Wednesday, April 6, 2022

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 04/06/2022 - Grammy Backlash, Misery on Tour, Black Billionaires, Father John Misty, Soccer Mommy...

Writing songs is part of this process of self-discovery for me. I don't write songs [about how] I was sad last week. I write songs [that say] I'm f***ing sad right now. Why am I sad? Or why am I angry?
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Wednesday April 06, 2022
REDEF
Rockers incorporated: Toronto punk band Pup.
(Vanessa Heins/Grandstand Media)
quote of the day
"Writing songs is part of this process of self-discovery for me. I don't write songs [about how] I was sad last week. I write songs [that say] I'm f***ing sad right now. Why am I sad? Or why am I angry?"
- Stefan Babcock, Pup singer/guitarist
rantnrave://
See? Not OK

It's not that he quickly resumed his career after admitting to multiple instances of sexual misconduct against women, including fellow comedians. There has always been room for paying for your sins, through time or reparations or atonement/reflection/apology, and eventually moving on with your life and your work.

It's not that he started making albums again. That's his profession, his livelihood.

It's not even that he released an album in which he laughs off the very conduct he had allegedly reflected on and atoned for. Saying dumb, offensive, hypocritical things in public is protected in our society. No one is required to listen and no one is required to remain silent about it. No one is required to give him awards.

And yet they did. And that's what this is about. It's that he's being honored for the very album on which he says those very things about the trauma he inflicted on his peers. "Wait till they see those pictures of me in blackface," he jokes, according to the New York Times' MELENA RYZIK, who's among those who listened. "That's going to make it a lot worse. Because there's a lot of those, there's thousands of pictures of me in blackface. I can't stop doing it. I just—I like it. I like how it feels." It's all bad. Unfunny. Gratuitous. Offensive. But those last two sentences especially, in light of the exact things he was accused of and admitted doing, are horrifying.

And so, it's about that. It's about the fact that they've given him their imprimatur. The RECORDING ACADEMY has said this is an album worth nominating as one of the best in its field, and the Academy's voters have said this is the one that should actually get the award. Which it did Sunday night.

When the Grammy nominations were announced in the fall, Recording Academy CEO HARVEY MASON JR. defended them, saying the Academy "won't look back at people's history" or "anything other than... is this recording for this work eligible based on date and other criteria." Which is a defensible position except for one giant caveat. Mason was talking about eligibility for awards. But the issue wasn't whether SINCERELY LOUIS CK was eligible for a Grammy Award. The issue was whether it was deserving of being a finalist for, and actually getting, the award. The issue was, and still is, about the criteria for what work is worthy of being honored. It's about the content of the work itself, which in this case includes laughing off sexual assault (and comes dangerously close to embracing sexual assault). It would be horrifying and unfunny and unworthy even if it wasn't his own behavior he was joking about. And yet. He was.

Rest in Peace

Flamboyant record exec and producer ANDY WICKHAM, who helped usher Warner Bros. and Reprise into the rock era in the 1960s. He was fondly known as the "house hippie" at Reprise, where he was hired as a talent scout for $200 a week in 1967, after stints doing promo and press for Immediate Records in London and Dunhill Records in Los Angeles. In his first week on the job, the young Englishman told Reprise boss Mo Ostin to sign Joni Mitchell. Van Morrison soon followed. Wickham became the label's ambassador to Laurel Canyon, where he lived a lifestyle closer to the artists he championed than to his colleagues at the label, whose office hours he treated as optional. "To my knowledge," Warner/Reprise exec Stan Cornyn once said, "Mo Ostin never took a drug. Joe Smith never took a drug. We had Andy Wickham to take the drugs." Wickham's ears, and whatever he took, fueled a three-decade career at Warner/Reprise, where he also produced records and opened the label's Nashville office in the early 1970s. His other notable signings included Gram Parsons, Emmylou Harris, Jethro Tull and a-ha. Also, as his obit in the Times of London took the time to mention, he was believed to be one of the first people in England to own a skateboard, earning him the nickname "Wipeout."

