jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 04/23/2019 - The Growing Free Streaming Universe, Playing Jazz for Nazis, Ozuna, Nipsey Hussle & YG, Coachella...

It's the art form that has the most profound daily effect on me which I know nothing about... I don't know one note, I can't play anything, I don't know how a song is written, and I think that that kind of pure ignorance allows me to be an unmitigated fan.
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Choir members at Kanye West's Sunday Service at Coachella, April 21, 2019.
(Rich Fury/Getty Images)
Tuesday - April 23, 2019 Tue - 04/23/19
rantnrave:// April showers are bringing more than May flowers this year. They've already brought free music streaming services from both AMAZON and GOOGLE. More or less. The free tiers of AMAZON MUSIC and YOUTUBE MUSIC have limited catalogs, are designed to play playlists rather than specific songs and are tethered to the companies' respective smart speakers. They're free and they play music but they're about as portable as health insurance, and if you want to hear the reigning #1 song in the country at any given moment, you're out of luck. If you ask for some country rap, you've got a fighting chance. Which is to say, SPOTIFY, whose stock took a hit when news of the Amazon free tier leaked a few days early, is in no immediate danger of losing its most valuable differentiator, and its stock can go back to where it was if it wants to. (So far, it does not seem to want to; Spotify investors have other things and other competitors to worry about.) But Amazon's and Google's advances into the free sphere may present a different kind of threat. To so-called casual music fans ("so-called" because casual is a loaded word), those limited catalogs may be good enough, and to advertisers, those free listeners could be pots of gold, as more than one analyst has noted. And it's in ad revenue, rather than user numbers, where Spotify may eventually feel the bite. As may some other notable Amazon and Google competitors. Assuming these free offerings gain a foothold... I'm ever-fascinated by the concept of the casual music fan. If you only listen to radio pop, and you only listen to it on the radio, does that automatically mean you don't have a serious relationship with, or need for, music? Or is it possible you're exactly as engaged with the 12 songs that pass through your brain every day as other people are engaged with the 1,200 songs that pass through theirs? Also, is it possible Spotify one day becomes a boutique brand aimed entirely at the latter group, while some other company becomes the go-to brand for everyone else? Which brand would you rather be?... Setlists from JANELLE MONÁE, TORO Y MOI, REM and many others are the prizes in an online auction benefiting programs for young writers, which launched Monday night. SETLISTS FOR YOUNG VOICES is the brainchild of writers NICK HORNBY, DAVE EGGERS and MICHAEL CHABON. As a lapsed grabber-of-setlists-from-club-stages, I love this. PATTI SMITH's setlists are handwritten on hotel stationery, which is, obviously, a goal all touring artists should aspire to... SIRIUSXM gets out of the car... BANDCAMP launches a vinyl pressing service... BLINK182 is, objectively, a terrible password. May I recommend 5SECSOFSUMMER or SUM41 instead?... RIP LES REED, OMAR HIGGINS, STEVE GOLIN and RAY BODDINGTON.
- Matty Karas, curator
big grrrl small world
The New Yorker
The Jewish Trumpeter Who Entertained Nazis to Survive the Holocaust
by Amanda Petrusich
A lot of us who write about music talk about how a song or album saved our lives at one point or another. Eric Vogel understood the idea literally, as a debt he'd spend the rest of his life repaying.
Billboard
How Ozuna Became YouTube's Most-Watched Artist of 2018 -- And Why He's Drawing More Attention Now
by Eduardo Cepeda
In a banner year for growth in Latin music, Ozuna reflects on his record-breaking run to the top -- and the controversy dogging him from his past. Plus: America's next generation of bilingual stars, Anitta and Brazil's bright new future, and more.
The FADER
Nipsey and YG
by Jeff Weiss
YG and Nipsey grew up in the public eye, transforming themselves from super raw children of the struggle to symbols of aspiration, entrepreneurs, and avatars for Los Angeles.
Rolling Stone
Threats, Bullying and Misinformation: Inside Spotify's Battle With Songwriters
by Elias Leight
Songwriters and publishers are in an ongoing cold war with Spotify, which is fighting against increasing their pay.
BBC Music
Smart speakers: Why your voice is a major battle in music
by Peter Rubinstein
Success on smart speakers comes down to how well record labels and artists can optimise their songs' metadata.
