jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 06/22/2020 - Sault's Perfect 2020 Album, Twitch v. Music, Lamb of God, Bob Dylan, Phoebe Bridgers...

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The pain we sing of [in Marvin Gaye's 'What's Going On'] is a lingering, never-going-away pain. For the well-intentioned co-conspirator, it's a temporary pinprick—just enough discomfort to provide a false sense of assimilation and understanding. When they sing along, they never fully realize the luxury of pain that only lasts for a moment.
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Terence Blanchard at the Sundance Film Festival, Park City, Utah, Jan. 24, 2007.
(Randall Michelson/WireImage/Getty Images)
Monday - June 22, 2020 Mon - 06/22/20
rantnrave:// It's quite possible the best album of 2020 came out three days ago "out of thin air, and with little information." UNTITLED (BLACK IS) is the third album in 13 months by SAULT, a co-ed London neo-soul/funk/plus band about which pretty much nothing is officially known. It's a stripped-down 20-song Black Lives Matter concept album that has lots of drum-machine soul, plenty of chanting, a little Afrobeat, a touch of gospel and a moment of doo-wop, and which frames its considerable anger and pain inside the spiritual optimism of declarations like "We will never show fear / Even in my eyes / I will always rise / In wildfires." Also responsible for much of the framing: one of the most affecting female voices of this moment. It's hard to tell if the heart of the album is the phrase "Stop dem!" shouted angrily, almost desperately, three times in a row at the end of the song of the same name, or the almost romantically cooed "Black is so warm and pure / And when all else fails, Black endures" that ends the opening track. Probably both. The full album could have been recorded entirely in the past month, or in the past year; it's not as if the issues the album is speaking to popped out of nowhere this spring. For all the minimalism of the arrangements, the songwriting and production are perfectly conceived and detailed, sometimes with a throwback vibe that earns that "neo" tag. There's an alternate universe somewhere where like 12 of these 20 songs are singles. I have no idea how big that alternate universe is, maybe it's about the size of an Autonomous Zone in the Pacific Northwest, maybe it's a corner of TWITTER or BANDCAMP, maybe, hopefully, it could actually be this universe. You can download "Untitled (Black Is)" for free from the band here or buy it here or stream it at all the usual places... And yes, speaking of three days ago, that BOB DYLAN album is an A-plus late-career gift... And here's to BEYONCΓ‰ surprise drops—and black-owned business directories... This TERRACE MARTIN quote was my quote of the day a week ago and I'm still thinking about it a lot: "For those that aren't reflecting the times, my job is not to question their artistry, but I question their being, and why they're doing this for a living"... RIP TRAY SAVAGE.
- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
mo' better blues
NPR Music
Sault's 'Untitled' Lights Up The Full Spectrum Of Blackness
by Marcus J. Moore
Sault's latest and best album is a capital-B Black record that funnels rage and sorrow into contemplative streams of thought, over equally brooding music meant to slow your heart rate.
Bloomberg
Twitch's Streaming Boom Is Jolting the Music Industry
by Lucas Shaw
Long an afterthought to YouTube, Instagram and TikTok, Twitch has won over musicians. Now it must deal with their lawyers.
Literary Hub
A Brief History of the Policing of Black Music
by Harmony Holiday
For as long as Black music has been popular, crossover, coveted by white listeners and dissected by white critics, it has also been criminalized by white police at all levels of law enforcement.
HITS Daily Double
Jeffrey Harleston: The Task at Hand
by Simon Glickman
UMG general counsel and interim Def Jam chief Jeffrey Harleston already had a full plate when he was tapped, with Motown's Ethiopia Habtemariam, to lead Universal's Task Force for Meaningful Change in response to the crisis that erupted in the wake of George Floyd's death.
Los Angeles Times
Coronavirus halted L.A.'s biggest K-pop festival. Now fans have a digital alternative
by August Brown
Kim Hyun Soo, head of CJ ENM global festivals, tells The Times about KCON:TACT, the digital K-pop festival replacing KCON amid a coronavirus outbreak.
The Daily Beast
The Heavy Metal Band Raging Against the Trump Machine
by Nick Schager
Lamb of God frontman Randy Blythe opens up about their new self-titled album, the state of America, and why they're one of the few metal acts that goes after Trump.
Slate
Bob Dylan's New Album Is His Best in Many Years, Maybe Decades
by Carl Wilson
The Nobel winner's latest is a masterful (and crude) collage from our greatest remix artist.
The Ringer
Everyone Wants to Be Phoebe Bridgers's Friend
by Michael Tedder
With her new album 'Punisher,' indie rock's brightest star is letting us into her world. Now if only she could get a dog.
Music Tech Solutions
Who Owns The MLC Database of Songs?
by Chris Castle
If you've been following the evolution of the "aircraft carrier" revision of the U.S. Copyright Act styled the "Music Modernization Act," you will remember that America now has a blanket license for the mechanical reproduction of songs (or will have as of 1/1/21). 
Variety
Proposed Wording in Music Modernization Act Worries Songwriting Advocates
by Geoff Mayfield
The phrase "server fixation date and termination" might sound boring or gibberish to anyone other than an attorney or a tech reporter, but that term, from the U.S. Copyright Office's April update on the Music Modernization Act, has become a potentially thorny issue among those hammering out rules for the new law, which takes effect in January.
round midnight
The Atlantic
How Far Does the Apple Fall From the Tree?
by Dave Grohl
In my case, it ripped off the branch and rolled all the way down the hill.
Complex
How the Music Industry Needs to Change, According to Artists
by Jessica McKinney
Artists explain how they'd like the music industry to change and better support Black voices.
Complex
How New Artists Are Moving Forward in a World Without Concerts
by Caitlin LoPilato
With concerts on hold, emerging artists are figuring out how to adapt.
The Tennessean
How John Prine gave us one last song: 'I Remember Everything'
by Dave Paulson
The late singer-songwriter played the song for friends at Thanksgiving dinner and 'just melted everyone,' producer Dave Cobb says.
Bloomberg
Avenging the Tulsa Race Massacre With Hip Hop
by Taylor Hosking
The "Fire in Little Africa" project hopes to resurrect Tulsa's Black Wall Street legacy through the city's homegrown hip hop scene.
Vulture
We Are Not 'Alright'
by Craig Jenkins
The world Kendrick's song envisioned seems far away today. The moment requires a different kind of protest song, and rappers are putting in work.
Daily Mail Online
How NYC's iconic Gem Spa was a magnet for musicians and misfits
by Dusica Sue Malesevic
Madonna, Basquiat, Lou Reed, and the New York Dolls were regulars at the shop known for its egg creams.
Lefsetz Letter
The Live Nation Memo
by Bob Lefsetz
Never EVER forget that this business runs on talent. Without the talent, there's nothing to sell. And talent is not fungible.
Variety
Following 'Catastrophic Job Losses,' Film Scoring Gears Up to Return as Hollywood Reopens
by Jon Burlingame
With a projected $32 million loss in wages for canceled scoring dates because of COVID-19, the Los Angeles music community is gearing up for the return of film and TV recording - but cautiously, under strict guidelines.
The New York Times
My Journey to Writing an Opera About Police Violence
by Tazewell Thompson
Tazewell Thompson's libretto for "Blue" tells the story of a black family struck by tragedy.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Wildfires"
Sault
"Take off your badge / We all know it was murder / Murder, murder, murder." From "Untitled (Black Is)," out now on Forever Living Originals.
"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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