Expensive guitars don't write better songs | | | | | City Girls' Yung Miami on the BET Hip Hop Awards, October 2020. (Getty Images) | | | | "Expensive guitars don't write better songs" | | | | Word Up CAMEO but for songs, you say? OK! Here are the songs "ADAM GREEN" and "INDIEPOP LIST" from MOMUS' 1999 album STARS FOREVER, which consisted of songs named for patrons who paid $1,000 each for the right to have Momus write and sing a song about them. The waggish Scottish singer/songwriter sold slots on the album to the first 30 bidders, which included fans, fellow artists and an assortment of entities that ran in the same indie-pop circles, like, for example, the email list that sponsored the second song in the previous sentence. There's a lot of talk in the music biz these days about the desirability of direct-to-fan transactions. This was that, two decades ago. The $30,000 in patronage money didn't fund the album, as you might have suspected; instead, it helped pay the legal fees incurred when WENDY CARLOS, the electronic music pioneer, sued Momus for an earlier song he wrote about her, that one unsolicited and unwelcome. Either way, an artist needed money, he had fans willing to pay, he went directly to them, and they got an amazing and unique souvenir. No intermediary or platform needed. If you're an artist, you can do this yourself tomorrow. A personalized song startup called SONGFINCH is in the news after raising $2 million from investors including the WEEKND, his manager SAL SLAIBY and ATLANTIC RECORDS CEO CRAIG KALLMAN for what's essentially the platform version of that Momus album. For $199, you tell Songfinch what you want your song to be about and what genre and mood it should be; Songfinch promises to deliver a song with two verses and repeated choruses (you can buy an additional verse for a little more money), written to your specifications, within a week. The artist and the service split the money 50/50 and the artist keeps the copyright. So, kinda sorta Cameo for songs. And kinda sorta not. You won't find any B-list celebs on here, which I thought was Cameo's entire attraction. And the songwriters have to work for their money. Even if they're just plugging customized lyrics into a pre-written, pre-recorded template, that's a lot more effort than, say, SARAH PALIN riffing about your girlfriend or boyfriend for 2 or 3 minutes. A hundred bucks seems low for that. So, maybe POSTMATES for songs? One more way for struggling songwriters to jump into the gig economy for (they no doubt hope) a little while? Co-founder JOHN WILLIAMSON seems to understand the risk of this being a short-lived novelty thing—pet rock songs, if you will—and he's pushing the idea of Songfinch as a service for emotions and memories (HALLMARK for music?), as well as a way for artists/writers to connect with a new kind of audience. The Rolling Stone piece, by ETHAN MILLMAN, that I've linked to here is a good overview of the basic idea. Trapital's DAN RUNCIE sees a long game where the songwriters become personalities who can set their own rates and create a legit new income stream, and in which Songfinch becomes a Cameo acquisition target. I'm a lot more skeptical. But as a famous songwriter-for-hire once said (I hope RANDY NEWMAN got more than 100 bucks for this one), I've been wrong before. Plus Also Too SONY MUSIC PUBLISHING has joined its recorded-music cousin, SONY MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT, in writing off unrecouped debts for most songwriters it signed before the year 2000... The NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS' 2022 Jazz Masters are singer CASSANDRA WILSON, bassist STANLEY CLARKE, drummer BILLY HART and saxophonist (and NOTORIOUS B.I.G. mentor) DONALD HARRISON JR.... TAYLOR SWIFT won't submit her re-recorded version of FEARLESS for GRAMMY or CMA award consideration, presumably so as not to compete with herself. Her label, REPUBLIC, made clear in announcing the news that the pop star's late-2020 album EVERMORE will be prepared to accept any nominations and awards that might come its way... DAMON DASH swears he isn't violating a court order by putting his one-third ownership in ROC-A-FELLA INC. up for auction via an NFT gallery; on the contrary, he says, he's honoring the order. This chapter in the ongoing dispute between Dash and JAY-Z is a confusing mess I don't pretend to fully grasp, but if I was in the NFT business and I was trying to sell artists on the appeal of token transactions, I'd be begging Dash to reconsider using the format to trade a business partnership with an artist who's adamantly opposed to the transaction. Rest in Peace LITHOFAYNE PRIDGON, songwriter, muse to musicians including Jimi Hendrix and Sam Cooke, possible inspiration for Hendrix's "Foxy Lady" and, in the words of musician and critic Greg Tate, "nobody's concubine"... Prolific music video director MARTIN KAHAN, whose oeuvre of rock and country clips included the first videos Kiss made without makeup... Mezzo-soprano JEAN KRAFT... Longtime Metropolitan Opera lighting designer GIL WECHSLER. | | | Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator |
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| | | Vulture |
| The Misunderstood Cultural History of City Girls' 'Twerkulator' | by Charlie Harding and Nate Sloan | To break down the manifold dimensions of twerking, Switched on Pop co-host Nate Sloan sat down with Dr. Kyra Gaunt, ethnomusicologist, professor, author, and presenter of the TED Talk "Broadcasting Black Girls' 'Net Worth'," to discuss the history of the dance — which even the Oxford English Dictionary got wrong. | | | | The New York Times |
