Wednesday, March 8, 2023

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 03/08/2023 - TikTokify, Pras Stuck in the Middle, Trot, Kelela, Classical's Gender Barrier...

I'm not gonna go see Coldplay if they start their show at 9 o'clock, and there's an opening act. I want to hear Coldplay at 1 pm. And I think if we filled a stadium of people who want to see a matinee of Coldplay, I think we're gonna start a trend
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Wednesday March 08, 2023
REDEF
Rain parade: Izora Armstead (left) and Martha Wash of the Weather Girls, March 20, 1984,
(Harris/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"I'm not gonna go see Coldplay if they start their show at 9 o'clock, and there's an opening act. I want to hear Coldplay at 1 pm. And I think if we filled a stadium of people who want to see a matinee of Coldplay, I think we're gonna start a trend"
- Jamie Lee Curtis, morning person (and Oscar nominee)
rantnrave://
All You Do to Me Is Tik Tok

My rough notes on the "TikTokification" of SPOTIFY, which Bloomberg says will be announced today at Spot's "Stream On" event in Los Angeles (and online here) and which Music Ally says is much "more than just a TikTok clone." Both good early reads, especially STUART DREDGE's preview for Music Ally of the new vertical feed, which, he says, suddenly appeared on his Spotify mobile app Monday, two days early. No such luck for me.

1. As reported, it's a vertical scroll of recommended content that will, apparently, auto-play as you scroll. TIKTOK is an obvious analog but far from the only one. Vertical swiping is the new black.

2. Knee-jerk first reaction. On TikTok and similar services, users swipe vertically through videos, many of which have music on them, but it's a visual swipe, not an audio one. The image is what matters. Spotify's feed will be the reverse: audio content that happens to have some kind of visuals. Do users want to quickly swipe through audio snippets, a few seconds, if that, of this song, a few seconds of that one, in search of one that sparks interest? Does music work like that?

3. You know who quickly skips through audio snippets a few seconds, if that, at a time? A&R people. Programmers. Critics. Lots of other people in the music biz. They can hit "skip" almost as fast a TINDER users can swipe left. Maybe they know something. Maybe that's a perfect way for ordinary fans, too, to sample sounds in search of the one that hits them where it counts.

4. Early MTV, the MTV that everyone has nostalgia for, was literally an endless scroll of music clips with video attached. Pop fans really, really liked it. Now imagine they had the power to swipe past that JODECI video they didn't really want to see to get to the BELL BIV DEVOE video that they did. And that they could click on the BBD video and see all the BBD videos they wanted. And related content, personalized to them. Hey, throw some 10- and 20-second news bits into that scroll and you might just have me. (Is SWAY available?)

5. What Stuart Dredge actually wrote: They're cards, not videos. With albums, playlists, recommendations, podcasts, etc. And various choices for interaction on each one. "Spotify and TikTok don't have the same goals," he notes. "[TikTok] wants to keep you watching, swiping through video after video. The feed IS the experience, and it's geared towards keeping your eyeballs on it for as long as possible... Spotify wants you to listen to the music and podcasts that it's recommending. It wants you to tap through to listen in full, and it wants you to engage... Its success may be measured by how quickly you tap away from it, rather than how long you spend on it."

6. OK then. Different Tiks for different Toks. Seriously, though does Sway have some time on his hands?

Plus Also Too

SOUNDCLOUD is testing a "TikTok-like feed," too (that's Tech Crunch's words, not SoundCloud's)... MAREN MORRIS, BROTHERS OSBORNE, HAYLEY WILLIAMS, BRITTANY HOWARD and JASON ISBELL are among the artists who'll perform at a Nashville fundraiser later this month to protest Tennessee's proposed anti-drag legislation. The "Love Rising" concert March 20 at BRIDGESTONE ARENA March will benefit several Tennessee pride organizations... ROSALÍA didn't play Peru on her 2022 tour, so a Peruvian social media star decided to play a Rosalía concert himself for disappointed fans. IOANIS PATSIAS spent $100,000 recreating a Rosalía show, and sold out a 3,500-seat amphitheater in Lima... The 1970s late-night concert show THE MIDNIGHT SPECIAL has arrived on YouTube.

Rest in Peace

BRANDY MILLER of Rochester, N.Y., the second woman to die as a result of the stampede at a GloRilla show Sunday night. Rochester officials are investigating several possible causes of the crowd crush, and whether the Main Street Armory had sufficient safety measures in place. "We are going to hold people accountable," Mayor Malik Evans said.

