Thursday, June 2, 2022

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 06/02/2022 - Cultural Reparations, Merch Vendors Tip the Scales, H.E.R., Kate Bush, Raphael Saadiq...

White artists appropriated and profited from Black music.
Open in browser
Thursday June 02, 2022
REDEF
Roots rock: Valerie June at Old Forester's Paristown Hall, Louisville, Ky., May 24, 2022.
(Stephen J. Cohen/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"White artists appropriated and profited from Black music."
- Interim Report of the California Task Force to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans, p. 299
rantnrave://
That's All Right for You

Today is the second day of BLACK MUSIC MONTH and the second anniversary of the music-industry-led BLACKOUT TUESDAY of 2020, and here's your read for the day: a book-length (nearly 500 pages) interim report by a California state task force on reparations for African Americans. The state established the task force two years ago to study the historic and continuing effects of slavery on Black Californians and to recommend reparations. The interim report, which arrives a year ahead of the deadline for a final report, is a wide-ranging, scholarly overview that examines a reservoir of discriminatory practices in both the state and the country, most of which, based on a read of a chapter on "Creative, Cultural & Intellectual Life," will be old news to anyone familiar with the history of African Americans in the US. But who's telling the story matters. It's one thing for a music historian or rapper to tell you, "White artists appropriated and profited from Black music." It's a whole 'nother thing for a government body with the power, or at least the potential power, to do something about it to tell you.

In a section on Black music that traces a history from laws in multiple states against enslaved musicians (the slavery was legal; the music was not), to minstrel music's racist appropriations, to the monumental, uncompensated contributions to American culture of Black gospel, blues, jazz and R&B artists, to government crusades against rap music, the task force singles out four names: NWA and NIPSEY HUSSLE, both cited as examples of rappers targeted by law enforcement agencies because of their art, and ELVIS PRESLEY (see next item) and ARTHUR "BIG BOY" CRUDUP, presented together as an example of a white man who rose to stardom with the help of a song by "a Black man who was paid so little for his recordings that he had to work as a laborer selling sweet potatoes."

The music industry can and should work to protect future NWAs and Nipsey Hussles from government intrusion and worse, but obviously the industry isn't specifically to blame for that. But the exploitative contracts and copyright crimes against past, present and future Arthur Crudups are entirely within the music biz's purview and entirely within the music biz's ability to repair. Music doesn't have to wait for the government to explain what needs to be done. Music, which made plenty of pledges on Blackout Tuesday—some of which it's followed through on—is in a position to do those reparations itself. Today is a perfect day to stop and read up on the history. Tomorrow is a perfect day to do something concrete about it.

That's Not All Right for You

You could quibble with the above report about a description that reduces Elvis Presley to a singer who "imitated Black blues and R&B singers." Elvis had a wealth of love, respect and understanding of every artist whose music he covered, and a voice capable of colluding with their songs' deepest mysteries. But he also had an accomplished army of businessmen/exploiters at his side. Trees, meet forest.

And unlike the families of some of the Black artists whose songs he covered (he covered plenty of white artists, too), Elvis' descendants continue to derive unfathomable wealth from the work of a man who died nearly half a century ago. Which is the point of all this. And if those descendants want to tell every wedding chapel in Las Vegas to cease and desist with their Elvis-themed weddings on behalf of his future great-grandchildren and the businesses that control his copyrights and trademarks—yet had nothing to do with creating them—it turns out they can, no matter how much those weddings seem like part of the fabric of American life. That's the privilege of a system that was set up to support your great-grandfather and will still be supporting you long into the future.

