Switched on Pop is a podcast about popular music. The show was created in 2014. It is hosted by musicologist Nate Sloan and songwriter Charlie Harding.
Reception
The show has received generally very positive reviews, with acclaim from many leading media outlets. In a review for The New Yorker, music critic Alex Ross (music critic) praised Switched On Pop saying “the show’s hosts deliver charmingly rigorous dissections of Taylor Swift and Weeknd songs, slipping in a fair amount of music history and theory."[1]Rolling Stone said “music theory class was never this fun or addictive.”[2] The show was named one of The Atlantic’s Top 50 podcasts of 2019,[3] one of the Guardian's best music podcasts in 2021 for its “forensic music analysis,”[4] one of Time Out's best podcasts of 2022,[5] one of Vogue’s top podcasts of 2023,[6] and one of Esquire’s best podcasts in 2024.[7]
Switched on Pop: How Popular Music Works, and Why it Matters is a 2019 nonfiction book written by Charlie Harding and Nate Sloan with illustrations provided by Iris Gottlieb.[8][16] The book covers pop music from a musicological perspective. The book is a literary component to the podcast Switched on Pop which is co-hosted by Harding and Sloan and similarly analyzes pop music in a more academic style.[16] The title of both the book and podcast is a play on the debut album by the American composer Wendy CarlosSwitched-On Bach. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Harding and Sloan revealed they decided to write the book because "the book allows us to think about the things we’ve learned and put them in historical context" and because listeners wanted a "comprehensive guide to how to listen more thoughtfully."[17]
Switched on Pop received positive reviews from critics. Hannah Giorgis of The Atlantic praised the book, writing "Switched on Pop is a far less foreboding sensory experience than 'Swimming Pools,' but it’s no less immersive."[19] Emily Bootle of the New Statesman noted that the "required understanding of music theory leads to necessarily laborious explanations, but also allows for the authors' most illuminating insights".[20] Neil Shah of The Wall Street Journal lauded the book for its "sophisticated but accessible discussion" of the selected musical tracks.[17] The book won the 2021 PROSE Award Subject Category Winner for Music & the Performing Arts.[21]