This is a dark age, but Low End was always light, a respite and sanctuary, a lit spliff and a safe haven from the sanctimony and greed, the corporate sponsorships and the clout. Nothing can ever be really pure, but it came close for a very long time.
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Exit sign at the Airliner, longtime home of Los Angeles club night Low End Theory.
(PYMCA/Universal Images Group/Getty Images)
Thursday - August 09, 2018 Thu - 08/09/18
rantnrave:// Funny, innit, how everyone [ed. note: not actually "everyone"] wants the GRAMMY AWARDS to pay more attention to noncommercial, nonzeitgeist music, and everyone [ed. note: nope, not necessary here] also wants the OSCARS to pay more attention to blockbuster, zeitgeist films? Can everyone be right about both things? The Oscars have relented, announcing a new award for Outstanding Achievement in Popular Film, which sounds like a bad idea on its face, with predictably unpredictable consequences, but we can reserve judgment until we see how it plays out (and if the MOTION PICTURE ACADEMY follows up by changing the name of Best Picture to Outstanding Achievement in Unpopular Film). Should the Grammys do the opposite? Add a category for Boutique Album of the Year? Or Real Instrument [ed. note: hahaha] Album of the Year? Or Public Radio Album of the Year? The short, obvious answer is of course not, because the Grammys already have 825 categories [ed. note: exaggerating, slightly], a couple of dozen of which, and I'm no longer exaggerating, already are Boutique Album of the Year awards. The more pertinent answer, for me, is that what gives both awards shows their meaning and value is that STURGILL SIMPSON, DRAKE and BEYONCÉ can be heard, and considered, side by side, as peers, as artists equally worthy of hearing, and that BLACK PANTHER can be read from the same envelope as IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK and BLACKKKLANSMAN, equal and not separate. That as musicmakers, music fans, filmmakers and filmgoers, we are equally open to a wide variety of artistic expression, artistic process and artistic budgets; a story is still a story, a song still a song. I'd love to see CARDI B and KACEY MUSGRAVES and JANELLE MONÁE and KAMASI WASHINGTON and SOCCER MOMMY all nominated, in one top category, and then I won't care who wins, because at that point everybody will have won. Consider that my MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE... PASSION OF THE WEISS' JEFF WEISS offers a beautiful eulogy for LOW END THEORY, which ended a 12-year-run Wednesday night at the AIRLINER bar in Los Angeles. Low End Theory was at the center of so much that mattered in LA music—and, either directly or indirectly, much that mattered in electronic, hip-hop and pop music everywhere. It was also a refuge, "the club that could be your life," as Weiss puts it. The mood and the attendance both headed south in the past year, after one of LET's resident DJs, GASLAMP KILLER, was accused of rape. (He denies it and is suing his accuser.) His partners dropped him—"you believe the woman," co-founder KEVIN "DADDY KEV" MOO told the LA TIMES—but the incident appears to have left the Low End Theory community deeply divided. A sacred spot had been left a little less sacred. A musical temple that will not be easy to replace, and will be deeply missed... Sing for the year: This is the most Boston story ever... RIP LORRIE COLLINS, BRADLEY DAYMOND and GLEN ROVEN.
- Matty Karas, curator
nosaj thing
Longreads
We Stand on Guard for Bieber
by Soraya Roberts
How Canadian is Justin Bieber? His hometown’s “Steps to Stardom” exhibit provides some answers.
The New York Times
How the Soulquarians Birthed D’Angelo’s ‘Voodoo’ and Transformed Jazz
by Nate Chinen
D’Angelo, Questlove, James Poyser and J Dilla hunkered down in Greenwich Village and created a sound that won Grammys and united genres. (Adapetd from “Playing Changes: Jazz for the New Century,” by Nate Chinen.)
Los Angeles Times
The end of an era: Low End Theory's bittersweet closing caps a year of soul-searching
by Randall Roberts
Founded in 2006, at its peak in the early ‘10s the Low End Theory was the destination for globetrotting music fans convinced that this little club night was reframing electronic music culture. And then, at the height of the #MeToo movement, everything changed.
