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The whole music industry has been primed to just listen to people talking about the same s*** to different beats... There’s so much to talk about if you allow yourself to not get caught up in the status quo or trying to appease f***ing Mal and Rory, or rep the f***ing Joe Budden Podcast, when you’re trying to really experience the fullness that the world has to give.
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Summer festival season: Denzel Curry at Outside Lands, San Francisco, Aug. 11, 2019.
(FilmMagic/Getty Images)
Wednesday - August 05, 2020 Wed - 08/05/20
rantnrave:// When you say it's gonna happen now, well when exactly do you mean?, ROLLING STONE's ELIAS LEIGHT asks, in so many words, in a reported piece checking in on the music industry's progress two months after BLACKOUT TUESDAY. What he finds is "a deluge of newly created task forces and a torrent of press releases." Press releases, that is, trumpeting task forces which, after a certain amount of time, will "tell a company what is already painfully obvious," which is that action needs to be taken. But when exactly? Is it fair to expect "lasting change" to have already happened? Of course not. Lasting change, by definition, takes a great deal of time. That's what makes it lasting. Is it fair to expect tangible steps toward that lasting change to have already happened? It would be easy to say no to that question, too, as it's only been two months and there's a pandemic going on, but, as Leight notes, "these companies routinely pivot with remarkable speed when they need to, for example, sign a fast-moving TIKTOK hit." The music biz is swimming in pivots these days. As CHERIE HU dryly observes, the industry seems to be able to launch a new livestreaming platform every week in the middle of the pandemic. The best-selling album of 2020 was created from scratch in two months in that middle of the pandemic. MICROSOFT, if all goes according to to plan, will take less than two months in the middle of the same pandemic to buy the US operations of TikTok for tens of billions of dollars. Change, even massive, disruptive change, can happen in two months if the right incentives are in place. So far, in music's push to root out systemic racism, some promotions have been announced, some diversity officers have been hired and some task forces have been put in place. There have been a handful of longterm pledges that Leight doesn't mention, for example LIVE NATION's promise to greatly diversify its upper management and board by 2025. That's a long way off, though. "Make someone Black a chairman, a chairwoman," A&R exec and artist manager CHRIS ANOKUTE tells Leight "Give somebody Black a venture. We want to see proof that the change is happening." Because, as the unspoken subtext says, we've already waited too long. And you know what the next line after that is... Here's something that could have happened in two months but ended up taking more than two years: the decommissioning of GOOGLE PLAY MUSIC. The legacy subscription service will be gone for good by December, with all users migrated to YOUTUBE MUSIC, the company says... "Plaintiff in good conscience cannot allow his music to be used as a 'theme song' for a divisive, un-American campaign of ignorance and hate," declares NEIL YOUNG in a copyright infringement suit against PRESIDENT TRUMP's campaign for playing "ROCKIN' IN THE FREE WORLD" and "DEVIL'S SIDEWALK" at his rally in Tulsa, Okla., without, Young says, a public performance license. It could be a complicated case. ASCAP and BMI, which provide blanket performance licenses to venues, allow individual songwriters to opt out of any political use of their music. But, as the HOLLYWOOD REPORTER's ERIQ GARDNER notes, whether the government consent decrees under which the two performance rights operate allows for that has yet to be tested in court... A bonus message from Neil Young to the prez... Are the NBA's DETROIT PISTONS actually offering J. COLE a tryout? Does the person who operates the Pistons' Twitter feed have that authority? Can J. Cole hit these shots in a game situation? Then again, can any other musician hit those shots even in a Twitter situation?... The pandemic took a bite out of SONY MUSIC's Q2 revenues... RIP MICHAEL SMITH (who among many other things wrote this), FBG DUCK (at least the 11th rapper murdered in the US this year, and I don't blame hip-hop, Chicago or anything else except guns) and TONY COSTANZA (MACHINE HEAD's original drummer, who quit after playing exactly three shows but co-wrote a good chunk of the band's debut album).
- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
i am the son
Rolling Stone
Two Months After Blackout Tuesday, the Music Industry Has Yet to See Lasting Change
by Elias Leight
In June, the music industry started to have serious conversations about racism - but proof of change is hard to find.
Water & Music
Where TikTok fits in Microsoft’s music strategy
by Cherie Hu
It’s been a long, long time since Microsoft was at the center of any music-industry conversation.
Vogue
How the Go-Go's Found Their Beat: An Oral History
by Keaton Bell
Forty years after the release of their star-making debut album, "Beauty and the Beat," the key players recall the forming of the band, becoming one of MTV's first stars, playing on "Saturday Night Live," and being told by Sting that they had hit No. 1.
Vulture
Lupe Fiasco vs. Everybody (Even Himself)
by William E. Ketchum III
The divisive rap great on making an EP based off a tweet, not allowing Joe Budden to clown him, Virgil Abloh, and why he basically invented Genius.
