i landed guys. thank you for your prayers. can't believe how many people wished death on me on this website. f*** you. but not today | | Post Malone at the Rock in Roma festival, Rome, Italy, July 10, 2018. (Giuseppe Maffia/NurPhoto/Getty Images) | | | | | "i landed guys. thank you for your prayers. can't believe how many people wished death on me on this website. f*** you. but not today" | | | | | rantnrave:// A day after closing the VIDEO MUSIC AWARDS, POST MALONE and members of his crew spent several hours in a small plane Tuesday afternoon circling over New Jersey, New York and Connecticut preparing for an emergency landing after blowing out two tires on takeoff. They landed safely, but not before flying directly into the kind of turbulent, bonkers news cycle that BILLY JOEL songs are instantly made of. And not before giving internet trolls ample time to show their true troll colors. I have no interest in repeating or linking to the tweets the "ROCKSTAR" pop star was responding to with a well-deserved "f*** you" after he was safe, but I did my due diligence to make sure they were there, which they were, of course. Color me shocked. Which I was. Because it's still shocking to see fellow humans actually writing these things and actually posting them in public, no matter how many times you've seen them before. The onslaught of ugliness is deeply dispiriting. And worth fighting everywhere it shows its face. One of the guiding philosophies of MusicREDEF is that we celebrate the existence of all music, all art, all meaningful expression. And we take it all seriously—the artists who make it, the businesspeople and crews who support it, the fans who listen to it. We are human and there are things we like more than others—and things we like less than others—but we try to never lose sight of the fact that every artist and every piece of art they make is important to someone. Post Malone is every bit as life-affirming to his fans as BEYONCΓ is to hers. The connection is every bit as crucial. We will go to the grave fighting for that. And we will go to the grave fighting for the magic of pop music, from "Rockstar" to "BETTER NOW" and beyond. Safe travels always, Post Malone... Speaking of that connection: Artists have just as strong spiritual connections with the artists they love as fans do. And they can get just as nervous when meeting them. I heart this essay by SOCCER MOMMY's SOPHIE ALLISON on how to make that moment work, whether you're running into HAYLEY WILLIAMS in a mall when you're a teenager or bumping into her backstage when you find your own band opening for hers a few years later... Yet another way to commune with a favorite artist: YOUNG THUG gives ELTON JOHN's "ROCKET MAN" a go. Hugs... JJ ABRAMS has a record label... MADONNA has an explanation, sort of... RIP DON CHERRY and PAUL BROADNAX. | | | - Matty Karas, curator | | | | | Afropunk | In the telling of rock and roll's history, women - especially Black women - are often relegated to the footnotes. This is their true story. | | | | Synchblog | With famous musicians and music publishing executives continuing to express their discontent over the current streaming royalty rates for songwriters, Eamonn Forde explains why the solution is not as simple as it appears. | | | | Music Business Worldwide | Telco giants are back in love with music - but is that definitely such as good thing? | | | | Billboard | As cringeworthy as her speech was, it's unfair to levy all the blame at Madonna, when MTV's decision to assign her an Aretha Franklin tribute was so misguided from the beginning. | | | | The Fader | The VMAs, like the song of the summer, will soon be obsolete. As for this year, at least Jennifer Lopez was there. | | | | The Times | You may not have heard of him, but your kids will be crazy about him. Meet the 'regular dude' who became a global heartthrob. | | | | The Outline | Musicians are trying to capture the soundscapes of the environment as it dies. | | | | Playboy | "Playboy" visits Palm Springs' Splash House and discovers EDM's staying power. | | | | Hypebot | Music industry journalist Cherie Hu joins co-hosts Michael Brandvold and Jay Gilbert on our Music Bis Weekly podcast. Cherie is passionate about documenting and propelling innovation in music, media and entertainment. In September 2017, she received the Reeperbahn Festival's inaugural award for Music Business Journalist of the Year. | | | | Lone Star Music Magazine | How a wild blues Blaster and an old Flatlander found a way, after years of friendship, to finally "Get Together" on record. | | | | The Ringer | Superproducer Jay Joyce has made hit records for Eric Church, Little Big Town, Carrie Underwood, and more. The rest of Nashville just wants to know how he does it. | | | | Resident Advisor | Holly Dicker goes deep on the 30-year tradition that's infiltrated modern dance music. | | | | Pitchfork | The Prince spiritual that closes "BlacKkKlansman" is the culmination of a long friendship and a shared commitment to defiance. | | | | Music Week | "Music Week" has obtained a letter issued by Warner Music Group that reveals a starkly different approach between the majors in how the proceeds from the equity sale in Spotify will be passed on to artists. | | | | Rolling Stone | "Despacito" proved that pop speaks every language. Now, Korean superstars like BTS are scoring megahits and selling out U.S. stadiums. | | | | The Ringer | Denied a no. 1 debut, the rapper took aim at Travis Scott and Spotify on Twitter, and took solace in … Harriet Tubman? | | | | Garage Magazine | Talking with the two women of The B-52s about teasing their incredible style out of beehive hairdos. | | | | CBS News | Of all the orchestras he conducts around the world, this may be the one that moves Barenboim the most. | | | | Consequence of Sound | "Regardless of what anybody told us on our way up, we're here now." | | | | The Bitter Southerner | Patterson Hood's father played with the late Aretha Franklin for years. Today, he remembers the great power she had in his family and on his life. | | | | | | YouTube | | | | | | | | If you haven't read Michael Gonzales' "Black Women Rock," the first story in today's mix, this is your cue to circle back and do so now. | | | | | | © Copyright 2018, The REDEF Group | | |
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