Search
  Shop

Music

Film Scoring

Live Sound

Music Industry

Music Marketing

Music Law

Music Theory

Recording

Songwriting

Sheet Music

Instruments

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Home

Music Industry

Bad Boy: The Influence of Sean "Puffy" Combs on the Music Industry

Bad Boy: The Influence of Sean "Puffy" Combs on the Music Industry
Email a friendEmailView larger imageZoom

Bad Boy: The Influence of Sean "Puffy" Combs on the Music Industry

 
SKU:  

1200126932

In Stock
Availability:   Usually ships in 1 business days
Only 3 left in stock, order soon!
 
 

This is a tale of friendship, greed, and betrayal in the music industry -- and a definitive history of America's biggest rap mogul.

No one knows more about creating hits than Sean "Puffy" Combs. For years he virtually ran hip-hop. It seemed the perfect arrangement: "Puffy" provided the sounds and obsessive attention to detail while the Notorious B.I.G. promoted an image that kept rap fans happy. It should have lasted forever, but "Biggie" was murdered at the height of his career -- and "Puffy"'s ascension to superstardom ushered in an age of disloyalty and deception that exploded into one of the greatest debacles in the history of the music industry.

Through interviews with label insiders, grand jury testimony, and other sources, America's preeminent rap journalist Ronin Ro

  • reveals the true story of "Puffy"
  • addresses the larger issues that shaped the man and the industry
  • explains how Bad Boy both helped and destroyed hip-hop and R&B music
  • details why some artists "Puffy" created ultimately left his Bad Boy family in disgust.

At once an intimate history and a portrait of an era, Bad Boy shows readers exactly how Combs lost his strangle-hold over the multibillion-dollar rap music industry.

The story of Bad Boy Entertainment is the story of the American Dream, an up-close and personal account of the people, the money, the creative process that made it all come true, and the young mogul who caused the dream to fall apart. In this hip-hop tragedy of Shakespearean dimensions, readers finally learn the story that Sean "Puffy" Combs does not want them to know.

 
Our Price: $25.00 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.
 
 

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.


Product Details
Author:Ronin Ro
Hardcover:224 pages
Publisher:Atria Books
Publication Date:October 30, 2001
Language:English
ISBN:0743428234
Product Length:9.48 inches
Product Width:6.46 inches
Product Height:0.85 inches
Product Weight:1.03 pounds
Package Length:9.57 inches
Package Width:6.49 inches
Package Height:0.86 inches
Package Weight:0.98 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 6 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:3.0 ( 6 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

7 of 8 found the following review helpful:


2Objective but depressing  Jun 14, 2003
I enjoy reading about entrepreneur and learning about how they built their particular business into a success. If you are looking for the same thing in this book you will be very disappointed. The book goes through a blow-by-blow account of P Diddy's problems and ultimately questions his ethics. I believe the book is written objectively, but very few pages are are actually dedicated to expalining how he actually made the leap from intern to a CEO of a multi-million dollar company. That was the story I really wanted to read about. Unfortunately, I learned more about Puffy's legal trial than I did about how he built his empire. If you want an entrepreneurial focused book buy Russell Simmons' Life and Def instead.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:


5This Book Is Incredible  Apr 11, 2002
Many people might not know about this book since it was released in early September of 2001. But Ronin Ro's Bad Boy is a must-read work. Instead of rehashing details about the coastal rap rivalry he already covered in Have Gun Will Travel, Ro presents an entirely different tale, in an intriguing new voice, but with the same eye for the telling detail. For the first time, a book details every stage of Puffy's career--Ro describes his days as an ambitious aspiring music executive, his first steps at R&B/rap label Uptown and his apprenticeship under Andre Harrell, his contributions to the rap remix format, his rise in the industry(precipitated by well-placed acquaintances at various rap magazines), and his relationship with the late rapper Notorious BIG (covered through a mix of Big's lesser-known interviews and compelling and exciting interviews with label insiders, associates and more). Bad Boy also reveals the creative process behind the label's string of hit albums during the 1990s, how Puffy marketed and--in some cases--watered down his artists' music and how he scrambled to save face after some, including The Lox and Mase, abruptly left the label and the man who claimed to have made them famous. Anyone expecting another book-length retread of the Bad Boy Death Row beef might want another book. Bad Boy is more than that. For a balanced look at Sean "Puffy" Combs and the empire he tried to build, the most in-depth portrait of Biggie Smalls ever offered, and a gripping account of Puffy's 2001 criminal trial, read this book.


3Not really what I expected...  Jul 13, 2009 By Louis Porter Jr.
I thought this book would be more focused on actual business strategies used to grow the business not the stories on how Puffy he recorded CDs.


4THE TRANSFORMATION FROM PUFFY TO DIDDY  Jun 20, 2007 By Gian Fiero
This book offers a very detailed and accurate chronological compilation of monumental and pivotal events in "Puffy's" life and Bad Boy's history. While it often portrays Puffy as determined and focused, it also depicts him as an egomaniacal and self-serving tyrant. All the people who have played a key role in helping him build his Bad Boy Brand and near billionaire status are woven throughout this story of his meteoric rise to fame including Biggie; Craig Mack; Mase; The Lox; Black Rob; 112; Carl Thomas; Faith Evans; Mary J. Blige; Heavy D; Dream; Andre Harrell; LA Reid; Russell Simmons; and Clive Davis.

You will discover things about Bad Boy that you didn't know (such as Biggie selling his publishing rights to Puffy for $150,000), things that you wish you didn't know (like how Puffy used the tired 60s tactic of buying cars for highly pursued or recently signed new artists with their own money and used it as a smokescreen to blind them to inequitable business practices), and many other serious music business lessons. Despite the fact that this book ends abruptly, it's rivetting, entertaining, and highly informative. Ronin Ro should definitely update this. There's a lot that has happened with Puffy and Bad Boy since it was written.

3 of 9 found the following review helpful:


4The P. The D. The I. The D.....it's Diddy.....Hold Up!!!!!  Nov 13, 2001
(...) Damn Puf!!!!!

This is a good insight into the Rise and Fall of Sean "Puffy", "P-Diddy" Combs. And I use to admire the guy. Despite the Haters. Read this and it may change your mind, as it did mine.

See all 6 customer reviews on Amazon.com

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 About UsContact Us
ChrisSparksEntertainment.comRecordingVIP.com