| Asians Are Represented in Classical Music. But Are They Seen? | by Javier C. Hernández | The success of some artists of Asian descent obscures the fact that many face routine racism and discrimination. | | | | Miami New Times |
| Rolling Loud Needed Only One Thing to Survive the Pandemic: The Fans | by Tony M. Centeno | Refunds helped redeem the brand. A deal with Twitch kept fans engaged. | | | | Billboard |
| Jack Antonoff on the 7 Habits of Highly Effective Producers | by Jason Lipshutz | Whether he's crafting whole albums with pop stars like Taylor Swift and Lorde or making his own as Bleachers, Antonoff has one goal in the studio: helping everyone find their "North Star." | | | | Los Angeles Times |
| Lithofayne Pridgon, a muse to musicians and likely inspiration for Jimi Hendrix's 'Foxy Lady,' dies | by Chris Campion | From Marvin Gaye to Sly Stone to Hendrix, Pridgon orbited with musical stars of an era. | | | | Rolling Stone |
| The Rosy 'Creator Economy' Is Music's Biggest Lie | by Tim Ingham | Platforms of the so-called "passion economy" tell us everyone can make bank. The reality of this scam is nowhere more evident than in the numbers out of the music industry. | | | | Music x |
| The non-static tipping point: how culture's going non-linear and generative | by Bas Grasmayer | Deepfakes, infinite albums, generative NFTs - creative pioneers are rapidly pushing technology-enabled concepts into the center of web culture. Whereas just a few years ago, it was hard to get people to care about non-static media, it's now grabbing people's attention and their (crypto) currency. | | | | The Independent |
| 'Thom Yorke made a doomerwave version of his own f***ing song!' | by Michael Hann | What on earth is doomerwave? And what does the Radiohead singer releasing a slowed-down version of 'Creep' have to do with it? Michael Hann investigates a musical trend from the depths of the internet, and the doom-obsessed generation that spawned it. | | | | Applied Science |
| Guest Post: Khufu Reign on The Renaissance of the Cultural Investor | by Khufu Reign and Jon Tanners | Money, art, and NFTs. | | | | NPR |
| Alligator Records Founder Bruce Iglauer On 50 Years Of Celebrating The Blues | by Scott Simon and Ned Wharton | "When I first came to Chicago, in 1970, a patron at one of the blues clubs said to me, 'You listen to the blues to get rid of the blues.' " Iglauer has been helping folks do just that ever since. | | | | | Stereogum |
| A Composer Breaks Down The Music Theory Behind Lorde's 'Solar Power' | by Vivek Maddala | "Solar Power," the title track of Lorde's forthcoming album, is a breezy, cheerful kind of summer anthem — and a rather modest one. The song feels understated due to its dry production style, but more importantly, because of its simple and direct compositional architecture. | | | | VICE |
| 'Why Don't We All Go Bonkers?' -- The Rise and Fall of Happy Hardcore | by Jaimie Hodgson | DJs, producers and the scene's major players tell the full story of dance music's most divisive genre. | | | | Resident Advisor |
| Why Did House Dancing Leave the Club? | by Turtle Bugg and Max Pearl | Our latest film looks at a tradition as old as house music itself. | | | | Beats & Bytes |
| Championing Gender Equity in the Music Industry With Our New 6MO Report and Artist Pronoun Database | by Michelle Yuen | Our new 6MO report and artist pronoun database are our first steps toward creating a platform for gender equity and gender equality in the music industry. | | | | Country Queer |
| Profiles in Activism: Black Opry's Holly G. | by James Barker | "The ultimate goal of Black Opry is to create community. I feel very strongly that Black Opry is not mine, it belongs to this community forming around it." | | | | Bandcamp Daily |
| A Guide to the Early Music of John Coltrane on Prestige Records | by Ben Ratliff | On these economical recordings, one can hear the jazz legend becoming himself in real time. | | | | Dark Star |
| Hip Hop, Blogs and NFTs: Unbundling, Remixing and Reintegrating Media | by Jarrod Dicker, Brian Flynn, Matt Stephenson... | Long Term maximum value requires accepting — even embracing — loss of control. | | | | PopMatters |
| How Pop Music Mainstreams Religious Weirdness | by David Mihalyfy | With its devils and aliens, pop music can be a "window on the weird", sweeping odd material lodged in subcultural pockets into the broader currents of culture. | | | | Entertainment Weekly |
| An oral history of Jimmy Eat World's 'The Middle' | by Matt Sigur | Twenty years ago, Jimmy Eat World got dumped by their record company - then released the biggest song of their career. Here's how it happened. | | | | Billboard |
| Why Are We Still Measuring Artist Success With a Major Label Yardstick? | by Joel Andrew | CD Baby president Joel Andrew argues that the music industry needs to update its definition of what counts as a successful artist. | | | | | | | Video of the day | "20 Feet From Stardom" | Morgan Neville | Directed by Morgan Neville, with no deepfake voices :) | | | YouTube |
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| Directed by Morgan Neville, with no deepfake voices :) | | Music | Media | Sports | Fashion | Tech | | "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?'" | | | | | Jason Hirschhorn | CEO & Chief Curator | | | | | | | |
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