Tuesday, March 7, 2023

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 03/07/2023 - Remembering David Lindley & Spot, Legalizing Sampling, Hybe x SM, Lil' Kim, Hardy...

The song is the center of everything.
Open in browser
Tuesday March 07, 2023
REDEF
String theorist: David Lindley in Tokyo, March 1977.
(Koh Hasebe/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"The song is the center of everything."
- David Lindley, 1944 – 2023
rantnrave://
Up on the Sun

Today's newsletter goes out to the memories of DAVID LINDLEY and GLEN "SPOT" LOCKETT, two insufficiently heralded giants of two very different LA rock scenes who I originally knew as little more than names on the inner sleeves of a bunch of records I loved, but who I eventually came to recognize as monumental creative forces.

Today's newsletter also goes out to the very idea of album credits.

The sound of Lindley's slide (and non-slide) guitar and fiddle and mandolin (and another dozen or more stringed instruments) is deeply embedded in the sound of '70s-ish singer/songwriter rock and all that sprung from it in later years and decades. I used to think this lap steel and this slide, for example, is what guitars on rock songs inherently and automatically sounded like, which of course isn't true. They were choices made by one adventurous and curious player who so deeply understood what songs needed that he made his parts seem inherent and automatic. Which is why everyone from JACKSON BROWNE (with whom he's most associated) to LEONARD COHEN to WARREN ZEVON to LINDA RONSTADT to RY COODER to JOHN PRINE wanted him on their records, which is where I saw his name in small print over and over again (along with various permutations of these guys, his peers). And why he's still being widely copied today.

But you don't learn how to play various guitars and mandolin and banjo and fiddle and bouzouki and oud just to play with every singer/songwriter who's ever set foot in Los Angeles. In addition to forming EL RAYO-X, a kind of blues-reggae-rock party band, in the '80s, Lindley went on to make a series of albums with experimental guitarist HENRY KAISER, in which they explored the music of Madagascar and, later, Norway with local musicians, and with Jordanian hand-drum master HANI NASER. He spent his life looking not for songs where "David Lindley" lines were needed, but rather songs where David Lindley could discover something else that needed playing. He was never much for parties, Jackson Browne once said: "He was always in his room with his instruments."

For a long time I wasn't sure if Spot actually existed. There wasn't an internet back then, nor any other obvious place (to me anyway) to find out why that anonymous-sounding name kept showing up on albums by BLACK FLAG, the MINUTEMEN, HÜSKER DÜ, the MEAT PUPPETS and others that were shaking up my world on a seemingly weekly basis, as punk-rock spiraled out in a thousand directions in real time. He was, it turned out, the house producer/engineer at SST RECORDS, working out of a studio in Redondo Beach, 20 very long miles from the Hollywood studios where Lindley plied his trade.

The house/producer engineer for '80s punk and indie rock was a jazz hound raised on THELONIOUS MONK, post-bop and jazz fusion. He found an army of kindred souls in the bands trying to break away not only from the bloat of commercial pop and rock but also from the strictures of punk. "I like listening to really out-there jazz... where people really took chances," he said in 2018. "Suddenly, the chances were happening in a different way, but they were *big* chances that people were taking."

SST's microscopic budgets, which required him and his bands to work fast and efficiently, with minimal if any overdubs, played to his jazz sensibilities, too: "Everything was based on the idea of playing the music right when you were playing it live, and then recording that."

Spot, who was also a writer and accomplished photographer, didn't move on to become a big-budget rock producer or punk-rock label boss, and nothing in his bio suggested he ever wanted to. He wasn't a bizzer. He was an artist to the core. A Celtic and folk artist, to be specific, at his next stop, Austin, Texas, because punk means never having to do what everyone else thinks you should do. "I thought, 'Jesus, Spot is like swimming upstream backwards through the history of American music,'" said JOE CARDUCCI, an old friend from his SST days. Is there a better way to swim?

