A song that is useful, that touches somebody, must be measured by that utility alone. | | Leonard Cohen, November 2013. (Adrian Thomson/Flickr) | | |  | “A song that is useful, that touches somebody, must be measured by that utility alone.” |
| |
| rantnrave:// LEONARD COHEN lived a long life, an adventurer's life, an artist's life, a productive life. He worked at an astonishingly high level into his 82nd year with his guitars and synths and notebooks and his deeply weathered voice and his deceptively classic gift for melody and songform. He left us with songs, from "SUZANNE" and "FAMOUS BLUE RAINCOAT" to "HALLELUJAH" and "EVERYBODY KNOWS" and so many more, that are indelibly burned into a particular corner of our culture that few other singer-songwriters have dared to inhabit, or *could* inhabit. He was, to borrow a recently popular political term of art, the greatest, or at least very close to that. And he left behind one of the best death-obsessed swan-song albums ever released by an artist who literally had days to live—but not necessarily the best one of those to be released in 2016. Be gone, please, 2016. Be gone, you dark, suffocating year that seems determined to drag every living creature underwater. Cohen, for his part, was "ready to die," as he famously told the NEW YORKER's DAVID REMNICK in a definitive profile published a month ago. But then, a few days later, he told a LOS ANGELES audience, "I think I was exaggerating. I’ve always been into self-dramatization... I intend to stick around until 120." That will, unfortunately, not come to pass, but YOU WANT IT DARKER, his final album, says goodbye with an octogenarian grace that suggests he knew how to ease his way into the next station, as if he really was just passing through. RIP... REMNICK's epic profile is a perfect place to begin your Cohen reading. BOB DYLAN speaks at length to Remnick about that underrated melodic gift; his line-by-line analysis of the musical structure of "SISTERS OF MERCY" is breathtaking criticism. We've compiled several decades' worth of Cohen literature in our REDEF MusicSET "Remembering Leonard Cohen," which we'll keep adding stories to over the next few days... It's FRIDAY and that means new music from A TRIBE CALLED QUEST, EMELI SANDÉ, SAD13, DANIEL BACHMAN, STING, SLEIGH BELLS, SIMIAN MOBILE DISCO, OLLY MURS, BODY/HEAD, MARTHA WAINWRIGHT, ENNIO MORRICONE, JALEN SANTOY, JAMES CHANCE & THE CONTORTIONS, RONNIE DUNN and WAKRAT. And for the OLDCHELLA demo: 36 CDs' worth of live DYLAN, various audio/video configurations of the STONES in CUBA, and one unearthed disc of pre-DEAD JERRY GARCIA and ROBERT HUNTER. And more. | | - Matty Karas, curator |
|
|
| hey, that's no way to say goodbye |
|
 | REDEF |
He was born with the gift of a golden voice, a dark, sexy bass instrument that attracted decades' worth of rock fans and paramours to him with almost religious fervor. And, hallelujah, he left behind 50 years' worth of indelible songs. | |
|
 | The Guardian |
The movement has plenty of high-profile supporters and detractors from the world of hip-hop, but should we expect rappers to be natural allies of activism? | |
|
 | Harvard Business Review |
Three strategic choices behind the phenomenon. | |
|
 | The Washington Post |
“If the Copyright Office head is toeing the Google line, creators are going to get hurt.” | |
|
 | Thump |
Why the heavy-handed policing at the festival shouldn't have caught us by surprise. | |
|
 | Lone Star Music Magazine |
Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley talk about “What It Means” to take a stand. | |
|
 | NPR |
The Brazilian percussionist lives by the philosophy of "cultural cannibalism" - eating, digesting and regurgitating culture and information to create experimental music. | |
|
 | Rolling Stone |
The backlash to Beyonce and the Dixie Chicks' CMA Awards performance reflected the fear and anger of voters who would elect Donald Trump president. | |
|
 | The New York Times |
Half a century on, playing vintage blues is an act of preservation and reclamation for the band. | |
|
 | Billboard |
Nine minutes into the VFiles Runway show at New York Fashion Week in September, rapper Young Thug stepped out of his seat on the front row, stopping the young man coming down the catwalk to adjust the model's outfit. | |
|  | Red Bull Music Academy |
With 13 albums to his name to date, a career in photography and film, a passion for animal rights activism and spirituality, Moby remains one of the most famous yet low-key dance music pioneers of the century -- and a varied human being at that, too. | |
|
 | The Creative Independent |
Legendary performer Justin Vivian Bond discusses the influence of politics on art-making and the why sometimes the most important roles are the ones you create for yourself. | |
|
 | Atlas Obscura |
From altered voices to "infrasound," these audio tricks spook and unsettle. | |
|
 | Complex |
Last year, Kamaiyah was working as a security guard. Now, she’s one of the most promising artists in the game, stealing the show alongside Drake and YG and performing at ComplexCon. here’s how she did it while staying true to herself. | |
|
 | Billboard |
For Tom Morello it's personal. The Rage Against the Machine/Prophets of Rage guitarist feels so strongly about Jane's Addiction getting into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame this year that he's penned an impassioned essay for Billboard about the band he calls "the punk rock Led Zeppelin," recalling how they "started a moshpit in my mind." | |
|
 | WTF with Marc Maron |
Talent manager Shep Gordon had no real interest in pop music. He was a young hippie making money dealing drugs to rock stars. Shep tells Marc how he transitioned into a life of management and production with an eclectic group of clients including Alice Cooper, Ann Murray, Teddy Pendergrass, Raquel Welch, and a bunch of celebrity chefs. | |
|
 | The Guardian |
In Tranny, the Against Me! singer writes a memoir about transitioning while in a successful punk band and the slow, difficult journey towards self-acceptance | |
|
 | BBC |
In her first interview since 2011, Kate Bush describes the "terror" she felt ahead of her live comeback in 2014, and hints at plans for a new album. | |
|
 | The Quietus |
Catching up with The Raincoats' Gina Birch about Brexit, their legacy and more ahead of their upcoming tour. | |
|
 | The Howard Stern Show |
Sting talks about The Police's early success with "Roxanne," their turning point on "Zenyatta Mondatta," Puff Daddy's use of "Every Breath You Take," his new record "57th and 9th," and he performs "Message in a Bottle," "Every Breath You Take," and more. | |
|  | RIP Leonard Cohen |
| | | |
|
| © Copyright 2016, The REDEF Group |
|
|