I'm not trying to sell you me. I'm trying to sell you, you. | | Smiley bass face: Brooke Dickson of the Regrettes at Life Is Beautiful, Las Vegas, Sept. 21, 2019. (FilmMagic/Getty Images) | | | | | "I'm not trying to sell you me. I'm trying to sell you, you." | | | | | rantnrave:// Artists should know what they're signing before they sign it. This seems like a solid, bulletproof piece of advice for anyone getting into the business of being any kind of artist, or, really, anyone getting into any kind of anything that requires signing contracts. But what if you're 15 years old and that contract includes pages and pages of paragraphs and subparagraphs that look anything like the 319-word sentence, with seven commas in the first 34 words and five instances of the word "hereunder," that music lawyer CHRIS CASTLE shares here, describing it as a "pretty good artist friendly rerecording restriction"? I can't tell you exactly how the provision restricting TAYLOR SWIFT's right to rerecord her own music is worded in the particular contract she signed when she was 15, which continues to haunt her weeks before her 30th birthday. Nor can I tell you who's telling the truest truth as the back and forth volley of statements between Swift and BIG MACHINE/SCOTT BORCHETTA/SCOOTER BRAUN continues apace. But I can tell you that I'm well past my 15th birthday (my 30th, too) and I had to pop open a bottle of TYLENOL about 50 words into that 319-word sentence, and I still don't understand what makes it either a) artist-friendly, b) not artist-friendly or c) an English sentence. I can also tell you that seasoned music law experts can't quite agree, even today, on how any rerecording restriction applies to any live television performance, which is the issue at the center of this particular dispute involving this particular artist and this particular label. There is, however, some consensus that while it might be plausible to argue that recording restrictions, which are designed to prevent artists from creating new versions of songs that would compete with the old versions controlled by their label, could be applied to a live TV performance, it would be an unprecedented use of a label's power and would be against the spirit of most contracts. And it wouldn't make much business sense either. I have a lot of respect for my friend BILL WERDE, who cautions against taking sides in "what amounts to a business dispute between extraordinarily wealthy and powerful people on all sides," especially when none of us knows all the facts, and so I will merely continue to ask: Who has more to lose in this public battle, Taylor Swift or Big Machine? Who has more to win? How will you weigh VARIETY's observation that, through all of this, Braun's "friends say he still speaks of his fandom for Swift and her music"? What, precisely, do you mean when you say an artist should have read that contract before she signed it? Is Chris Castle right when he says, "Something says to me that Taylor Swift is building an evidentiary record for one of the great artist rights lawsuits of all time in the future"? (Disclaimer: His next three words are, "but maybe not.") Is it fair for me to ask you to refrain from saying "She should have bought back her masters" until you can name five other 29-year-old pop superstars who own their masters?... AOC and ELIZABETH WARREN, for what it's worth, are on Team Taylor... TENCENT is seeking co-investors to join its bid to acquire up to 20 percent of UMG, BLOOMBERG reports... In the middle of a scorching essay on why the ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME needs "sweeping action, not... incremental change" to make up for its female problem—it appears to hate honoring women—EVELYN MCDONNELL drops this infuriating statistic about the Hall's almost-as-bad racial problem: "The percentage of total people of color in the hall has declined every year from an impressive high of 55.8% in 1989 to the current low of 32.7%." There are books to be written about what this civil-rights-in-reverse record says about this particular universe of cultural gatekeepers and the gates they insist on building and locking. There are also existential questions, such as: What makes the BLACK KEYS "rock"? What makes TRAVIS SCOTT not "rock"? And, to circle back to McDonnell's main thesis: Why the DAVE MATTHEWS BAND? Why not the GO-GO's?... ALISON KRAUSS will receive a National Medal of Arts later this week. The ASSOCIATED PRESS notes that the WHITE HOUSE, which bestows the honor, doesn't know how to spell her name... The secret music of plants... My journey with bird songs... The s***ty DMs women in punk and metal receive from