Hooks in Popular Music Tim Byron Jadey O’Regan Hooks in Popular Music · Tim Byron Jadey O’Regan Hooks in Popular Music Tim Byron Jadey O’Regan School of Psychology Sydney Conservatorium of Music University of Wollongong University of Sydney Wollongong, NSW, Australia Sydney, NSW, Australia ISBN 978-3-031-18999-9 ISBN 978-3-031-19000-1 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-19000-1 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2022 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. 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This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature Switzerland AG The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland For Wendy O’Regan We hope this would have made you proud Acknowledgements We would both like to thank our loved ones for their support of us and this project. We would especially like to thank our friends in our ‘Hook Hangs’ group who discussed many of the examples in this book with us—Paul Andrews, Casey Atkins, John Encarnacao, Amber Rules, Cass Scully, and Tom Sowonja. Additional thanks to our friend and research assistant, Ivy-Jane Browne, for her help assembling the extensive discog- raphy. We would also like to express our gratitude to the organisers of two opportunities that enabled us to discuss our research before the publication of this book. Firstly, thank you to Ralf von Appen and the students at MDW (University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna), and secondly, to Rachel Campbell, Chris Coady, and David Larkin from the Musicology Department at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music for allowing us to present this research at the monthly Musicology Collo- quium. We also greatly appreciate the efforts of Bill Thompson and Ralf von Appen to send us some kind words we could use on the back of the book. Thanks to Naveen Dass, Liviyaa Sree, Nobuko Kamikawa, and the vii viii Acknowledgements team at Palgrave Macmillan for their support and advice in stepping us through the process of writing and publishing this book. Tim Byron Thanks: My colleagues at the School of Psychology at the University of Wollon- gong for their support. In particular, I would also like to thank Professor Peter Caputi, as Head of School for providing me the space and time for this book during a difficult time, Emma Hamilton, a 2021 Honours student, for her hard work and determination embarking on a complex study into the way people perceive hooks, and Dr. Frances De Blasio, for her help in cleaning the data generated by Emma’s project. Jadey O’Regan Thanks: My friends and colleagues in the Contemporary Music Practice faculty and beyond at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music—Charles Fairchild, Toby Martin, Paul Mac, Rainbow Chan, Heather Shannon, Jerome Blazé, and Nell Yeo. Without their support, this book wouldn’t be possible. Many thanks to the Sydney Conservatorium of Music for providing me with a short research leave which allowed me the time and space to think and write during 2022. Thank you to my friend Liz Giuffre for her continuous support of this project. Finally, thank you to my students in the Contemporary Music Practice program for their interest in and support of this work. This book grew from the conversa- tions we had in our classes, and in many ways, this book is for you. Contents 1 The Intro 1 1.1 Defining the Hook 1 1.2 The Hook as Discussed by Music Journalists and Critics 7 1.3 The Hook as Discussed by Producers and Musicians 12 1.4 The Hook as Discussed in Songwriting Texts 20 1.5 The Hook as Discussed by Songwriters 22 1.6 Hooks and Pop Music 26 1.7 Conclusions 35 References 37 2 Can’t Get You Out of My Head: Hooks and Psychology 41 2.1 Hooks as Implicitly Psychological 41 2.2 The Psychology of Standing Out 46 2.3 The Psychology of Memorability 61 2.4 Hooks in Relation to Earworms 70 2.5 Attention, Memory, and Emotion in Music 77 2.6 Conclusions 79 References 82 ix x Contents 3 Thank U, Next: Hooks in Popular Music Studies 89 3.1 Burns (1987) 90 3.2 Musicology Wrestles with Pop 92 3.3 Hooks in Popular Music Studies 97 3.4 Conclusion 112 References 113 4 This Is How We Do It: An Approach to Hooks 117 4.1 Our Conceptualisation of Hooks 118 4.2 Our Taxonomy of Hooks 131 4.3 Conclusion 146 References 147 5 Sing It Back: Melody and Topline Hooks 151 5.1 Topline Pitch Hooks 152 5.2 Topline Rhythm Hooks 163 5.3 Topline Performance Hooks 177 5.4 Topline Production Hooks 193 5.5 Topline Lyrical Hooks 209 5.6 Conclusion 227 References 228 6 D-D-Don’t Don’t Stop the Beat: Backing Track Hooks 231 6.1 Backing Track Pitch Hooks 233 6.2 Backing Track Rhythm Hooks 245 6.3 Backing Track Harmony Hooks 255 6.4 Backing Track Instrumentation and Arrangement Hooks 263 6.5 Backing Track Production Hooks 274 6.6 Conclusion 287 References 289 7 Don’t Bore Us, Get to the Chorus: Structural Hooks 293 7.1 Repetition in Pop Music 294 7.2 Verses and Choruses 299 7.3 Prechoruses, Postchoruses, and Other Elements of Verse-Chorus Form 305 7.4 Tension and Release 307 Contents xi 7.5 Novel Elements and Novel Combinations of Elements 310 7.6 Modulations in Time and Key 316 7.7 Conclusion 320 References 321 8 Parallel or Together?: Compound Hooks 323 8.1 Hook Stacks 325 8.2 Multi-Hooks 331 8.3 Riffs 341 8.4 Samples and Interpolation 351 8.5 Conclusion 358 References 359 9 The Outro 363 9.1 Song Analysis: Hooks in Context 370 9.2 What’s not a Hook? 378 9.3 The Role of the S tudy of Hooks i n Music Psychology 380 9.4 The Role of the Study of Hooks in Popular Musicology 386 9.5 Unresolved Questions and Future Research 391 9.6 Bonus Track 395 References 397 Discography 401 Index 457