Tuesday, May 10, 2022

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 05/10/2022 - Hip-Hop Indictments and Lyrics, White House Record Collection, Costly Tickets, Bad Bunny, Wet Leg...

Can I find a better order of notes that I didn't find last week?
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Tuesday May 10, 2022
REDEF
Glowing on: Turnstile bassist "Freaky" Franz Lyons, drummer Daniel Fang and singer Brendan Yates at Stubb's in Austin, May 6, 2022.
(Gary Miller/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"Can I find a better order of notes that I didn't find last week?"
- Ron Carter, who celebrates his 85th birthday tonight at Carnegie Hall
rantnrave://
Punks?

The breaking news overnight, of which we'll be hearing a lot more in the days and weeks to come, is that authorities in Georgia say YOUNG THUG's YSL label is a criminal gang that's committed numerous crimes including murder, and 28 people, including Young Thug and his labelmate GUNNA, have been indicted in a major racketeering case. Young Thug, accused of founding the gang and taking part in numerous related activities, was arrested Monday; his lawyer told Atlanta's WSB-TV he has "committed no crime whatsoever." One of his alleged crimes is renting an Infiniti sedan from Hertz that was used in the 2015 murder of DONOVAN THOMAS JR., who prosecutors say was a rival gang member. YAK GOTTI, who's signed to YSL, is one of five men charged with the murder.

It's as easy at this point for fans to proclaim Young Thug's, Gunna's and everyone else's innocence as it is for prosecutors to proclaim their guilt. We don't have the information and we can't possibly know.

But we do know that the evidence laid out in Monday's blockbuster indictments includes the lyrics to multiple songs, including the 2018 Young Thug/NICKI MINAJ track "ANYBODY," in which Young Thug raps, "I never killed anybody / But I got something to do with that body." The evidence against Gunna includes a line in LIL KEED's 2020 song "FOX 5," in which Gunna raps, "We got ten-hundred round choppers." The indictment also notes that Gunna was wearing YSL jewelry in the video.

Every major art form—hip-hop, rock, country, film, painting, literature, etc.—is full of stories of murder and other criminal mayhem, often told in the first person. Jewelry-wearing is common, too. But as ANDREA DENNIS, co-author of the book RAP ON TRIAL: RACE, LYRICS, and GUILT IN AMERICA," told the New Yorker in 2019, "We have searched widely, and, based on our research, rap is the only fictional art form treated this way. No other musical genre and no other art is used in the same way or to the same extent."

A bill currently working its way through the New York state legislature would ban prosecutors in that state from using rap lyrics as criminal evidence. It's a good bill. I don't know if Young Thug is a gang member or an accomplice to murder. I do know he's a rapper and "I never killed anybody / I got something to do with that body" is a metrically solid couplet that ends with an identical rhyme, which is discouraged in traditional poetry but common in nearly all forms of popular music. He can and should admit to that in court, while testifying "WTF" in regard to any other questions about those words.

If he's a gang leader, one hopes prosecutors will work to prove that based on what he and the gang did on the streets of Atlanta, not what they wrote down with pen and paper and rapped into a microphone, to a beat.

(Here's some further context/history about the very idea of calling rappers and their crews a gang.)

(And one more bit of news from the indictments: At one point, they claim, someone at YSL tried to shoot LIL WAYNE.)

Dark Side of the Catalog Market?

Possibly for sale: DARK SIDE OF THE MOON and the rest of PINK FLOYD's recorded music catalog (per LUCAS SHAW at Bloomberg).

Definitely for sale: The entire music holdings of TEMPO MUSIC INVESTMENTS, a private equity fund that in the past two years has invested in copyrights of artists including WIZ KHALIFA and FLORIDA GEORGIA LINE.

A sale would represent "the first major private equity exit from the red hot music copyrights market," the Financial Times' ANNA NICOLAOU reported last week (paywall). One likely reason: Rising interest rates, which may be making music catalogs a less attractive investment relative to others. (Possible counterpoint: Discount rates.) WARNER MUSIC has already put in a bid for Tempo's holdings and UNIVERSAL MUSIC is looking, according to Nicolaou.

Dot Dot Dot

Members of Congress are continuing to squeeze SPOTIFY on its Discovery Mode program, which gives artists a chance to be promoted to more users in exchange for a lower royalty rate. While the House Judiciary Committee seemed most concerned about those reduced royalties when it started asking questions last year, three members of Congress' Multicultural Media Caucus have been hitting Spotify on the issue of consumer transparency: Do users know the company's recommendations are partly based on which artists are cheapest to promote? Billboard obtained a copy of Spotify's response to the legislators explaining how it publicizes the program—it wrote a blog post about it, for example—and says Reps. YVETTE D. CLARKE, JUDY CHU and TONY CARDENAS aren't buying it. In an echo of radio payola rules, they're pushing for clearer disclosures. Spotify executives, they tell Billboard, "cannot be the sole arbiters of what is good for music creators, their subscribers or the general public"... Navajo composer and multimedia artist RAVEN CHACON wins the Pulitzer Prize in Music for "VOICELESS MASS," a piece written during the pandemic about the oppression of Indigenous people. He says he wanted to call attention to "spaces in which we gather, the history of access of these spaces, and the land upon which these buildings sit." He found out he'd won the prize when friends texted him Monday. "Apparently they don't call you," he told the New York Times... DOLLY PARTON and DOJA CAT team up to call attention to TACO BELL's Mexican Pizza. They, too, won't be getting a call from the Pulitzer Prize committee... Confessions of a new MITSKI lover... MARISSA R. MOSS's book HER COUNTRY: HOW THE WOMEN OF COUNTRY MUSIC BECAME THE SUCCESS THEY WERE NEVER SUPPOSED TO BE is out today.

