jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 10/25/2019 - Greatest Human Artist of All Time, Musical Hallucinations, Eminem, Elton John & Lana Del Rey...

I lurk music a lot. I wake up every morning and spend two hours listening to music that I've never heard before.
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Kanye West performing his Sunday Service at Coachella, Indio, Calif., April 21, 2019.
(Rich Fury/Getty Images)
Friday - October 25, 2019 Fri - 10/25/19
rantnrave:// KANYE WEST is "unquestionably, undoubtedly, the greatest human artist of all time," according to Kanye West. "It's just a fact." Call him the GHOAT, I guess. He said a lot of other words in an insanely long BEATS 1 interview with ZANE LOWE that you probably don't need to listen to unless you've been wondering if people who collaborate with him these days are allowed to have premarital sex (they are not), if he will be president one day (yes) and if GOD is using him to show off (duh). Think of him as LIAM GALLAGHER without the sense of humor, married to POSH SPICE and with way better music skills. Anyway, the interview was recorded on Tuesday and his album JESUS IS KING wasn't yet finished and it's now Friday and the album may or may not have been released this morning. This isn't the first time he's promised it. And even if it has been released, that doesn't necessarily mean it will still be available, say, tomorrow. Because, you know. But also, and this matters: GHOAT or not, the man has never made a bad album... If Kanye's album is in fact out and everything has gone according to plan, then you can click on every song on it in PANDORA and get a full list of songwriter, musician and producer credits. Pandora's credits rollout will be welcomed by artists, composers, labels and every music fan who's spent the last decade wondering what happened to liner notes. It may also confuse them. For now, it's web-only (it may be available on Pandora-for-Victrolas, too; I haven't checked) and nothing is hyperlinked, so if you want to know what EVAN SMITH has done besides playing saxophone on LANA DEL REY's NORMAN F***ING ROCKWELL, you're out of luck. You may also notice, while perusing that album's title song, that JACK ANTONOFF is credited as "producer," "associated performer," the oddly titled job of "composer lyricist" and the seemingly thankless one of "studio personnel," which may leave you wondering if he was getting coffee for everyone in addition to producing the session, which, to be fair, maybe he was. Elsewhere, BILL WYMAN is both "bass" and "bass guitar" and MICK JAGGER is both "vocalist" and "vocals" on the ROLLING STONES' "SLAVE," which is a bit much even for the greatest human rock band of all time. Is there an editor in the house? Tech companies gonna tech. But wouldn't it be nice if a tech company that prides itself on delivering a particularly human experience in a cold digital world put a little more humanity into one of the most human pieces of its interface?... Also in liner notes nation, the RECORDING ACADEMY today launches its Behind the Record campaign, in which it's giving artists tools to create custom album and single covers with credits on them, for posting on social media. A nice human touch... "This is my 19th album and I'm still writing about cars," BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN tells us near the beginning of his unusual concert film WESTERN STARS, which opens today. The film, which functions as a sort of third act to SPRINGSTEEN ON BROADWAY, finds him performing the album of the same name with a country-rock band, a small orchestra and a mini-choir in a barn on his New Jersey property and talking about the songs, himself and America in solemn interstitials shot in the California desert. There's a lot of running away and running back home, both of which cars are good for. I'm not sure the songs need all that explanation—they tend to do a good job of introducing themselves—but the performances are intimate and wonderful. And speaking of coming home, they do a nice job of putting his wife and E STREET BANDmate PATTI SCIALFA at the center of his stage in a way the Broadway show could not. This Q&A with WARNER BROS. PICTURES chief TOBY EMMERICH is worth your time, and includes some great insight into Springsteen's relationship to cinema, Westerns in particular... So anyway it's FRIDAY and in addition to maybe Kanye (oh, he has a film, too) and definitely the Bruce soundtrack, that means new music from FKA TWIGS, ANNA MEREDITH, GALLANT, TEEBS, KING PRINCESS, DAVID BYRNE, BROOKE CANDY, NEIL YOUNG & CRAZY HORSE, VAN MORRISON, OLD DOMINION, GUAPDAD 4000, DESERT SESSIONS, MEEMO COMMA, REX ORANGE COUNTY, CIGARETTES AFTER SEX, KONRADSEN, SEBASTIAN, RINGO STARR, GREAT GRANDPA, SUNN O))), ALCEST, PHIL CAMPBELL, LITTLE KRUTA, the GREAT OLD ONES, CLOAK, MAYHEM, ALLISON MOORER, GRACE POTTER, CARMEN LUNDY, the BAD PLUS, HARRY CONNICK JR., JAMES BLUNT, ANNA OF THE NORTH, STEVE HAUSCHILDT, DRY CLEANING, LITTLE SCREAM, BLACK MARBLE, MIKAL CRONIN, HEMLOCK ERNST & KENNY SEGAL, NEGATIVLAND and ANTHONY RAMOS... RIP DAVE KING.
- Matty Karas, curator
a load of compromisin'
Nautilus
The Necessity of Musical Hallucinations
by Jonathan Berger
That song stuck in your head is your brain doing its work.
BuzzFeed News
The Secret Service Interviewed Eminem Over "Threatening Lyrics" About Trump And Ivanka. These Docs Prove It.
by Jason Leopold
Documents obtained by BuzzFeed News show the Secret Service interviewed the rapper about his Trump lyrics after an email from a TMZ staffer.
