jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 04/20/2022 - Maskonomics, The Best Rapper Alive, The Ides of Merch, Vince Staples, Danny Elfman...

Marijuana [is] a thousand times better than whiskey. It's an assistant, a friend.
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Wednesday April 20, 2022
REDEF
Happy 4/20 from Wiz Khalifa, pictured in Atlanta on his Dazed & Blazed Tour, Aug. 21, 2018.
(Paras Griffin/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"Marijuana [is] a thousand times better than whiskey. It's an assistant, a friend."
- Louis Armstrong
rantnrave://
Maskonomics

Do you ever feel like you're CRAIG T. NELSON in POLTERGEIST and everyone around you is the developer who moved the headstones but didn't move the graves underneath your house? "Whyyyyyyyy?"

The ruling by a federal judge on Monday that ended the United States' mandate for masks on planes and public transportation probably isn't going to directly affect the average touring band, which generally isn't using planes, trains or buses to get around, but indirectly it's going to make it a lot harder for them to ask their audiences to mask up or expect their audiences to do so on their own. The headstones, so to speak, have been moved. The virus has not.

"In just the last two weeks," DAMON & NAOMI's DAMON KRUKOWSKI wrote Tuesday, "there have been announcements [about positive Covid tests] from BARTEES STRANGE (Apr 2), CAR SEAT HEADREST (Apr 3), LOW (Apr 8), SUPERCHUNK (Apr 9), CIRCUIT DES YEUX (Apr 11), BRIAN JONESTOWN MASSACRE (Apr 14), SPOON (Apr 14), JON SPENCER (Apr 16), SEA POWER (Apr 18) and BOB MOULD (Apr 18)." And that's just one musician's social media feed. As Krukowski was publishing, CROWDED HOUSE's NEIL FINN was checking in with a positive test from Australia, forcing the cancellation of the final four shows of that band's tour, and metal warhorse LAMB OF GOD was announcing frontman RANDY BLYTHE's positive diagnosis in Grand Rapids, Mich. But Lamb of God was planning to go through with Tuesday's show in Grand Rapids anyway, with CHIMAIRA singer MARK HUNTER filling in for Blythe. Respect to the solidarity between metal bands, which will spare Lamb of God a big economic loss and may give its fans something special to remember. That option isn't available to most bands. For most, the economic loss is the only option. And potential health issues aside, this is an economic story.

Mask and vaccine requirements aren't delivering repeated blows to the live music economy. The disease itself is. Those canceled tours, STEVE ALBINI wrote Tuesday, are "ruinously expensive." Albini's message to fans, in a thread explaining why his band, SHELLAC, is heading out on tour after a long string of postponements: "I want you, potential gig goers, to appreciate how definitely *not* over it we are, and how we will not get to over it without commitment from everybody to a few basic things, done as a matter of human decency out of consideration of other people... Wear a mask. Please."

It isn't just bands who faces losses when someone in their orbit gets a positive test. "It hurts everyone: venues, staff, crew, etc.," the FUTURE OF MUSIC COALITION tweeted. And too many artists, desperate after two years of little or no work, feel they have no choice but to accept bookings where there are no mask or vaccine requirements, which only increases the likelihood that they, too, will soon face the bad news of a positive test. Actually, the Coalition specified "festival" bookings in that tweet. Are you listening, COACHELLA?

Krukowski laid out the economic consequences in further detail in his post, "Masks Are Off," and contrasted it with recent rosy pronouncements about the state of live music from LIVE NATION and AEG. That contrast, he wrote, "is stark. I know there have always been iniquities in the music business. But this is extreme." Festivals, he noted, can endure individual artists canceling—COACHELLA seems to have endured the loss of one its headliners this year with little problem—as can big promoters and agencies. The losses are local and individual they can be painful. Now cooking, Krukowski wrote at the end of his post: "Matzoh, the bread of affliction."

In Variety, my friend JEM ASWAD talked to BRIAN LONG of KNITTING FACTORY MANAGEMENT, who said he's seeing anywhere from one to five postponements *every day*. Read that again. "The solution lies with us," Aswad wrote. "Mask up."

Hi Hi Hi

A reading/listening guide for the 20th day of the fourth month of this or any year: Classic cannabis songs from the Jazz Age... A short history of LOUIS ARMSTRONG and the vipers... How weed culture evolved through hip-hop... How did weed and country music get so cozy? (That link is vintage, from 2013; the country conversation got really weedy circa 2013-14)... Classical cannabis... 4/20 time signatures... Rolling Stone's greatest songs about weed... Billboard's weed anthems ranked by potency.