Rest in Peace

DAVE SMITH, founder of the pioneering synth company Sequential Circuits and one of the inventors of MIDI. A monumental figure in modern recording... 23 RACKZ, a 16-year-old up-and-coming DMV rapper, who last week became at least the 12th rapper murdered in the US this year. At least 19 musicians of note have been murdered worldwide in 2022.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
my baby left me
Billboard
Concert Merch Vendors Are Making Bank -- and Not Everyone Is Happy
By Elias Leight
"This is the hot-button issue right now in the tour merch world," says one exec.
Ebony
Back to H.E.R. Roots
By Ronda Racha Penrice
At just 24, trailblazing megastar H.E.R. has become one of the most prolific artists of her time, well on her way to an EGOT. Her musical roots run deep, and as we discover with her dad Kenny Wilson, the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
Slate
Finally, Rappers Are Getting the Biographies They Deserve
By Nitish Pahwa
Books on DJ Screw and the Notorious B.I.G. are welcome additions to the genre.
Rolling Stone
California's Reparations Task Force Takes on the Historic Theft of Black Art and Culture
By Jonathan Bernstein
Nearly 600-page interim report is 'the most extensive government-issued report on the African American community' since 1968, according to task force chair.
Variety
How 'Stranger Things' Landed Kate Bush's 'Running Up That Hill'
By Jazz Tangcay
Kate Bush rarely approves her music for synch usage: How did this prominent and complex placement come about?
TorrentFreak
Record Labels Want to Know if Piracy Trial Jurors are Hip-Hop Fans
By Ernesto Van der Sar
Popular mixtape platform Spinrilla is being sued by several major record labels. Both sides are preparing questions for potential jurors.
The Cadence
How a Madonna Rework on TikTok Breeched My Brain's Algorithm
TikTok outflanks all other music discovery.
Dazed Digital
Pussy Riot's Maria Alyokhina on art and activism in wartime Russia
By Thom Waite
After a daring escape from Moscow, Alyokhina has regrouped with the punk collective to 'stand with Ukraine during the terrifying war that Putin started.'
And The Writer Is...
And The Writer Is...Justin Kalifowitz
By Ross Golan and Justin Kalifowitz
Today's guest is a lifelong advocate for empowering creators and the Founder and Executive Chairman of Downtown Music Holdings. He's also co-founder of NY is Music, a non-profit coalition dedicated to advancing the importance of the role of music in economic development, culture, and education in New York State.
The Liner Notes
Why Is Raphael Saadiq Still So Underrated?
By Marcus J. Moore
He's worked with some of the biggest names in music, but it still feels like he's not given proper credit.
my mama don't allow me
The Guardian
'Creem gave you a ground-level excitement about music': the 1970s rock magazine makes a comeback
By Michael Hann
Founded in 1969, the Detroit title that first used the term 'punk rock' was daringly derisive but also often racist, sexist and homophobic -- so why bring it back?
Billboard
Why Is Vinyl Getting So Expensive?
By Chris Eggertsen
Supply chain problems and rising costs continue to plague pressing plants, labels and retailers - but CDs may be a stopgap.
Guitar World
Body Count's Ice-T and Ernie C look back on the making of -- and reaction to -- their incendiary 1992 debut album
By Brad Angle
How Body Count came out of South Central LA and cooked up an explosive sound informed by Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, punk, Slayer and a burning sense of injustice.
Variety
Patti Smith and Bruce Springsteen Discuss How 'Because the Night' Came to Be
By Caryn Rose
There was one big problem: Patti was not interested in singing someone else's songs. She felt strongly about wanting to write and record her own material, whether by herself or with someone in her group. So Springsteen's tape went home and sat on her mantel. 
Midia Research
Burning out and fading away: the exhausting job of marketing new music
By Keith Jopling
The recent protests by music artists about the pressures of keeping up a constant presence on social media are disconcerting in an age when many artists are struggling with mental health issues and wellbeing. The Music Managers Forum has released 'The Digital Burnout Report', based on a series of roundtable discussions with music managers and marketers.
CNN
Elvis reimagined as an Asian American icon
By Jacqui Palumbo
Tommy Kha photographed Elvis tribute artists of all ages and backgrounds for years before the artist assumed the role himself.
NPR
Like The Linda Lindas, this teen girl band in Benin makes you dance — and think
By Nick Roll
The Star Feminine Band hails from a conservative part of the country. They sing about female genital cutting, child marriage and gender equality. And they rock.
The FADER
Quelle Chris doesn't want you to feel bad for him
By Brandon Callender
Quelle Chris talks about his new album "Deathfame," what rap fans get wrong about lyricism, and letting the music form itself.
The New York Times
'Baseball Players Don't Dance'? The Savannah Bananas Beg to Differ
By Margaret Fuhrer
TikTok choreography, dancing umpires, a ballet-trained first-base coach: This collegiate summer league team has amassed a following by leaning into entertainment.
Texas Monthly
How a Legendary R&B Band Helped Willie Nelson Cut His Best Album
By John Spong
Muscle Shoals bass player David Hood on 'Phases and Stages,' producer Jerry Wexler, and "(How Will I Know) I'm Falling in Love Again."
what we're into
Music of the day
"The Pressure Pt. 1 (Frankie Knuckles Classic Remix)"
Sounds of Blackness
Video of the day
"Larry Heard on Hip-Hop Beats, Mystery of Love and Fingers Inc."
Red Bull Music Academy
Music | Media
SUBSCRIBE
Suggest a link
"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
HOME | ABOUT | SETS | PRESS
Redef Group Inc.
LA - NY - Everywhere
Copyright ©2021
UNSUBSCRIBE or MANAGE MY SUBSCRIPTION

No comments:

Post a Comment

Welcome to Bernie Schaeffer's Award-Winning Option Advisor

Congratulations! By signing up for Option Advisor, you just took the first step towards becoming a successful trader and pot...