Los Angeles Times
Here's what Coachella's co-founder did over the weekend (think Kanye West and sod)
by Steve Appleford
A Coachella post-mortem with festival impresario Paul Tollett, who explains why headliners actually need those multimillion-dollar paychecks, and what excites him after 20 years of booking acts.
Genius
Are Industry Plants Really A Thing?
by Eddie Fu, Jer Paulin, Jacques Morel...
In an era when memes can take musicians to the top of the charts within a matter of weeks, an increasing number of artists are being labeled as industry plants. Many independent singers and rappers who experience a sudden surge in popularity are given the tag, which implies that they were actually receiving support from a record label all along.
Variety
Mott the Hoople: 2019's Great Rock Resurrection
by Chris Willman
Ian Hunter borrowed a bit of Easter imagery for "Roll Away the Stone," the closing number from Mott the Hoople 's final studio album in 1974. He didn't take the religious symbolism much further for a song that is a jubilant paean to enduring love and, implicitly, to the power of music itself.
The New York Times
At Coachella, the Gospel According to Kanye West
by Jon Caramanica
After a few of his most difficult years and a brief retreat from the spotlight, the rapper returned with Sunday Service - a performance of spiritual music where he rarely took center stage.
Page Six
Sex, cocaine and Van Halen -- inside MTV's wild '80s contests
by Michael Kaplan
"This was the Wild West of the cable era and [MTV executives] were doing anything they could to connect with viewers," said.
lizzobangers
Longreads
The Revolution…Without Prince
by Kevin Sampsell
Hoping to reconnect to their love for the iconic musician, Kevin Sampsell and an old girlfriend go to hear his best known band play without him.
Los Angeles Times
Home Grown Radio, where Nipsey Hussle fans mourn and LA hip-hop finds a voice
by Victoria Hernandez
Chuck Dizzle started "Home Grown Radio" in the early 2000s as a platform for local artists like Kendrick Lamar, Nipsey Hussle and YG to shine. Now it's a leading voice in hip-hop.
CBS Sunday Morning
BTS, the kings of K-Pop
by Seth Doane
Selling out stadiums across the globe, topping the Billboard charts, and landing on Time magazine's Most Influential People List - it's the South Korean boy band's time.
Stereogum
Five Of Bob Dylan's Photographers Share Their Best Dylan Stories
by Zach Schonfeld
If you were a rock photographer in the mid-'60s, being invited to photograph Bob Dylan was perhaps the best thing that could happen to you. You'd get a front-row view to the then-burgeoning countercultural revolution. You'd get to trade wisdom with the tousle-haired genius who wrote "Visions of Johanna." And, if all went well, you'd have your photo credit slapped onto some of the most definitive iconography of the vinyl era. Most of all, you'd wind up with great party stories-ones you could...
The Guitologist
The Big Mistake YouTube Guitar & Music Channels are Making
by Brad Linzy
Think of any unmonetized cover song or song clip in your video catalog as "unmined gold". It's gold. It's in the ground just sitting there. Someone will find a way to get to it eventually especially as technology makes the effort more affordable.
Rolling Stone
The O'Jays Give the People What They Want for the Last Time
by Elias Leight
After a lengthy breaking from recording, the group known for Seventies hits like "Back Stabbers" returned to the studio to make one final album.
The Bitter Southerner
The Music of the Murders
by Joycelyn Wilson
Forty years ago, the generation that shaped Southern hip-hop also lived through the Atlanta Child Murders, the kidnapping and killing of 30 African Americans between the ages of 7 and 27. With the murders in the public eye again , Dr. Joycelyn Wilson investigates how her generation's music was shaped by — and still memorializes — the trauma.
Billboard
As Beijing Cracks Down, Can Hong Kong's Cantopop Business Be Saved?
by Alexei Barrionuevo
Jolland Chan is one of the most prolific songwriters in the history of Cantonese pop music, with over 1,000 titles to his name, including two of the most popular karaoke songs of 2018, "Can Never Say Goodbye" and "Half Moon Serenade."
Afropunk
Decolonizing Techno: Notes From a Brooklyn Dance Floor
by Deforrest Brown
DeForrest Brown, Jr. went to the Dweller Festival and asked the question, can one celebrate Black underground artists and audiences in a gentrified genre?
The Ringer
Do You Remember When You First Fell in Love With Music?
by Rob Harvilla
A father and rock critic reflects on watching his young son discover his first favorite artist.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Juice"
Lizzo
From "Cuz I Love You," out now on Nice Life/Atlantic.
"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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