jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 06/08/2020 - Urban Not-So-Contemporary, Protest Music, Fake Spotify Collabs, The Source, Miles Davis...

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To run my label and management company, to direct my films and produce my tours, that meant ownership—owning my masters, owning my art, owning my future and writing my own story. Not enough black women had a seat at the table. So I had to go and chop down that wood and build my own table.
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Keep on pushing: Curtis Mayfield in 1970.
(Gilles Petard/Redferns/Getty Images)
Monday - June 08, 2020 Mon - 06/08/20
rantnrave:// "Urban," a music industry code word for you know what, began as a radio format called urban contemporary, coined by New York radio legend FRANKIE CROCKER in the 1970s to describe a generous and forward-thinking programming vision that made room for R&B, jazz, disco, Latin pop, hip-hop and much more. Each of those genre names has a lexicological history of its own to explore if you ever get the itch. Rabbit holes within rabbit holes. Crocker wasn't averse to playing BARBRA STREISAND. His station, WBLS, was urban in the most literal, non-musical sense, and it's easy to see, in retrospect, how the phrase described the station's demographic more than it described any particular song on the playlist. It's a good name. It has a nice ring to it and it works with or without the code that was embedded in it from the beginning. (Crocker did not, to my knowledge, play much or any country music, but that genre, too, despite a name that evokes cornfields, has a valid claim to the urban designation. The industry is based in cosmopolitan Nashville and its audience is spread through other major cities from Chicago to Dallas to Los Angeles. But I digress.) It's not unusual for names to become detached or at least semi-detached over time from their origin stories. Magazines, record companies, the rest of the radio industry and awards shows all found the phrase "urban contemporary," and particularly the first word, useful for avoiding saying something else, and for avoiding having to describe concepts that defy description. The GRAMMY AWARDS, for example, still give a Best Urban Contemporary statuette to an album "containing at least 51% playing time of newly recorded contemporary vocal tracks derivative of R&B." (Does anyone at the RECORDING ACADEMY or anywhere else in the industry knows what that means beyond the fact that this year it meant LIZZO, who won the category, but not ANDERSON.PAAK, who won the Best R&B Album prize?) Labels have long used it to describe black artists as well as the departments and people at the labels who work with those artists. People in those departments sometimes complain about being denied opportunities for both themselves and their artists, as if trapped by an urban ceiling. "It's just a politically correct way to say the n-word, to me," TYLER, THE CREATOR said after this year's Grammys. "When I hear [urban], I'm just like, why can't we just be in pop?" But now maybe he can. As one of its first concrete responses to this spring's racial justice protests, REPUBLIC RECORDS on Friday announced it will no longer use "this antiquated term" that's "rooted in the historical evolution of terms that sought to define Black music." The label called on the rest of the industry to follow suit "as it is important to shape the future of what we want it to look like, as to not adhere to the outdated structures of the past." It's a symbolic move, but one that may well have concrete ramifications. Frankie Crocker would have loved Tyler, the Creator, and I'd like to think that somewhere up there he's smiling, knowing that the spirit of his programming vision is durable enough to survive a grammatical edit, and may even be stronger for it... ABBEY ROAD STUDIOS has reopened after a 10-week coronavirus closure... Nightclubs in Ibiza remain closed, with local government orders overriding Spain's move into phase three of its national reopening plan... Brooklyn metal club SAINT VITUS went on KICKSTARTER in search of $15,000 to weather the pandemic. And then the most metal thing ever happened... BTS and BIG HIT ENTERTAINMENT donate $1 million to BLACK LIVES MATTER... RIP RUPERT HINE, KENNY YOUNG, CLAUDE HEATER and TYRONE "THE BONE" PROCTOR... And this is a hell of an obituary for pioneering rap journalist, producer and songwriter ROBERT FORD JR., who died in May. It's a story of where following your curiosity can lead. All you have to do is keep your ears open, always.
- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
maxwell's urban hang suite
Pitchfork
From Techno to Go-Go, How Music Is Moving Protests Around the World
by Evan Minsker
Hardcore, reggae, hip-hop, and Beyoncé provide the soundtrack to protests against police brutality and systemic racism.
NPR Music
The New Sounds Of Protest And Hope
by Ann Powers
As demonstrations for racial equality continue across the U.S. and the world, artists have been shaping and sharing their grief, fury, resolve and vision for the future.
