jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 12/19/2019 - Epidemic of Buy-Outs, Streaming Myths, Meek Mill, Gary Vaynerchuk, Pop Smoke...

Bruce Springsteen sang about 'Murder Incorporated.' You, Mr. Hernandez, essentially joined Murder Incorporated.
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Big Thief's Adrianne Lenker at the Roundhouse, London, May 23, 2019.
(Burak Cingi/Redferns/Getty Images)
Thursday - December 19, 2019 Thu - 12/19/19
rantnrave:// To "disrupt," meaning to break apart, throw into disorder or interrupt, isn't always a positive thing. Sometimes breaking things apart just leaves them broken. Which will it be for EPIDEMIC SOUND, a Swedish production music house that finds itself near the center of a brewing controversy over how royalties are paid, or not paid, for licensed music? In the US, the controversy has played out around reports that NETFLIX and DISCOVERY are aggressively pursuing buy-out deals from TV composers that would deny them back-end royalties for their work (imagine a network trying that with its screenwriters). Discovery has gone a step further by reportedly asking composers to relinquish royalties for all their previous shows, too, if they wish to do any more work with any of Discovery's channels. Composers are angry and organizing against the networks. In Europe, Epidemic Sound has come under fire from the EUROPEAN COMPOSER AND SONGWRITER ALLIANCE (ECSA) for its practice of only working with composers who aren't members of ASCAP, BMI or any other performance rights organization, buying their music outright and selling it royalty-free to TV and video producers. ECSA called those buy-out deals "malpractices from another age." To which Epidemic Sound CEO OSCAR HOGLUND told MUSIC BUSINESS WORLDWIDE, "It is not so surprising that they took this viewpoint as they come from a more traditional part of the industry, which we're disrupting." Disrupting what exactly, though? The negotiations and paperwork that come with buying or licensing someone else's work? The money it costs to license music? The money that composers use to buy microphones and pay rent? Is the model causing a new problem for music producers by solving an old one for TV producers? There's a particular fear in Europe, writes COMPLETE MUSIC UPDATE's CHRIS COOKE, of American tech and media giants trying to "force the US system" on the continent, where industry conventions and copyright laws currently offer some protection for composers in these situations. On the other hand, Cooke asks, some composers might be OK with Epidemic's model, "and why should industry conventions and/or copyright law seek to interfere with that?" Fair question. But what if the model interferes with everybody else's ability to sell their music? What if it devalues everybody else's work? ECSA has one other issue with Epidemic Sound. At least some of the shows that use its music credit the company on-screen instead of the composers—devaluing them further by making them invisible. Epidemic, it turns out, is also known for providing fake artists (real musicians rendered invisible behind pseudonyms) who can be found all over mood playlists on streaming services and whose masters and publishing are wholly owned by the production house. After all these years worrying about the future of record companies, should we be more scared of a future that has record companies but no artists? And film and TV music but no film and TV composers?... BILLBOARD parent VALENCE MEDIA buys NIELSEN MUSIC—"as data is taking on an increasingly outsize role in the music industry," as the WALL STREET JOURNAL's ANNE STEELE puts it (paywall)... TEKASHI 6IX9INE sentenced to two years, with credit for 13 months already served, in a racketeering case in which he testified against gang members in the Nine Trey Gangsta Bloods... The FOX, whose voice is legitimately foxy and whose real last name isn't FOXX, wins season 2 of THE MASKED SINGER over the ROTTWEILER, who fared better here than he did on AMERICAN IDOL many dog years ago. Somehow they both beat PATTI LABELLE, MICHELLE WILLIAMS and SEAL, who lost their masks earlier in the season... RIP RUTH ANDERSON and KENNY LYNCH.
- Matty Karas, curator
fox on the run
Penny Fractions
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Los Angeles Times
As rapper Meek Mill fights for judicial reform, something unexpected happened: a Grammy nomination
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Complete Music Update
Discovery, Netflix and Epidemic Sound in the spotlight as the debate around audio-visual royalties gains momentum
by Chris Cooke
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The New York Times
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The FADER
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by Shamira Ibrahim
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Variety
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by Jon Burlingame
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VICE
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by Hilary Pollack, Colin Joyce, Ross Scarano...
2019 yielded an abundance of slappers beyond just "Old Town Road." Here are our favorites.
Billboard
Billboard's 10 Best Music Moments in 2019 Movies
by Mara Reinstein
Of all the fantastic music moments in 2019 movies, these were the ten best.
Reuters
Tencent taps GIC, sovereign funds to rescue Universal Music deal: sources
by Pamela Barbaglia, Kane Wu and Gwénaëlle Barzic
Tencent Holdings Ltd has turned to Singapore's state investor GIC and other sovereign funds to help rescue a deal to buy a stake in Vivendi's Universal Music after major buyout funds quit the negotiating table, sources said.
Slate
An Actual Cats Fan Reviews Cats
by Marissa Martinelli
The new adaptation of the hit musical understands that the uncoolness is the point.
twentieth century fox
Music Business Worldwide
How Spinnin Records is meeting the 'challenge of holding on to the attention of millennials'
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Spinnin' celebrated its 20th birthday in 2019. Here, CEO Roger de Graaf tells MBW about his career in the music industry and the challenges of marketing dance music today.
Complex
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Highsnobiety
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In the visual-oriented 2010s, music videos are crucial to shaping an artist's public aesthetic. 
Billboard
The Enduring Business of Boy Band Nostalgia Tours
by J'na Jefferson
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Chicago Magazine
Reassembling Family Legacies with Lost Gospel Records
by Mark Guarino
The CD "No Other Love" honors the South and West Sides' vibrant small-label scene. For many, it's also unearthed rich cross-generational connections.
Texas Monthly
For Singer Bill Callahan, Home Is Where the Art Is
by Paula Mejía
Forget the tortured artist clichés. Bill Callahan began making the best music of his life when he settled in Texas and decided to try being happy.
Variety
Estranged From Mariah Carey, 'All I Want for Christmas' Co-Writer Calls No. 1 'Bittersweet'
by Chris Willman
Christmas is a time when things often become difficult for divorced parents. That seems to hold true for Mariah Carey and Walter Afanasieff, the mother and father of "All I Want for Christmas Is You," which is arguably the most popular holiday song in the world right now, and certainly the most favored one to have come about in the last 50 years.
Songwriter Universe
Qobuz Emerges With Excellent Hi-Res Streaming Service; Interview with Dan Mackta, Managing Director of Qobuz USA
by Dale Kawashima
"When you open up Qobuz, the first thing you see is the new albums. And [you see] music from genres like jazz and classical that are important to audiophiles…that's where we shine."
Slate
Pop's New Guard Is Here, and They're Obsessed With the Climate
by Lindsay Zoladz
2019 saw artists from Billie Eilish to Lana Del Rey to Vampire Weekend to Megan Thee Stallion grappling with the warming planet.
Longreads
Wonderful Things: The Kid Creole and the Coconuts Story
by Michael Gonzales
Combining island sounds with stylish clothes and an unforgettable stage presence, one of New York City's most original bands helped influence 1980s pop culture, and they never sacrificed their unclassifiable artistic vision.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
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@JasonHirschhorn


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