Raised on Radio

Power Ballads, Cocaine & Payola – the AOR Glory Years 1976-1986

Contributors

By Paul Rees

Formats and Prices

On Sale
Feb 24, 2026
Page Count
352 pages
Publisher
Da Capo
ISBN-13
9780306836046

Price

$30.00

Price

$40.00 CAD

Format:

  1. Hardcover $30.00 $40.00 CAD
  2. Audiobook Download (Unabridged) $27.99

A massively entertaining oral biography of the golden era of critically derided yet monumentally popular radio rock, when Journey, Boston, REO Speedwagon, Toto, and more ruled the airwaves

Paul Rees’ Raised on Radio is, remarkably, the first biography of the (at the time) critically derided and yet massively popular AOR (album-oriented rock) bands whose heyday was 1976-1986, when groups like Journey, Boston, Foreigner, Toto, and REO Speedwagon sold many millions of albums, toured stadiums, and whose songs continue to stream in record numbers. Many of them still tour. And sure, they were punching bags for the elitist rock critics more interested in covering punk and new wave, terminally uncool, and never fashionably cutting edge, but their music was, and is, the soundtrack to so many people’s lives. Who among music fans (of a certain age) didn’t pump their fist to “Don’t Stop Believin'” (long before The Sopranos), play air guitar to “More Than a Feeling,” bellow along with Toto’s “Africa,” or have their heart broken to the strains of “Can’t Fight This Feeling”?
 
Even better: their tour stories and the tales of making the music are as entertaining and eye-opening as any of the antics from the annals of rock and roll history. Cocaine use was rampant, intra-band fighting was par for the course, and for better or worse, the groups’ members lived life to excess. In so many ways, it was these artists’ music (they are responsible for the power ballad) and lifestyles that led directly to the soon-to-follow hair metal scene. And in spite of what the critical establishment wrote, it turns out the music has aged . . . rather well!
 
Raised on Radio is a stadium-sized, massively entertaining oral history in the bestselling tradition of Meet Me in the Bathroom, Nothin’ But A Good Time, and Please Kill Me, capturing a time and a place that was as big and booming and as unabashed as the music that provided its soundtrack.
 

Paul Rees

About the Author

Paul Rees has been writing about popular music and culture since 1990. He is a former award-winning editor of the fabled British rock weekly Kerrang! and was editor-in-chief of Q magazine from 2002-2012. He has interviewed everyone from Paul McCartney, Bono, Bruce Springsteen, and Madonna to AC/DC, Noel Gallagher, Take That, and Adele. He is the author of six previous books, including the bestselling RobertPlant: A Life.

Learn more about this author