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The Speed of Sound: Breaking the Barriers Between Music and Technology: A Memoir Hardcover – October 11, 2016

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 441 ratings

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The remarkable story of rising to the top of the music charts, a second act as a tech pioneer, and the sustaining power of creativity and art.

Thomas Dolby’s hit songs “She Blinded Me with Science” and “Hyperactive!” catapulted him to international fame in the early 80’s. A pioneer of New Wave and Electronica, Thomas combined a love for invention with a passion for music, and the result was a new sound that defined an era of revolutionary music. But as record company politics overshadow the joy of performing, Thomas finds a surprising second act.

Starting out in a rat-infested London bedsit, a teenage Thomas Dolby stacks boxes by day at the grocery and tinkers with a homemade synthesizer at night while catching the Police at a local dive bar, swinging by the pub to see the unknown Elvis Costello and starting the weekend with a Clash show at a small night club. London on the eve of the 1980s is a hotbed for music and culture, and a new sound is beginning to take shape, merging technology with the musical energy of punk rock. Thomas plays keyboards in other bands’ shows, and with a bit of luck finds his own style, quickly establishing himself on the scene and recording break out hits that take radio, MTV and dance clubs by storm. The world is now his oyster, and sold out arenas, world tours, even a friendship with Michael Jackson become the fabric of his life.

But as the record industry flounders and disillusionment sets in, Thomas turns his attention to Hollywood. Scoring films and computer games eventually leads him to Silicon Valley and a software startup that turns up the volume on the digital music revolution. His company barely survives the dotcom bubble but finally even the mavericks at Apple, Microsoft, Netscape and Nokia see the light. By 2005, two-thirds of the world’s mobile phones embed his Beatnik software. Life at the zenith of a tech empire proves to be just as full of big personalities, battling egos and roller-coaster success as his days spent at the top of the charts.

THE SPEED OF SOUND is the story of an extraordinary man living an extraordinary life, a single-handed quest to make peace between art and the digital world.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"He rose during the advent of the British New Wave. But what was he, exactly? A singer-songwriter? Performance artist? Programmer? Engineer, poet, actor, inventor? And if we couldn't be sure, how possibly could he? This is the engaging, emotional, funny and surprising tale of Thomas Dolby -- a brilliant multi-hyphenate on his journey of discovery and self-discovery."
-- JJ Abrams, Director, Writer, Producer



"Whatever technology does to musicians will also be done to the rest of us -- but to Thomas Dolby first. Professor Dolby's candid memoir is fascinating. Its significance will grow."
-- Bruce Sterling, author of The Epic Struggle of the Internet of Things and The Mirrorshade anthology

"Thomas Dolby has had at least four notable lives. The chart topping musician and ubiquitous MTV presence, the Silicon Valley innovator, the music director for TED and then, astonishingly, a professor at Johns Hopkins. His journey is as amazing as the book is well written. From start to finish, I thoroughly enjoyed every page of T
he Speed Of Sound. Brilliant."
- Henry Rollins, bestselling author, journalist and musician

"Musician Thomas Dolby debuts with an absorbing account of his pioneering work merging digital music with film, technology, and science. In this story-filled memoir, Dolby draws deeply on his experiences as a synthesized music guru and early internet geek, offering wonderful scenes involving such notables as Michael Jackson, Joni Mitchell, David Bowie, Steve Jobs, and George Lucas. His innovative accomplishments, rendered in fascinating detail here, are legendary."
-
Kirkus, Starred Review

“In his engaging memoir, British New Wave icon Dolby retraces his journey from London stock clerk to pop star to unlikely success as a Silicon Valley pioneer…Dolby’s style―understated but acute―and wealth of anecdotes make for an enjoyable narrative… the bespectacled Brit is more Renaissance man than one-hit wonder.”
- Publishers Weekly

"Wildly entertaining"
― Salon.com

About the Author

Thomas Dolby has spent his career at the intersection of music and technology. He was an early star on MTV, and then moved to Silicon Valley, where he has had an extraordinary career as an entrepreneur. He has been named Johns Hopkins University's first Homewood Professor of the Arts, where he will help create a new center that will serve as an incubator for technology in the arts. He lives in England with his family.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Flatiron Books; First Edition (October 11, 2016)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 288 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1250071844
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1250071842
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.5 x 1 x 9.5 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 441 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
441 global ratings
Yes! Yes! Yes! but also made my cry.
5 Stars
Yes! Yes! Yes! but also made my cry.
The hardcover version arrived today and I just read it cover to cover. I really enjoyed the book. The battles with the music industry and then the battles with Silicon valley. The ups and down of money and wealth, the sudden loss of friends. The price of fame and the cost of being a entrepreneur. Thomas Dolby in a great entertainer in prose and music!Personally, being 5 months older than Thomas, I have lead a surprisingly parallel life (in the 70s I had a subscription to Electronics Today International). His descriptions of London in the late 70s. are spot on. The attached photo is of an advert for the TRANSCENDENT 2000 from the April 1983 issue of ETI.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2016
This review will allude to some subject matter in the book which might be slight spoilers but not a pure giveaway to the story.