Rest in Peace

CAREY "KK" HODGES, founder of the vinyl-only metal label Last Hurrah Records... Singaporean DJ and promoter EILEEN CHEN, who performed as Cats on Crack.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
time & space
Washingtonian
The Untold Story of the White House's Record Collection
By Rob Brunner
Jimmy Carter's grandson, John Chuldenko, is unlocking its mysteries. It includes Funkadelic's "Hardcore Jollies," "Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols," a Gil Scott-Heron compilation and Barry Manilow's "Greatest Hits."
VICE
Here's Why No One Can Afford Concert Tickets Right Now
By Kristin Corry
Inflation and COVID-19 are teaming up to give companies like Live Nation and Ticketmaster free reign to hike prices, while small venues continue to struggle.
The New York Times
Young Thug, Atlanta Rap Star, Is Arrested on Gang-Related Charges
By Richard Fausset
He was indicted with about two dozen others, including some accused of murder and attempted armed robbery. The county's district attorney has vowed to crack down on street gangs.
The Ringer
Money, Problems, Respect: The Early Days of Biggie's Fame
By Justin Tinsley
In an excerpt from the new biography 'It Was All a Dream: Biggie and the World That Made Him,' author Justin Tinsley explores what it was like for the Notorious B.I.G. as he adjusted to the limelight.
The New Yorker
The Pop Song That's Uniting India and Pakistan
By Priyanka Mattoo
The writer and musician Ali Sethi has created an unconventional hit with "Pasoori."
Vulture
Bad Bunny's Endless Summer
By Gary Suarez
Benito's approach on "Un Verano Sin Ti" erodes the usual boundaries of the season, its infiniteness dotted by fun flings and moments alone on the beach.
Pollstar
How Wet Leg Buttered Muffins & Conquered The Post-Pandemic World
By Roy Trakin
Who knew salvation would come from the tiny Isle of Wight, an island in the English Channel off the southern coast heretofore best known in rock lore for the annual rock music festival where Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen and Jimi Hendrix all famously played in '69 and '70? 
Billboard
Why You're Seeing Fewer 'Featuring' Credits and More Co-Billings on the Hot 100
By Elias Leight
The use of "featuring" credits on top ten Hot 100 hits hasn't been this unpopular since 1995. A&Rs and lawyers believe they know why.
NME
Music fans care more about climate than general public, survey shows
By Will Richards
And some artists are taking action.
BuzzFeed News
The Same Security Company For Dave Chappelle's Show Also Oversaw The Deadly Astroworld Festival
By Brianna Sacks
"[CSC] is everywhere. They just did Coachella. They are set to do EDC in Las Vegas in two weeks. They already have a contract for the next Super Bowl."
nonstop feeling
Texas Monthly
Drake's Passionate, Calculated Love Affair With Houston
By Brady Brickner-Wood
The Toronto rapper has an everywhere-and-nowhere relationship with place, but no city has influenced him as much as H-Town.
The Spectator
The musical note that can trigger cold sweats and sightings of the dead
By Simon Ings
The eerie power of a certain low A is just one of many mysterious vibrations explored by the composer Richard Mainwaring.
Aria Inthavong
The Karaoke Song That Killed Countless People: 'My Way Killings'
By Aria Inthavong
Since the 2000s, numerous karaoke singers in the Philippines have been murdered after performing "My Way." Why? And how do the "My Way killings" actually tie into the lingering effects of the U.S. colonization of the Philippines?
The Ringer
Rebellion Behind a Paywall: On Black Star's 'No Fear of Time'
By Justin Sayles
Yasiin Bey and Talib Kweli's Luminary-exclusive new album comes 24 years after their classic debut. Both the where and when of its release may ultimately matter more than the music itself.
Slate
They Were the Best Alliance in Hip-Hop. What Happened?
By Jack Hamilton
Black Star is back with its second album, but a lot has changed in 24 years.
Guitar World
How Korn changed the face of guitar music
Charting Munky and Head's influence -- from Sepultura and Slipknot to the present day.
The New York Times
A Violin From Hollywood's Golden Age Aims at an Auction Record
By James B. Stewart
Played in "The Wizard of Oz" and other classic films, Toscha Seidel's Stradivarius could sell for almost $20 million.
Billboard
Where Does BMAC's Fight to Dismantle Racism End? The 'Ultimate Goal Is to Become Obsolete'
By Gail Mitchell
Ahead of its second music industry report card, Black Music Action Coalition co-chairs Willie "Prophet" Stiggers and Caron Veazey assess their progress.
GQ
Glaive Went From Making Songs in His Bedroom to Selling Out Shows in 22 Months
By Eileen Cartter
Not quite two years ago, Ash Gutierrez was a high schooler staying busy through lockdown. Now he's a 17-year-old hyperpop star on a "gap year" that might not ever end.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Night Shift"
Mary Halvorson
With Adam O'Farrill (trumpet), Jacob Garchik (trombone), Patricia Brennan (vibes), Nick Dunston (bass) and Tomas Fujiwara (drums). From "Amaryllis," one of two albums the MacArthur Grant-winning jazz guitarist is releasing this Friday on Nonesuch.
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