Tuesday, March 21, 2023

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 03/21/2023 - Rant Through This, Taylor Swift on Tour, Adele in Vegas, Ultra v. Ultra, BSS, Myke Towers...

The bar [at the Rock Hall of Fame] is demonstrably lower for men to hop over (or slither under). The Rock Hall recognised Pearl Jam about four seconds after they became eligible—and yet Chaka Khan, eligible since 2003, languishes with seven nominations. All is not lost, though—the Rock Hall is doing a special programme for Women's History Month on her stagewear.
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Tuesday March 21, 2023
REDEF
Hole's Courtney Love at the Video Music Awards, Sept. 7, 1995.
(Kevin Mazur/WireImage/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"The bar [at the Rock Hall of Fame] is demonstrably lower for men to hop over (or slither under). The Rock Hall recognised Pearl Jam about four seconds after they became eligible—and yet Chaka Khan, eligible since 2003, languishes with seven nominations. All is not lost, though—the Rock Hall is doing a special programme for Women's History Month on her stagewear."
- Courtney Love
rantnrave://
Hall Parts

MEG WHITE, who's nominated for the ROCK & ROLL HALL OF FAME this year as one half of the WHITE STRIPES, didn't ask to be rock's top trending subject on the internet last week, but there she was, the drummer of "THE HARDEST BUTTON TO BUTTON," "FELL IN LOVE WITH A GIRL" and "SEVEN NATION ARMY" at the center of a days-long discussion about whether she was good at her job. Happy WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH.

White, who didn't bother participating in said discussion, was replaced on the trending pop chart at the end of the week by COURTNEY LOVE, who got there by ripping the Rock Hall to shreds, in an essay in the Guardian and a days-long tweet storm, for its not-so-hot record of honoring women. Amplifying the well-researched work of feminist critics of the Hall including JESSICA HOPPER and EVELYN MCDONNELL, Love named names (of women who belong in the Hall and the men who've shunned them) and politely suggested the institution "go to hell in a handbag." (I say politely because later she let her followers know the Guardian had edited out her suggestion that the Hall is "run by a governing board made up of musics most malevolent, a virtual black hole of the hellish.")

Some random information she shared: 8.48% of the Hall's current inductees are women. None of them is BIG MAMA THORNTON. PEARL JAM got in right away while it took NINA SIMONE more than 30 years. I'm reminded of a scene in the 1994 movie QUIZ SHOW, where ROB MORROW, playing a government lawyer investigating the 1950s quiz show scandal, tells two TV producers how one of their former contestants tried to tell him they'd rigged their show to make sure every Jewish winner is eventually beaten by a non-Jew, who goes on to win more money. Crazy, right?, the lawyer asks. They all laugh. "The thing is," the lawyer finally says, "I looked it up. It's true."

Truth, as a singer/rapper who'll officially be eligible for the Hall in 15 years tells us, hurts. It should be noted that the Hall's current leadership is clearly aware of these truths and has spent the past couple years trying to address them, inducting TINA TURNER, CAROLE KING and the GO-GO's in 2021 and PAT BENATAR, CARLY SIMON, DOLLY PARTON, EURYTHMICS, ELIZABETH COTTEN and SYLVIA ROBINSON in 2022. But it'll take decades to catch up with the truth at that pace. Something a little more drastic may be required on the part of the voters, who include too many Jacks (full disclosure: I'm one of them) and not enough Megs, as well as the nominating committee. In those same couple years, the committee has used its Musical Excellence Award (formerly the, um, "Sidemen" award) to unilaterally induct six men on top of the voters' picks, and no women. In the award's two-decade history, it's been bestowed on 42 men and one woman. Musically excellent bass legend CAROL KAYE remains unrecognized and uninducted. Musically excellent drummer SHEILA E and singers MARIAH CAREY and KAREN CARPENTER remain on the outside, looking in.

All of this matters, Love wrote, because "The Rock Hall is a king-making force in the global music industry. Induction affects artists' ticket prices, their performance guarantees, the quality of their reissue campaigns (if they get reissued at all). These opportunities are life-changing—the difference between touring secondary-market casinos opening for a second-rate comedian, or headlining respected festivals... Particularly for veteran female artists, induction confers a status that directly affects the living they are able to make."

