jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 06/14/2019 - 'Hello' New Music Friday, Stem & Music's Middle Tier, Khaled v. Tyler, Baroness, Madonna...

That's the reason people go to shows: they want to feel connected to something, and not so alone.
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He's gonna ride till he can't no more. Bruce Springsteen's "Western Stars" is out today on Columbia.
(Danny Clinch/Shore Fire Media)
Friday - June 14, 2019 Fri - 06/14/19
rantnrave:// Every Wednesday or Thursday I compile a list of all the albums coming out that week that seem worth knowing about (caveat A: subjective, obviously, but I try to cast as wide a net as possible) (caveat B: wait, albums? In 2019? Seriously, dude?) and I listen to a song or two from (almost) all of them. On Friday, I add as many as time allows into a SONOS playlist, hit shuffle and go about my business. This week, my pre-release-day ritual led me for the first time to the title track from LUKAS NELSON & PROMISE OF THE REAL's TURN OFF THE NEWS (BUILD A GARDEN). Good title (unnecessary parenthetical tag). Good song, too. With a familiar country-rock melody. Naggingly familiar. But I couldn't place it. I racked my brain for a few minutes trying to figure out the long ago source, walked away for a couple minutes, and then it hit me that Nelson's melody was of rather recent vintage. As in "HELLO SUNSHINE," the lead single from another album of some note that comes out today, BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN's WESTERN STARS. They're pretty much the same song, musically speaking. In the same key, even. The chance that either is in some way ripping off the other is almost nil, and I doubt I'd care if one of them was. It is, rather, a coincidence of influence, of instincts, of guitarists writing in D major, of the collective conscience from which all music is pulled in one way or another. Doesn't matter if you're a 69-year-old Rock and Roll Hall of Famer from New Jersey, the 30-year-old son of a Country Music Hall of Famer from Texas or, hell, a 20-year-old hip-hop striver from Atlanta. You're all jumping into the same cosmic pool of musical possibility. The connections aren't always so obvious but they're always there. And what we share with each other has much to do with who we are as what we don't share. That's my takeaway from music this week. Happy Friday. Turn off the news for 72 hours if you want... Oh, and there's a new MADONNA album, too. Every one one of her 21st century albums, even HARD CANDY, is better than you think it is. This week was created, I believe, with me in mind... The BLUE NOTE documentary BEYOND THE NOTES opens today in New York, and MARTIN SCORSESE's ROLLING THUNDER REVUE: A BOB DYLAN STORY is in limited release in theaters and unlimited release on NETFLIX. The latter chronicles one of the strangest and most compelling chapters in Bob Dylan's strange and compelling career. We take a look at how it felt in real time circa 1975, and how it's remembered today, in MusicSET: "When Bob Dylan's Thunder Rolled"... DRAKE is releasing two songs today to celebrate the TORONTO RAPTORS' first NBA championship... And yes it's FRIDAY and besides BRUCE and MADGE and LUKAS, that means new music from BARONESS, CRUMB, JOHN LUTHER ADAMS, JULIA SHAPIRO, BILL CALLAHAN, JEAN DEAUX, YOUR OLD DROOG, CHRIS SHIFLETT, KATE TEMPEST, BASTILLE, IRON & WINE/CALEXICO, BLOCBOY JB, MATTIEL, ANTHONY NAPLES, ANAT COHEN TENTET, EDMAR CASTAÑEDA & GRÉGOIRE MARET, MEERNAA, PERSONAL BEST, WILL YOUNG, NOAH KAHAN, NOEL GALLAGHER, X AMBASSADORS, TWO DOOR CINEMA CLUB, ZHAVIA WARD, ANATOLIAN WEAPONS, CHRIS ROBINSON BROTHERHOOD, SWEET OBLIVION, KEB' MO', JORDAN RAKEI and ROGER DALTREY... RIP ANDY GILL (the rock critic, not the GANG OF FOUR guitarist) and PAUL J. PELKONEN.
- Matty Karas, curator
i got a bad desire
Water and Music
What Stem's Upheaval Reveals About Music Distribution's New "Middle Tier"
by Cherie Hu
Stem is growing up, and not everyone is happy.
NPR Music
All He Wanted Was To Be Free: Where Bruce Springsteen's 'Western Stars' Came From
by Ann Powers
Springsteen's new album connects to a stream of pop balladry that emerged in tandem with Hollywood's turn in the late 1960s toward hippie antiheroes and modern masculinity's fatalistic drift.
KCRW
Song of a Gun
by Jessica Hopper, Robin Linn and Myke Dodge Weiskopf
As long as there have been guns, there have been songs about guns. But American culture's relationship with guns is changing. Does popular music reflect that?