Music Industry Blog
We Are At a Turning Point for Social Music
by Mark Mulligan
In recent days we have seen three major developments that, collectively, are a potential pivot point for social music.
Pollstar
Concert Venues Will Fold Without Federal Assistance
by Audrey Fix Schaefer
Popular D.C. club The Anthem displays a message of hope April 29. The live business and its music venues remain all but completely shut down through August. Since April we have been sounding the alarm that music venues like the 9:30 Club and The Anthem cannot survive the COVID-19 shutdown without federal assistance. 
The New York Times
A Black Pianist Helped Birth Bossa Nova. His Story Is Rarely Told.
by Beatriz Miranda
Johnny Alf has always been revered by Antônio Carlos Jobim and João Gilberto, but his legacy remains obscure, even among Brazilians.
The Bitter Southerner
Somebody Died, Babe: A Musical Cover-Up of Racism, Violence, and Greed
by Kevin Kehrberg and Jeffrey A. Keith
Beneath the popular folk song, “Swannanoa Tunnel,” and beneath the railroad tracks that run through Western North Carolina, is a story of blood, greed, and obfuscation. As our nation reckons with systematic racial violence, the story of this song points to the unmarked graves of the hundreds of wrongfully convicted Black people who died building the tunnel.
British GQ
At home with Paul McCartney: His most candid interview yet
by Dylan Jones
He was wistful, candid and contented as he recalled all the notes of a miraculous life. How four lads from Liverpool came together to change a great deal more than music. What it felt like to be blamed for the band’s demise. How behind fame, adulation and wealth exists a normality he jealously protects. And why the work of a lifetime is still far, far from finished.
Rolling Stone
Better Concert Livestreams Are Coming. But You’ll Have to Pay for Them
by Ethan Millman
Paid livestreams from artists like BTS are netting millions of dollars, skyrocketing brand-new startups to the top of the music industry, and making labels and talent agencies scramble to adapt. Will they last?
and the heir
The San Diego Union-Tribune
Protest songs capture the times, from Black Lives Matter to civil rights and anti-war movements
by George Varga
From Beethoven, Beyoncé and Bob Dylan to Kendrick Lamar, Woody Guthrie and Janelle Monáe, music of protest endures.
The Guardian
'The narrative is we don't sell records': the black female singers uncredited by the UK industry
by Jumi Akinfenwa
Their vocals and songwriting feature on some of the biggest hits, but black women are often not credited, leaving their solo careers stunted and causing them to lose out financially.
Highsnobiety
'Political Hip-Hop' No Longer Exists, All Hip-Hop Is Political
by Robert Blair
The genre that once supplied us with groundbreaking revolutionary anthems seems, at passing glance, to be ignoring the weight of this moment. But not quite.
Jazz Right Now
Artist Feature: Angel Bat Dawid
by Cisco Bradley
Multi-instrumentalist and composer Angel Bat Dawid's emergence has been one of the most exciting things to happen on the Chicago creative music scene in recent years. Her release of The Oracle in 2019 was a monumental debut release and she has not looked back since.
Complex
Flo Milli Does What She Wants
by Jessica McKinney
"I just like to make people feel confident and hot," Flo Milli tells Complex, celebrating the release of her excellent debut project, 'Ho, Why Is You Here?'
Variety
‘Late Show With Stephen Colbert’ Music Booker Fired Following Sexual Misconduct Allegations
by Jem Aswad and Shirley Halperin
Giovanni Cianci, music producer of "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert" since 2017, has been let go from the company after a woman accused him of sexual misconduct in a 2010 incident, Variety has learned.
The Guardian
Coups, lies, dirty tricks: The Police's Stewart Copeland on his CIA agent father
by Dorian Lynskey
The drummer was brought up in the Middle East - not realising that his father Miles was a spy sent to destabilise the region. But, he says, it was Miles’s claim that the Police were a psy-ops outfit that upset Sting.
i-D Magazine
The novel documenting rave culture in reunified Germany
by Will Harrison
Rainald Goetz's 'Rave', the classic novel about the German techno scene in the 90s, has just been translated into English. As a similar illegal rave culture emerges in the wake of pandemic-induced club closures, we look at whether it still resonates today.
Real Life
Music for Plants
by Rahel Aima
Indoor plants need what your domestic life needs.
Elijah Writes
Mark Mothersbaugh Answers Elijah’s Questions
by Elijah Gomez
I first found out about Mark Mothersbaugh at a young age when I watched "Yo Gabba Gabba!," where his segment was "Mark’s Magic Pictures." I started listening to Devo in the fourth grade and learning more about them during this pandemic we’re in. I think that it made me see them as more than just musicians. It made me see them as people who had an important message and wanted to share it.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Mercy"
Max Richter and Mari Samuelson
Mood. From Max Richter's album "Voices," out now on Decca.
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