Rolling Stone
Musicians on Musicians: Elton John & Lana Del Rey
by Patrick Doyle
Pop's most enigmatic star visits her idol at his Beverly Hills home to talk about songwriting, Seventies L.A., and how live shows are like sex.
Trapital
The 10 Most Influential Hip-Hop Business Moves of the 2010s
by Dan Runcie
To make the list, a business move had to do two things: Change the trajectory of the artist, mogul, businessperson, or company involved. Influence others by changing the landscape or following their lead.
Pitchfork
22 Musicians on Their Favorite Albums of the 2010s
by Cat Zhang
The records that defined the decade for Courtney Barnett, Denzel Curry, Carly Rae Jepsen, Disclosure and more.
Music Business Worldwide
Record labels can now pay Spotify to promote artists on the platform, via pop-up 'Music For You' alerts
by Tim Ingham
US-only 'test' is first official sign of Spotify charging labels and artists for 'two-sided marketplace.'
Austin Chronicle
Faster Than Sound: Unearthing Daniel Johnston's 'If'
by Rachel Rascoe
Producer Brian Beattie has an unreleased Daniel Johnston album ready, but can't make amends with the late cult singer's management.
The New Yorker
Summer Walker's Sex-Positive R. & B.
by Briana Younger
"Am I really that much to handle?" Summer Walker coos in the opening seconds of her début album, "Over It." It's the question women ask ourselves when we're trying to make sense of love and of how much space we're allowed to take up.
Rolling Stone
Hundreds of Musicians Call for Amazon Boycott Over ICE Contracts
by Jon Blistein
Deerhoof, Ted Leo, Guy Picciotto of Fugazi, Speedy Ortiz sign No Music for Ice open letter.
Billboard
Senators Call for TikTok Investigation Over Chinese Espionage Concerns
by Chris Eggertsen
Chuck Schumer and Tom Cotton fear a 'potential counterintelligence threat' from the popular video-sharing app.
on the road to my horizon
Passion of the Weiss
'Jesus is King': A Kanye West Experience
by Mano Sundaresan
Mano Sundaresan attends a listening event for Kanye's newest project. Weirdness ensues.
Deadline
Warner Bros Pictures Chief Toby Emmerich's Bromance With The Boss On Bruce Springsteen's Directorial Debut 'Western Stars'
by Mike Fleming Jr
On a rainy Wednesday last week at the Metrograph on Manhattan's Lower East Side, Bruce Springsteen unveiled Western Stars to a small group of family and friends that ranged from bandmate Steven Van Zandt, Sopranos creator David Chase to CBS Records magnate Clive Davis, who signed The Boss.
The Guardian
Martin Scorsese on Lou Reed: 'He spoke the language of people with nothing'
by Martin Scorsese
The director hails a songwriter who, like him, brought the wild side of New York to life, recalls their collaborations that got away and describes what it's like to be immortalised in one of his songs.
Medium
Benchmarks Are More Important Than Charts…Get Over It!
by Greg Delaney
In the beginning there was a sound, this became a tune that evolved into a song. Songs took on meaning, told tales, conveyed emotions, praised daities, expanded minds, entertained, distracted, mocked and mobilized. A song can fill a stadium, crown a festival, climax a rave, cocoon a club, shut out the daily commute and turn your own room into the biggest venue in the world.
The Atlantic
When Music's Sad Boys Chase Happiness
by Spencer Kornhaber
Male angst has dominated pop history. But something feels different with artists such as Rex Orange County, Hobo Johnson, and Chris Farren.
NPR
'Rhythm + Flow' Remixes The Rules For Reality TV
by Stuart Symington
Netflix's rap-competition reality show dispenses with many tired tropes of the genre and infuses it with winning energy.
Teen Vogue
Zara Larsson Gets Candid About Politics and Social Media
by Michelle Lhooq
The Swedish singer opens up to us about the music business and mastering authenticity on the internet.
Vox
How the Wu-Tang Clan raised Sophia Chang
by Peter Kafka and Sophia Chang
From managing members of The Wu-Tang Clan and A Tribe Called Quest to training the next generation of entrepreneurs, Sophia Chang chats with Recode's Peter Kafka to discuss her new audiobook-only memoir, "The Baddest Bitch In The Room." In it, she outlines what it was like being one of the first asian women in Hip-Hop, the power of networking, and how to break into the business.
DownBeat
ECM and Manfred Eicher on the Search for the Sublime
by Josef Woodard
A search for the heart of the ECM Records operation leads to a small, quiet space located on the second floor of a compound in an industrial section of Munich, Germany. Here, in visionary label head Manfred Eicher's peaceable central office--filled with audio equipment from different eras--the producer and curator of the ECM aesthetic plots his company's moves.
Los Angeles Times
Morrissey is anti-immigrant and backs a white nationalist political party. Why don't fans care?
by Randall Roberts
The singer, who plays the Hollywood Bowl on Saturday (Oct. 26), has always enjoyed a special bond with his SoCal fans. But could hateful remarks about immigrants spoil that?
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Cellophane"
FKA twigs
From "Magdalene," out today on Young Turks.
"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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