When you’ve played it as long as I have and are familiar with it, the guitar tends to want to go in certain places—your fingers find where they need to be. It’s not about me forcing my will of a genius composition on top of the instrument. It’s letting go of the idea that I’m in charge. The guitar calls the shots and I sort of f***ing figure it out.
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Ariana Grande surprises Coachella with an unannounced performance with Kygo, April 20, 2018.
(Christopher Polk/Getty Images)
Tuesday - April 24, 2018 Tue - 04/24/18
rantnrave:// I had the chance a couple weeks ago to sit down with the leadership team at DOWNTOWN MUSIC's SONGTRUST platform, which administers publishing and collects royalties for 100,000-plus songwriters (as well as publishers and labels). The platform is great technology and aggressive administration applied to an ingeniously simple idea: There are scores and scores of potential royalty streams around the world for any given song, which means there are scores and scores of chances for any given songwriter (or publisher or label) to miss out on them. What if it they could all be hunted down, centralized, digitized and put within easy reach of anyone—without asking for a piece of the song in return? That meeting was on my mind as I read DENIS SIMMS' 3,0000-word essay for MUSIC BUSINESS WORLDWIDE on the fundamental economic changes wrought by streaming, mostly regarding the abilities and opportunities for artists and songwriters to get paid. It's worth your time, both for Simms' wide view and for his unusually optimistic tone. We could use more of that. But where Simms focuses on newish income-stream opportunities like royalty investment markets and new business models like customizable label services, I'm fascinated by the simple idea of making sure songwriters are paid what they're already owed. From the numerous platforms already using their compositions to the numerous countries where they're being played. No need to mint new money yet. Just find the money that's already been minted in your name. Simms gives love to KOBALT, whose menu of services includes royalty collections. And BILLBOARD's NICK WILLIAMS spotlights CREATE MUSIC GROUP, which started with the narrow goal of helping musicians squeeze money out of YOUTUBE and has grown into a $30-million-a-year company with the goal of mining "overlooked opportunities" throughout the business. The music copyright business, I've always thought, can seem tangled and complicated, and it's easy to understand how a random company that uses music could overlook some payment obligations without companies like these knocking on their doors. Not really, Songtrust co-founder JUSTIN KALIFOWITZ countered when I said that out loud in his office. He says copyright and royalties are a lot more straightforward than they might seem. You've just got to put in the work. And then, maybe, some optimism won't seem so strange and unusual after all... Over the weekend, J. COLE's KOD, an addictive album about addiction, broke SPOTIFY's and APPLE MUSIC's records for most-streamed album in a single day. But were you obsessively listening to it because you love it, you hate it or—this is J. Cole after all—both? Yes, according to reviewers. VERY SMART BROTHAS: "If You Love J. Cole, 'KOD' Is Dope. If You Don’t Love J. Cole, 'KOD' Is Trash." The RINGER: "Fogey MC or a figure of purpose?" WASHINGTON POST: "Where is rap-Switzerland?" NOISEY: You're all wrong. (That last one's a glowing review, btw)... Killer live sessions: Tuareg singer-guitarist BOMBINO on shaky hand-held video for the LINE OF BEST FIT. Jazz saxophonist LOGAN RICHARDSON and band behind NPR MUSIC's TINY DESK... One resounding yes and one big fat no to SUMMER: THE DONNA SUMMER MUSICAL, which opened Monday on Broadway... Also premiering Monday, with some A-list rock star assistance: the music doc HORSES: PATTI SMITH AND HER BAND... An interactive map of all the crimes committed in PALM SPRINGS during COACHELLA... RIP STUART COLMAN.
- Matty Karas, curator
no tears left to cry
Music Business Worldwide
How streaming will continue to change everything in the music business
by Denis Simms
The next revolution in the music business will not be a new consumer-facing format or a visionary product. The next revolution is financial and multifaceted with wide implications, and it’s already started.
Medium
“Keep The Children Free”: Prince in Post-Civil Rights America
by Jeff Chang
Fifty years since King’s assassination, we find ourselves further from a national consensus to confront and end racial segregation and resegregation than we have ever been. Prince’s journey went in the opposite direction. He did what real leaders do, he subverted the accepted wisdom and what passed for common sense to move us forward.
Topic
They Don't Do Sadness
by Isaac Butler
In the aftermath of the Parkland shooting, the teenage cast of "Spring Awakening" prepares to take the stage.