- Matty Karas, curator
two tons o' fun
Music Ally
Spotify's new vertical discovery feed is more than just a TikTok clone
By Stuart Dredge
This piece was going to be a set of predictions for how Spotify's vertical feed would work and what that would mean, but it's been made much easier by the fact that on Monday, the new feed appeared in my Spotify mobile app. Here are some thoughts.
Money 4 Nothing
Spotify Redux (Quiet Threats + Desperate Flailing)
By Saxon Baird and Sam Backer
Even in the best of times, Spotify was handcuffed to the majors, and threatened by mega-sized competitors. And these are no longer the best of times. We dig into why Universal Music is thinking about ripping up a system that it (more or less) set up in the first place, and what that tells us about the power structure of the industry—and where it might be heading.
Bloomberg Businessweek
How One of the Fugees Got Sucked Into US-China Intrigue
By Jason Leopold, Matthew Campbell and Anthony Cormier
The Fugees' Pras Michél got entangled in one of the century's great financial scandals, mediated a high-stakes negotiation between global superpowers and may now face the consequences.
Los Angeles Times
K-Pop isn't the only hot ticket in Koreatown — how 'trot' is captivating immigrants
By Jeong Park
For many Korean immigrants, trot songs tug at the feelings they often suppress as they go about their daily routines in their adopted country.
LAist Studios
K-Pop Dreaming Ep 3: Trot
By Vivian Yoon
Vivian begins her exploration of K-Pop's history with a genre of Korean music called trot that emerged during the Japanese colonization of Korea. Her guide for this episode: her grandmother.
The Atlantic
Kelela Knows What Intimacy Sounds Like
By Hannah Giorgis
The elusive R&B singer wants to help you feel your feelings: "If you came to the club to dissociate, I'm 'bout to make you cry."
The New York Times
A Conductor's Battle With a Classical Music Gender Barrier
By Farah Nayeri
Claire Gibault has spent a lifetime fighting sexism and forging a path in a male-dominated profession. Her next targets: pay gaps and age discrimination.
NPR Music
Does 'Tár' tell us anything about Mahler's 5th Symphony?
By Tom Huizenga
The music that haunts the Oscar-nominated film is a calling card for conductor Rafael Payare.
XXL
Experts, Artists Share Ways New Rappers Are Finding Success
By Grant Rindner
The path to success in hip-hop is different for every rapper: quick and fast, slow and steady, up and down. How do new artists get on these days to achieve that goal?
Rolling Stone
RETRO READ: Meet Martha Wash: The Most Famous Unknown Singer of the '90s
By Jason Newman
How the voice behind "It's Raining Men," "Gonna Make You Sweat" and "Strike It Up" went from being a bullied victim to an industry pioneer.
weather girls
Bloomberg
Kakao Offers to Buy 35% of K-Pop Label SM to Fend Off Rival Hybe
By Sohee Kim and Shinhye Kang
Kakao Corp., South Korea's internet giant, launched a tender offer to become the largest shareholder of SM Entertainment Co., boosting the shares to a new high in an escalating battle for control of the K-pop label with entertainment powerhouse Hybe Co.
Trapital
What Music Can Actually Learn From Gaming
By Dan Runcie
The difference between music and games is less about a particular business model and more about the viability of multiple models.
KEXP
The McFerrin Family Legacy of Joy
By Dusty Henry, Madison McFerrin and Taylor McFerrin
KEXP's Dusty Henry talks with Madison and Taylor McFerrin about their family's musical legacy spanning generations.
NPR Music
The lessons of Wayne Shorter, engine of imagination
By Michelle Mercer
Shorter's biographer, Michelle Mercer, recalls the many "isms" and lessons she learned from her time working with the legendary composer and saxophonist on his biography, "Footprints."
CBS News
David Byrne on Talking Heads and following his own beat
By Anderson Cooper, David Byrne and 60 Minutes
Anderson Cooper speaks with David Byrne about his boundary-melding and eclectic body of work and artistic innovations.
The Trichordist
The Attack of the StubHub Future Bots: @davidclowery asks the Georgia Legislature when is a Georgia concert ticket a 'security'?
By Chris Castle
Silicon Valley's answer to Charles Ponzi may be called StubHub or its parent company Viagogo.
Consequence
Balance Sheet: Bella White Breaks Down Income and Expenses from 17 Concerts
By Wren Graves
The money the Canadian bluegrass/folk artist spent on travel, food, lodging, and personal entertainment, as well as her musical income from tour.
The Independent
Slowthai: 'My whole life people have told me I wasn't good enough to do this'
By Will Pritchard
Fresh off a string of £1 pub gigs and an album release, the rapper speaks with Will Pritchard about his left-turn to post-punk, trying out therapy (it's not for him), and shrugging off his tabloid bad boy image.
Switched On Pop
Switched On Pop: How John Denver Got Huge In Asia
By Charlie Harding and Nate Sloan
The globalization of "Take Me Home, Country Roads."
The New York Times
Glen 'Spot' Lockett: The Punk Producer's 10 Essential Recordings
By Christopher R. Weingarten
As the house producer for SST Records, Lockett shaped the sound of hardcore from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s. He died last week at 72.
what we're into
Music of the day
"I Don't Know Anybody Else"
Black Box
Lead vocal by an uncredited Martha Wash (and good luck finding this version, the single, on YouTube without the video that she wasn't invited to be in).
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