jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 12/17/2018 - Yo Don't Bum Rush Your Ex's Show, Heavy Metal Hoaxing, H.E.R. Jay-Z, The 1975, Selling Stereo...

It's time for all of us to come together to solve this problem. We must stop pointing fingers to say it's radio's problem and radio saying it's the labels' problem. Can we all just get in a room together and find a solution before we hurt the careers and livelihoods of so many talented artists?
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Sleep singer/bassist Al Cisneros in OIso, Norway, May 22, 2018.
(PYMCA/Universal Images Group/Getty Images)
Monday - December 17, 2018 Mon - 12/17/18
rantnrave:// Following your ex to her place of work, loudly interrupting her at a presentation in front of her colleagues and clients and begging her to take you back is "cringeworthy" at best, a "textbook definition of harassment" (and stalking) at worst. Abetting such a stunt in the hope of creating a viral music festival moment is so beyond gross I don't know what the proper word for it is. Telling the internet to stop bashing your ex who did that because he's still the father of your baby and because online bullying isn't ever helpful is the definition of class. I'm not naming names even though you know who I'm talking about because I don't know them and their private lives are none of my business. But when those private lives spill over into public performance involving some of the biggest pop stars on the planet, it would be super helpful, classy even, for the handlers and other people behind the scenes to think about what message is being sent to the boys, girls and young men and women in the audience, to further think about the slights and abuses that women face every day of their lives, and to do the right thing... Also, stop trying to countrysplain why there are so few women on the radio and start putting women on the radio. Literally all you have to do is cue up a song and hit the "play" button. That's the solution... Every officially inducted member of every band in the ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME becomes a Hall of Fame voter, which means, for example, RADIOHEAD gets five ballots in future Hall campaigns, ROXY MUSIC and DEF LEPPARD get six each, the CURE get nine and JANET JACKSON gets one. And that, I would like to think, means the chances just got a little better for the likes of KRAFTWERK, DEPECHE MODE, CHAKA KHAN, the SMITHS and JUDAS PRIEST. Not that I can imagine THOM YORKE sitting at his desk, pondering the options and filling in a ballot. But I can see JONNY GREENWOOD patiently putting checkmarks next to CAN or KRZYSZTOF PENDERECKI, should the nominating committee ever see fit to offer those options... "I'm gathering that RIVERS might be a guy in WEEZER?"... Music law headline of the week: "You Can't Buy the 'RASPBERRY BERET' MP3 at the Secondhand Store"... RIP JOE OSBORN, ANDREW FRIERSON and PERRY ROBINSON.
- Matty Karas, curator
dopesmoker
Rolling Stone
The Great Heavy Metal Hoax
by David Kushner
How a down-on-his-luck headbanger fabricated a persona, faked a tour, and promoted himself as a hard-rock savior.
The Daily Beast
How the Godfather of SoundCloud Rap Became an Incel Hawking Ten-Dollar Beats
by Tarpley Hitt
The rapper who paved the way for stars like XXXTentacion and Denzel Curry never achieved their commercial success. Now he posts about incels and Elliot Rodger.
Billboard
Need Tickets? Get In Line, as Emails Reveal How Brokers Get First Crack at Tix for Big Arena Shows
by Dave Brooks
Emails show how professional resellers buy (and sell) tickets for arena concerts before the public ever gets a shot at them -- but the risk is high and the market is overheating.
American Civil Liberties Union
The Problem With Using Face Recognition on Fans at a Taylor Swift Concert
by Jay Stanley
Face recognition is of little use as a security tool unless there's a watchlist to back it up — a set of photos of people that you're looking out for. With any watchlist, the questions are who is put on those lists and based on what information? There's a long history of private and quasi-private watchlists being abused.
Los Angeles Times
H.E.R. went from child star to enigmatic R&B sensation — on her terms
by Gerrick D. Kennedy
H.E.R. stayed true to her core and pierced the bass rattling sounds of rap with several EPs bursting with brooding, slow-dripping soul that announced her as one of the most exciting R&B talents in recent years. Now she's up for five Grammys.
