jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 09/19/2018 - A Win for Songwriters Like Lamar Alexander, Ticketmaster Tricks, 'Anything for a Hit,' Hip-Hop Restaurants...

The songwriters and the publishers and the digital music companies and the broadcasters and the record labels decided to work together over the last two or three years on what they agree on instead of what they disagree on.
Is this interest remix not displaying correctly? | View it in your browser.
Julian Gosin and Paul Robertson of the Soul Rebels at Grandoozy, Denver, Sept. 15, 2018.
(Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic/Getty Images)
Wednesday - September 19, 2018 Wed - 09/19/18
rantnrave:// Putting an exclamation point on years of complaints from artists and songwriters who got 17 million plays and earned 17 cents in royalties, LAMAR ALEXANDER outed himself on the floor of the US SENATE Tuesday as one of those songwriters. The Tennessee senator, who's an accomplished pianist (I'm pretty sure literally every living human in Tennessee is a musician), did a tiny bit better than 17 cents for his quarter share of LEE BRICE's "FALLING APART TOGETHER." The song, as he informed his Senate colleagues shortly after they unanimously approved the MUSIC MODERNIZATION ACT, was inspired by a conversation he had with an "older couple sitting in a pickup truck" (I did mention this was Tennessee, right?). He told Brice, who was working on his debut album at Alexander's house (see previous parentheses), about the encounter, and before you could say "BLUEBIRD CAFE," it was a song. "You'd think those royalties would add up and give me a nice income in addition to my salary as United States senator," Alexander said. "I checked, and in 2016 I reported on my ethics form that I file each year that my royalties only added up to $101.75. That's for one-fourth of a record that's played on an album of a pretty well known singer and writer. If you're a songwriter in Nashville or anywhere else, you can't make a living on that." Quick background check: It was Brice's moderate-selling debut album, it wasn't a single and several years have passed. But still. Point made, this time by a man with the power to directly do something about it. Alexander was a key force in bringing together the various corners of the music biz to shape what is now officially called the ORRIN G. HATCH Music Modernization Act, in honor of another senator/songwriter who played a key role. The songwriting and publishing communities, led by tireless advocates like ROSS GOLAN—who has co-written with ARIANA GRANDE, JUSTIN BIEBER and NICKI MINAJ and has a great podcast on the craft—played huge roles, too, bringing immense pressure on the bill's opponents. Alexander said its passage was still "in doubt" Tuesday afternoon. A last-minute compromise with SIRIUSXM reportedly sealed it. Senator Hatch—who apparently has one platinum and one gold record to his name—said the bill "will enhance songwriting in America." Here's what the bill does. It still has to go back to the HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, which approved a slightly different version, for final passage, and then it will need PRESIDENT TRUMP's signature. The bill's backers sound confident it will go smoothly and quickly. May the royalties and licenses and collaborations and business opportunities and swimming pools come smoothly and quickly, too, for all who stand to benefit. And may Lamar Alexander's next copyright net him a few dollars more... The team behind the MORE PERFECT podcast is responsible for this fantastic project that dropped Tuesday, in which artists including DOLLY PARTON, DEVENDRA BANHART, TORRES and CHERRY GLAZERR have written and recorded 27 songs to accompany discussions of the 27 amendments to the US CONSTITUTION... Also arriving Tuesday: BHAD BHABIE's debut mixtape, titled "15." And, no, it sounds nothing like ADELE despite following the same naming convention... Only days after JOAN JETT's complete catalog was finally made available for streaming, BIKINI KILL has put its catalog online, too, and the internet is suddenly rocking a little harder than it used to... MusicREDEF is taking a day off in observance of YOM KIPPUR. We'll be back in your inbox Friday morning.
- Matty Karas, curator
like a record that's skipping
CBC
'I'm getting ripped off': A look inside Ticketmaster's price-hiking bag of tricks
by Dave Seglins, Rachel Houlihan, ValΓ©rie Ouellet...
Buying a ticket for Saturday's Bruno Mars concert in Toronto was probably never going to be cheap, but what many of the star's 17,000 fans who scored a seat might not realize is it wasn't just scalpers driving up prices.
Billboard
ExposΓ© of Shady Music Biz of Decades Past Has Today's Record Labels Abuzz
by Ed Christman
