Tin Pan Alley (tin pan AL-ee) noun

   Popular music industry; composers, songwriters, and music publishers
   considered collectively.

[After West 28th Street in New York City where music publishers were
formerly centered. From the cacophony of cheap pianos and hack musicians
the area came to be known as Tin Pan Alley (apparently from the term
tinny piano) and eventually became generalized to refer to the whole
music industry. The term, popular in the past, is less used today.]

The corresponding term in the UK is Denmark Street in London. The UK
capital also has the literary equivalent of Tin Pan Alley/Denmark Street
in Grub Street, a collective term for hack writers.

Today's word in Visual Thesaurus: http://visualthesaurus.com/?w1=tin+pan+alley

  "[Neil Diamond's] got one foot planted in Tin Pan Alley songcraft and
   the other in Vegas shtick."
   Greg Kot; Kneel to Neil; Chicago Tribune; Aug 2, 2005.

This week's theme: metaphorical terms having origins in New York.

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Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/tin_pan_alley.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/tin_pan_alley.ram

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