Thursday, January 12, 2023

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 01/12/2023 - Remembering a Guitar Hero's Guitar Hero, Dr. Dre Sells, Yo La Tengo, Margo Price, 03 Greedo...

[The Fender Stratocaster] is a tool of great inspiration and torture at the same time because it's forever sitting there challenging you to find something else in it. But it is there if you really search.
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Thursday January 12, 2023
REDEF
Heart full of soul: Jeff Beck in England in the 1960s.
(Fiona Adams/Redferns/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"[The Fender Stratocaster] is a tool of great inspiration and torture at the same time because it's forever sitting there challenging you to find something else in it. But it is there if you really search."
- Jeff Beck, 1944 – 2023
rantnrave://
Rough and Always Ready

His first major gig was replacing GOD in a volatile British blues-rock band, a job for which he was recommended by a man who more than a few people thought was LUCIFER, who eventually came back around and replaced *him*. Which made him the middle child in the most storied lineup of guitarists in the history of rock, sandwiched between heaven and hell, forever condemned to live in the shadow of mythical figures who'd go on to collect more private planes and platinum records and ROLLING STONE cover stories than he ever would, even if he was the one who turned that particular blues-rock band into the Rock Hall of Fame-worthy innovators they became by modernizing and psychedelicizing their sound, even if he was the one with the most lightning bolts in his fingers. Condemned to be not a guitar god, per se, but a mortal guitar hero. A guitar hero's guitar hero. The one the other heroes wanted to be. The one who influenced everybody who came within 100 miles of rock in the past 60 years. Everybody! The one with the purest tone and the most sensitive touch. And always one more melodic idea. The one who said yes to blues and psychedelia and metal and jazz and soul and even techno, and no to the ROLLING STONES. "I've never made the big time, mercifully probably," JEFF BECK once said. "When you look around and see who has made it huge, it's a really rotten place to be when you think about it. Maybe I'm blessed with not having had that."

Beck, who died Tuesday at age 78, remained active to the very end, and though he had a heart full of chops and technique that ran over, under, sideways and down, what he really had, what made him an unequal among unequals, were his sympathetic ears and borderless musical curiosity. I was struck by two particular tweets in the outpouring of love for Beck on Tuesday. ROD STEWART, who first came to the world's attention as lead singer of the JEFF BECK GROUP and who's known a few other guitarists in his time, wrote, "He was one of the few guitarists that when playing live would actually listen to me sing and respond." What an incredible compliment. What a massive diss of everybody else. And then, by way of example, this tweet from acolyte VERNON REID of LIVING COLOUR, describing how Beck listened his way through his solo on STEVIE WONDER's "LOOKIN' FOR ANOTHER PURE LOVE": "The sound of Pure LOVE. Between 2 friends. Stevie's 'go ahead Jeff', & what Jeff played? It doesn't happen often enough." It happened every time Beck played. With the Yardbirds. With Rod. With JAN HAMMER and NARADA MICHAEL WALDEN and STANLEY CLARKE. With BUDDY GUY and STEVIE RAY VAUGHAN. With DIANA ROSS and TINA TURNER and KATE BUSH. (And here's what else happened when Beck and Wonder were hanging around in the early 1970s.)

Beck also had a ceaseless drive for musical adventure, which led him from the Yardbirds' psychedelic pop to the Jeff Beck Group's proto heavy metal (that audacious first album came out half a year before the remarkably similar debut from LED ZEPPELIN, who began life, not coincidentally, as the New Yardbirds) to the instrumental jazz albums (or jazz rock or jazz fusion or whatever you choose to call them) that brought him his greatest acclaim and biggest fame) to soul and funk and pop and a thousand side trips. His was a life of listening and responding, following the music wherever it might lead. An improviser's life.

There were bumps and bruises along the way, as will happen. Beck wasn't always as good an actual bandmate as he was a musical collaborator, and there's a reason, besides his wandering musical heart, why a lot of his projects were short-lived. And then, in hindsight, he'd tell interviewers he regretted a lot of his musical choices until, after additional hindsight, he'd tell other interviewers he was happy with them. Wandering ears, you might say. Except when he in a studio or onstage, when his ears were always at attention, his fingers ready to follow. This is from four months ago. RIP.

Etc Etc Etc

DR. DRE is selling a huge bundle of artist, songwriting and producing royalties for his N.W.A and solo work, as well as the master rights to THE CHRONIC, in two catalog deals that will net him north of $200 million, Billboard reports, citing unnamed sources. Two separate buyers, SHAMROCK HOLDINGS and UNIVERSAL MUSIC, will scoop up assets that Billboard says are currently earning $10 million a year. Universal is also reportedly getting Dre's share in KENDRICK LAMAR's catalog, which comes through a joint venture between Lamar's label, TOP DAWG, and Dre's AFTERMATH... UMG chief LUCIAN GRAINGE says "the economic model for streaming needs to evolve." And though he's a little vague, in his annual memo to UMG staff, about what it should evolve into, he has some clear ideas about what it should evolve away from. He calls out platforms that are adding 100,000 tracks a day and using algorithms to push users toward "generic music that lacks a meaningful artistic context, is less expensive for the platform to license or, in some cases, has been commissioned directly by the platform"... Nominations for the BRIT AWARDS will be livestreamed starting at 11 am ET today.

