Trying to capture Dr. [Don] Shirley’s essence pushed me to my ends and it’s the reflection of the person he was and the life he lived. I thank him.
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Don Shirley in an artist's studio above Carnegie Hall, New York, 1960.
(Alfred Eisenstaedt/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images)
Monday - February 25, 2019 Mon - 02/25/19
rantnrave:// As of this writing, R. KELLY has been in jail for two days, charged with 10 counts of aggravated sexual abuse against a woman and three girls and apparently unable to come up with $100,000 to cover his bond. He's there because of police work, because of victims who had the courage to come forward and tell their stories, and because of the tireless, thankless work of journalists, especially JIM DEROGATIS, who has been shining a light on Kelly's sordid universe for nearly two decades—through denials, through threats, through music industry indifference, through an infamous acquittal—for publications including the CHICAGO SUN-TIMES, the VILLAGE VOICE, BUZZFEED and the NEW YORKER. There were others along the way, including some of my old MTV NEWS colleagues, and of course DREAM HAMPTON and the rest of the crew behind LIFETIME's SURVIVING R. KELLY documentary series, which used the power of television to make it impossible for Kelly's protectors in the music business, of which there were many, to continue ignoring a story they had been ignoring for years. A damning soundbite and a telling financial fact from a DeRogatis interview on NPR over the weekend. "It is impossible to walk two or three blocks in the South or West Sides without meeting a young woman who has a story... Everyone in Chicago knew, but no one did anything." It's equally impossible to walk two or three hundred feet down a record company corridor. Which leads us to that financial fact: DeRogatis says he's been told that Kelly has generated nearly $1 billion for his labels over his career. Does that explain why he had a major label deal until a month ago? Does that explain why he kept getting gigs (even if, in the past couple years, on-the-ground protests made it harder and harder to actually play them)? Does that explain two decades? DeRogatis could be off by a factor of 10 on that number and I'd still have the same questions. Is there a reason I shouldn't? Kelly, of course, was acquitted the last time he faced similar charges, and his lawyer, STEVEN GREENBERG, questioned the credibility of his new accusers. Here's another quote that gave me pause, from KENYETTE TISHA BARNES, co-founder of #MuteRKelly, in the NEW YORK TIMES: "The difference between this indictment and the last indictment is that you didn’t have the degree of public pressure to get him convicted in 2008. It was actually the opposite—more people wanted him acquitted." It should go without saying, but I'll say it anyway, that public pressure should have nothing to do with whether Kelly, or anyone, is convicted or acquitted. We will continue to talk about this case, but we will also continue to hope justice is allowed to proceed at its own pace, under its own power... Walk two or three hundred feet down the corridor at any indie label or club and you'll—unfortunately—encounter someone who has a story or two like the ones singer-songwriter CASEY DIENEL shares in this must-read story of the day: "Why I Quit My Dream Job in the Music Industry"... This year's OSCARS basically brought to you by music. Winners: LADY GAGA, MARK RONSON, ANTHONY ROSSOMONDO and ANDREW WYATT for writing "SHALLOW"; LUDWIG GÖRANSSON for his BLACK PANTHER score; RAMI MALEK for his toothy take on FREDDIE MERCURY; MAHERSHALA ALI for his, um, supporting portrayal of DON SHIRLEY; and, for Best Picture, the one that told Dr. Shirley's story from an unconventional, or perhaps all-too-conventional, angle, there will be debates... SHAZAM fail: You could Shazam the Oscars any time Sunday night and be told, more or less, what songs would be, or had been, performed during the telecast (but, um, no KENDRICK LAMAR and SZA did not perform "ALL THE STARS" on this night, nor did anyone). But I didn't need an app to tell me that, and nor did you. If you tried Shazam'ing during, say, the In Memoriam segment, it couldn't tell you that was the LA Philharmonic or what piece it was playing. I expect more from my apps, and from my TV shows, in 2019... RIP MAC WISEMAN, JACKIE SHANE, ETHEL ENNIS, HILDE ZADEK and IRA GITLER.
- Matty Karas, curator
bury a friend
The Ringer
Back to the Stratosphere: How the Rarest Music in the World Comes Back
by Mark Richardson
Duster was a small, largely forgotten band from the late ’90s. Then their legend began to grow on sites like Discogs. Now, they’re the subject of a major reissue. The internet made it all possible.
Medium
Why I Quit My Dream Job in the Music Industry
by Casey Dienel
What happens when our dreams land us in a toxic environment? How should we reckon with the shifting of our priorities over time? Love alone is not a cure-all.
The New Yorker
The Music of Don Shirley Is More Resilient Than Any “Green Book” Cliché
by Ethan Iverson
The pianist’s determination to play by classical rules despite being seen as a jazz performer will always be provocative.