men... RIP TERRY O'NEILL and CAROL BRIGHTMAN... A programming note: There will be no MusicREDEF Tuesday morning. We'll be back in your inbox Wednesday morning, which is also, for anyone keeping score, when the GRAMMY nominations will be announced. | | | - Matty Karas, curator | | | | | Billboard | While institutions such as the Recording Academy and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences have been forced, in the face of protest, to diversify their memberships and productions, the Rock Hall has at best offered lip service and tokenism to calls for improved gender and racial representation -- and at worst, they've denied the problem and gaslit the media. | | | | Quartz | A new app could revolutionize the way we experience live events. | | | | Variety | The latest Taylor Swift- Scooter Braun- Scott Borchetta kerfuffle involves the sort of music business minutiae that doesn't commonly interest the general public -- in fact, it's probably safe to say that untold thousands if not millions of people are suddenly familiar with the concept of re-recording old masters. | | | | The Ringer | In the late 1990s, Dr. Dre needed more than a hit. He needed to reinvent himself. His follow-up to 'The Chronic' allowed him to do that while changing the course of rap history-and papering over the more troubling aspects of his past. | | | | gal-dem | With the return of My Chemical Romance, Niellah Arboine reflects on growing up with an interest in the macabre and a love of emo and alternative music. | | | | Slate | Chris Molanphy and Ned Raggett discuss the '80s wave of British alt-rock on Hit Parade's The Bridge. | | | | VIBE Magazine | The Soul Train Awards are a good time. So why did it take us so long to embrace it again? | | | | BBC | The psychedelic graphics of the late 1960s evoked the anarchic, iconoclastic energy of the era. Joobin Bekhrad explores a kaleidoscopic world. | | | | The Guardian | London used to rule UK rap -- but now the biggest hits are from outside the M25. Manchester's Aitch, Coventry's Jay1 and Leicester's Trillary Banks explain why. | | | | The Future of What | In the past, digital start-ups frequently approached the music industry with tech solutions to problems that didn't exist for most artists and labels. That paradigm has seemingly shifted in the past few years, and now the solutions being brought forth by tech companies are helping to alleviate certain stresses and strains on the music industry. | | | | Los Angeles Times | When producer Tali Pelman arrived for dinner with Tina Turner and husband Erwin Bach in Switzerland in 2014, their house was beautiful. Turner looked gorgeous. But even before introductions were completed, Turner told Pelman: "I have no intention of doing this, but let's have dinner before we talk about it." | | | | Rolling Stone | Millions of people around the world tuned in to see FunPlus Phoenix defeat G2 Esports in 3-0 at the 2019 League of Legends World Championships last weekend, but the real stars of this year's premiere Esports tourney may have been a surprise musical group who performed during the event's larger than life opening ceremony. | | | | Billboard | Recapping the 2010s Top Venues chart. | | | | The Outline | The Old Soul Radio Show is the best digital honky-tonk in Dingess, West Virginia. | | | | The Trichordist | I'm posting my letter to the Copyright Royalty Judges about the Mechanical Licensing Collective "voluntary settlement" with the DLC. It may be voluntary for some people, but it was negotiated after shutting out everyone else from the negotiation on a technicality. | | | | DownBeat | Long before Nina Simone told a Carnegie Hall audience that she meant every word of "Mississippi Goddam," artists have been engaging in activism, creating music that confronts. Decades after John Coltrane wrote "Alabama" and Marvin Gaye told an entire generation "What's Going On," contemporary performers are evolving the legacy of their activist predecessors. | | | | them. | The DJ and producer explains how Ursula K. Le Guin's work helped her defy gender norms. | | | | The New York Times | Today's "age of the fan" is not so new: Audiences have always held more sway over performers than we admit. | | | | MusicAlly | Music-marketing firm Linkfire had a big announcement yesterday: it has a deal with Apple Music to provide more attribution data. | | | | Salon | How does a music lover learn to live without sound? The answer for me: sensorial diversity. Excerpted from "Life After Deaf: My Misadventures in Hearing Loss and Recovery" by Noel Holston. | | | © Copyright 2019, The REDEF Group | | |
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