Or, to put it another way, giving women their flowers (and not mocking their musicianship) during Women's History Month is nice, but how about giving them something a little more concrete and bankable. Or, to put it the way Courtney Love tweets it: "Do your work BRO."

Etc Etc Etc

The music biz lays down principles for supporting human creativity in the age of artificial intelligence, including requiring that all copyrighted works used to train AI models be licensed, and that copyright not be granted to "output solely created and generated by machines." (BAD BUNNY may want to take note of the demand that "performers' and athletes' voices and likenesses must only be used with their consent and fair market compensation")... Still needed: principles for supporting human creativity in the age of ELON MUSK... PETER GABRIEL, meanwhile, says no job, including his, is "safe from AI," and so "we might as well just grab the algorithms and dance with them, rather than fight them"... "You finally got justice Jah," XXXTENTACION's mother wrote on Instagram Monday after three men were convicted of murdering the rapper outside a Deerfield Beach, Fla., motorcycle store in 2018. XXX, who was 20 when he was killed, was born Jahseh Onfroy. The first-degree murder convictions come with mandatory life sentences... An analysis of all 44 songs TAYLOR SWIFT player in her three-hour-plus tour opener Friday in Glendale, Ariz. (She's promised to vary the setlist throughout the tour)... Russian soprano ANNA NETREBKO's refusal to denounce VLADIMIR PUTIN after Russia's invasion of Ukraine cost her a string of performances at the METROPOLITAN OPERA in New York last year. But those cancellations have now cost the Met $200,000, with an arbitrator ruling the diva "had a right" to support her country's president and the opera company had no grounds to break its contracts with her. On Friday, the Met fired Netrebko's husband, tenor YUSIF EYVAZOV, from an upcoming production of TOSCA but said it would still pay him... GLADYS KNIGHT, BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN and JOSÉ FELICIANO will receive National Medals of Arts this afternoon from PRESIDENT BIDEN... BONO and the EDGE at the TINY DESK... T-PAIN's cover of BLACK SABBATH's "WAR PIGS" "is awesome and the haters need to apologize," declares the metal site MetalSucks, whose word is final and true.

Rest in Peace

Parliament-Funkadelic singer FUZZY HASKINS, who was an original member of the doo-wop and R&B group the Parliaments in the 1960s and continued on as an essential member of Parliament and Funkadelic through the late 1970s. His lead vocals included "I Got a Thing, You Got a Thing, Everybody's Got a Thing" and "Miss Lucifers Love." After leaving the P-Funk orbit, Haskins released two solo albums, became a preacher and performed with other P-Funk alums as the Original P... Mexican singer/saxophonist FITO OLIVARES, known as the King of Cumbia... Songwriter JERRY SAMUELS, aka one hit wonder NAPOLEON XIV, whose moment in the pop sun was the 1966 novelty smash "They're Coming to Take Me Away, Ha-Haaa!"... Original Hawkwind guitarist MICK SLATTERY... Country publicist and Country Music Hall of Fame exec LIZ THIELS.