Rest in Peace

Metal album artist JUSTIN "VBERKVLT" BARTLETT.

- Matty Karas, curator
blow by blow
The New York Times
Jeff Beck, Guitarist With a Chapter in Rock History, Dies at 78
By Jim Farber
His playing with the Yardbirds and as leader of his own bands brought a sense of adventure to their groundbreaking recordings.
Rolling Stone
RETRO READ: Jeff Beck Is Back in Action
By Chris Hodenfield
The British blues-guitar great returns with a new 'Group.' (Originally published June 24, 1971.)
The Guardian
Heart full of soul: the maverick genius of Jeff Beck, the 'guitarist's guitarist'
By Alexis Petridis
He began with bubblegum pop in the Yardbirds, then moved on to psychedelia, funk, jazz fusion, even techno - but no matter what the genre, Beck was always ahead of the curve.
Billboard
Dr. Dre Selling Music Assets to Universal Music and Shamrock
By Ed Christman
His two deals, estimated at around $200 million total, mark an acceleration of a run on hip-hop assets.
Pitchfork
Forty Years In, Yo La Tengo Are Still Making It Up as They Go
By Philip Sherburne
… and that's exactly how they like it.
Jezebel
Margo Price Surveys Her Own Destruction
By Audra Heinrichs
Between her memoir and new album, the singer-songwriter is incapable of telling anything but the truth about years of affairs, addiction, and darkness.
Stereogum
For Rap Fans, 03 Greedo's Release Is A Respite From So Much Bad News
By Jayson Buford
After five years in a Texas prison, the Los Angeles rapper is scheduled to be released this Thursday - exceptional news for a city whose rap scene has been through a maddening amount of tragedy since he was sentenced for drug and weapons charges.
Billboard
Lucian Grainge Calls For 'Updated Model' For Music Industry
By Dan Rys
Universal's chairman/CEO laid out several issues that he feels have arisen in the decade-plus since streaming was introduced, and called for an "updated model" for the business that will be "an innovative, 'artist-centric' model that values all subscribers and rewards the music they love."
Variety
The State of the Songwriter With Warner Chappell Music Publishing Co-Chair Carianne Marshall
By Shirley Halperin, Cynthia Littleton and Andrew Wallenstein
On the latest episode of Variety's "Strictly Business" podcast, Carianne Marshall talks about the challenges songwriters have faced in recent years, and the triumphs the community has seen.
Rolling Stone
Sharp as a Blade, Soft as a Dream: Jeff Beck's Greatest Songs
By Angie Martoccio, Brian Hiatt, Andy Greene...
From fuzzed-out Yardbirds riffs to virtuosic Beatles covers, here are the late guitar legend's best moments.
truth
Penny Fractions
2023 in Review: Amazon Music
By David Turner
Three of the four main western music streaming platforms slot music within larger hundred billion-dollar businesses: Apple, Spotify and YouTube. That's why we're starting this industry overview with Amazon, a company that's traditionally the least associated with music but over the last few years made a real dent into the niche of music streaming.
The Sydney Morning Herald
'I'm very sure of who I am': Lorde's little sister spreads her wings
By Jules LeFevre
Singer Indy Yelich says she is not concerned about comparisons with her famous relative.
The Guardian
Billy Nomates: 'Some days I think I've done something good, the next I'll set fire to it'
By Emma Garland
Tor Maries took her band name from an insult, and her sick-of-it-all songs decry sexism, dead-end jobs and social inequality. She's still wondering how success found her.
Toronto Star
'A dream experience': Kardinal Offishall joins Def Jam Recordings as new Global A&R
By Richie Assaly
The Toronto rapper and music executive will work with one of hip hop's most iconic record labels to sign and help elevate talent from around the globe.
The New York Times
RETRO READ: A Guitar Hero Won't Play the Game
By Larry Rohter
At 65, Jeff Beck remains the greatest guitarist that millions of people have never heard of, but he has resisted making concessions that would allow him to be heard more widely.
Vulture
Two Rock Hall Voters Debate Who Should Be on This Year's Ballot
By Devon Ivie
"They're definitely running out of geezers. You can't do so many more years of, 'Oh yeah, this guy who had three hits in 1972.'"
Music Ally
Fan-focused strategy still the best catalyst for success
By Vasja Veber
Vasja Veber, co-founder of music data analytics platform Viberate, explains how building immersive artist strategies that cultivate fandom are more likely to encourage fan cross-over to streaming.
The Moment with Brian Koppelman
The Moment with Brian Koppelman: Adeem the Artist -- 01/11/23
By Brian Koppelman and Adeem the Artist
Adeem The Artist on finding out that becoming who you truly are is the one thing that can lead you to success. 
Tidal
Just Music: Why the Pointer Sisters Matter
By Elisabeth Vincentelli
Before they became dance-pop stars in the '80s, the group blazed a trail with their fearless disregard for musical and cultural barriers.
SPIN
Music Journalists Who Make Music
By Ryan Reed
Blurry ethical lines, unexpected gigs, conflicts of interest — a peculiar career path of overlapping passions.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Goodbye Pork Pie Hat / Brush With the Blues (live)"
Jeff Beck
With Tal Wilkenfeld on bass and Vinnie Colaiuta on drums.
Video of the day
"Still on the Run: The Jeff Beck Story"
Matthew Longfellow
2018 documentary, streaming at Amazon Prime and Apple+.
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