RIP also: '50s and '60s teen idol BOBBY RYDELL, whose hits included "Wild One" and "Volare" and whose high schools named in his honor included the fictional Rydell High of "Grease." In the film version of "Bye Bye Birdie," he played high schooler Hugo Peabody, who did not like teen idol Conrad Birdie one little bit... YANICK ÉTIENNE, a Haitian singer who was a go-to backing vocalist for Bryan Ferry and Roxy Music. She was the mother of producer D'Mile, who dedicated the Song of the Year Grammy Award he won with Silk Sonic on Sunday to her... Greenwich Village singer/songwriter PAUL SIEBEL, who released two albums for Elektra in the early 1970s and whose songs were widely covered by artists including Bonnie Raitt and Emmylou Harris.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
the dream is over
Stereogum
Why Are Musicians Expected To Be Miserable On Tour Just To Break Even?
By Zach Schonfeld
A viral Twitter thread from Asheville indie rock band Wednesday sparked a conversation about the economics of touring in 2022. We spoke to DIIV, Squirrel Flower, and others about getting by in the age of Spotify and Covid.
The New York Times
The Psychic Contortions of the Black Billionaire
By Blair McClendon
Black billionaires are rare, and a disproportionate number of them are performers. What does that much wealth do to your art?
The Independent
How Father John Misty, the most online man in folk rock, disappeared
By Kevin EG Perry
As Josh Tillman prepares to release his fifth Father John Misty album, he's declining interviews and keeping a low profile online. Kevin E G Perry explores why the former internet prankster turned off and dropped out.
Billboard
The Changing World of Record Label Marketing
By Dan Rys
As labels and the media landscape evolve, marketing music and artists has, too. Six executives break down how they do their jobs.
Pitchfork
Soccer Mommy Slays Her Demons
By Quinn Moreland
After hitting a crushing low around the release of her last album, singer-songwriter Sophie Allison is back with a new attitude and a bold new record produced by Oneohtrix Point Never's Daniel Lopatin.
Vulture
Silk Sonic Producer D'Mile Honored His Late Mother by Making Grammys History
By Justin Curto
He's the first songwriter to win Song of the Year twice in a row.
The Liminal Space
musicOS
By Dan Fowler
The future of Crypto (or Web3, depending on your lexicon), and Music is going to be a nuanced and complex set of composable services that artists and fans can opt into. The game will be played by each creator choosing which options best suit their unique situation. To understand what is happening and to make informed decisions, we need a user experience to help.
The Daily Beast
Ukraine's Musicians Orchestrate Massive 'F*** You' to Putin
By AJ McDougall
Musicians across the country are swapping their instruments for guns in the fight against Vladimir Putin's army.
CBS News
Sound familiar? Taking songwriters to court
By David Pogue
When two songs share a melody, some chords, or even just a vibe, can the songwriter be taken to court? Correspondent David Pogue looks at how music copyrights have become an increasingly disharmonious area of litigation.
Dazed Digital
So, so, so scandalous: The demise of the Great British Girlband
By Sean O'Neill
If it is true that in girlbands we can see our society reflected back at us, what does it say about our society that we are left without a girlband at all?
morbid stuff
VICE
The Rules of Fandom Are Changing. Celebrities Don't Know How to Handle It
By Julie Fenwick
Doja Cat is quitting. Will Smith went in for the slap. And Kanye's just Kanye. Celebrities are just like us.
Resident Advisor
MCs Are the Unsung Heroes of UK Electronic Music
By Richard Akingbehin
Despite being a cornerstone of UK dance music since its beginnings, MCs don't always get the love they deserve. Richard Akingbehin unpacks and celebrates their role.
Billboard
Bob Dylan Beats 'Opportunistic' Lawsuit Over $300M Catalog Sale
By Bill Donahue
An appeals court ruled that the co-writer of "Hurricane" clearly signed away any co-ownership rights years ago.
The New York Times
Louis C.K.'s Grammy Victory Leads to Backlash
By Melena Ryzik
Some comedians are questioning how the Recording Academy saw fit to bestow an award to someone who had admitted to sexual misconduct.
Music Business Worldwide
As vinyl sales soar, European pressing plant Record Industry and Bertus Distribution join forces
By Murray Stassen
The combined entity says that its pressing capacity will be "practically doubled" to around 25 million units per year.
NPR
Mystery recordings will now be heard for the first time in about 100 years
By Jennifer Vanasco
The New York Public Library recently received a machine that will read cracked and scratched wax cylinders -- which include some of the earliest recorded audio.
Under the Radar
The Linda Lindas on Their Debut Album 'Growing Up'
By Hayden Merrick
By singing about the things closest to home--cats, sure, but also personal experiences of racism and sexism, mental health, and growing up in lockdown--The Linda Lindas make striking comments about society. Their songs have the power to engender revolution, if not make us punch our fists in the air and feel alive again.
The New Yorker
Among the Goths, Proto-Goths, and Technical Metalheads at an H. R. Giger Show
By Hannah Seidlitz
A retrospective for the artist known for designing the creature in Ridley Scott's "Alien" pairs a metal concert with tentacle-porn adjacent works.
Refinery29
The Grammys Snubbed Jamaican Artists, But Reggae Doesn't Need Awards To Validate The Genre
By Sharine Taylor
The implications of white, American band SOJA winning the 2022 Best Reggae Album Grammy suggest to Jamaican artists like Spice that they are not capable of producing and receiving accolades for their own music. But the genre doesn't need awards to validate it.
Louder
The complicated journey of the song that catapulted Joan Jett towards stardom
By Dave Ling
With its monster riff and huge chorus, Joan Jett & The Blackhearts' "I Love Rock 'N' Roll" was a global smash, but you'd be forgiven for not knowing it was a cover.
what we're into
Music of the day
"PUPTHEBAND Inc. Is Filing for Bankruptcy"
Pup
From "The Unraveling of PUPTHEBAND," out now on Little Dipper/Rise.
Video of the day
"We Were Hyphy"
Laurence Madrigal
Laurence Madrigal's Bay Area hip-hop doc can be seen this week at the Cinejoy online film fest at https://creatics.org/cinejoy.
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"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?'"
Jason Hirschhorn
CEO & Chief Curator
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