Thursday, May 12, 2022

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 05/12/2022 - Better 360 Deals?, Ethel Cain's Waffle House Fame, Eurovision, Kendrick Lamar, Dua Lipa...

Oh God, I will never be caught dead living in [New York or Los Angeles]. I don't want any career that requires me to be there.
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Thursday May 12, 2022
REDEF
Ethel Cain's debut album, "Preacher's Daughter," is out today on Daughters of Cain Records.
(Helen Kirbo/Motormouthmedia)
quote of the day
"Oh God, I will never be caught dead living in [New York or Los Angeles]. I don't want any career that requires me to be there."
- Ethel Cain
rantnrave://
Deal (or No Deal)

SPOTIFY's rocky Q1 aside, it remains a hella good time to be in the recorded music business, as record company financials keep reminding us. If Billboard is to be believed, it's also a good time to be an artist looking for a deal with any of those companies in the recorded music business. As in the US economy at large, where unemployment is low and workers, like so many products, are in short supply, it's a seller's market. And the buyers are flush with money.

The 360 deals that became de rigueur in the wake of the post-NAPSTER music recession are increasingly negotiable, Billboard's GLENN PEOPLES reports. Don't want to give your label 20 percent of your ancillary revenue? Demand less. Don't want them participating in your touring income? Ask them to carve that out. Want to own your masters or get them back soon? That may be up for discussion, too. And sometimes, it should be noted, it may not. But in general, labels are hungrier to get deals done than they used to be, and artists, with home studios, access to distribution and maybe some leverage from a TIKTOK hit, are a little less hungry.

Except, of course, when they're literally hungry, as bedroom pop singer/songwriter ETHEL CAIN told the New York Times she was when she signed with DR. LUKE's PRESCRIPTION SONGS without even knowing Dr. Luke was involved in the company. "I'm not Googling CEOs when I'm eating a candy bar," she explained to the Times' JOE COSCARELLI (really great profile, by the way). "I was unemployed and it was a pandemic."

Is Ethel Cain, whose dark, ambitious debut album is out today, an outlier or a harbinger? What happens if and when possible recession turns into actual recession? Does discretionary spending for things like music and TV subscriptions dry up? Should Spotify's somewhat worrisome subscription numbers be a cause for concern for labels whose rosy financials are based almost entirely on streaming income? Are label profits a lagging indicator in a streaming economy? Will the pandemic continue to eat into the biggest ancillary revenue piece of all—touring—or will clubs, arenas and festivals finally turn it around? What will 360 deals look like 365 days from now?

For now, at least, the Ethel Cains of the world, self-sufficient musicians with strong artistic visions, may have plenty of leverage even after they sign their deals. With the caveat that it's in the interest of labels to publicize how artist-friendly they are and of artists to publicize how independent they are, Cain appears to have a dream situation: creative freedom, the ability to tell the New York Times that working with her label's producer-owner "sucks" and "creatively, I have no need for him," and the self-assurance to want to be JOANNA NEWSOM popular but not TAYLOR SWIFT popular. And to understand that sometimes things can suck and not suck at the same time. "It's just not my year," she sings on her current single, "AMERICAN TEENAGER." "But I'm all good out here."

Etc Etc Etc

"We are here to show that Ukrainian culture and Ukrainian music exist," says OLEH PSIUK of Ukraine's KALUSH ORCHESTRA, which carried the country into Saturday's EUROVISION finals with a performance of "STEFANIA," a song that's become an unofficial anthem for the war-torn country. Oddsmakers are favoring Ukraine to win... COMPTON HIGH SCHOOL broke ground on a new $200 million campus last week with the help of $10 million from local high-school-dropout-made-good DR. DRE... Speaking of Dre: 12 classic hooks by JEWELL, "The First Lady of Death Row," who died last week... Ten players that tried, and failed, to take on the IPOD... Battle of the user interfaces: SPOTIFY vs. NETFLIX.

Rest in Peace

Black Dahlia Murder singer/lyricist TREVOR STRNAD, a beloved figure in death metal who'll be remembered almost as much for his behind-the-scenes contributions to the genre as for his electric onstage presence. "We haven't just lost an integral part of a band and a charismatic frontman," Decibel's Justin Norton wrote, "but one of the most informed and passionate advocates for underground music of any generation"... Multi-instrumentalist, songwriter and vaudevillian GLORIA PARKER, who was primarily known as a master of musical glasses, or glasspiel, which she played onstage, on TV and in Woody Allen's "Broadway Danny Rose." Her favored instrument was 28 crystal glasses filled with various amounts of water and white wine. Benjamin Franklin introduced the instrument to America, she once explained to the New York Times. "And now, through ['Broadway Danny Rose'], the whole world can see them in the 20th century, and I will be the person affixed to them."

