jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 10/07/2019 - Ginger Baker's Polyrhythmic Life, How Spotify Knows, Gibson's Future, Tyler the Creator, Boiler Room...

If Ginger wants to play jazz, he plays jazz. If he wants to play rock, he starts Cream. If he wants to play Afrobeat, he moves to Nigeria. Whatever he plays, he brings his own pulse and sound. He understands the African beat more than any other Westerner.
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Ginger Baker playing with Cream at the National Jazz & Blues Festival, Windsor, England, Aug. 13, 1967.
(David Redfern/Redferns/Getty Images)
Monday - October 07, 2019 Mon - 10/07/19
rantnrave:// GINGER BAKER's life was an eight-decade-long polyrhythm, a lifelong exploration of the rhythmic possibilities of jazz, rock, Afrobeat and any number of other styles and hybrids that called out to him as he worked his way across the three continents he called home (often on the run from someone or something), making friends onstage and enemies offstage, abusing himself more than he ever abused anyone else, helping invent heavy metal (which he hated), and, because everyone needs a hobby, going broke pursuing his love of polo. Here's a classic account of his peripatetic life, which is your one biographical must-read as we mourn the death of one of the greatest rock drummers ever (he would've disputed the phrase "one of the"). Here's a 13-minute drum solo. (Bonus track: 16-minute drum duet with Afrobeat grandmaster TONY ALLEN.) Here's one of many examples of his penchant for cruelty and, lest you think a single rhythm can ever be the sum of anything, an example of him being absolutely charming in another time and place. He spent his life exploring other times and places. He was a master of time, in the musical sense of the word. And he wound up in an incredibly dark place, in any number of senses. But in the early '70s, having spent his previous few years changing the world and sealing his name in the Book of Rock with one double-bass-drum kit, one generational guitarist and two supergroups in his native London, he decamped to Lagos, Nigeria, built a recording studio and reconnected with FELA KUTI, whom he had met in London. While most of his peers were digging deeper into their rock and roll roots and branches—and often making great records in the process—Baker decided to look over the hills and far away (to borrow a phrase from a famous band of disciples he only sort of tolerated). He went rogue in the best possible way. Schooling and immersing himself in Fela and Afrobeat. Traveling to the edges of rock and jazz. Looking, for much of the rest of his life, for new musical companions to drive him forward, while he drove them even further forward, in pursuit of, well, new times and new places. I love this understated summation of Baker's "strange magic," from NPR MUSIC's TOM MOON: "Though he wasn't necessarily charming or gracious in social settings, he was somehow able to cultivate genuine interaction and empathy among musicians in live situations. He did this on stages of every conceivable size, in front of massive Hyde Park crowds and in tiny subdued jazz clubs." There were victims along the way, including Baker himself. When you've made your way through those drum solos and the decades of music that followed, JAY BULGER's (completely bonkers) 2012 documentary BEWARE OF MR. BAKER will be here to fill in the darkness. RIP... PAULINA PORIZKOVA remembers her late husband RIC OCASEK for ROLLING STONE and it is, among many other things, one of the most beautiful accounts of a loved one's death that I've read in a long time... RIP also: DIAHANN CARROLL, ED ACKERSON, MARCELLO GIORDANI, LARRY JUNSTROM and ERIC FLY.
- Matty Karas, curator
ginger baker's air force
Rolling Stone
RETRO READ: The Devil and Ginger Baker
by Jay Bulger
Inside a gated compound in South Africa, one of rock's most legendary drummers is still making enemies.
SnagfFlms
RETRO WATCH: 'Beware of Mr. Baker'
by Jay Bulger
Ginger Baker is well-known for his smashing work in Cream and Blind Faith. But the world's greatest (and most volatile) drummer didn't really hit his stride until 1972, when he journeyed to Nigeria and discovered Fela Kuti's Afrobeat. Following periods of drug-induced self-destruction and countless groundbreaking musical works, this musical madman eventually settled in South Africa.
OneZero
How Spotify's Algorithm Knows Exactly What You Want to Listen To
by Dave Gershgorn
A set of powerful algorithms use your music and your personal details to shape your entire listening experience.