Music Business Worldwide
The Elephant In The Room
by Ronald E. Sweeney
Why is it that Black music generates millions and millions of dollars a year and yet none of the companies have a meaningful number of employees of color, let alone in the executive suite?
Rolling Stone
The Music Industry Was Built on Racism. Changing It Will Take More Than Donations
by Elias Leight
On Tuesday, the major labels protested police brutality with a "blackout." Executives and artists say industry-wide racial equality is still a long way away.
The Daily Beast
How K-Pop Fans Became Black Lives Matter's Most Delightful, Spammy Ally
by Laura Bradley
As protesters fight on the ground, K-pop fans around the world have shown support by overwhelming police apps and flooding dangerous hashtags-including, most recently, #QAnon.
NewMusicBox
How Can Artists Respond to Injustice? Thoughts from Seven Musicians
by Will Robin
I knew I wanted to hear from artists I believed in, who have been thinking deeply, and for many years, about the role of musicians in enacting social change. Here are some of their thoughts.
Hollywood Reporter
When Time's Up Didn't Step Up
by Rebecca Keegan and Tatiana Siegel
Time's Up is the most recognizable brand in the quest for gender equality, but for some women in HBO Max's 'On the Record' and other activists, its reluctance to back the film raises deeper questions: "It's difficult to incubate a social justice organization when you are adjacent to powerful entertainment executives."
OneZero
Scammers Are Gaming Spotify by Faking Collaborations With Famous Artists
by Peter Slattery
Users like Wali Da Great are growing infamous for tricking streaming listeners with falsified metadata.
The New York Times
For Years, He Was Spank Rock. He's Always Been Naeem.
by Jeremy Gordon
The rapper who burst out in 2006 with the rollicking "YoYoYoYoYo" is returning with "Startisha," his first new album in nine years, and a newfound comfort with speaking his truth.
Los Angeles Times
After five decades, McCabe's Guitar Shop owners are retiring, citing coronavirus crisis
by Randall Roberts
Bob and Espie Riskin, longtime owners of the iconic McCabe's Guitar Shop in Santa Monica, are turning over the business to their daughter and son-in-law.
urban hymns
NPR Music
Country Star Mickey Guyton: Why Being 'Black Like Me' Shouldn't Be Twice As Hard
by Jewly Hight
"I did Nashville the Nashville way for so long ... with very little results," Guyton tells NPR. "So why am I holding out just in case?"
Pitchfork
Ramy Youssef on How His Sitcom Uses Music to Tell a Millennial Muslim Story
by Gabe Friedman
The star of Hulu's "Ramy" talks about the stereotype-busting soundtrack to his show, now in its second season.
The New York Times
How Did The Source Cover the 1992 Los Angeles Uprisings?
by Jon Caramanica, James Bernard and Reginald Dennis
Two former editors look back at the magazine's on-the-ground reporting following the Rodney King verdict.
Water & Music
8% of the corporate music C-suite is Black
by Cherie Hu
The issues that are top of mind for me right now focus on two actions that all of us can start doing right now in service of Black equality, both in and out of music: Following the money (economics), and tracking what you see (visibility). 
Adam Neely
The f***ed up legacy of the arrest of Miles Davis
by Adam Neely
black lives matter
The Undefeated
Wu-Tang's RZA on the influence of Bruce Lee
by Justin Tinsley
How martial arts flows throughout the work of the influential hip-hop group.
Rolling Stone
Dance Challenges Are Dead? Why the Music Industry Is Investing in 'Emo' TikToks
by Elias Leight
When it comes to launching singles, "the emotional side of TikTok is now showing that it has the potential to be as powerful as the dance side," says one major-label A&R.
The Conversation
There is no easy path out of coronavirus for live classical music
by Peter Keller
Concert halls may slowly be able to reopen -- but difficulties will remain.
Complex
How Drakeo the Ruler Made His New Album in Jail While Awaiting Trial
by Max Bell
Drakeo the Ruler speaks with Complex over the phone from jail about his new album, criminal justice reform, police, and protests unfolding across America.
The Tennessean
While stuck at home, these Nashville songwriters made albums with their kids
by Dave Paulson
A little more than a year ago, Nashville songwriter Luke Laird won his second Grammy Award for co-writing Kacey Musgraves' heartbreaking "Space Cowboy." But if you thought that was good, wait until you hear his new single: "Rocks, Worms, Dirt."
MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"I Can't Breathe"
Black Pantera
"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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