Friday, March 17, 2023

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 03/17/2023 - Two From U2, Lil Yachty's Psychedelic Relaunch, Swifties Need a Miracle, Hip-Hop at 50, M83...

With Ticketmaster just completely failing at their one job, people have really stepped up to make sure that actual fans are in the audience.
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Friday March 17, 2023
REDEF
Stylish like Billie Eilish: Armani White performs at a Def Jam/Vibe showcase at SXSW, Austin, March 16, 2023.
(Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"With Ticketmaster just completely failing at their one job, people have really stepped up to make sure that actual fans are in the audience."
- Amanda Jacobsmeyer, founder of the TS Fandom Fund, one of several groups helping Taylor Swift fans find Eras Tour tickets at fair prices
rantnrave://
It's Friday (Bloody Friday)

And there are two new U2 projects, both of which emphasize the "2" in U2: A Disney+ documentary about two of the four members of the band (with help from DAVID LETTERMAN) and an album of stripped-down rerecordings credited to the full band but not always featuring the full band. Interviewer: "Is this U2 reinterpreting U2 songs, or is it BONO and the EDGE reinterpreting U2 songs?" Edge: "Ooh, a very good question." A reminder, this is, of how rare, unlikely and honestly impressive it is that a rock band, or any band, has gone 45 years with its original lineup intact. And though Bono tells the LA Times that "we have *all* quiet quit U2 over the years" and though a few people on the internet are unnecessarily outraged that the band plans to play a few shows in Las Vegas with a different drummer while LARRY MULLEN JR. recovers from surgery, there are no signs anyone is actually quitting. But "they didn't need to play on all the songs" on the 40-track SONGS OF SURRENDER, the singer adds, "because then we'd be just a rock band." The album features some pointed lyrical rewrites, like "WALK ON," originally written for Burmese Nobel Prize winner AUNG SAN SUU KYI but now about Ukraine President VOLODYMYR ZELENSKY. "I felt so let down by Aung San Suu Kyi, like many people did," Bono says. "So I gave the song to another figure." Running to not stand still, you might say.

In other it's-time-for-a-change news, 100 GECS, who made their name with loud, unpredictable, genre-jumping, short-attention-span hyperpop, have followed up the "digital glitchiness" of their debut with "an alt-rock album," which is how the New York Times describes the equally unpredictable journey to their second album, 10,000 GECS. "We could've made an album in the style of the last one quickly," LAURA LES tells the paper. "The songs would've been pretty OK. It was just boring"... T-PAIN's ON TOP OF THE COVERS is a covers album, and one of the covers is "WAR PIGS" and it's kind of amazing...On PRAISE A LORD WHO CHEWS BUT DOES NOT CONSUME; (OR SIMPLY, HOT BETWEEN WORLDS), experimental rocker YVES TUMOR seems to be going for "an ecstatic fusion of alt-rock and R&B, seeking the mysterious nexus where LOVELESS meets PURPLE RAIN," says Pitchfork, and "it's difficult to imagine many richer-sounding rock records being released this year." Also, that title.

Plus: New albums from EST Gee, Lil Keed (RIP), M83, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Aly & AJ (released Wednesday), Lil Pump, Princess Nokia, Kahn & Neek, Julian Lage, Ralph Towner, Billy Childs, Dan Tepfer, Kosaya Gora (aka Kedr Livanskiy and Flaty), Kamal., Genevieve Artadi, Dorothy Moskowitz, the Van Pelt (emo band's first album in 25 years), All Time Low, Now More Than Ever (feat. Tyson Ritter of All-American Rejects), Gideon, Úlfúð, Kruelty, Deathcrash, Black Honey, C.M. Talkington, the Lost Days, Doug Paisley, Band of Heathens, Emilíana Torrini & the Colorist Orchestra, the Cash Box Kings and Daddy Long Legs... And four previously unreleased songs from Taylor Swift, who opens her Eras Tour tonight in Glendale, Ariz., which has been renamed Swift City, Ariz., for the occasion. They didn't even rename it for the Super Bowl.

Friday I'm in Etc Etc Etc

In the continuing saga of the CURE's establishment-tweaking ticket rollout, TICKETMASTER has agreed to refund up to $10 per ticket for every verified fan who bought tickets when the band's North American tour went on sale Wednesday. This is according to Cure frontman ROBERT SMITH, who publicly complained about Ticketmaster's service fees on on-sale day and apparently found a sympathetic (or embarrassed) ear at the ticketing giant... In related news, SWIFTIES take care of their own... Reports of mixtape portal DATPIFF's death appear to have been greatly exaggerated, but critic JAYSON BUFORD, in "A Requiem for the Datpiff Era," wonders if its moment has passed even if the site itself hasn't. In the golden age of Datpiff, Buford writes, "a kid could download a zip file and receive the new wave of hip-hop at that moment." The end, he suggests, came "sometime around Drake's 'If Youre Reading This Its Too Late' in 2015, [when] the line between street mixtapes and albums was obliterated"... Performers JUNIOR KIMBROUGH, ESTHER PHILLIPS and JOSH WHITE and Memphis historian and documentarian DAVID EVANS are among the names who'll be inducted into the BLUES HALL OF FAME in May... Citing a "shift" in workplace conditions after EPIC GAMES bought the company a year ago, staffers at BANDCAMP have organized and are seeking to hold a union election. CEO ETHAN DIAMOND said the company is "reviewing the petition to understand their concerns"... JANINE NABERS and DONALD GLOVER's limited series SWARM, premiering today on AMAZON PRIME, is a dark study of an extremely obsessed fan of a fictionalized version of an eerily familiar pop star. Or, to quote Rolling Stone, "What If a BEYONCÉ Stan Became a Serial Killer?" DOMINIQUE FISHBACK stars as Dre, the fan... Netflix's animated AGENT ELVIS, also dropping today, imagines the King of Rock and Roll (voiced by MATTHEW MCCONAUGHEY) moonlighting as a government spy. Shoutout rock singer/songwriter JOHN EDDIE, with whom I share some Asbury Park history, who co-created the show with PRISCILLA PRESLEY.