Traveling on Now

And while we're swimming upstream backwards through American music, let's offer one more dedication, to the last surviving original member of LYNYRD SKYNYRD, GARY ROSSINGTON, who we also lost this weekend. There are two signature guitar parts on "FREE BIRD," the epic closing song on Lynyrd Skynyrd's first album. There's the scorching four-minute classic-rock hall of fame solo that ends it, which is the work of ALLEN COLLINS. But first there's the heart-on-its-sleeve slide-guitar lead that introduces the main melody and then duets with singer RONNIE VAN ZANT throughout the song's first half. That's Rossington. "The lap steel," David Lindley once said, "was my way of singing—of playing a vocal." Same principle. That slide guitar is Rossington's lead vocal. And it's amazing.

Rossington also co-wrote several Skynyrd songs, including "Sweet Home Alabama," "What's Your Name" and "Simple Man," and was one of the survivors the 1977 plane crash that killed lead singer Ronnie Van Zant, guitarist Steve Gaines and backup singer Cassie Gaines. He and Collins, who also survived the crash, went on to form the short-lived Rossington-Collins Band, after which Rossington returned to a regrouped Lynyrd Skynyrd, with which he played for most of the rest of his life.

These Days

New York Times money columnist ANN CARRNS' tips for buying in-demand concert tickets (in short: ignore the on-sale date and wait until prices plummet closer to the show date) won't be breaking or shocking news to anyone who's tried to finesse their way into a stadium or arena in recent years. But it raises, or at least implies, questions that don't often get raised in the mainstream debate about ticketing that I'll be circling back to later this week... KAROL G's MAÑANA SERÁ BONITO is the first all-Spanish album by a female artist to hit #1 on the BILLBOARD 200 (the first male artist was BAD BUNNY, in 2020)... Fifty best songs by fake bands... SIRIUSXM laid off 475 employees Monday, 8% of its staff... The JAZZ JOURNALISTS ASSOCIATION reports that JAZZTIMES magazine has been sold and the entire staff has been laid off—but it's still publishing, leading to this embarrassment... SCREAMING FEMALES finally make it to Alaska... EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE and ELVIS were among the winners at the GUILD OF MUSIC SUPERVISORS AWARDS... SOY BOMB reveals all.

Rest in Peace Also

Prolific Nashville session bassist MICHAEL RHODES, who played with basically everyone who ever recorded in that city, including Dolly Parton, Willie Nelson, George Strait, Kenny Chesney, Elton John and Etta James... Renowned Architect (and amateur pianist) RAFAEL VIÑOLY, whose commissions included Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts in Philadelphia... RHONDESIA BELTON, one of two women killed in a stampede at a GloRilla concert Sunday night in Rochester, N.Y. (the second woman has yet to be identified)... Multi-instrumentalist ERIC ALAN LIVINGSTON of San Francisco experimental metal band Mamaleek... STEVE CAIN, singer of Cincinnati thrash band Critical Khaos, who was a victim of a horrifying and heartbreaking murder-suicide on Feb. 27.