Passion of the Weiss
RIP Low End Theory (2006-2018)
by Jeff Weiss
This is a dark age, but Low End was always light, a respite and sanctuary, a lit spliff and a safe haven from the sanctimony and greed, the corporate sponsorships  and the clout. Nothing can ever be really pure, but it came close for a very long time.
Rolling Stone
How Musicians Make Money — Or Don’t at All — in 2018
by Amy X. Wang
What do “royalties” in music actually comprise?
The Guardian
'Hipster kryptonite': will CDs ever have a resurgence?
by Jumi Akinfenwa
Compact discs don’t have the romance of vinyl -- but as a generation of tastemakers reconnect with their youth, that could be about to change.
Mixmag
The 50 most influential dance music albums of all time
by Joe Muggs, Sirin Kale, Thomas H. Green...
Electronic music wouldn't be the same without them.
Pitchfork
Is Clubbing in a Video Game Fun?
by Kevin Lozano
Playing the new “After Hours” update to “Grand Theft Auto Online,” wherein the Black Madonna, Dixon, and more DJ your virtual club
Billboard
Keeping Up With Travis Scott: How The Rapper's 'Astroworld' Soared to No. 1 With One of the Year's Best First Weeks
by Sowmya Krishnamurthy
Travis Scott is expected to take the top spot on the Billboard 200 albums chart. Here's how he was able to level up.
Huck Magazine
The enduring legacy of 'Wild Style,' hip hop's first ever film
by Miss Rosen
As the 1983 feature -- which brought New York’s hip hop scene to international attention -- celebrates its 35th birthday this year, we talk to the people who made it happen.
glitch mob
Dazed Digital
The forgotten story of Pure Hell, America's first black punk band
by Cassidy George
The four-piece lived with the New York Dolls and played with Sid Vicious, but they’ve been largely written out of cultural history.
ADWEEK
How MTV Changed Advertising Forever
by Nick Gardner
It was only natural for brands to eventually find their way into music.
Chicago Magazine
When Running a Record Store Is a Side-Hustle
by Rosamund Lannin
Owner Nuntida Sirisombatwattana also holds down a 9 to 5 at an alderman's office.
NME
Musical differences -- meet the people whose romantic relationships were torn apart by pop
by Nick Levine
You meet a new person. Everything about them is perfect. Then they pick you up in their car and they're rocking out to a Nickelback CD. What do you do? You may very well dump them, finds Nick Levine.
Medium
The (Pop) Sounds of a 2000s Relationship
by Rachael Nunemacher
Growing up I can vividly remember waking up early on Saturday mornings to watch the VH1 Top 25 Music Video Countdown. While most kids watched cartoons, I anxiously waited to see which of my favorite songs were climbing the charts, which artists were on the rise, and if any of my predictions were going to be confirmed or not.
The Florida Times-Union
Florida inmates spent $11.3 million on MP3s. Now prisons are taking the players
by Ben Conarck
For the last seven years, inmates have stocked the libraries of their personal MP3 players with $2 downloads. Come January, they’ll be forced to hand it all over because the Florida Department of Corrections signed a new deal with a competing company.
Billboard
Why Country Songwriters Won't Be Putting Their Phones Down Anytime Soon
by Tom Roland
You're not imagining it: tons of country songs mention smartphones in the lyrics. "The phone is a part of your body at this point," says one songwriter. "It's going to be a lyric in a lot of songs."
Highsnobiety
It's Time to Put Some Respect on Big Freedia's Name
by Sydney Gore
Big Freedia is a damn icon, and it should not have taken a Drake music video to make that clear. We break down her wealth of accomplishments here.
Variety
Know Your Catalog's Worth: Test-Driving the 'Zillow for Royalties'
by Mara Schwartz Kuge
A promising start and a worthwhile idea, the new Know Your Worth app is a tool for rights holders (songwriters, music publishers and the like) to get a sense of their catalog's potential market value.
Spotify for Artists
Matt and Kim on Film & TV Syncs, Inter-band dating, and Not Having Goals
by Michael Tedder
Matt Johnson explains how planning not to plan can sometimes be the best plan.
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