- Matty Karas, curator
grace jones
The Guardian
Why are women so marginalised by the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame?
By Courtney Love
Barely 8% of its inductees are female. The canon-making doesn't just reek of sexist gatekeeping, but also purposeful ignorance and hostility.
The Washington Post
Taylor Swift's Eras Tour opening weekend: Tears, joy and 'therapy'
By Emily Yahr
Fans descend on Glendale, Ariz. (a.k.a. 'Swift City') for a long-awaited chance to commune with their pop icon, revel in her lyrics and express their true selves.
NPR Music
At Adele's Vegas residency, intimacy is the ultimate luxury
By Bilal Qureshi
The pop star has always been an uneasy match for the demands of touring. In the controlled stillness of a Las Vegas theater, she may have finally found her place.
Variety
Which Ultra? Dance Music Festival, Label and Publisher Share Name but Are Not Connected, Market Confusion Be Damned
By Lily Moayeri
Confusion in the music space and a tangled legal web for entrepreneur Patrick Moxey.
Billboard
How Should Artists Face AI? Entertainment Industry Coalition Releases 7 Principles to Support 'Human Creativity'
By Kristin Robinson
Announced during a South by Southwest panel, the principles state that policymaking around the technology should keep "creators' interests" in mind.
Complex
Fans Are Using Artificial Intelligence to Turn Rap Snippets Into Full Songs
By Eric Skelton
Earlier this month, a few unreleased songs from Lil Uzi Vert and Juice WRLD went viral on Twitter. At first glance, this seemed fairly normal. Rap songs leak all the time, after all. But this time, something was different.
Tidal
BSS Interview: The Art of the Sub-Unit
By Jeff Benjamin
Within K-pop's mega-groups, sub-units have offered a chance for members to showcase their tastes and personalities. BSS, a branch off from Seventeen, is the latest sub-group to hit big.
Los Angeles Times
With co-signs from reggaeton's titans, Myke Towers sets sights on Latin music stardom
By Suzy Exposito
The third album from Puerto Rican MC Myke Towers features high-profile collaborations with icons Daddy Yankee, Ozuna and J Balvin.
Trapital
Africa's Music and Startup Future (with Mr Eazi)
By Dan Runcie and Mr Eazi
Investing in both artists and music, Mr Eazi models himself after Jay-Z. emPawa Africa is his Roc Nation. It's a talent incubator turned music service company with management, publishing, and distribution. 
gal-dem
Meet the musicians changing the face of who 'should' play the guitar
By Naomi Larsson Piñeda
The roots of guitar playing lie with women of colour and queer people of colour, but they've too often been glossed over.
the shangri-la's
Monday Magazine
U.S. woman brings ashes to Victoria to see Jason Isbell play on anniversary of partner's death
By Brendan Mayer
Jason Isbell proves music can heal.
NPR
'Swarm' is about how we're doing fandom wrong
By Aisha Harris
The bizarre new thriller created by Janine Nabers and Donald Glover serves as a spikey admonishment of celebrity worship. 
Los Angeles Times
'We're losing our Abbey Road': Famed L.A. music studio United Recording lays off staff
By Kenan Draughorne
The real-estate company that owns the studio responsible for landmark albums from Frank Sinatra to Green Day announces mass layoffs and a shift in direction.
The Quietus
Monsters Vs. Nazis: Margaret Killjoy Of Feminazgûl On Anti-Fascist Black Metal
By Margaret Killjoy
In an extract from the new book *Black Metal Rainbows*, writer and musician Margaret Killjoy insists you don't win a culture war by giving up ground.
Resident Advisor
The Sound of Resistance: A Year in Ukrainian Music
By Margareeta Evi
After 12 months of war, what's the sound of Ukraine? Our Kyiv city manager, Margareeta, sums up a year in music in the face of invasion.
Music Ally
We deserve better: no artist should be in the dark about their financial status
By Tracey Melnick
I still have people calling me with questions about royalties at companies I left years ago.
Music Business Worldwide
'Fake streams are nothing new, but the recordings business is only just waking up to the scale of the practice'
By Pascal Bittard
Though labels and distributors are not actively buying fake streams, evidence suggests there may be bad actors among managers and artist teams working within some of the industry's most lucrative rosters.
The Washington Post
King Charles needed a coronation song. He summoned Andrew Lloyd Webber.
By Peter Marks
The composer of "Cats" and "The Phantom of the Opera" adds a royal commission to his resume.
Andscape
Bobby Caldwell was a great artist -- and a continuing revelation for Black fans
By Keith Murphy
The 'What You Won't Do For Love' artist was covered or sampled by everyone from The Notorious B.I.G to John Legend.
Slate
Why a 'Canceled' Country Star Has America's No. 1 Song
By Chris Molanphy
Two years ago, Nashville tried to cut ties with Morgan Wallen. Now he's scored the genre's first real chart-topper in decades.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Teenage Whore"
Hole
"I've seen your repulsion and it looks real good on you." From "Pretty on the Inside" (1991).
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