SPIN
Remembering Avicii, the Producer Who Influenced a Generation of EDM
by Nick Murray
Today, Avicii's "Levels" stands as one of the triumphs of the early EDM era, a single riff combined with an Etta James sample and built upwards into the clouds. The song doesn't sound produced so much as discovered, a ball of energy that could neither be created nor destroyed.
Variety
‘The Middle’ Is a Hit for Maren Morris, After Demi, Camila, Bebe Don’t Make the Cut
by Shirley Halperin
How the Zedd song cycled through 12 singers and several false starts on its way to the No. 1 spot on pop radio.
Pitchfork
The Agony and the Ecstasy of Alice Glass
by Meaghan Garvey
After revealing a horrific history of abuse last year, the former Crystal Castles frontwoman is starting over again, on her own terms.
Advertising Age
Music to your taste buds
by Jessica Wohl
Brands and agencies, long attuned to ways audio can help them sell products, are increasingly looking to sound to help them market beverages and food in new and unconventional ways.
The New York Times
The New ‘American Idol’: Youth Gone Wild and an Understanding Dad
by Jon Caramanica
The singing competition, back after a two-year hiatus, is focusing on the fireworks onstage, rather than between the judges. And Lionel Richie is its godfather.
Motherboard
Meet the Teen Who Turns Beyoncé's Live Shows Into Amazing, Unofficial Albums
by Mikelle Street
The 17-year-old behind @BeyReleases says he'll do almost anything to get the BeyHive what it wants.
Texas Monthly
Why Does Willie Nelson Still Do It?
by Michael Hall
Willie Nelson talks to us about how he’s able to continuing writing-and touring-well into his eighties.
break free
Billboard
With Coachella In the Rear View Mirror, Stacy Vee and Goldenvoice Prep for Stagecoach
by Dave Brooks
Florida Georgia Line, Garth Brooks and Guy Fieri set to fire up West Coast's first county fest of 2018.
Advertising Age
Tracking tech to shorten Lollapalooza loo lines?
by Megan Graham
Going to Lollapalooza this August? Organizers may be able to tell whether you passed over the Arctic Monkeys for Space Jesus, how many Lime-A-Ritas you bought and how long you had to wait to buy them.
The Guardian
Girl Talk! How queer pop came out
by Amelia Abraham
It has been 10 years since Katy Perry released I Kissed a Girl, a global hit that fetishised lesbians. Now with mainstream stars from St Vincent and Princess Nokia to Halsey and Marika Hackman singing about their myriad sexual identities, it’s time to put sapphic stereotypes to bed.
NOW Toronto Magazine
What will cannabis legalization mean for music?
by Kate Robertson
As weed goes corporate, so might its relationship with musicians and artists. How Canadian pot regulations, marketing laws and criminalization of people of colour will affect music and cannabis.
NPR Music
How Rhiannon Giddens Reconstructs Black Pain With The Banjo
by Michel Martin and Dustin DeSoto
The renowned folk songwriter stops by NPR's Washington D.C. headquarters to play two songs from her latest album and discuss the historical African-American roots of her music and of her instrument.
Splice Today
Gospel Music as Liberation
by Crispin Sartwell
They answer to God, not the politeness or respectability of middle-class society or popular culture.
Hollywood Reporter
Record Majors in New Legal Fight With SiriusXM Over Pre-1972 Works
by Eriq Gardner
Nearly three years after major record labels reached a $210 million settlement with SiriusXM over the use of sound recordings created before 1972, a new legal fight has erupted over the licensing of classic songs by such artists as Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, and Simon & Garfunkel.
NPR Music
Tiny Desk Concerts At 10: How One Miserable Show Led To A Magical Concert Series
by Bob Boilen and Laura Gibson
How Laura Gibson's "terrible-feeling" concert experience led to the birth of the Tiny Desk concert series 10 years ago.
The Creative Independent
Nikki Sixx on not getting stuck
by Nikki Sixx and T. Cole Rachel
Musician Nikki Sixx discusses the connection between creativity and sobriety, challenging yourself in new ways, and why most creative stumbling blocks exist only in your mind.
Refinery29
Post-Beyoncé, Music Festivals Still Have A Woman Problem: Here's How To Fix It
by Courtney E. Smith
FYF, Fortress Festival, and L.A. Pride: how three different festivals are addressing equal representation of women with their lineups and headliners.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"The Anthem"
Kardinal Offishall
For Toronto.
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