Thursday, July 28, 2022

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 07/28/2022 - Lawyered Up, Tech Whisperer Guy Oseary, Sampling Beyoncé, Jon Batiste, Travis Barker...

I feel like any life advice that I could ever give anybody is, like, 'Should I get all the way in?' 'Yes.'
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Thursday July 28, 2022
REDEF
Phoebe Bridgers at the O2 Academy, London, July 26, 2022.
(Lorne Thomson/Redferns/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"I feel like any life advice that I could ever give anybody is, like, 'Should I get all the way in?' 'Yes.'"
- Phoebe Bridgers
rantnrave://
Lawyered Up

In a business where "get it in writing" can mean "create and execute a clear legal agreement as soon as possible between everyone in the studio so there's no ambiguity about who gets a songwriting credit and who's owed points on the master recording when it becomes a surprise hit six months from now," what's a starving aspiring pop star supposed to do?

DAVID FRITZ and STEVEN SHIP have an app for that. They're co-founders of CREATIVE INTELL, a platform, currently in private beta, that they envision as the LEGALZOOM of the music business. They just closed a $3 million seed funding round and they've got the backing of some heavy hitters in music law, music management and others around the biz.

Creative Intell, which will be available via subscription, is an intriguing entry in the growing menu of a la carte label services and career management tools—a kind of virtual legal assistant with A.I. capabilities and music biz expertise. It's a dealmaking platform that will help anyone, not just starving aspiring pop stars, draw up and negotiate contracts for all manner of musical interactions and partnerships. It's also a music biz education tool, stuffed with tutorials that explain what everything is and advise users what to do and, just as important, what not to do as they step through their deal points. There are reporting and data mining tools, too, to track and manage deals after they're signed.

For creatives, the founders say, the platform introduces ease and transparency into a process that's long been opaque and intimidating. (While the engineer is swapping PRO TOOLS sessions back and forth over the internet, the singer can be swapping drafts of the contracts that will help monetize and protect those sessions.) But they also believe it will be an important tool for lawyers, semi-automating the creation of basic contracts and freeing them for more complex, high-value work.

"It will be a game changer for the music industry," music lawyer DINA LAPOLT, a seed investor, said.

Correlation or Causation?

BEYONCÉ rolls out her album the old-fashioned, conventional way. Beyoncé's album leaks.

Earnings

Dispelling, at least for now, any fears that music streaming might be headed for a NETFLIX-like fall, SPOTIFY's Q2 report shows big jumps in paying subscribers (188 million) and monthly users (433 million), both beating expectations, and a fourth straight quarter of growth in average revenue per user. With the company having raised the price of its family plan, its ARPU for subscribers, which had been in decline in recent years, is up to $4.59. Spotify is expecting growth to continue, but at a slower rate, in Q3. On the other hand, the company reported a quarterly of €125 million—more than six times what it lost in the same quarter a year ago—its stock is down 50 percent in 2022 and it killed its once-hyped Car Thing... UNIVERSAL MUSIC, which relies heavily on streaming revenues from Spotify and others, reported a 17.3 percent jump, year-over-year, in revenues. UMG said publishing monetization, physical sales and "initial contributions from catalog acquisitions made in prior years" also contributed to its Q2 growth. Thank you, BOB DYLAN?

