bands and radio stations. These song pluggers would sing and/or play the song for the band leaders to encourage
bands to play their music.
During the ASCAP strike of 1941, many of the composers, authors and publishers turned
to pseudonyms in order to have their songs played on the air.
Brill Building songs were constantly at the top of
the Hit Parade and played by the leading bands of the day:
• The Benny Goodman Orchestra
• The Glenn
Miller Orchestra
• The Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra
• The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
Publishers included:
• Leo Feist Inc.
• Lewis Music Publishing
• Mills Music Publishing
Composers included:
• Billy Rose
• Buddy Feyne
• Johnny Mercer
• Irving Mills
• Peter Tinturin
Racial Politics of Music Publishing:
The music publishers at this time followed the racial codes
of the day. They either had their own (typically white) contract writers composing songs or they opened their doors to publish
songs of others, but hid the fact that songs were created by non-white or non-Christian artists.
Jewish songwriters
often adopted anglicized noms de plume in order for their songs to be published. This was necessary at a time when anti-semitism
was widespread.
In the 1930s some publishers in the Brill Building specialized in publishing the songs of African
American Swing composers. For example, Lewis Music published the songs of Erskine Hawkins and Avery Parrish, among others.
These tunes were called "Race Music", the euphemism for songs written by black artists. If a composer wrote an instrumental
(and even sometimes if there were already lyrics), the publishers provided their own lyricists. Top selling songs on the (white)
Hit Parade, such as Tuxedo Junction and Jersey Bounce, were originally composed as instrumentals by black swing artists, but
were not played by white bands on the radio until they had been published with lyrics, often by white writers.
The
"Brill Building Sound":The Brill Building's name has been widely adopted as a shorthand term
for a broad and influential stream of American mainstream popular song (strongly influenced by Latin music and rhythm and
blues) which enjoyed great commercial success in the late 1950s and throughout the 1960s. Many significant American and international
publishing companies, music agencies and recording labels were based in New York, and although these ventures were naturally
spread across many locations, the Brill Building was regarded as probably the most prestigious address in New York for music
business professionals. The term "The Brill Building Sound" is somewhat inaccurate, however, since much of the music
so categorised actually emanated from other locations - music historian Ken Emerson nominates buildings at 1650 Broadway and
1697 Broadway as other significant bases of activity in this field.
By 1962 the Brill Building contained 165 music
businesses: a musician could find a publisher and printer, cut a demo, promote the record, and cut a deal with radio promoters,
all within this one building. The creative culture of the independent music companies of Brill Building and the nearby 1650
Broadway came to define the influential "Brill Building Sound" and the style of popular music songwriting and recording
created by its writers and producers.
Carole King described the atmosphere at the 'Brill Building' publishing
houses of the period:
"Every day we squeezed into our respective cubby holes with just enough room for a piano,
a bench, and maybe a chair for the lyricist if you were lucky. You'd sit there and write and you could hear someone in
the next cubby hole composing a song exactly like yours. The pressure in the Brill Building was really terrific - because
Donny (Kirshner) would play one songwriter against another. He'd say: 'We need a new smash hit' - and we'd
all go back and write a song and the next day we'd each audition for Bobby Vee's producer." - quoted in The Sociology
of Rock by Simon Frith (1978, ISBN 0-09-460220-4).
Writers:Many of the best works in this
diverse category were written by a loosely affiliated group of songwriter-producer teams - mostly duos - that enjoyed immense
success and who collectively wrote some of the biggest hits of the period. Many in this group were close friends, as well
as being creative and business associates - and both individually and as a duo, they often worked with each other and with
other writers in a wide variety of combinations.
• Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller
• Doc Pomus and
Mort Shuman
• Gerry Goffin and Carole King
• Ellie Greenwich and Jeff Barry
• Barry Mann
and Cynthia Weil
• Burt Bacharach and Hal David
• Neil Sedaka and Howard Greenfield
• Hugo
& Luigi
• Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart
Other famous musicians who were headquartered in The Brill
Building:
• Laura Nyro
• Claus Ogerman
• Neil Diamond
Among the hundreds of hits
written by this group are Leiber and Stoller's "Yakety Yak", Shuman and Pomus's "Save The Last Dance
For Me", Bacharach and David's "The Look of Love", Sedaka and Greenfield's "Calendar Girl",
King and Goffin's "The Loco-Motion", Mann and Weil's "We Gotta Get Out of This Place" and Spector,
Greenwich and Barry's "River Deep Mountain High".
Aldon Music - 1650 Broadway:Many of these writers came to prominence while under contract to Aldon Music, a publishing company founded ca. 1958 by aspiring
music entrepreneur Don Kirshner and industry veteran Al Nevins. Aldon was not initially located in the Brill Building, but
rather, a block away at 1650 Broadway (at 51st St.). In fact, 1650 was built to be a musician's headquarters, so much
so that the laws at the time required that the "front" door be placed on the side of the building due to laws restricting
musicians from entering buildings from the front. Most so-called 'Brill Building' writers began their careers at 1650,
and the building continued to house many record labels throughout the decades.
Selection of businesses
located 1619 Broadway (Brill Building) and 1650 Broadway:
1619 Broadway• Broadway
Video
• Postworks LLC/Orbit Digital
• Famous Music
• Coed Records, Inc.
• Mills
Music
• Southern Music
• TM Music
• SoundOne
• Helios Music/Glamorous Music
• KMA Music
• Paul Simon Music
• Maggie Vision Productions
1650 Broadway• Aldon Music
• Bell Records, Inc.
• Buddah Records, Inc.
• Gamble Records, Inc.
• Scepter/Wand Records
• Web IV Music, Inc.
Source:
Wikipedia the free Encyclopedia