Guitar World
Gibson speaks out: 'We're leveraging our iconic past in order to make the best-playing and best-sounding guitars today'
by Richard Bienstock
James 'JC' Curleigh and Cesar Gueikian reveal how they turned around.
5 Magazine
Boiler Room Is Changing
by Terry Matthew
Into what? It's hard to say.
SPIN
10 Women the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Should Nominate This Year
by Al Shipley
When Janet Jackson entered the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's class of 2019 in March, she closed her acceptance speech with a simple request. "Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, please, 2020: induct more women."
Vox
How this chair became a pop culture icon
by Estelle Caswell
A lot of celebrity butts sat in this chair.
The Guardian
Tyler, the Creator: 'Theresa May's gone, so I'm back in the UK'
by Rebecca Nicholson
Four years after being turned away at the airport, the rapper talks about his battle with the Home Office, his funk reinvention - and why accusations of homophobia were wide of the mark.
Stereogum
Read An Excerpt From Liz Phair's New Memoir 'Horror Stories'
by Liz Phair
I'm sitting in the makeup chair, one of those canvas-backed director's thrones that are awkwardly tall and feel like they could fold inward at any moment. There's too much air circulating around me — on my calves and the small of my back, across my naked shoulder blades.
The New York Times
Ginger Baker's Essential Songs: Listen to 15 Tracks
by Christopher R. Weingarten
The musician who helped define the role of the superstar rock drummer has died at 80.
baker gurvitz army
Digital Trends
A.I. musicians are a growing trend. What does that mean for the music industry?
by Luke Dormehl
The most prolific musical artists manage to release one or two studio albums in a year. A.I. company Auxuman plans to put out a new full-length album every single month. Welcome to the world of machine creativity. Here's why Auxuman's founder is so confident he's onto a winner.
The Washington Post
Steve Miller cracked the code of 1970s radio. But he's still raging against the music industry
by Geoff Edgers
How the unconventional genius behind "Fly Like an Eagle" learned to love his label so you could hear his hidden treasures.
Longreads
The (Loud) Soundtrack to My Struggle with Faith
by Anna Gazmarian
After being diagnosed with bipolar disorder, Anna Gazmarian grapples with her evangelical upbringing, and finds solace in screamo music.
Rolling Stone
China's Tencent Is Setting a Trend That Spotify May Have to Follow
by Tim Ingham
By making select releases premium-only, this company is showing high-profile competitors that the practice might have legs.
Music Business Worldwide
Spotify's market cap value has fallen by $15bn in 14 months. Is declining ARPU freaking investors as much as record companies?
by Murray Stassen
Without a hardware 'get out', is Spotify's global pricing strategy on a road to nowhere?
Africa is a Country
The Cuban Atlantic
by Boima Tucker
Afrobeats, kuduro, and afrohouse arrive in Cuba birthing a new local musical genre. A new film documents the whole thing for international audiences.
The Guardian
No-deal Brexit may make touring Europe 'unviable' for UK artists
by Laura Snapes
Bands, theatre groups and sports clubs could be badly hit by need for visas, carnets and documents.
Red Bull Music Academy
Rap 12"s and the Forgotten Artform of Bonus Beats
by Jeff Mao
Jazzy Jay, Carlos Berrios, Monica Lynch and more on one of hip-hop's most adventurous eras.
Billboard
What's It Like to Watch Billie Eilish at ACL Music Fest With Your 10-Year-Old Superfan? These Parents Found Out
by Hilary Hughes
One set stood out from the rest on Saturday (Oct. 5) during the first weekend of the 2019 Austin City Limits Music Festival, and that was largely thanks to the hundreds of young girls watching Billie Eilish from the shoulders of a chaperone.
Slate
Crooner José José Was the Soundtrack of Mexican Life for a Half-Century
by León Krauze
An icon of romantic angst.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Ye Ye De Smell"
Fela Kuti & the Africa '70 with Ginger Baker (live 1971)
"I wrote this tune especially for Ginger. He doesn't smell, really. He takes his bath." – Fela
"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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