Most people know Thomas Dolby from his hit, “She Blinded Me with Science” and others know some of his lessor known hits as well. Why would a musician who some people call a “One Hit Wonder” write an autobiography, and more importantly why should you care? First of all, he wasn’t a “One Hit Wonder” as he had other songs that charted throughout the world, but “Science” is the one people remember from his video days on MTV. The second reason you should care is because this man changed the ways in which music impacts our daily lives. This is why his story is so important. What you know of the sound and music landscape via websites and the ring tones in your phone were truly shaped by Thomas and his team of gurus during the early days of the Internet. Did you know that? I know many people don’t.

Thomas Dolby’s story is unique from all musician autobiographies I’ve read mostly because it contains stories that truly draw in the reader to the point where you are thinking, “wow, did he really do this?” As we start the journey with Dolby we see him as a UK born young man who stumbles across a piece of a synthesizer in the trash outside of a store. He takes the piece home and through his tinkering is able to get it working to the point he creates synthesized sound in his bedroom. From there his electronic music journey begins and is one filled with successes, failures, and successes again. This isn’t a fluffy autobiography where a musician brags about why they are so incredibly awesome. This is a human story where you discover a man who oozes creativity, and his successes and failures truly impact him in very personal ways as they would with anyone. I truly enjoyed the early stories of his career, his dealings with unethical managers and record companies, and his subsequent stepping away from the industry to try something new. An average reader who isn’t a fan of Thomas Dolby’s music will enjoy the adventures and surely be as wowed as I was about the impact the man has made on modern music.

In the book you’ll find the name dropping that you’d expect with any celebrity autobiography but it isn’t what you’d think. Of course you’ll read about his adventures with Michael Jackson and his collaboration with David Bowie, but the more interesting names to me were those who supported and worked alongside him during his career in music and technology. There are some truly amazing stories in this book about people I’d never even heard of who worked with him to create cutting edge technologies that still impact our lives today.

The only downside of the book was that I felt it was too short. I’m sure the editor went through the manuscript to keep it concise, but there were so many stories and names mentioned that made me wonder what really happened next to those people/characters who helped shape his life and career. What happened next? Inquiring minds would love to know.

As with anyone, Thomas Dolby has loved, laughed, cried, hit rock bottom, and rose back from the ashes. This book is a testament to the man, his family and friends, and to all the people who shaped his life who also inadvertently shaped our lives as well. I felt I knew a lot about Thomas Dolby’s career since I was an early fan of his music, but there is so much I didn’t know and many gaps in my knowledge were explained. Wait, my cell phone is ringing with that tune that seems so familiar to millions of people. Thanks, Dolby…thanks a lot! ;)

Buy this book as you will truly not be disappointed.
Reviewed in the United States on October 27, 2016
Although Thomas Dolby is best known for his first careers as a musician and producer at the height of the 80's synth pop craze, he has since reinvented himself as a silicon valley entrepreneur, taken a few years off in semi-retirement in his native England, and most recently returned to the US as a professor at Johns Hopkins. To me the most interesting aspect of Dolby's story is how he has managed to do all of this as a largely self educated man from a modest background. Lots of one hit wonders have come and gone in the music industry, but I can't think of another who has followed that up with even more success in business. I can also think of lots of successful silicon valley entrepreneurs, but most of them come from privileged Ivy League backgrounds (you might mention Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg, but I'd respond that both of them got into Harvard even if they didn't bother to finish.)

Dolby tells his story in a straight forward way, including lots of unflattering details that other autobiographers might have skipped. At times there is too much detail about recording sessions, concert tours, and business meetings, but some of the stories about personalities and events are fascinating.

