Winning a TV award doesn’t christen me successful. It took me some time to learn that. I bought all my masters back last year in the prime of my career, that’s successful. 'Blonde' sold a million plus without a label, that’s successful. I am young, black, gifted and independent.
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The queen of the Grammys leans back. (Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
Monday - February 13, 2017 Mon - 02/13/17
rantnrave:// Hello. Are you kidding me?... GRAMMY thinkpiece #1: Wrong. But not ADELE's fault... #2: Technically, BEYONCÉ still won... #3: The tone-deafness of RECORDING ACADEMY president NEIL PORTNOW singling out "AMERICAN" music in his annual lobbying speech (what about Grammy winner VICENTE FERNÁNDEZ? Or CHUCHO VALDÉS? Or FLUME?), followed by the tone-deafness of his own academy snubbing one very particular American artist... #4: They could've ended the show after the first words host JAMES CORDEN spoke: "Stop! Stop! Stop it! I said stop! This is a disaster!"... Facts: Last black artist to win Album of the Year: HERBIE HANCOCK (2008). Last black woman to win: LAURYN HILL (1999). The three artists who have beat Beyoncé for it: TAYLOR SWIFT, BECK, Adele... I'm tired... It's late night, and not confident I'm going to be able to put this in the proper cultural perspective. So I'll just note this: This awkward (and in many ways painful) choice in crowning the year's best album continues a long-running pattern from an industry that's largely based on the coasts, so no blaming the rest of the country for this one... That all said (sort of): Props to Beyoncé for a next-level performance of "LOVE DROUGHT" and "SANDCASTLES," which was so much deeper, crazier and more ambitious than any other live event on TV this year that you could start compensating her by giving her an EMMY... And for the night's most beautiful speech... And for surprise-dropping a single with JAY Z and DJ KHALED during the ceremony... Props to Adele for her final speech ("I can't possibly accept this award... The LEMONADE album was just so monumental"), and for breaking her Album of the Year trophy afterward (unclear if it was on purpose or not)... A TRIBE CALLED QUEST were angry, political and great; KATY PERRY weird, political and almost great; CHANCE THE RAPPER gospelly and great... Doubling down on Beyoncé and the DIXIE CHICKS' controversial CMA AWARDS collaboration, the Grammys offered stellar pairings of MAREN MORRIS and ALICIA KEYS, and STURGILL SIMPSON and the DAP-KINGS... BRUNO MARS is a flawless performer... LADY GAGA was the best part of GAGATALLICA... Chance the Rapper's three Grammys, including Best New Artist, are a big win for indie music, and his shoutouts to "DJ DRAMA for doing it first" and "SOUNDCLOUD for holding me down" were nicely on point. But no shoutout to APPLE?... DAVID BOWIE won four Grammys. He won one when he was alive... Over the course of three decades, AL JARREAU, who died Sunday, won jazz, pop and R&B Grammys, and was as comfortable scatting with a jazz band as cutting a breezy studio pop single. If pure joy were a Grammy category, he would've won more... RIP also: NICOLAI GEDDA and HARVEY LICHTENSTEIN.
- Matty Karas, curator
mornin'
Motherboard
The Man Who Broke Ticketmaster
by Jason Koebler
The most infamous ticket scalper of all time used bots to buy millions of tickets. Now he wants to stop them.
Bloomberg
Spotify Befriends Katy Perry in Quest to Win Artists’ Favor
by Lucas Shaw
Company wants to show internet exposure can outdo radio play.
The Guardian
Grammys 2017: Adele reluctantly beats Beyoncé for top prizes as politics flares
by Amanda Holpuch
The British singer swept the top awards of the night after a performance mishap as A Tribute Called Quest and Busta Rhymes called out ‘President Agent Orange.'
Los Angeles Times
When it comes to politics, the Grammys let the music do the talking
by August Brown
As in almost every show in this volatile awards season, political protest was all over the Grammys this year. >From subtle and poised to outraged and esoteric, resistance came from artists of all genres and will likely be a major part of what this contentious Grammy ceremony will be remembered for.
