jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 08/20/2018 - Aretha's Freeway of Song, Zane Lowe's New Beat, Warped Tour's Bittersweet End, Nicki Minaj, Bebe Rexha...

She can be hiding out in her house in Detroit for years... She can cancel half her gigs and infuriate every producer and promoter in the country. She can sing all kinds of jive-ass songs that are beneath her. She can go into her diva act and turn off the world. But on any given night, when that lady sits down at the piano and gets her body and soul all over some righteous song, she'll scare the s*** out of you. And you'll know—you'll swear—that she's still the best f***in' singer this f***ed-up country has ever produced.
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Aretha checks out Aretha, New York, Jan. 9, 1969.
(Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
Monday - August 20, 2018 Mon - 08/20/18
rantnrave:// ARETHA FRANKLIN wrote or co-wrote her fair share of songs, some of them stone cold classics. But she made her mark on a half-century of music largely by singing music and lyrics written by or for others. Covers, you might say, not inaccurately. But that word doesn't do justice to what Aretha Franklin did. Her voice was her pen. She used it transform and reclaim nearly every song she touched, discovering spiritual fire, sexual power and sociopolitical meanings unknown to anyone who may have touched a song before her. Her voice was one of the all-time great pop/soul/R&B/gospel songwriters. She also sometimes did it the old-fashioned way, with pen and paper, as in the "R-E-S-P-E-C-T / Find out what it means to me" hook that she added to OTIS REDDING's "RESPECT" ("I just lost my song," Redding said when he heard her version. "That girl stole my song"). But as interpreter/transformer, she turned BEATLES songs inside-out, gospel songs upside-down and patriotic songs into revolutionary ideas of what America is or could be. MusicSET: "S-O-N-G-S of Aretha Franklin"... Like all working people in all professions, Aretha liked to be paid for her work. When she sang live, she demanded her pay upfront, in cash. But she didn't have that kind of leverage with radio. In 51 years of terrestrial radio play for her signature hit, "Respect," she has earned zero dollars and zero cents. (You may want to pause here and read that last sentence again. I'll understand.) "Respect" isn't a big earner for her on digital radio either, thanks to copyright law that continues to exempt songs recorded before 1972 from those royalties in the U.S. There will be some posthumous online checks though. She had major hits for labels now owned by both SONY, which has begun distributing $750 million in SPOTIFY stock profits to artists— free and clear of any unrecouped earnings—and WARNER, which has $126 million to distribute but is withholding unrecouped balances. Another chance, perhaps, for "Respect," which falls under the Warner umbrella, to lose out one more time... MTV will pay tribute to Aretha during tonight's VIDEO MUSIC AWARDS (9pm ET on MTV). "She's one of the all-time greats so we have to do her justice," says the show's exec producer, JESSE IGNJATOVIC. JENNIFER LOPEZ will collect the VIDEO VANGUARD AWARD... RIP JILL JANUS and DANNY PEARSON.
- Matty Karas, curator
a rose is still a rose
Village Voice
Aretha: The Voice of America
by Carol Cooper
"I celebrate having been a witness to her life, and mourn her passing because she was special, and we may not see her equal again."
The New York Times
How Aretha Franklin's 'Respect' Became a Battle Cry for Musicians Seeking Royalties
by Ben Sisario
The song "Respect" helped Aretha Franklin soar to fame and became an anthem for the women's rights movement. But radio royalties for the song went to its writer, Otis Redding.
Music Business Worldwide
What happens when artists and record labels build and buy their own media companies?
by Cherie Hu
Cherie Hu breaks down the increasing similarities between "music companies" and "media companies."
BuzzFeed News
The Ending Of Warped Tour Is Bittersweet
by Hanif Abdurraqib
Warped Tour was flawed, but no more flawed than the many homes I chose for myself outside of it.
Variety
Check's In the Mail: Sony Music Disburses $750 Million to Artists in 'Spotify Windfall'
by Shirley Halperin
Sony Music has begun to distribute the $750 million in profit it collected from the April sale of 50% of its Spotify shares to the artists and distributed labels within the Sony system, Variety has confirmed. As previously reported, Sony will not count the funds against the artists' and label's unrecouped earnings.
