Men need resolution and suspended chords keep things open-ended. You go to a man if you have a problem and he tries to solve it. You go to a girlfriend and she’ll pat you on the back and say, Oh yeah, I get it.' She doesn’t try and come up with some stupid solution. | | Joni Mitchell in 1988. (Calle Hesslefors/ullstein bild/Getty Images) | | | | “Men need resolution and suspended chords keep things open-ended. You go to a man if you have a problem and he tries to solve it. You go to a girlfriend and she’ll pat you on the back and say, Oh yeah, I get it.' She doesn’t try and come up with some stupid solution.” |
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| rantnrave:// With 3 million sound recordings and 3 million "pieces of attendant support material" including photos, books, magazines and press kits, BOB GEORGE's ARCHIVE OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC is one of the world's greatest pop music libraries/archives. Hopefully you're aware of it; maybe you've used its services. It's in some danger of losing its home in downtown New York, and George has launched a $100,000 GOFUNDME. This is a public service announcement. Send him money. ARC's clear and simple mission is to own one copy of everything, in all formats, and for several decades it's served as a priceless and probably irreplaceable resource for music researchers both inside and outside the music biz. Its collections are deep, wide and (small c) catholic, and I've long forgiven ARC for not taking my collection of classical 78s off my hands when I was scrambling to find a good home for it because classical was the one thing it wasn't collecting. Maybe that was George's subtle way of telling me that my home was already a good home. I've recently reclaimed the albums (sidenote: the packaging of long-playing 78s from the first half of the 20th century is why albums are called albums) from storage and brought them back home. I'm contributing to the GoFundMe because I believe in the mission and also to say thanks. George, who has housed the collection in his Tribeca space since 1985, tells ROLLING STONE that museums and university libraries "only want things after they’ve gotten valuable. It’s a small view of value. We see things differently. We see the value in everything.” That's pop right there. That's also, I needn't tell you, how you create value in the first place. The $100,000 would go toward paying off back rent that's been growing since ARC's rent doubled from $10,000/month to $21,000/month, and it's a pittance to pay for a treasure... COACHELLA's deep, wide and catholic radius clause has survived a legal challenge "with prejudice," which is great for GOLDENVOICE and a setback for would-be competitors from roughly Tucson to Seattle. Which does not mean Goldenvoice is now free to annex the entire Western US, but here's some of the legalese of what it does mean... This is the best ADAM NEELY YOUTUBE video I've seen in a long time, which may or may not mean anything to you but should, because he's one of the smartest and clearest musicsplainers on the internet. I've learned something from every video he's made, whether it's about how to count complex polyrhythms or how music sounds when A = 432Hz. This one's about the prevalence of a particular vocal rhythm called the Scotch snap in English-language pop and hip-hop and how it's a byproduct of the way Americans speak English and how it connects to early English baroque music and traditional Scottish dance music and there's some math involved and some sheet music and I swear it all makes sense. This man is a gem; as long as your wallet's open, contribute to his PATREON... This is the best TINY DESK CONCERT I've seen in a long time. As a bonus, I now know how to pronounce LEIKELI47's name... Self-explanatory but also not-self-explanatory headline of the day: The BRITNEY SPEARS Musical Will Feature Fairy Tale Princesses (?) in a Book Club (??) Reading 'The Feminine Mystique' (???)... Happy SXSW, those of who you are there. Plan ahead, remember to hydrate and don't forget your earplugs... RIP JOHN KILZER and VERA BILA. | | - Matty Karas, curator |
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| | NPR |
At 20 years old, Logic was young and broke, and while crashing on a friend's couch, he poured himself into his music. His career could have fizzled if it wasn't for Chris Zarou, a young college athlete-turned-manager who had no more experience in the music business than Logic. | |
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| Pitchfork |
Trade groups say the streaming services are essentially suing songwriters. Spotify says it’s not as simple as just paying songwriters more. The truth is, it’s complicated. | |
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| Bloomberg |
Christopher Nissen, a handsome Dane who speaks very little Mandarin, has hit it big in the world’s hottest music market. | |
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| Okayplayer |
De La Soul's debut, '3 Feet High and Rising,' turned 30. The occasion should've been celebratory. Instead, De La is in an ongoing battle over royalties. | |
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| Billboard |
The Music Modernization Act passed last October with much fanfare and excitement. But now, after the party, we are all looking at what that means, exactly. Here are a few areas to keep in mind as we move forward. | |
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| NPR Music |
Remember that scene in "The Color Purple" when Shug Avery was somewhere between the juke joint and her daddy's church, singing at the top of her lungs, and the Saturday night sinners got all mixed in with the Sunday morning saints, and it was hard to tell if they were praising the high heavens or raising holy hell? That's what Leikeli47's Tiny Desk felt like in the flesh. | |
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| Chartmetric |
Korea’s BLACKPINK is all-in with their 2019 US media blitz…how will the public react? | |
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| PopMatters |
The major eight-CD collection, "The Gospel According to Malaco," captures the evolution of gospel from the mid-'40s to the 21st century with many electrifying performances throughout. | |
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| UPROXX |
A look back at the career trajectory of one of rap’s most promising talents, analyzing how close he is to hip-hop’s highest pedestal. | |
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| The Washington Post |
Yotam Haber went to help Iditarod rookie Blair Braverman and record the sound of sled dogs. Now, he’s recovering from surgery to reattach his finger. | |
| | Please Kill Me |
Jazz trumpeter extraordinaire Lee Morgan was a prodigy who inherited the musical mantle of Clifford Brown, as well as his untimely and tragic end. | |
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| The Guardian |
The rapper has involved himself, and his legal team, in a string of legal cases involving black men mistreated by law enforcement. | |
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| RealClearLife |
Lydon, Rollins, Ramone took different routes to fame, but all deserve respect. | |
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| Mixmag |
All night long bookings are typically preserved for established acts who can bring punters in. | |
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| Switched On Pop |
Songs are getting shorter, albums are getting longer, and there is an entirely new section of the song that draws from the classical past: the “pop overture.” | |
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| Music Business Worldwide |
What scrapping Copyright Royalty Board's new rates might mean for songwriters and publishers. | |
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| Rolling Stone |
The legendary drummer reflects on working with Elvis Presley, Dean Martin, the Ronettes and more in a previously unpublished conversation from 2017. | |
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| Billboard |
At 29, Puerto Rican Marco “Tainy” Masís has produced some of the top tracks and albums out today, from Balvin’s eclectic 'Vibras' to Bad Bunny's 'X100PRE' to “I Like It." Now, he's signed with Roc Nation and will release his debut album later this year, following new hit “I Can’t Get Enough,” a collaboration with Selena Gomez, Balvin and Benny Blanco. | |
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| JAZZIZ Magazine |
Saxophonist-vocalist Karl Denson talks about his new album with Tiny Universe, "Gnomes & Daggers," out now via Seven Spheres Records. | |
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| Genius |
The rapper turnt singer’s impact goes far beyond auto-tune. | |
| | YouTube |
| | | From her 1975 masterpiece, "The Hissing of Summer Lawns." |
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