Rest in Peace

Rapper JAYDAYOUNGAN ("23 Island"), murdered Wednesday in his hometown, Bogalusa, La. He's at least the 16th rapper murdered in the US in 2022; it's July... SANDY ROBERTON, a Scottish folk-rock producer (Steeleye Span, John Martyn, Iain Matthews) who enjoyed a lengthy second career (it actually might have been his third or fourth) as a manager of producers, mixers and engineers. His clients at his LA-based Worlds End Management included Nick Launay, Steve Lillywhite, Walter Afanasieff, Jack Endino and the Matrix. "He has been a pioneering champion for so many people who have written and produced many of the best songs of the past four decades," the Matrix's Lauren Christy said... British engineer/producer and Sade collaborator MICHAEL PELA... Actor PAUL SORVINO, who in his later years was able to realize his dream of being an opera singer.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
lawyers, guns and money
Variety
From Maverick to Mogul, Madonna's Manager Guy Oseary Transcends the Music World to Take on NFTs
By Shirley Halperin
Guy Oseary is leveraging his success to become the next great tech whisperer.
Vulture
So You Want to Sample a Beyoncé Song. Now What?
By Jewel Wicker
Clearing a sample takes more than just asking politely, especially from one of the biggest singers in history
gal-dem
Solidarity in silence? Why muting artists in support of music industry abuse survivors is complicated
By Ray Sang
Speaking to industry experts, Ray Sang explores the nuanced questions around whether not pressing play on the work of alleged abusers can make a difference.
VICE
A Musician Releases a Song With Abusive Lyrics. What Happens Next?
By Nicolas-Tyrell Scott
Tracks detailing domestic violence and threats against women are nothing new, but when should a record label look to intervene?
DownBeat
The Beauty of Jon Batiste's Spiritual Journey
By Suzanne Lorge
On the surface of things, it seems counterintuitive that DownBeat critics would name the same musician both Jazz Artist of the Year and Beyond Artist of the Year — until you learn that the musician in question is Jon Batiste, and suddenly the double billing makes sense.
The Ringer
Why Travis Barker Became Your Favorite Rapper's Favorite Drummer
By Paul Thompson
The pop-punk king has a long relationship with hip-hop, but it's not just for show.
Penny Fractions
What's Going on with All Those Music SPACs?
By David Turner
The music industry never avoids a path towards fast cash and so got very quickly caught up in the SPAC craze.
Music Business Worldwide
Why I'm doubling our investment in the UK music industry, just when people say it's losing global power
By Lucas Keller
Milk & Honey founder Lucas Keller explains why he's doubling investment in his UK business in 2022, and why he has an unshakeable belief in the continued global power of British creatives.
Billboard
Rap on Capitol Hill: Proposed Federal Law Would Ban Lyrics From Criminal Cases
By Bill Donahue
A first-of-its-kind federal bill comes as Young Thug and Gunna sit in jail over charges that heavily cite their lyrics.
Culture Notes of an Honest Broker
How a Prominent Composer Lost His Wikipedia Page--and Got Entangled in Kafkaesque Nightmare Trying to Get it Back
By Ted Gioia
Bruce Faulconer deserves better, but the system seems rigged against him.
lawyers in love
The New York Times
Is Beyoncé's 'Renaissance' Rollout (Gasp!) Conventional?
By Joe Coscarelli and Ben Sisario
The singer, who has prioritized innovation over commercial domination, has opted for a more standard playbook ahead of her seventh solo album, "Renaissance," out Friday.
Pitchfork
Tinashe Has It All Under Control
By Tarisai Ngangura
After years of major label blues, the R&B siren has settled into a sweet spot of independent bliss. What now?
Consequence
Balance Sheet: Brooklyn Duo TOLEDO Break Down Income and Expenses from Nine Concerts
By Wren Graves
Our new feature Balance Sheet provides an honest look at the cost of life on the road.
Music Business Worldwide
Once again, Spotify avoids Netflix's woes: Music streamer added 6m net subscribers in Q2
By Tim Ingham
In its Q2 results announced today (July 27), Spotify has confirmed that it added 6 million net Premium subscribers to its user base in Q2, taking its total global subs up to 188 million.
Lefsetz Letter
The Playlist Fallacy
By Bob Lefsetz
The power of playlists is way overstated!
The Guardian
Springsteen tickets are going for a whopping $4,000 -- what else are we paying dynamic prices for?
By Arwa Mahdawi
Fans were outraged after the cost of watching the Boss play surged. But companies are now increasingly adjusting charges based on data they have about you too.
Okayplayer
'Look at Me: XXXTentacion' Director Talks About the Complications of Telling the Controversial Rapper's Story
By Anthony Malone
We sat with Look at Me: XXXTentacion director Sabaah Folayan who talked about the film's purpose while taking the time to respond to a few questions regarding some concerns.
The Guardian
Abel Selaocoe: 'As an African cellist, I've always been looking for a home'
By Kate Kellaway
The electrifying, township-born musician on attending South Africa's Eton, moving to Manchester and feeling Bach's groove.
Twenty Thousand Hertz
Twenty Thousand Hertz: Handbook for Sonic Happiness
By Dallas Taylor, Andrew Anderson and Laurie Santos
We spend a lot of time curating for taste, touch, smell, and vision. But too often, sound gets overlooked. We forget that we can get rid of sounds that annoy us, and surround ourselves with sounds that we love. When we do, it can have huge benefits for our mood and wellbeing. 
what we're into
Music of the day
"In Tense"
Harish Raghavan
With Morgan Guerin, Charles Altura, Joel Ross and Eric Harland. From the album of the same name, out Friday on Whirlwind.
Video of the day
"Full Set | From the Basement"
Warpaint
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