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
strangers
The New York Times
Ethel Cain Is the Most Famous Girl at the Waffle House
By Joe Coscarelli
The singer-songwriter Ethel Cain has an elaborate vision of becoming a different kind of pop star. She's doing it from rural Alabama.
Los Angeles Times
Atlanta, a hip-hop mecca, reels as a favorite son faces sweeping criminal charges
By August Brown
There has never been another artist as established, popular and culturally important as Young Thug who has been accused of running such a vast criminal conspiracy, with his art used as evidence against him.
Pitchfork
What Young Thug and Gunna's Indictment Means for Rap Music on Trial
By Marc Hogan
The Georgia indictment perpetuates a much-criticized history of prosecutors using rap lyrics in court. The defendants could spend decades in prison if convicted.
Vulture
Will Ukraine Win Eurovision This Year?
By Nate Sloan and Charlie Harding
Its entry, written before the Russian invasion, has become a beacon of national pride and is the odds-on favorite to take home the glass microphone.
Bandcamp Daily
Migration of a Groove: the Dembow Rhythm Around the World
By Collin Smith
The ubiquitous reggaeton beat has a deep history, and artists use it in infinitely interesting ways.
KQED
Kendrick's Most Important Song That No One's Talking About
By Pendarvis Harshaw
An early track by Kendrick Lamar provides the secret origin for his gift of revisiting familiar themes.
Billboard
Labels Are Still Pushing for 360 Deals -- But the Terms Are Better
By Glenn Peoples
Even in good times labels want more than artists' recording revenue, but increased competition favors artists' negotiating power.
Vogue
The Real Dua Lipa
By Jen Wang
A pop sensation for serious times.
I Heard It In A Magazine
Audio Preservation: Archiving as an Act of Restorative Justice
By Mira Kaplan
The act of preserving or archiving can be a form of restorative justice, or it can be a form of exploitation. Mira Kaplan connects preservation efforts across time and space, from early 20th century to the modern day, to help us understand this important practice.
Music Industry Blog
How iPod changed everything
By Mark Mulligan
At 21 years of age, it outlived many of the dramatic changes it witnessed and triggered.
gibson girl
Mixmag
'It's an opportunity to switch off and reset': How Muslim DJs navigate Ramadan
By Aneesa Ahmed
Artists share what Ramadan means to them, how it changes their music habits, and what they learn during the holy month.
The New York Times
Leader of Pussy Riot Band Escapes Russia, With Help From Friends
By Valerie Hopkins and Misha Friedman
After more than a decade of activism, Maria Alyokhina disguised herself as a food courier to evade the police -- and a widening crackdown by President Vladimir Putin.
Billboard
Anitta's Global Vision: A Trilingual Takeover
By Griselda Flores
"Many executives at labels told me that it was impossible to have an international career as a Brazilian, and they weren't being mean — they just had never seen anyone do it recently," Anitta says. "I was like, 'I don't know, there's no impossible for me.'"
interdependence.fm
Arguing cryptos case in music with the Money 4 Nothing podcast
By Holly Herndon, Mat Dryhurst, Saxon Baird...
After listening to some great episodes pulling apart the Bandcamp Epic Games acquisition and showing some skepticism about Web 3, I approached Money 4 Nothing podcast to have a convivial discussion about crypto for a collaborative episode.
The Trichordist
Clowns to the Left of Me, Jokers To the Right: When Will the MLC Show Us the Money?
If you've received one of these emails from the MLC about having to recast their monthly statement inside of a single month, when you're eying that $500,000,000 of supposedly unmatched money sitting in the MLC, Inc.'s bank account (maybe?), or if you're trying to figure out when they are launching the vastly overdue claiming portal, you're probably wondering–who's in the clown car today?
Los Angeles Times
In Tulsa, the new Bob Dylan museum reconsiders the legacies of an icon and a city
By RJ Smith
Tulsa, Oklahoma's Bob Dylan Center opened to the public this week, throwing into focus a towering cultural figure and a city wrestling with its past.
DownBeat
Abdullah Ibrahim: The Illusion of Moonlight
By Gary Fukushima
Gone from his playing are the physically demanding displays of bombast and endurance from his heroic solo piano ruminations in the 1970s. Now, Ibrahim's intention seems to be to induce an unhurried stream of melody and harmony, weaving tunes from the corners of his long life and career together into a singular tapestry of sustained thought. 
Loud And Quiet
The deeper south: the London DIY music scene's next step
By Jessica Wrigglesworth
A new generation of South London artists and organisers are continuing the legacy of Black Midi, Squid et al and pushing their scene forward.
Medium
It was in the middle of Prince's Musicology Tour circa 2004 when I discovered the Foo Fighters
By Ruth Violette
"They are so good they could do a whole album of my rock songs," Prince told me.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Thoroughfare"
Ethel Cain
From "Preacher's Daughter."
Video of the day
"Toronto Rising: Mini-Doc on Drake producer Noah '40' Shebib"
Alim Sabir/Native Instruments
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