Absolutely loved this retrospect of one of the most iconic American shows in music history. Questlove crafted an extremely thorough homage, giving us readers a history lesson, a nostalgic flashback, or both! There were so many things that I learned that I didn't know before, such as Jody Watley's first claim to fame was being a dancer on the show or that artists didn't really come back to the show once they were 'big', or even that Rosie Perez and Carmen Elektra were some of the dancers. I did know about Don Cornelius' aversion to hip hop, and Quest didn't hold back on highlighting those tense or even condescending interview moments Don had with rappers. I.e. The "well that was just frightening" comment after Public Enemy's performance LOL. Even outside of rap, Don had some people he didn't care to butter up to, telling Rick James that he didn't think he'd amount to anything in the business. SHEESH! Don was a straight shooter though, and he owned up to when he was wrong.
I learned about or re-learned so many artists from this book. My Apple Music library grew by probably 25% after I was done. Albums from Babyface, Force MDs, Evelyn Champagne King, Lisa Lisa, LSG, and so much more will be in my rotation for the rest of the year. Overall, this was just a perfect collection of moments, performances, mini-biographies and stories of a show that's a vital part of black music culture. Almost every significant artist from the 70s-90s had the opportunity to grace the Soul Train stage. Now I'll be digging in the YouTube archives to see all the moments I highlighted while reading!