Tuesday, May 23, 2023

jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 05/23/2023 - Condition of the Art, Janelle Monáe, Peso Pluma, Kesha, The Grateful Dead...

[Saxophone] is a complicated instrument, 24 keys, and to be able to make music with that while remaining present mentally is like, 'that's a heady person.' You're moving your hands really fast and you're very in tune. It's like a dancer or pole dancer or stripper, very intuitive and very self-confident.
Open in browser
Tuesday May 23, 2023
REDEF
Singin' in the rain: Taylor Swift at Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, Mass., May 20, 2023.
(TAS Rights Management/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"[Saxophone] is a complicated instrument, 24 keys, and to be able to make music with that while remaining present mentally is like, 'that's a heady person.' You're moving your hands really fast and you're very in tune. It's like a dancer or pole dancer or stripper, very intuitive and very self-confident."
- Masego, whose self-titled second album is out now on EQT/Capitol.
rantnrave://
Condition of the Art

Through what lens should the music industry view ANDY WARHOL's series of silk-screens of PRINCE, which were based on a portrait by rock photographer LYNN GOLDSMITH, and which were the subject of a landmark Supreme Court decision handed down last week?

Was Warhol akin to human musicians ED SHEERAN, ROBIN THICKE and PHARRELL WILLIAMS, writing and producing songs that seem to borrow a vibe, and maybe a bit of rhythm and/or melody, from songs that came before them? Or was he more like a non-human artificial intelligence program listening to any number of existing songs and spitting out endless new ones that literally reuse pieces of their DNA? Should he have been free to do what he wanted, unbound by any obligations to his sources, as the music industry wishes for Sheeran, Thicke and Williams, or did he owe a perpetual debt to his sources (even long after his death), as the industry says A.I. will have to?

Or was Warhol not quite either of those things? What options are available in between? Was he a visual sampler? An interpolater? Folk artist? Pop star? Postmodern visionary? An artist being an artist? More than one of the above? Can a visual artist's output be mapped against the creation of sound recordings in those kinds of terms, or any terms at all?

Were record companies and publishers right to worry that a decision in favor the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, in the case of Warhol v. Goldsmith, would have opened the door for future A.I. programs to rob human musicians blind? Was the actual decision—a 7-2 ruling in favor of Goldsmith that the majority said was about a specific magazine contract and the legal definition of fair use and not about Warhol's right to create the artworks in the first place—as narrow as the majority made it out be? Or will it have much broader implications as everyone else, including dissenting JUSTICE ELENA KAGAN, fears? Would a win for Warhol's foundation have led to an absurd broadening of the meaning of fair use and created a free-for-all for artistic appropriators? Will the actual decision lead to an absurd narrowing of what artists are allowed to do?

Are those record companies and publishers right to be happy with the outcome of the case? Is it logical, and workable, for them to have wanted Ed Sheeran to win and Andy Warhol to lose?

Do we want Lynn Goldsmith's photos and Andy Warhol's silk-screens to be equally free to exist? Beyond the narrow specifics of the Goldsmith-Warhol-Vanity Fair legal dispute, which I think I understand as much as a layman can and for which I am sympathetic toward the photographer, what should the art industry's and the music industry's and the legal system's goals be? What's the best wide angle lens for all of this?

Can we—please—start with the idea that Warhol was an artist who made important, beautiful and provocative art? Does it matter if not everyone agrees with those adjectives? Can we simply agree that it's art and that we want it to be made and we want it to exist? And that we want future artists to follow their muse wherever it may lead, even if it means provocatively or transformatively or mysteriously appropriating from Warhol himself? And can we root for, and strive for, decisions, legal and otherwise, that lead toward that simple goal?

(And finally, a correction: In Friday's newsletter, I mistakenly said the labels and publishers had sided with Warhol in the court case, an obvious mistake that was easy to catch if you followed the link in that same sentence. They were, of course, on Goldsmith's side. Thanks to all who corrected me, and my apologies.)

Etc Etc Etc

TAYLOR SWIFT's ERAs tour has been welcomed with government-sanctioned celebrations across the US. In Massachusetts this weekend, it was greeted with pouring rain and legislation. The so-called "Taylor Swift Bill," introduced in the state House and Senate, would require transparent, all-in ticket pricing and prohibit dynamic pricing, the controversial practice of changing concert ticket prices in real time as demand fluctuates. Massachusetts joins a number of states and the federal government in trying to rein in ticketing practices that have increasingly angered fans of several artists, including Swift... Record execs are continuing to press streaming services to raise their prices and Bloomberg's LUCAS SHAW says it's "only a matter of time" before they get their biggest wish, a bump in the price of SPOTIFY's basic subscription price in the US. If Spotify doesn't act on its own soon, Shaw reports, the record companies will force its hand by requiring it in their next contracts with the streaming giant... Imagine Hollywood's reaction if federal prosecutors went after filmmakers, in court, for glamorizing drugs and having characters murdered. Record companies should be having that reaction now, publicly and loudly... And every artist who plays anywhere in Florida should do this. The more in violation of state law, the better... JOSH FREESE, whose previous gigs have included WEEZER, NINE INCH NAILS and GUNS N' ROSES, has officially been appointed to the most talked-about drum seat in rock and roll.