- Matty Karas, curator
what makes a man start fires?
Slate
It's Time to Legalize Sampling
By Dan Charnas
Hip-hop is 50 years old, but the genius idea at its core remains unprotected. Here's how we can change that.
CNN
BTS mastermind on HYBE-SM deal: We're not 'trying to take over the whole industry'
By Michelle Toh and Richard Quest
The billionaire mastermind behind some of the world's biggest K-pop stars is pushing back on accusations that he's trying to monopolize the Korean music industry, just days before a major potential deal is expected.
Chicago Reader
Proposed fee hikes on U.S. visas will hurt independent music and inhibit tours from abroad
By Jamie Ludwig
Time is running out to oppose the change, but you can still stand up for international artists and small music businesses in the States.
Rolling Stone
There Were Sidemen. And Then There Was David Lindley
By David Browne
The legendary musician didn't just accompany L.A. rock legends - he shaped the sound of an era.
Red Bull Music Academy
RETRO READ: Behind the Sound Of American Punk
By Sam Backer
Spot, a house engineer and producer for SST Records, gave early '80s hardcore the space to be itself.
The New York Times
Tips on Buying Tickets the Next Time Your Favorite Singer Is in Town
By Ann Carrns
Our columnist thought she'd gotten a good deal on Bruce Springsteen tickets. But could she have gotten a better one? Here's what she learned.
Pitchfork
6 Ways to Fix the Broken Concert Ticketing System
By Marc Hogan
Scoring tickets for your favorite artist's tour seems tougher than ever, but there are practical steps the industry could take to make things better.
VICE
These People Wait Hours To Buy Concert Tickets so You Don't Have To
By Micah Avry Guiao
Securing concert tickets has never been this difficult. What if you could skip the queue?
Billboard
Are Older Listeners the Key to Unlocking Streaming's Growth Potential?
By Glenn Peoples
The often overlooked 55-and-over age group's monthly online listening rate stands at just 53%, leaving lots of room to expand that audience.
Aeon Magazine
What drum machines can teach us about artificial intelligence
By Jack Stilgoe
As AI drum machines embrace humanising imperfections, what does this mean for 'real' drummers and the soul of music?
zen arcade
Guitar World
RETRO READ: Gary Rossington recalls the making of 10 landmark Lynyrd Skynyrd tracks: 'The more wild experiences you have the better songs you can write'
By Alan Paul
In this classic interview, the late Southern rock icon discusses Ronnie Van Zant's habit of writing lyrics in the shower, how "Sweet Home Alabama" started as a joke and why the band's record label begged them not to include "Free Bird" on their debut album.
CNN
Why the 'zip-a-dee-doo-dah' lyric is so controversial — and why Disneyland has removed it
By Jordan Valinsky and Natasha Chen
Disneyland has removed the "zip-a-dee-doo-dah" lyric played during its park parades because it comes from a movie that has been criticized for racist portrayals of Black Americans.
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
Two women killed in stampede at GloRilla concert in Rochester
By Victoria E. Freile
Just after 11 p.m., concert-goers were leaving the venue when the crowd started to surge and rush toward the exit, said Rochester Police Chief David Smith. There were reports of individuals hearing what they believed to be gunshots inside the venue, "causing the crowd to panic," he said.
The Guardian
Why are there so few women headlining music festivals?
By Rhian Jones
Glastonbury has been criticised for its all-male headliners but it's far from the only one - the result of an industry that has deprioritised women for decades.
Andscape
In the history of hip-hop fashion, there's no ignoring Lil' Kim
By Channing Hargrove
She paved the way for female rappers to front fashion campaigns, be a designer's muse or star in major ad campaigns.
NPR Music
The 2023 Oscars' best original song nominees, cruelly ranked
By Stephen Thompson
This year's crop may not have a James Bond theme or a ubiquitous Disney banger, but it's got range -- thanks in part to a viral dance number from "RRR."
The New Yorker
Can Hardy Revive 'Butt Rock'?
By Kelefa Sanneh
Onstage, the musician plays the role of a small-town boy who is too rock for country, and too country for rock and roll.
Rolling Stone
Two Years Ago, Pheelz Was at a Low Point. Then He Posted a Song Snippet on TikTok
By Nelson C.J.
Pheelz produced some of Afrobeats' biggest hits but, by 2021, he couldn't afford bottled water. But after "Finesse" became a surprise global smash, his career found new life.
Eli Enis
On Whirr and Navigating Canceled Bands in Canon
By Eli Enis
What do we do with socially discarded bands when they're still materially present?
Culture Notes of an Honest Broker
How Wayne Shorter Transformed Jazz Composition in the 1960s
By Ted Gioia
I look back at 10 historic performances.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Ambilanao Zaho"
Henry Kaiser/David Lindley/Rossy
From "A World Out of Time: Henry Kaiser and David Lindley in Madagascar" (1992).
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

Disrupting the Disruptors: Convening a Research Discussion To Mitigate Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals

At NCCIH, we focus on supporting research that helps us understand whole person health... ...