I would have liked to hear more about Dolby's latest reinvention as a college professor and what he wants to work on at this stage of his life.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 7, 2018
I have always been fond of Thomas dolby's music, first and foremost. I heard vague murmurs about his technical career after music, but it never really came clear to me. Not only does this book fill in that gap, it paints a very real, human and compassionate picture of a man who wants to innovate, and succeed, but most importantly, just wants to be happy. Thankfully, this book has just that kind of happy ending. Highly recommended, engaging, Charming, witty, highly illuminative of the dot-com Tech boom culture of the 90s in the San Francisco Bay Area, and a real Joy To Read.
Reviewed in the United States on October 24, 2016
I love this book so much. As an almost lifelong fan of Thomas Dolby's work, this was a fascinating read! I loved reading about how he began his career, the great stories of his friends and foes both famous and non, his travels, dreams, plans and innovations along the trajectory of his extraordinary life. His writing really transports you to times and places in a captivating way. The insight into the music business and what it's like to be on a major record label should be read by anyone even remotely thinking about going into music professionally, the same is true for entrepreneurs. He's hilarious, thoughtful and lovely. His life truly is inspiring on so many levels.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2017
The book was a joy to read. Like so many in their 40s and 50s, Dolby's music was a part of my musical upbringing. So getting a peek behind the scenes of his remarkable career was a real treat. Reading one story after another about his challenges with the music industry, his surreal encounters with the likes of Michael Jackson and Stevie Wonder, and how he managed to shape the digital frontier of music is enough to keep any reader engaged. From his early days, through "Science!" and then on to his experiences with the burgeoning high-tech world of the 90s and beyond with fascinating anecdotes about Bill Gates and others, Dolby keeps the pace moving and never bores the reader. I also wanted to mention how honest he is in this book. He never brags about his successes, but also acknowledges the more difficult elements of his personality. He appears to be immensely humble, but also highly ambitious. If you have any affinity at all for the music of the 80s and 90s, MTV, new wave, the digital revolution on music, or are interested in how one of the pioneers of today's music made his way to various degrees of success, you'll love this read.
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Top reviews from other countries

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Miguel R
4.0 out of 5 stars Uma visão de dentro do mundo da música e da tecnologia nos anos '80-'90
Reviewed in Brazil on July 19, 2021
Uma história interessante pra quem curte música e tecnologias modernas. Mostra aspectos comerciais da indústria "fonográfica", e descreve a atividade intensa dos empreendedores de tecnologia do Silicon Valley, os altos e baixos. Vale a leitura.
Vaibhav
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful stories
Reviewed in India on October 15, 2023
Creatives at their best. Must read.
Rob
5.0 out of 5 stars Dolby's story is an amazing one! A candid and honest rags to riches ...
Reviewed in Canada on June 8, 2017
Dolby's story is an amazing one! A candid and honest rags to riches story about making it big in the music biz to changing the way we hear our cell phones ring around the globe. The man is a humble genius and a great story teller to boot. Highly recommended.
tqm
5.0 out of 5 stars Grazie thomas
Reviewed in Italy on January 28, 2018
L’auto biografia di un pioniere. Grazie a gente come lui sono cresciuto e ho continuato ad amare la musica suonata con le macchine. Libro ben scritto, consigliato ai geeks e a chi vuole avere uno sguardo sempre nuovo per proporre nuove idee
Terry Overall
5.0 out of 5 stars The Speed Of Sound by Thomas Dolby
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 29, 2016
This is a book I wanted to be written many, many years ago, but never really expected to see the light of day or make to print.

As a long time fan of Thomas Morgan Dolby Robertson's (or TMDR as many of my fellow enthusiasts refer to him), a long wait and tireless patience are an established pre-requisite for those who follow his work, as I'm sure he himself would also acknowledge.

And this, his first book much like his musical output over the past 30 years or so, rewards that patience immensely and gives an honest and highly enjoyable insight into what has been (and continues to be) a fascinating life & career.

Unlike most rock biographies, The Speed Of Sound flows almost like an adventure novel and is at times funny and heart breaking. Starting with his early days working in a fruit and veg shop & his nights as a roadie / sound engineer in pre & post punk London, the book then takes us into his storied musical career with fascinating insights into his creative process and production work as well as his documented collaborations with Lene Lovich, Whodini, Foreigner, George Clinton, David Bowie and of course Thomas' highly amusing accounts of his dealings with a certain King of Pop.

We are also treated to his frank view of the corrupt & Machiavelli music industry of that time which clearly frustrated the young Dolby and ultimately fuelled the decisions that followed which led to a complete career shift and change of direction & his years working in San Francisco during the height of the tech boom in the mid to late nineties as CEO of Headspace / Beatnik.

This was a period where most of his core fan base were almost totally in the dark in terms of his career & potential new music. But these later chapters were both fascinating & insightful to me and I was totally unaware of the risks and pressure that both he and his family were under as he navigated a path through the dot.com boom. To be candid, all I was interested in from 1993 to 2005 was when the next album was coming out or when the tour dates & venues would be announced. I had no idea, shame on me......

The fact that he eventually rediscovered his passion for making music post his Tech-CEO diversion & moved back to his native Suffolk and then delivered a fantastic new album in 2011, and ultimately this book is (as a fan) a delight to me.

Overall this book is a great read. Certainly one of the best Rock biographies written in recent times and believe me I've read a great many. Could there have been more detail about the latter points in his life & career (for example; reference to the amazing Scala gig, and the tours that followed) I would say yes, but that is a very minor quibble & who knows we may get an update when the paperback version is released in 2017 (one can hope!)

In the meantime, please buy this book and if you haven't already done so; check out the amazing studio albums by one of the finest solo artists & producers this country has produced.
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