jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 01/28/2020 - Thank U Grammys Next, Rainbo Records, Stormzy, Kesha, Jazz Myths...

It was always hard for the little guy to get records made. Now it's going to be that much harder.
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Kraftwerk phone home. At the Keio Plaza Hotel, Tokyo, September 1981.
(Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty Images)
Tuesday - January 28, 2020 Tue - 01/28/20
rantnrave:// So GRAMMY week is over; what now? Glaringly absent from all the talk in the past two weeks about the RECORDING ACADEMY, DEBORAH DUGAN, the diversity of the recorded music business and the integrity of the Grammy Awards was any sense of the Academy's side of the story. There were a couple leaked (more or less) memos, a handful of denials and, over the weekend, a promise to address a few specific gender agenda items that sounded eerily similar to what the Academy had already said it was going to do. Dugan, the Academy's suspended CEO, meanwhile, was on TV, in the press and in lawyer's offices making a compelling case that the Academy she was hired to reform had no interest in doing any such thing. The perception was that she was blowing up the house from inside and doing a pretty good job of it (with some help from DIDDY and from the Academy's diversity and inclusion task force). The Academy itself, of course, had an awards show to run and thousands and thousands of thousands of guests in town. It had business to attend to. Even so, the show's near-silence on the scandal "was deafening," in VULTURE's words. The show "got away with saying nothing," according to PITCHFORK. Actually, host ALICIA KEYS did have something to say, as noted in Monday's MusicREDEF, but she spoke in code. The death of KOBE BRYANT made the show that much more solemn and sober than it was already going to be, and provided even more business to attend to. Most of the artists at the STAPLES CENTER laid low, too. Vulture's EVE BARLOW notes that artists and presenters did their best to avoid the media room, and TYLER, THE CREATOR, who did have something to say, told the journalists in the room, "Y'all look bored as f***." Interim Academy CEO HARVEY MASON JR. declined the customary on-air state-of-the-Grammys speech and skipped the press room, too. But the Grammys are in the rear window now and 2020 is ahead. Time is near, it would seem, for the Academy to clear the rather heavy air still hanging over Los Angeles, to tell a new story... Grammy producer KEN EHRLICH's message to LIZZO and other people who aren't BILLIE EILISH: "It should be on my forehead: Nobody remembers who won the Grammy"... Part one of director MICHAEL D. RATNER's YOUTUBE documentary JUSTIN BIEBER: SEASONS is live on YOUTUBE. Several more parts are available on YOUTUBE PREMIUM... Teen Grammy reggae winner KOFFEE at the TINY DESK... Why do we hate the music we hate?... RIP REED MULLIN and BOB SHANE.
- Matty Karas, curator
three futures
Los Angeles Times
Saying goodbye to Rainbo Records -- and 80 years of pop culture history
by Randall Roberts
This L.A. business pressed discs immortalizing Black Flag, 2Pac and N.W.A. -- and ordinary people too.
InsideHook
Why Millennials Refuse to Let Go of Physical Media
by Bonnie Stiernberg
The last generation to know life before the internet hasn't fully switched over to streaming.
Slate
What Does It Mean That Black Music Is the Default Soundtrack in Mostly White Restaurants, Gyms, and Shops?
by Tre Johnson
On being heard, but not seen, in our rapidly gentrifying cities.
Tidal
Rap Radar: Stormzy
by Elliott Wilson, Brian "B.Dot" Miller and Stormzy
Stormzy is taking over one continent at a time. Recently the South London rapper released his sophomore album 'Heavy Is The Head.' In February, he's set to embark on his year long international tour. While in New York, Big Michael speaks on his latest album, Glastonbury performance, Bansky, Beyonce, rap beef, and more.
Stereogum
Kesha Turns The Page
by Chris DeVille
How do you move on? This is the defining question on "High Road," Kesha Rose Sebert's fourth album and second since the public drama that redefined her life and career. In 2014, Kesha sued her producer and label head Lukasz "Dr. Luke" Gottwald for a wide range of alleged abuses including sexual assault and battery.
The Washington Post
It's time for radical change at the Grammys -- and the clock is ticking
by Chris Richards
The awards have been too white, too male and too old for too long.
Vulture
The Grammys' Silence on the Deborah Dugan Scandal Was Deafening
by Eve Barlow
"If this is an indication of the industry dying, I'm with it."
Fast Company
Wyclef Jean has raised $25 million to democratize the global digital music marketplace
by Starr Rhett Rocque
Carnival World Music Group's Wyclef Jean will sign songwriters and producers in Africa, the Caribbean, and other developing regions.
The Outline
Don't leave jazz to the jazz guys
by Shuja Haider
The music is more than a personality trait.
The Washington Post
Five myths about jazz
by Natalie Weiner
No, it isn't dead, and its purveyors aren't all hopped up on drugs.
sprinter
Complex
Searching For a Clear Signal During a Complicated Grammys Week
by Sama'an Ashrawi
Grammys week 2020 will forever be connected with the passing of Kobe Bryant. Here's our report, featuring Coldplay's Chris Martin, TDE's Punch, D Smoke, & more.
Paper
Inside the World's Largest Heavy Metal Cruise
by Adam Powell
3,000 metalheads drinking piña coladas and moshing to Cattle Decapitation.
MusicAlly
Music Ally Startup Files: Voisey is the TikTok for music creation
by Joe Sparrow
If co-founder Olly Barnes' infectious optimism is correct, Voisey is a phenomenon-in-waiting: an app that has the potential to shake up how songs are made.
Billboard
Ditto Music Unveils New Blockchain-Based Tools to Help Untangle Split Royalties
by Richard Smirke
Global digital distributor and label services company Ditto Music is to launch a new blockchain solution that, it says, will generate higher earnings for artists and creators.
Playboy
The Black Lips Grow Up, Go Country and Give Nashville the Finger
by Michael Dunaway
The Atlanta stalwarts talk everything from GI Joe to GG Allin--and their new album, 'Sing in a World That's Falling Apart.'
The Alternative
Don't Fill Up On Chips -- Queerness Through The Lens of The Front Bottoms
by Joel Funk
Guest contributor, Joel Funk, discusses the message of struggle and acceptance of his sexuality that he was able to gain through the music of New Jersey folk punk band The Front Bottoms.
Lawyer Drummer
Are Tribute Acts Actually Legal?
by Kurt Dahl
Technically, most tribute acts are in violation of the rights belonging to the original act, to some degree. However, current legislation fails to adequately address the issue, and as such, a grey area has been created that has been left to the courts to decide.
American Songwriter
Why I Wrote A Screenplay About Steve Goodman
by Robert Morgan Fisher
In the summer 2008, I got a message from my old pal Paul Zollo. He said his friend, Seattle journalist Clay Eals, had written not just a biography of the late great folk-rock icon and Chicago native, Steve Goodman, but he'd in fact written the definitive and only biography the man who wrote "City of New Orleans" and many other songs.
The Independent
Louis Tomlinson: 'Being in One Direction was like a drug. The break-up hit me like a ton of bricks'
by Fiona Sturges
The former boyband star's first solo album, 'Walls', has taken four years to make, a period in which he has lost his mum and his sister. He talks to Fiona Sturges about grief, getting arrested and why he's sure 1D will reform
The New Yorker
The Kobe Bryant Grammys Brought a Lesson in Grief
by Briana Younger
The show arrived with a peculiar kind of duality-immense sorrow juxtaposed against the hard-earned wins of artists hoping to leave the kind of mark that Bryant did.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Dressing America"
Torres
From "Silver Tongue," out Friday on Merge. (Video NSFW.)
"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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