Pitchfork
Debunking 'Green Book': Jazz Greats on What It Was Really Like to Tour During Jim Crow
by Natalie Weiner
Though the Oscar-nominated film focuses on its white savior, for black jazz artists in the 1950s and early ’60s, the road was filled with rejection and humiliation.
Rolling Stone
Billie Eilish's Teenage Truths
by Jonah Weiner
How the unfiltered 17-year-old singer with dark visions became pop’s new conscience.
Longreads
Johnny Rotten, My Mom, and Me
by Kimberly Mack
Kimberly Mack recalls the ways in which rock music bonded her with her African American mom, and how those fierce sounds helped them cope with the poverty, violence, and despair both outside and inside their Brooklyn home.
Chicago Tribune
R. Kelly, facing new sex charges, makes return to the same Cook County courthouse a decade after child porn acquittal
by Jason Meisner, Megan Crepeau and Lolly Bowean
The embattled singer made an inglorious return to the Leighton Criminal Court Building, this time to face sweeping new sex abuse charges involving four victims — three of them minors — over the course of more than a decade.
The Guardian
Dolly Parton on sexual politics: ‘I’ve probably hit on some people myself!’
by Hadley Freeman
Her film 9 to 5 is a feminist classic. But she won’t label herself one - and she doesn’t see eye to eye with her former co-stars.
Los Angeles Times
Being Rivers Cuomo: Why Weezer's frontman put his life into a spreadsheet
by Mikael Wood
In a candid conversation at his home, Rivers Cuomo tells "The Times'" Mikael Wood about Weezer's two new projects, the "Black Album" and the "Teal Album," and recalls some complicated memories from the band's early days.
Medium
Because Community Matters
by Tyler Lenane
I’d like to answer a question that I get asked by investors, record labels and my former colleagues from the digital music industry: “why did you start a new music service?” 
when the party's over
The New Yorker
What Country Music Owes to Charley Pride
by David Cantwell
The genre would not exist if it weren’t for black music serving as an inspiration and a source. But there was no modern black country star before Charley Pride.
NPR Music
How Ludwig Göransson Helped Orchestrate America's Conversation On Race In 2018
by Rodney Carmichael
The Swedish composer is the link between Childish Gambino's "This is America," Grammys' song and record of the year, and "Black Panther," which could help him win an Oscar this weekend.
NewMusicBox
'Hearing' the Hammond Organ
by Kelly Hiser
The Hammond Organ became an immediate success when it hit the market in April 1935 and had a major impact on the soundscape of both popular and religious musical life in the U.S. However, advertising that pitted the instrument against pipe organs stoked outrage among a small but well-organized community of pipe organ performers, designers, and manufacturers.
Variety
Here's How Much Money 10 Artists Are Owed by PledgeMusic
by Jem Aswad
For eight years, PledgeMusic was a success story: A direct-to-fan platform where artists worked directly with their audiences to fund their albums, tours and all stripes of merchandise, with fans able to purchase everything from custom guitar picks to private concerts.
Oxford American
A Night with Lou Reed
by Elizabeth Nelson
Forty-two minutes northeast of Lou Reed’s hometown of Freeport, New York, I am in my childhood bedroom, curiously absorbing a videotape I narrowly understand at about thirteen years old. I had heard from a camp friend that Lou was like Bowie and Bowie was like "Rocky Horror," and that got my attention.
The Guardian
Rhiannon Giddens: ‘I see this album as part of a movement to reclaim black female history’
by Jude Rogers
The Grammy-winning artist’s collaborative project Songs of Our Native Daughters puts poems and narratives about slavery to music.
Rolling Stone
How the Dysfunction of My Chemical Romance Inspired 'The Umbrella Academy'
by Charles Holmes
Gerard Way began writing the comic series before his band broke up -- now the comic book is a Netflix TV show.
Billboard
Randy Rainbow Talks Taking on Donald Trump One Broadway Parody at a Time: 'I'm More Stressed Than Ever'
by Stephen Daw
The political comedian talks parodying the Trump administration through show tunes, his relationship with Stephen Sondheim and his rise to internet stardom.
Loud And Quiet
The oddly pleasant experience of reconnecting to your s*** hometown -- when it was Ian Curtis' s*** hometown too
by Luke Cartledge
Not everything happens everywhere at the same time.
Village Voice
RETRO READ: When Worlds Collided -- Peter Tork at CBGB's, Lester Bangs at the Typewriter
by Lester Bangs
As a critic you have your beat and that sometimes means you find yourself covering an artist in a situation that doesn’t quite track. That’s where the legendary music critic Lester Bangs found himself in the dog days of 1977, sitting with press colleagues in CBGB’s listening to Peter Tork, former bassist for the Monkees.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
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"In a Moorish Marketplace"
Don Shirley
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