There are easily 2 billion people in the world who can afford to pay for some level of music, yet Spotify and Apple Music combined have only around 100 million subs globally. There’s a huge gap there and we both have to grow by a significant amount in order to get to the numbers that we should be at.
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Florence and the Machine's Florence Welch in Neuhausen, Germany, June 19, 2015.
(Thomas Niedermueller/Redferns/Getty Images)
Tuesday - March 13, 2018 Tue - 03/13/18
rantnrave:// God I love TRACEY THORN's voice (I also love that the second track on her new album is "AIR" and the third is "GUITAR")... SPOTIFY's public listing appears to be set for the week of April 2, for anyone who thinks that particular internet venture might make money one day, or who likes a good bet. Two things to ponder between now and then (I assume people who are smarter than I have many more things to ponder; I'll leave all those pesky financial and business-model questions to them). Question #1: Is this payola (playola, if you will)? Or, more to the point, does it inevitably lead to institutionalized payola somewhere down the road? Every half-decent music mentor will tell you to never, ever pay someone to review or screen your music, or anything along those lines. But it's so easy to pay someone these days, and there are tangible, measurable benefits if the person you pay helps get your song on a playlist or two or 30. So what happens when those paid reviewers and playlist-pluggers gain a new level of self-awareness and figure out a way to prevent you, or anybody, from getting on a playlist if you don't pay up? What happens when their services become a requirement rather than an option? What happens when they put the "ola" in playola? Do you stop trusting those playlists? Do you stop trusting all playlists? Do you stop listening to them? Do you seek out a service that promises professional programming that can't be bought? Does such a service exist? Or am I living in the 20th century and you couldn't give a damn? Question #2: Why is Spotify asking you and me to fix and expand its metadata? Why is that our job? OK, actually I'm into this just-launched metadata crowdsourcing project. An addictive waste of time. I just told Spotify a thing or two about Tracey Thorn... Is there room, and a need, for a search engine for music? Meet QWANT, a French site currently in beta (and currently defaulting to French language search results)... There have been three bombings in 10 days in AUSTIN, TEXAS—two on Monday—all from packages delivered to people's homes. Austin police have asked residents not to open unexpected or suspicious packages. Please be careful, SXSW attendees... RIP CRAIG MACK and VENTURES guitarist NOKIE EDWARDS.
- Matty Karas, curator
st. david's episcopal church
Daily Dot
Inside the booming black market for Spotify playlists
by Austin Powell
Artists are desperate to be on your favorite playlists.
Pitchfork
How a Group of Journalists Turned Hip-Hop Into a Literary Movement
by Dean Van Nguyen
Looking back at the golden era of rap writing.
Rolling Stone
Can Jack White Change His Stripes?
by Brian Hiatt
He became a rock legend by embracing the past. Now, the last guitar hero is trying to figure out how to live in the future.
Huck Magazine
This is the story of Lawrence, music’s last true enigma
by Daniel Dylan Wray
Fun? No thanks. The cut-throat music business? Love it. Painstaking perfectionism? If only. Welcome to the world of Lawrence: the pop star that fame forgot.
The New York Times
James Levine’s Final Act at the Met Ends in Disgrace
by Michael Cooper
The Metropolitan Opera fired James Levine on Monday evening, ending its association with a conductor who defined the company for more than four decades after an investigation found what the Met called credible evidence that Mr. Levine had engaged in “sexually abusive and harassing conduct.”
Vulture
10 Questions The Met Must Answer About James Levine
by Justin Davidson
The Metropolitan Opera's self-exoneration raises a lot of questions about its role in furnishing the power that Levine abused.
NPR Music
It's Time To Recognize The Ronettes As Rock And Roll Pioneers
by Hilarie Ashton
History tends to remember some innovations over others - and The Ronettes, in particular, have been remembered as pop singers, with their rock and roll sensibilities railroaded out of their image.
Forbes
How Streaming Music Presages The End Of Ownership ... Of Everything
by George Howard
Music often acts as a Canary In A Coal Mine. As goes the music industry, oftentimes so, too, does every other industry. Could the way consumers have abandoned the concept of ownership around music presage the end of ownership generally?
Complete Music Update
The end of live music?
by Andy Malt
For years, when artists have complained that they're not earning enough money off their recordings these days, people with little knowledge of the situation have snapped back that they should shut up because they're all earning massive amounts from touring instead now. For the most part, that's not true.
The Muse
Tracey Thorn on Her Blunt, Feminist Pop Album Record and the Freedom of Aging
by Rich Juzwiak
“Nine feminist bangers” is how Tracey Thorn has described the contents of her latest solo album, Record. But then, Thorn’s songs have been feminist all along: “This is pretty much me doing that thing I do,” she admitted on the phone with me on Thursday.
central presbyterian church
BuzzFeed
Musical.ly Is Struggling To Deal With Self-Harm Content
by Katie Notopoulos
The app, popular with teens, banned search on tags like #proana and #mutilation after BuzzFeed asked why you could search for them on its platform.
Consequence of Sound
Goodbye for Now: Farewell Tours Aren’t All They’re Cracked Up to Be
by Ryan Bray
History and hefty ticket prices suggest fans have every reason to be cautious of goodbye shows.
Best Classic Bands
RETRO READ: My 20 Years at Tower Records
by Jackson Griffith
Jackson Griffith shares some of his experiences working for the chain during the heyday of record retailing. "It was a great ride while it lasted."
KEXP
Ibeyi - Full Performance (Live on KEXP)
by Ibeyi and Cheryl Waters
Ibeyi performing live in the KEXP studio. Recorded November 15, 2017.
Noisey
The Search for the Legendary Italian Musician Who Vanished into Thin Air
by Enrico Pitzianti
He was supposed to be the Bon Iver of Italy, but in 2013 he and his music disappeared without a trace. I tracked him down in Berlin five years later to find out why.
The Future of What
The Future of What: Addiction & Recovery
by Portia Sabin, Gene Bowen, Slim Moon...
The stereotype of “sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll” is pervasive in music. The music business often fosters an environment where addiction is the norm, but many artists and industry professionals who are in recovery have successfully stayed in the industry. We talk to a few of those people about their experiences, advice for those who are struggling, and resources like MusiCares.
here.org.uk
How Spotify can help artists & labels reach more fans
by Kieron Donoghue
For a long time now I’ve thought there is something missing from Spotify. Namely the ability for content creators, rights holders, record labels, publishers and more to reach their fans via advertising to Spotify’s audience of 159 million monthly active users.
The New York Times
Mouse on Mars at M.I.T.: A Symposium Becomes a Dance Party
by Jon Pareles
The Berlin-based duo unveiled its new album, “Dimensional People,” using state-of-the-art software to pinpoint sounds in three-dimensional space.
Bandcamp Daily
The Glorious Mixes of Late Night Tales
by Daniel Dylan Wray
Artists like Four Tet, The Flaming Lips, and Franz Ferdinand select hidden gems and beloved tracks for perfect after-hours listening.
Pitchfork
“Cocaine & Rhinestones” Is the Country Podcast You Need to Hear to Believe
by Stephen M. Deusner
Part true crime, part history rewrite, the first season of Tyler Mahan Coe’s podcast untangles the knots of legend and lore that have jumbled around country music.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
“REDEF is dedicated to my mother, who nurtured and encouraged my interest in everything and slightly regrets the day she taught me to always ask ‘why?’”
@JasonHirschhorn


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