Variety
Inside the DJ Khaled-Tyler, the Creator Chart Battle
by Shirley Halperin and Roy Trakin
The controversy surrounding the recent chart battle between DJ Khaled and Tyler the Creator has been a first-class problem for Sony Music, the parent company of Epic Records and Columbia Records, home to Khaled and Tyler, respectively.
The New York Times
Can Record Labels Be Trusted to Preserve Music History?
by Jon Caramanica and Jody Rosen
A 2008 fire destroyed master recordings for a who's who of popular music. A new investigation explores the damage done.
Billboard
All the Answers to the Big Questions Facing Today's Hitmaking Songwriters
by Carl Wilson, Colin Stutz, Taylor Weatherby...
From NBC to the MMA to the 30 people behind "Sicko Mode," songwriters are at the center of the cultural conversation -- and navigating more complex challenges than ever before. Here are answers to the 12 key questions facing today's behind-the-scenes hitmakers.
Billboard
How to Avoid Some of the Painful Parts of Music Publishing
by Joe Conyers III
For many songwriters today, royalties from their song copyrights can be their most consistent and dependable source of income. But often, significant amounts of money earned by music creators are left on the table or, worse, distributed to someone else, simply because they didn't understand their rights and properly manage their works.
Los Angeles Times
KCRW mainstay Jason Bentley to step down as 'Morning Becomes Eclectic' host
by Randall Roberts
KCRW will conduct a nationwide search to replace departing "Morning Becomes Eclectic" host Jason Bentley, who also doubled as station music director.
Stereogum
Baroness 'Gold & Grey' Review: A Legacy-Defining Masterpiece
by Michael Nelson
John Baizley's band returns with the best record they've ever made.
Afropunk
Frank Ocean Screwing His Label was a Win For Music
by Awa Gueye
Recently, Frank Ocean gave an interview to "Dazed," and it got me thinking about musicians who flip their middle fingers at institutions that try to control their creativity and profit. Thankfully, there are platforms to talk about adversities we face, allowing us to learn from each other.
i can't quench my desire
NPR
Madonna Introduces 'Madame X': 'Honesty Is A Commodity Right Now'
by Lulu Garcia-Navarro and Monika Evstatieva
On her 14th studio album, "Madame X," Madonna sings in Portuguese and Spanish in addition to English and highlights multicultural influences that she's encountered while living in Lisbon, Portugal.
Android Authority
A eulogy for iTunes, and the MP3 era
by Chris Thomas
Goodnight, sweet prince.
Music Industry Blog
Spotify Takes Aim at Radio, Again
by Mark Mulligan
Spotify has launched a radio-like feature set for premium subscribers in the US called Your Daily Drive.Although it is only positioned as a playlist, the content mix includes podcast news content and plays music the listener already likes with a sprinkling of new tracks.
Consequence of Sound
Phishing for a Future: The Strange Evolution of Bonnaroo
by Ming Lee Newcomb
As Phish returns to Bonnaroo this weekend, Ming Lee Newcomb traces the influential American festival's journey from jam-band past to present.
The FADER
How Stef Chura perfected her indie-rock howl
by Steffanee Wang
Two years after her promising debut, "Messes," Detroit musician Stef Chura honed her skills to make her most powerful record yet.
Music Business Worldwide
Amuse is capable of offering $1m-plus advances. What's its long-term game plan?
by Rhian Jones
Amuse CEO Diego Farias explains how he's building a record label fully attuned to the needs of artists in the digital age.
Medium
Watching the slow death of the mass merchant CD section
by Glenn Peoples
Retail has little interest in the compact disc. If downloads were the nail, streaming is the hammer. Seeing a mass merchant's CD section drives the point home, however. Over the years I've seen the decline of the CD at a Target store near my home in Nashville.
The Ringer
Let Us Remember 'Men in Black,' Will Smith's 1997 Classic Theme Song
by Donnie Kwak and Micah Peters
As we prepare for 'Men in Black: International,' here's a look back at the unforgettable ditty that put the movie franchise on the map.
Nashville Scene
Changing the Pronouns in 'What Mattered Most' Means a Lot to Ty Herndon
by Brittney McKenna
The openly gay country artist discusses re-recording his 1995 hit -- and how country music can open itself up to the LGBT community.
Time Magazine
In a Culture War Over the Military, Bruce Springsteen Stands Alone
by Andrew R. Chow
While public conversation about the military tends to devolve into feverish political debate, Bruce Springsteen is a voice for the veterans.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Borderlines"
Baroness
From "Gold & Grey," out today on Abraxan Hymns.
"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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