Complex
The 80 Best Jay-Z Verses
by Frazier Tharpe, Angel Diaz, Ross Scarano...
80 essential JAY-Z verses, picked from 13 solo studio albums, remixes, radio freestyles, and other classic ephemera.
NME
The 1975 Album of 2018 interview: Notes on an exceptional year
by Dan Stubbs
For the second time, The 1975 have topped NME's albums of the year list. We caught up with Matty to find out how he's feeling about all the hype.
Detroit Free Press
'Deaf and Loud Symphonic Experience' pairs DSO, deaf musicians for Detroit concert
by Brian McCollum
A first-of-its-kind concert pairs the DSO with deaf musicians and sign-language performers in a celebration of homegrown hits, from Motown to Eminem.
The Conversation
How stereo was first sold to a skeptical public
by Jonathan Schroeder and Janet Borgerson
Sixty years ago, stereo promised to forever change the way people listened to music. But how could record companies convince customers to buy a new record player, speakers and amplifier?
Grady Smith
This beat is killing country music
by Grady Smith
Country music has been taken over by snap tracks, and it's killing the whole vibe.
the sciences
Vulture
'Springsteen on Broadway,' Without the Hassle of Broadway
by Matt Zoller Seitz
It's a surprisingly meta presentation, at times feeling like as much of a storytelling workshop as a musical autobiography.
Los Angeles Times
'Real R&B' seemed like a lost art. Fresh voices have changed that — but is it enough?
by Gerrick D. Kennedy
In the '90s, R&B's influence was indelible. Artists dominated the charts with record-breaking singles and the explosion of groups - both male and female - created a boon for the genre. But as hip-hop continued its rise, the genre lost its way.
Broadly
The Professor Who Made Beyoncé's 'Lemonade' a College Course
by Rachel Rascoe
After empowering Southern students of color with her "Lemonade" course, Texas professor Omise'eke Tinsley retraces her own roots in a new book.
Billboard
The Buzz's Rocky Year: Inside the Kansas City Radio Station That Helps Alternative Bands Get Big
by Justin Curto
Kansas City's KRBZ 96.5 The Buzz has claimed for years that "KC breaks bands" -- like Mumford & Sons, alt-J and Glass Animals -- before they blow up elsewhere. Yet the station might not be the tastemaker it once was.
Inkstone
How China weaned itself off music piracy
by Grace Tsoi
In the not-so-distant past, almost everyone in China was a pirate.
Real Engineering
How Shazam Works
by Brian McManus
What you just witnessed was the Shazam app recognizing a song in a noisy environment and proceeding to find a match for it among the millions of songs in its servers database. For most this probably seems like a trivial task. Our brains can identify songs incredibly quickly from a young age, but the pathways in your brain that allow you to identify a song quickly are incredibly complex.
Pitchfork
Marie Davidson's Feminist Techno Brought Humor to the Dancefloor in 2018
by Philip Sherburne
Techno has seen plenty of ranters and preachers, but it's never had a narrator quite like this Montreal producer.
Rolling Stone
Taylor Swift's Concerts Have Grossed More Than Half a Billion Dollars in the Past Three Years – But Not Without Risk
by Tim Ingham
Swift may have been snubbed by the Grammys, but her "slow ticketing" model paid off in big ways.
Vulture
Great Moments in Auto-Tune History
by Larry Fitzmaurice
Typically, the music-streaming public remains at arm's length when it comes to tricks and tips that artists use in the recording studio -- it's too nerdy, too complicated, and only useful to obsessives and would-be artists themselves.
The Associated Press
Putin says rap should be controlled in Russia, not banned
The Russian president says rap "is based on three pillars: sex, drugs and protest." But he is particularly concerned with drug themes prevalent in rap, saying "this is a path to the degradation of the nation."
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Sonic Titan"
Sleep
Sleep's first album in 15 years was one of the great metal stories of 2018.
"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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