Rest in Peace

Punk and metal bassist ALGY WARD. He was a member of Australian punk pioneers the Saints and first generation UK punks the Damned before co-founding New Wave of British Heavy Metal band Tank, with whom he played for most of the rest of his life... British poet, singer and percussionist PETE BROWN, best known as the lyricist for several classic Cream songs, including "White Room" and "Sunshine of Your Love." Brown maintained a lifelong songwriting partnership with Cream's Jack Bruce... Country booking agent GEORGE MOFFETT, founder of Ohio powerhouse Variety Attractions.

- Matty Karas, curator
andy warhol looks a scream
Rolling Stone
Janelle Monáe Is Back From the Future and Ready to Play
By Mankaprr Conteh
Ahead of her most sumptuous album yet, the superstar goes deep on the evolution that's made her more nude, more present, and less anxious.
Billboard
Attack of the Clones: AI Soundalike Tools Spin Complex Web of Legal Questions for Music
By Nick Breen and Josh Love
"Will the music industry embark on another endless game of Whac-A-Mole…or will they find a way to embrace the new technology?"
Bloomberg
Why Your Spotify Subscription Is About to Get More Expensive
By Lucas Shaw
After almost a decade of strong growth, the music industry is slowing down.
Los Angeles Times
We asked Peso Pluma about his first hit. Then he hung up on us
By Suzy Exposito
Peso Pluma is enjoying unprecedented success for a regional Mexican artist, topping the Billboard Hot 100 and Spotify's Top 50. Just don't ask him about that one song.
The Face
DJ Absolutely S***: the unstoppable rise of cringe names in dance music
By Jumi Akinfenwa
In defiance of prudish algorithms, a new wave of silly selectors are heading to a good club near you.
Music Business Worldwide
TikTok is starting to look more and more like SoundCloud
By Murray Stassen
TikTok music strategy moves up a gear with new music discovery hub, and exclusive deals with indie artists.
The Guardian
Speak now: why pop stars must do more to defend LGBTQ+ fans
By Jeffrey Ingold
Taylor Swift has flagged her sympathies with this community, so why is her Eras tour visiting US states enacting repressive laws without comment?
NPR
On 'Gag Order,' Kesha gets intensely personal
By Ari Shapiro, Ann Powers, Stephen Thompson...
Listening to Kesha's new album, you can't help but think about all she's been through in the past 10 years.
A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs
A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs: 'Dark Star' by the Grateful Dead
By Andrew Hickey
Episode 165 looks at "Dark Star" and the career of the Grateful Dead. This is a long one, even longer than the previous episode, but don't worry, that won't be the norm. There's a reason these two were much longer than average.
Rolling Stone
Smiths Bassist Andy Rourke Was a Light That Will Never Go Out
By Rob Sheffield
His playing was the most underrated element in the band's sound -- and a big reason you won't forget the songs that made you cry.
andy warhol silver screen
The Critic Magazine
A tale of two tribes
By David Conway
The diverging fates of Central Europe's Roma and Jewish musicians.
GQ
Confessions of a Dave Matthews Superfan
By Alex Pappademas
Essayist and screenwriter Samantha Irby is one of the biggest DMB fans on Earth--so much so that she devoted a whole section to Dave in her hilarious new essay collection, "Quietly Hostile."
Billboard
Prosecutors Cite Fetty Wap's Lyrics In Seeking Harsher Sentence: 'Glamorized The Drug Trade'
By Bill Donahue
The filing came amid increasing scrutiny on the practice of using rap lyrics as part of criminal cases against the artists who wrote them.
Music Business Worldwide
Meet the virtual artists backed by some of the world's biggest entertainment companies
By Daniel Tencer
Despite not-entirely-unfounded concerns about what virtual artists could mean for real-life musicians, music companies are increasingly investing in the trend.
Variety
Giorgio Moroder Discusses His Legacy With Donna Summer, as New Films Recall Their Legendary Collaboration
By A.D. Amorosi
Besides having his work with the disco queen featured in a new documentary about her and 'Spinning Gold,' the producer-songwriter has also been heard in the 'Top Gun' soundtrack, a Beyonce song interpolating his work, and the deluxe reissue of a Daft Punk album.
No Bells
DD Osama's homecoming was a vision of rap's future
By Abe Beame
In the wake of tragedy, DD Osama rose to the top of New York drill. His first show home brought out a new generation of fervent rap fans.
Interview Magazine
Sax God Masego Makes Music With a Mamba Mentality
By Mira Kaplan
"Saxophone players are very sexual and sensual," the Jamaican-American musician told us before playing the The Wiltern in Los Angeles.
Sound Field
How Does the Mouth Become an Orchestra? The Art of Beatboxing
By Linda Diaz and Arthur 'LA' Buckner
Linda Diaz teams up with the remarkable talents of The Beatbox House, a collective of world-champion beatboxers who push the boundaries of music using only their voices. Together, they delve into the depths of beatboxing, exploring its origins and its deep roots in the culture of Hip Hop.
WTF with Marc Maron
WTF with Marc Maron: Episode 1437 -- Smokey Robinson
By Marc Maron and Smokey Robinson
Smokey Robinson just released his 26th studio album, but he's been writing songs since the age of six.
The New Yorker
The Graceful Rebellions of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
By James Wood
The poet Patrick Mackie hears Mozart's music as impropriety, as ambition--and even as revenge.
The New York Times
Classical Crescendo
By Maureen Dowd
For cool kids, symphony halls are getting hotter.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Rosa Pastel"
Peso Pluma & Jasiel Nuñez
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

Exposed: 3 Cent Crypto to Explode December 16th?

Chris Rowe, the man who spotted 44 different coins that have returned over 100%, is now making the biggest crypto call of his ...