Thump
How Internet Beatmakers Turned Knock-Off Rap Productions Into A Legitimate Career Path
by David Turner
"Type Beat" producers mimic other artists and game YouTube for a modest living. What do you do after that?
The New York Times
With Email Newsletter, He Serves Country Music Fans From a Political Perch
by Katherine Rosman
Kurt Bardella, a former Republican congressional aide who is now a public relations consultant and skeptic of President Trump, has started The Morning Hangover Tipsheet.
Consequence of Sound
Hip-Hop Might Be the New Mainstream News Outlet
by Collin Brennan
In an era of “alternative facts,” music lovers might seek out new sources of truth.
Okayplayer
The Secret History of Public Enemy’s ‘Yo! Bum Rush the Show’
by Jerry Barrow
We gathered the players behind this classic to share its secret history with us. Featuring Bill Adler, Bill Stephney, Eric Haze, Hank Shocklee + Chuck D.
The Washington Post
Al Jarreau, seven-time Grammy-winning singer, dies at 76
by Matt Schudel
Mr. Jarreau blurred the lines between jazz, soul and pop and was called the “Acrobat of Scat.”
Quartz
In the age of Spotify, radio stations should no longer get away with playing music for free
by Chris Israel
Unlike every other platform that delivers music to fans, legacy FM stations never pay a cent to the musicians who perform the songs they use on the air.
breakin' away
The Guardian
Pharrell’s ever-expandıng unıverse
by Sasha Frere-Jones
Musician, Hollywood producer, designer, inventor - Pharrell Williams is a restless polymath. Sasha Frere-Jones asks if this is a star looking for a life beyond music.
The Fader
On The Importance Of Creating Black Art In The Time Of Trump
by Jason Parham
Five creatives discuss the role art - and black art in particular - can play in unsettling times.
The Daily Beast
Beyoncé Falls Victim to the Grammy Awards’ Racism
by Kevin Fallon
That Beyoncé didn’t win Album of the Year is inexcusable on its own. That only 10 black artists ever have won the award is insane-as insane as Sunday’s ceremony was painful.
Salon
“I’ll be there”: Charlie Haden was the Tom Joad of jazz, and his Liberation Music Orchestra lives on
by Elzy Kolb
Jazz Great Charlie Haden's social justice legacy lives on in each of the members of his band.
MTV News
The Bittersweet Story of Zydeco in 2017
by Tirhakah Love
Five years after the Grammys stopped recognizing zydeco music, how is the Gulf Coast genre faring?
Los Angeles Times
How Colin Hanks found the 'emotional truth' in Eagles of Death Metal's return to Paris
by Mikael Wood
When Colin Hanks approached members of Eagles of Death Metal with the idea of directing a documentary about their harrowing experience in Paris -- the band was onstage at the Bataclan theater in 2015 when terrorists burst in and killed 89 concertgoers -- drummer Josh Homme’s first response was to warn him off.
The Conversation
The story of Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield, America's first black pop star
by Adam Gustafson
In the 19th century, critics and audiences thought blacks were incapable of singing as well as their white, European counterparts. Greenfield forced them to reconcile their ears with their racism.
The New York Times
Latin Jazz is Booming. Look Beyond the Grammys to Find It
by Giovanni Russonello
Older musicians got the Grammy nod this year for best Latin jazz album. But the real excitement is brewing in emerging corners of the genre.
NPR
David Axelrod, Musical Visionary And Historical Propellant, Remembered
by Eothen Alapatt
David Axelrod was a genre-fusing genius, a visionary artist in a boxer's body, a producer and composer who propelled popular music into an unknown future.
MTV News
Whitney Houston Was Too Perfect To Stay
by Hanif Willis-Abdurraqib
Five years after her death, we remember and honor a legend.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Take Five"
Al Jarreau
Live on German TV, 1976. RIP.
“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?’”
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