There are some girl musicians who are as much the masters of their instruments as male musicians. Think it over, boys. | | Mood: 24kGoldn at the Fonda Theatre, Los Angeles, Jan. 13, 2020. (Scott Dudelso/Getty Images) | | | | “There are some girl musicians who are as much the masters of their instruments as male musicians. Think it over, boys.” |
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| rantnrave:// "SPOTIFY," the service itself told us two years ago, "does not permit content whose principal purpose is to incite hatred or violence against people because of their race, religion, disability, gender identity, or sexual orientation." It's hard to argue with that as a general philosophy, and yet it's easy to see how hard it is to turn that philosophy into concrete policy. Who's to say what a song's principal purpose is? Who's to decide when a lyric is meant to incite, as opposed to, say, observe, describe, ponder, challenge, satirize or protest? And who's to know where to begin looking for violations among the tens of thousands of tracks uploaded to the service every day, from distributors big and small, from artists around the world, in any number or languages and styles, in all manner of intelligibility and decipherability? Challenged by the BBC, Spotify recently removed about 20 songs that it agreed promoted white power, anti-Semitism or homophobia. (APPLE MUSIC, YOUTUBE and DEEZER also removed all or most of the tracks, the BBC reported.) They included songs that quoted Hitler and celebrated the Holocaust. Some had their titles changed—but not their lyrics—before they were uploaded to streaming services. Some were collected on user-curated playlists of national socialist black metal, a sub-genre connected to neo-Nazism. Finding the songs "required no specialist skills or effort," the BBC's DANIEL KRAEMER and STEVE HOLDEN wrote. One imagines, though, that specialist skills and effort would come in handy in identifying the hundreds if not thousands of songs the BBC probably didn't find. Spotify was not so quick to respond to calls to banish a French rapper, FREEZE CORLEONE, who was dropped by UNIVERSAL MUSIC FRANCE last month for what it said was racist content. His debut album, LMF, originally released by Universal and now released independently, remains on the service, despite lyrics like these, translated from French and highlighted by the SIMON WIESENTHAL CENTER: "I arrive determined like Adolf in the 30s." "Build an empire like young Adolf / Determined with great ambitions like young Adolf." DIGITAL MUSIC NEWS shared the text of a Spotify customer support conversation in which the service told a user who asked about the album, "We make music available as the artist intends it to be heard, and that sometimes includes explicit content." Would the response be different if the BBC was asking? Are Freeze Corleone's lyrics different, in context and intent, than the songs on the national socialist black metal playlists? Are they different, in context and intent, from a century's worth of racism, homophobia and sexism in various corners of pop, blues, rock, metal, hip-hop, country and so many other genres? Should that matter? There are 60 million tracks on Spotify, some with lyrics distorted beyond recognition, some with lyrics buried under layers of noise, some with lyrics written in code. Is there any way to police all that? Spotify, which has a shaky history of trying to answer questions like this, says it's always trying to improve its ability to ferret out offensive content. Do you trust it, or any service, to separate the truly hateful from the merely offensive? Do you trust its users? Do you trust yourself?... TAYLOR SWIFT's FOLKLORE is the only album released this year to sell a million copies. The only album released last year that sold a million? Taylor Swift's LOVER... HARRY STYLES, arena investor and consultant... RIP JERRY JEFF WALKER, the outlaw country pioneer from upstate New York who helped transform the Austin, Texas, music scene in the 1970s and wrote this much-covered classic along the way; VIOLA SMITH, the bandleader and "fastest girl drummer in the world" of the 1930s and '40s who fought, somewhat unsuccessfully, for equality in big-band music; and WILLIAM BLINN, who met PRINCE in a Hollywood restaurant in 1983 but wasn't sold on the idea of writing the screenplay for PURPLE RAIN until the Minneapolitan took him to his car and played him a tape of "WHEN DOVES CRY." "I said, ‘Man, you’ve certainly got a foundation,'" Blinn, whose credits also included the TV miniseries ROOTS, remembered years later. "'This can pay off at the end'"... The wild, the innocent and the E Street correction: I wrote on Friday that BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN's LETTER TO YOU was recorded live in the studio during the pandemic. In fact, as anyone who paid attention to all the pre-release promo I alluded to would know, he and the E STREET BAND recorded it in November 2019. My apologies. | | - Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator |
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| | silver hair, a ragged shirt |
| The BBC found racist, homophobic and anti-Semitic content on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music and Deezer. | |
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24kGoldn and Iann Dior’s “Mood” is uniting rap fans, rock fans, and fans too young to care about the difference. | |
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For the king of country rock, nothing beats getting unconscious onstage, because that’s when he sings the best. | |
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| Austin American-Statesman |
Jerry Jeff Walker, who moved to Austin after becoming famous with the song “Mr. Bojangles” and helped to change the landscape of Austin music in the 1970s, died Friday evening after an extended battle with throat cancer. He was 78. | |
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Lizzo, Alicia Keys, and Steve Carrell joined Eilish remotely to round out the night. | |
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Twenty years after their record breaking debut album "Hybrid Theory" came out, it’s still a cathartic listen for suburban teens. | |
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It’s still possible that Guitar Center could avert bankruptcy, as it did earlier this year. | |
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Roblox’s Global Head of Music John Vlassopulos talks to Dmitri about how audio is playing a key role in the “imagination time” of the wildly popular Roblox gaming and world building platform. He and the Roblox team see themselves as “firestarters,” those who provide the basic ideas and code and then see what people create. | |
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This year, Michael Gruber learned to work Rangers games without fans. His new gig is a World Series without the Rangers. | |
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She formed the Coquettes “all-girl” big band and championed women in the almost completely male preserve of 1930s and ’40s popular music. | |
| “Fullnaming” all artists, regardless of background or tradition, is the only path to social justice in classical music. | |
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Not such an authentic cadence now, is it? | |
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Creepypasta meets esoterica in an ongoing meme. | |
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At Brooklyn’s Green-Wood, a moving performance that roved among the crypts. | |
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The singer’s new album, "2020," is meant to bear witness to an ugly period in American life. | |
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Mac Phipps was a rising star of New Orleans rap when he was convicted of a killing he insists he did not commit. Two decades later, he is still fighting for his freedom and his art. | |
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Kwame Safo talks to Marc Mac, Bryan Gee, DJ Flight and Junior Tomlin about the futuristic Black art form and why its Black roots should never be forgotten. | |
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An emerging breed of non-Anglo music channels are finding success by doing things differently. | |
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An acceleration of trends at home -- music's most important context for 2020 and 2021. | |
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Woods, who died, at ninety-six, of COVID-19, was a founding member of the record-breaking, racially integrated, all-female swing band. | |
| | | Aquiles Navarro & Tcheser Holmes |
| From trumpeter Aquiles Navarro and percussionist Tcheser Holmes' "Heritage of the Invisible II," out now on International Anthem. |
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