Dorothy Carvello's "Anything for a Hit: An A&R Woman's Story of Surviving the Music Industry" was years in the making but finally hit the market Sept. 4. The book, which sheds light on some shady business practices and heinous behavior that women in the music business have endured, comes as the #MeToo movement continues to build.
WNYC Studios
27: The Most Perfect Album
by Jad Abumrad and More Perfect
We invited some of the best musicians in the world to create songs inspired by each of the 27 amendments; a kind of "Schoolhouse Rock!" for the 21st Century.
The Tennessean
Senate approves Music Modernization Act, first major reform to copyright law in a generation
by Nate Rau
Stakeholders representing virtually every corner of the music industry backed the legislation, which received rare bipartisan support from a bitterly partisan Congress. The legislation has been championed by everyone from Paul McCartney to Maren Morris for the promise of improving the licensing system and increasing digital royalty payouts to songwriters.
Vice
My Search for TV on the Radio's Mythical Williamsburg
by Wilbert L. Cooper
On the tenth anniversary of "Dear Science," Wilbert L. Cooper reflects on discovering the seminal Brooklyn band as an angsty black youth in Ohio.
The Guardian
Hip-hop restaurants: Australia's popular yet polarising food trend
by Christopher Kevin Au
As a growing number of Instagram-friendly burger and fried chicken joints pay homage to the US subculture, some are finding the marketing gimmick hard to stomach.
The Undefeated
Mac Miller's final interview, like the icon Jimi Hendrix's, reveals the painful normalcy of uncertainty
by Justin Tinsley
The terrible art of figuring life out and the search for peace -- whether one is famous, or not -- has not changed.
Atlas Obscura
Tracing Ska Music's Great Migration
by Evan Nicole Brown
A journey from Jamaica to California, via England.
Noisey
I Tagged Along as Sleaford Mods Delivered Their New EP to People's Houses
by Daniel Dylan Wray
Would we get attacked or showered in love? There was only one way to find out -- jumping in the van and hitting the road.
The Guardian
Rihanna: Growing up in Barbados, school was a grind. But I was lucky
by Rihanna
We must fight for the quarter of a billion young people still denied an education by conflict, poverty, sexism and bad policy, says artist and philanthropist Rihanna.
i'm a modern man
The New Yorker
The Nigerian Musicians Changing Pop
by Kelefa Sanneh
The stars of Afrobeats combine local and global styles in a riot of new sounds.
The Associated Press
Prince's New 'Piano & A Microphone 1983' Basement Tape Is as Simple as It Sounds
Raw and simplistic Prince album to be released Friday (Sep. 21).
Paste Magazine
The Myth of Sex, Drugs and Rock 'n' Roll is Not an Excuse For Being A Terrible Person
by Lizzie Manno
The myth of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll is still often seen as an acceptable excuse for abusive behavior.
Noisey
Latin Trap Has a 6ix9ine Problem
by Gary Suarez
Anuel AA's new track "Bebe" features 6ix9ine, and opens up a whole can of worms.
The Fader
Christine and the Queens isn't afraid to be too much
by Katie Heaney
Christine and the Queens is back with her new album Chris, and she's more electric than ever before.
Tidal
Bikini Kill Is Now On Streaming
by Brenna Ehrlich
We chat with Kathleen Hanna about why Bikini Kill is still so vital today.
Vulture
How Does 'Bel Canto' Measure Up As an Opera Movie?
by Bilge Ebiri
In what should be the pivotal scene of Paul Weitz's "Bel Canto," an American soprano played by Julianne Moore stands at the balcony of a mansion that's been seized by left-wing guerrillas in an unnamed Latin American country, and sings "Vissi d'arte" from Puccini's Tosca out to the masses nearby.
UPROXX
If You Ask Nicely, Rico Nasty Might Just Spit In Your Mouth
by Cherise Johnson
The Maryland rapper's live show is a raucous release of punk rock angst, from mosh pits to flying wigs.
The New York Times
Lizzo Doesn't Care What You Think About Her Body
by Sandra E. Garcia
"I made a commitment to feel-good music," the hip-hop artist said before a show at MoMA PS1. "I had to show my belly a lot of attention, a lot of love."
Bandcamp Daily
The San Francisco Tape Music Center Was an Early Home to the Avant-Garde
by Jordan Reyes
Home to artists like Ramon Sender, Pauline Oliveros, Morton Subotnick, and others, the SFTMC was at the forefront of '60s experimental music.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Atonement"
Opeth
"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


REDEF, Inc.
25 Broadway, 5th Floor
New York, NY 10014

redef.com
YOU DON'T GET IT?
Subscribe
Unsubscribe/Manage My Subscription
FOLLOW REDEF ON
© Copyright 2018, The REDEF Group

No comments:

Nov. 14 - Target debuts ‘weirdly hot’ Santa | Tide’s social-first NFL marketing strategy

Why Tide is shifting to social-first marketing for its latest NFL blitz; McDonald’s holiday cups entertain with Doodles ...