Spotify for Artists
Metadata: What It Is and Why It Matters
by Nate Baker
Making sure you're digitally credited for the music you make is key to your income--and your success.
Pitchfork
Nicki Minaj, 6ix9ine, and the Alarming Normalization of Predatory Behavior
by Shanita Hubbard
Heavy is the head that wears the crown, argues Shanita Hubbard in this op-ed.
The Guardian
The Medicis of raving: how Elrow became a dance music empire
by Sirin Kale
The Arnau family started with a single social club in 1870. Now, the Spanish dynasty turns over £18m a year with its hypercolour techno carnivals - by prizing spectacle over DJs.
Slate
How Do You Solve a Problem Like Bebe Rexha?
by Lindsey Weber and Bobby Finger
Why, exactly, is it so hard to determine the "Meant to Be" singer's deal?
On An Overgrown Path
What exactly do we mean by 'listening' in this digital age?
by Pliable
Recently Deutsche Grammophon, home of Herbert von Karajan and other renown New shamans of sound, announced the launch of DG Playlists in conjunction with Apple Music. Many will have sympathy with the reader's comment on Slipped Disc of "and so the slow death of a label without artistic vision continues".
i knew you were waiting
Los Angeles Times
Zane Lowe marches ahead to a new beat while bringing positive vibes to Apple Music's Beats 1
by Eve Barlow
Zane Lowe in 2015 was hired by the tech giant to bring some brand name recognition -- and a gregarious personality -- to the world of streaming music, a bold shift at the time away from logarithm-based programming.
Rolling Stone
Aretha Franklin's Ghostwriter on the Singer's Enduring Mysteries
by David Ritz
Biographer David Ritz tells the story of the five years he spent with Aretha, getting to know the famously guarded Queen of Soul and trying to understand the pain behind her genius.
NPR Music
The Sound Made Flesh
by Ashon Crawley
In Aretha Franklin's gospel work, black life is sacred and to feel is to invent.
The Information
Does Tencent Music Deserve a Spotify-Like Valuation?
by Alfred Lee and Wayne Ma
China tech IPOs, of companies such as Xiaomi and Pinduoduo, have struggled this year. That puts the spotlight on the next big U.S. public offering from China, which is likely to be Tencent Music Entertainment Group, China's answer to Spotify.
The Daily Beast
The Punk Rocker With a Feminine Touch: Jesse Peretz's Unlikely Path to 'Glow' and 'Juliet, Naked'
by Kevin Fallon
As his film 'Juliet, Naked' hits theaters, Jesse Peretz reflects on how he, an ex-Lemonheads bassist, became TV's most in-demand—'Girls,' 'Glow,' 'OITNB'—director of women.
New York Post
Your taste in music says a lot about your bank account
by Catey Hill
Rich people march to a different tune. The richest Americans may be way more likely to listen to classical music - which could include Beethoven, Mozart and Bach - than the rest of us.
Billboard
How Lady Gaga's 'The Fame' Made Her a New Industry Standard for Pop Superstardom
by Stephen Daw
The "Just Dance" singer's meteoric rise to celebrity status not only defined the trajectory of Lady Gaga's career, but reimagined the way that up-and-coming pop musicians establish themselves as industry mainstays.
i-D Magazine
'Eighth Grade' has the Perfect Soundtrack for Teenage Angst
by Nick Fulton
Composer Anna Meredith's bold electronic creations sound how thirteen feels. Gucci!
Complex
Kodak Black Is Free. Can He Stay That Way?
by Kiana Fitzgerald
Kodak Black was sent to jail in January. Seven months later, he's finally out, and his friends and lawyer say he's on the straight-and-narrow.
Rolling Stone
Inside SiriusXM's 24/7 Beatles Channel
by Elias Leight
How programmers are finding countless ways to reexamine the Fab Four's legacy.
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Aretha Franklin
"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?'"
@JasonHirschhorn


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