Rest in Peace

PAUL BEASLEY, tenor singer in the Blind Boys of Alabama. He previously sang with the Mighty Clouds of Joy and the Gospel Keynotes... Contemporary classical composer LEWIS SPRATLAN, whose Pulitzer Prize-winning opera "Life Is a Dream" wasn't performed until 10 years after it won the prize in 2000... EDWARD WALTERS, a woodwind player and longtime musical contractor at the National Theater in Washington, D.C., and Wolf Trap in Virginia.

- Matty Karas, curator
stories for boys
Rolling Stone
Lil Yachty's Psychedelic Relaunch: 'I Don't Have To Be High To Make It Sound High'
By Andre Gee
An honest, at times contentious conversation with the artist behind one of 2023's boldest left turns.
The New York Times
Taylor Swift Fans Needed a Miracle. Here's How They Got Tickets.
By Joe Coscarelli
After "historic demand" led to a Ticketmaster debacle, the singer's most devoted online fans sprang into action to get each other into the Eras Tour at fair prices.
The New Yorker
Hip-Hop at Fifty: An Elegy
By Jelani Cobb
A generation is still dying younger than it should--this time, of "natural causes."
Billboard
What Kind of Advantage Do Longer Albums Have in the Streaming Age?
By Glenn Peoples
With fans able to stream an unlimited amount of music for a fixed price, it behooves artists to pad the length of their latest releases.
The Guardian
'More meaningful connections': will Spotify's updates mean a proper payday for artists?
By Rhian Jones
The biggest ever update to Spotify's app is set to bring artists and fans closer together. But given the platform's longstanding lean-back experience, has the horse already bolted?
The Ringer
The Past, Present, and Future of M83
By Ian Cohen
After nearly seven years between proper albums, Anthony Gonzalez returns this week with 'Fantasy,' his immersive ninth album that hits his nostalgic sweet spot but doesn't wallow in his history.
Vulture
Inside the Weirdest Oscars Performance of All Time
By Jason P. Frank
"Those were Michelle's hot-dog fingers."
Los Angeles Times
'RRR's' 'Naatu Naatu' made Oscars history. But South Asian dancers feel betrayed
By Jen Yamato and Helen Li
The failure to showcase more South Asian talent in the performance of 'RRR's' 'Naatu Naatu' was a misstep, dancers and choreographers say.
Music Industry Blog
Reality bites: Recorded music market 2022
By Mark Mulligan
Following a spectacular year of growth in 2021, global recorded music revenue growth slowed significantly in 2022 due to the combined impact of global economic headwinds and growth slowdown in mature streaming markets. Context, though, is everything.
NPR
Megan's Rule: Being exceptional doesn't make you the exception
By Gabby Bulgarelli, Rodney Carmichael and Sidney Madden
It felt like the December 2022 trial of Tory Lanez sparked a divide in hip-hop, but it just stoked the flames of a 50-year-long battle for Black women to be heard. In the first episode of our new season, we take you into Megan Thee Stallion's testimony to unpack the impact of misogynoir on rap.
11 o'clock tick tock
Billboard
With K-Pop 'in Crisis,' Hybe Is Focused on Global Expansion Beyond the Genre
By Glenn Peoples
Chairman Bang Si-hyuk says Hybe must have a "sense of urgency" in efforts to grow outside its home country.
LAist Studios
K-Pop Dreaming Ep 5: Solid
By Vivian Yoon
An out-of-the-blue invitation brought Korean American college student Jae Chong and his friends to Korea when K-pop was taking off. Their group, Solid, would become the Kings of R&B and the first Korean American act to make a splash in the Korean music industry.
The New York Times
The Poignant Music of Melting Ice
By Grayson Haver Currin
Scientists and musicians are recording the sounds of unfreezing water to document and predict the effects of climate change. Can their work help slow it, too?
Music Business Worldwide
'A lot of people are advocating for changes in the models of existing streaming services. I feel like that ship has sailed'
By Rhian Jones
Music/tech consultant Vickie Nauman talks about the next evolution after on-demand streaming, the most exciting opportunities in Web3, why TikTok might be on its way out, and much more.
Los Angeles Times
Donald Glover and Janine Nabers' new show 'Swarm' takes the Beyhive to the extreme
By Sonaiya Kelley
Donald Glover and 'Atlanta' scribe Janine Nabers' latest show, 'Swarm,' offers an 'American Psycho' take on stan culture.
Asbury Park Press
This Jersey Shore rocker made The King a bad-ass spy on new Netflix comedy 'Agent Elvis'
By Alex Biese
John Eddie has jammed with the Boss and been covered by Kid Rock. Now he is collaborating with Priscilla Presley for "Agent Elvis" on Netflix.
The Guardian
The rise of Morgan Wallen, America's controversial country music star
By Adrian Horton
The singer's record-breaking success spotlights the divide between coastal city culture and what's played elsewhere.
Billboard
Why the Music Industry Must Embrace Meritocracy for True Diversity, Inclusion
By Janishia Jones
For far too long, the music industry has perpetuated a system that benefits a select few at the expense of marginalized communities.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Echolalia"
Yves Tumor
From "Praise a Lord Who Chews but Which Does Not Consume; (Or Simply, Hot Between Worlds)," out today on Warp.
Video of the day
"Swarm"
Janine Nabers/Donald Glover/Prime Video
Premiering today on Prime.
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