Friday, July 29, 2022

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 07/29/2022 - Renaissance Friday, Music's Multi-Billion Dollar Battle Royale, Snap, Domi & JD Beck, Doja Cat...

Profitability is a choice. You can reduce infrastructure, marketing and advertising costs, and maybe not throw such big parties.
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Friday July 29, 2022
REDEF
Beyoncé performing "Be Alive" for the Academy Awards, Compton, Calif., March 20, 2022.
(Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"Profitability is a choice. You can reduce infrastructure, marketing and advertising costs, and maybe not throw such big parties."
- Anonymous Music Executive, on Spotify's financials
rantnrave://
August and Everything After

A programming note to start this morning: We're going fishing. MusicREDEF will be on hiatus for the month of August, meaning today's newsletter will be the last until right after Labor Day. We'll continue to share stories on our Twitter feed, as always, and we wish you a happy, peaceful RENAISSANCE summer.

It's Renaissance Friday

And it's not starting quite as scripted. On Wednesday, it leaked. On Thursday, KELIS had questions. The Kelis/BEYONCÉ/NEPTUNES dustup over this sub-two-minute song that started on Instagram and had taken over Twitter by Thursday night... No, wait, it started in 1999, the year of Kelis' fantastic debut album, KALEIDOSCOPE. "All tracks are written by PHARRELL WILLIAMS and CHAD HUGO, except where noted," Wikipedia tells us. Pharrell "has writing credits on my records, all my singles coincidentally, and he never wrote a song, a lyric, a day in his life," Kelis told us Thursday. They were friends, close friends... The dustup over the legal and ethical rights to a song that spilled all over the internet Thursday has its roots in a specific contractual dispute between a young artist and her (also young) producers. But it touches, in various ways, on issues that have haunted the music business since the day the words "music" and "business" were joined together and that resonate loudly in an era when songwriters and artists are fighting for every scrap of credit and income they can get.

The consequential, costly dispute over royalty splits that Kelis explains here and the Neptunes' Chad Hugo absolves himself of here ("I don't handle that. I usually hire business folks") is the exact situation CREATIVE INTELL, the deal-negotiating platform I wrote about Thursday, is designed to prevent. And it's one of the many mini-battles that simmer beneath the gargantuan one that Variety's JEM ASWAD chronicles in today's must-read, for which he interviewed some 30 label, publishing and streaming executives, many of them off the record. At stake in the upcoming US government hearings on streaming royalty rates for songwriters and publishers, he writes, "is nothing less than the future of the music business and the livelihood of the American songwriter." It's a story of century-old government regulations that date to the days of player pianos, and fundamental disagreements over how royalties should be divided between record companies and publishing companies that are owned by the same parent companies but represent two distinct creative constituencies. It's the story, one exec told Aswad, of a "deeply dysfunctional symbiotic relationship." In other words, the music business.

But also, this Friday morning, there's a new Beyoncé album. Or possibly, intriguingly, the first third of a new Beyoncé album. The Beyoncé dance-music album, with its nods to disco, house, techno, bounce and other corners of the capital-D dance music universe. And its samples and interpolations of ROBIN S., DONNA SUMMER and, well, KELIS. And its upbeat, summery vibe. The discussions have started. But we've got the rest of the summer to sort out meanings, intentions, implications and the politics of love. What matters right now is it's a summer weekend and there's a new Beyoncé album.

Also today: New music from King Princess, Maggie Rogers, Lil Shordie Scott, Wiz Khalifa, Amanda Shires, Friendship, Florist, Hayley Kiyoko, Twice (released earlier this week), DPR Ian, Perfume, K Camp, Soulja Boy, Doe Boy, Hotboii, Nychelle, $uicideboy$, Ithaca, Chat Pile, Dance Gavin Dance (last album with bassist Tim Feerick, who died in April), Beach Rats, Funeral Chic, Domi & JD Beck, Harish Raghavan, Nate Wooley, Allison Miller & Carmen Staaf, Whiskey Myers, Ronnie Dunn, Brooke Eden, Murder by Death, Wade Sapp, Tedeschi Trucks Band, Andrew Tuttle, Of Montreal, Orbital, Kuedo, Joe Armon-Jones & Mala, Emeka Ogboh, Emily Yacina, Tim Finn & Phil Manzanera, Jamie T, Matt Nathanson, Josh Rouse, Tallies and Deaton Chris Anthony.

Rest in Peace

REGINA BAER, co-founder of the revered Berlin techno club Tresor. "The history of Tresor and, indeed of Berlin's entire nightlife would be different without her," her co-founder Dimitri Hegemann wrote... "Dr. Who" and "The Wombles" actor BERNARD CRIBBINS, who had a pair of novelty pop hits in Britain in the early 1960s, produced by George Martin... New Zealand country singer JOHN HORE GRENELL.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
kaleidoscope
Variety
Inside the Multi-Billion Dollar Battle Royale Over Music-Streaming Royalties
By Jem Aswad
At stake is nothing less than the future of the music business and the livelihood of the American songwriter.
Water & Music
After the drop: Measuring the lifetime value of music NFTs
By Michael Zhang and Alexander Flores
This article presents an analysis of secondary sales and trading activity across several notable, multi-edition music NFT drops from late 2021 to mid-2022. As part of our analysis, we also develop a starting metrics framework for evaluating and comparing different music NFT drops over time. 
Billboard
Can Snap Bounce Back -- And Change Live Music's Future?
By Lyndsey Havens
With its new AR innovations, the tech company wants to make concertgoing more fun and functional — and open up a whole new world of artist partnerships, too.
Vulture
Into It: The Business of Beyoncé
By Sam Sanders and Danyel Smith
Sam Sanders and longtime music journalist Danyel Smith revisit how Beyoncé's surprise drop album in 2013 changed everything.
Tidal
Tia Fuller: Life in Beyoncé's Band
By Tia Fuller
The acclaimed saxophonist and composer reflects on her years touring the world with Queen Bey — from the multiphase audition through the eight-hour rehearsals and the lessons she'll never forget.
The Culture Journalist
We are all outsiders, with Eve 6 Guy
By Andrea Domanick, Emilie Friedlander and Max Collins
Max Collins on his evolution from Y2K alt-rocker to post-Bernie public intellectual, John Hinckley's music, and finding redemption in a culture war.
Complex
NYC Mayor Eric Adams' Son on Rapping, Drill Music, More: 'You Can't Ban a Genre of Music'
By Andre Gee
Jordan Coleman is a rapper who works in Roc Nation's film department. Sometimes he sends drill videos to his father, the mayor.
Rolling Stone
As Escalating Violence Hits Atlanta's Music Industry, a Shaken Hip-Hop Community Seeks Solutions
By Mike Jordan
Recent deaths, acts of violence and legal scandals have rocked the city. Veterans and rising stars alike weigh in on what's to be done.
The Guardian
Gen-Z jazz prodigies Domi and JD Beck: 'It was insane to see Herbie Hancock solo in front of us'
By Shaad D'Souza
The duo talk about working with the jazz pioneer on their debut album, "Not Tight," collaborating with Anderson .Paak and not making music for 'psycho jazz musicians who stay up until 8am.'
Nashville Scene
Amanda Shires Faced a Host of Demons to Make 'Take It Like a Man'
By Lorie Liebig
The outstanding songsmith discusses addressing the trauma that threatened her relationship and her ability to create.
tasty
Mixmag
Why dancehall isn't a major industry in the UK, and what needs to be done
By Ray Paul
Ray Paul gives a critical assessment of the state of dancehall music in the UK and what action is needed to strengthen the influential music genre.
Synchtank
Licensing, Lawsuits and Revenue Sharing: Meta's Evolving Relationship with the Music Industry
By Eamonn Forde
From litigation to expired licensing deals and the announcement of a new revenue share model, it's been an eventful week for Meta.
Americana Highways
When The Promise Is Broken: Springsteen & Us
By Steve Wosahla
The cost to Springsteen's brand far exceeds whatever increased income he will receive from Ticketmaster. 
Vulture
The Complicated History of 'Hound Dog' Converges in Doja Cat's 'Vegas'
By Charlie Harding and Nate Sloan
Her single borrows from Big Mama Thornton, Elvis, and others who have recorded the classic.
The Guardian
'Standing on your own': Ukrainian rapper on connecting with his country's culture
By Isobel Koshiw
Jockii Druce, 22, gives voice to young people reflecting on Ukraine's relationship with Russia and its colonial legacy.
Slate
No One Makes No. 1 Hits the Way Lizzo Does
By Chris Molanphy
"About Damn Time" demonstrates a skill that no one else can pull off these days.
Consequence
Welcome to the Wiz Khalifa Multiverse
By Eddie Fu
Wiz Khalifa discusses his new album, an upcoming tour with Logic, his mushroom wellness brand and more.
VICE
The Harsh Reality of Touring as a Female POC DJ
By Anonymous
In this book extract from 'Tales From the Booth', an anonymous DJ reveals how travelling the world for music isn't as glamorous as it sounds.
The Sydney Morning Herald
'Mick Jagger was not gonna marry no black woman': P.P. Arnold on the ugly face of the swinging '60s
By Michael Dwyer
Swinging London looks darker through P.P. Arnold's memoir of music and violence.
Jazzys WorldTV
Kendrick Lamar speaks on his legacy & talks about the positive effect his music has on his fans
By Jazzy and Kendrick Lamar
After his amazing live performance at Rolling Loud 2022 in Miami, FL, Kendrick Lamar speaks on his legacy & talks about the positive effect his music has on his fans including the emotional security guard caught in a viral clip during his concert in Houston, Texas.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Move"
Beyoncé (with Grace Jones and Tems)
From "Renaissance," out today on Parkwood/Columbia.
Video of the day
"Shania Twain: Not Just a Girl"
Joss Crowley
On Netflix.
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