But Also

How rock'n'roll broke up with booze and drugs... Creating while clean... And the Sober 21, a beautiful package of essays put together by the Creative Independent from musicians including NILE RODGERS, MIX MASTER MIKE, ANNIE TRUSCOTT, TYLER POPE, DARRYL "DMC" MCDANIEL and others.

Rest in Peace

Flutist, composer and bandleader JOSÉ LUIS CORTÉS, aka EL TOSCO, father of the Cuban dance style timba and a giant of 20th century Cuban music. He was a member of the influential bands Irakere and Los Van Van but made his most lasting mark with his own group, NG La Banda, which popularized (some would argue invented) timba and had a long run of hits in the late 1980s and 1990s. NG La Banda "transformed Cuban music in the '90s," musician and musicologist Ned Sublette, who released NG's early music in the US on his Qbadisc label, wrote in his newsletter announcing Tosco's passing. "One of the greats is gone"... Master luthier RICK TURNER, who helped build the Grateful Dead's iconic Wall of Sound, co-founded the bass and guitar company Alembic and designed Lindsey Buckingham's signature Turner Model 1 guitar... R&B singer RODERICK "POOH" CLARK of '90s group Hi-Five, which had a US #1 pop hit with "I Like the Way (The Kissing Game)"... Canadian rock singer/songwriter/guitarist JERRY DOUCETTE, best known for his band Doucette's late '70s albums.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
pass the kouchie
Variety
As Mask and Vaccine Mandates Fall, Covid Rates Soar Among Touring Musicians
By Jem Aswad
While no definitive figures exist, all one needs to do is look at social media to see dozens of postponed or canceled concerts or tours due to someone in the artist's party testing positive. It's grown worse in recent weeks — as noted in Pitchfork, the New York Times, musician Damon Krukowski's "Dada Drummer" substack and, sadly, comments from countless artists.
Dada Drummer Almanach
Masks Are Off
By Damon Krukowski
Meanwhile… my social media feed is filled with COVID positive results from musicians on the road. They are cancelling shows, abandoning tours, sick and/or stuck in quarantine far from home.
GQ
Future Is the Best Rapper Alive
By Elliott Wilson
Few artists are as prolific. As widely imitated. As consistently excellent. Which is why it's finally time to declare what's been true for a while now.
The Guardian
Vince Staples: 'I'm talking about is real life. Not entertainment'
By Michael Segalov
The Californian rapper has returned to his old LA stomping ground for new album "Ramona Park Broke My Heart." It's typically dextrous and incisive, but he asks that you check your voyeurism before listening.
Billboard
Noticing Fewer Mega-Hits on TikTok? You're Not Alone. Here's What's Happening
By Elias Leight
Viral moments are "fewer and farther in between, because the platform is so saturated," says one executive. Savvy marketers are adjusting strategies.
The Quietus
The Ides Of Merch: Why Venues Need To Stop Ripping Off Musicians
By Sean Adams
Touring is not as lucrative as you might think. Are venues really taking 30%+ commission on merchandise? Artists have had enough. Sean Adams explores how attitudes are changing.
Variety
Danny Elfman on Losing His Shirt and Owning a Wild, Web-Busting Coachella Show: 'I Thought, Can They Hang Me for This?'
By Chris Willman
He remembers joking, "Look, we have 30 minutes to set up a show that's never been performed before with 50 musicians on stage. What can possibly go wrong?"
Los Angeles Times
What we learned from the first weekend of Coachella 2022
By Mikael Wood
Fans and artists were thrilled to be back at the nation's preeminent music festival, despite (or because of) the lack of COVID safety protocols.
Trapital
Why Your Followers Aren't Fans of Your Music
By Dan Runcie
Coi Leray has all the co-signs that a rising artist dreams of, including a deal with Republic Records, songs with Nicki Minaj and Lil Durk and over 6 million Instagram followers. But last week, her debut album "Trendsetter" sold just 11,500 album units (around 17.3 million streams).
Radio Diaries
The Greatest Songwriter You've Never Heard Of
By Joe Richman
You probably don't know her name, but you definitely know her songs. Rose Marie McCoy was the woman behind smash hits by Tina Turner, Elvis Presley, Aretha Franklin and more - but most people have never heard of her.
pass that dutch
Billboard
FAIR Act Bill to Repeal California's 'Seven-Year Statute' Amendment Pulled the Day Before Hearing
By Melinda Newman
The bill may now be reintroduced at two bills separating the artists' and actors' interests.
SFChronicle Datebook
Golden State Warriors to produce original films and music -- starting with K-pop star BamBam
By Aidin Vaziri
As if the Golden State Warriors didn't have enough going on with the NBA playoffs, the team is now getting into the entertainment business.
MusicTech
Spotify vs Apple Music vs Tidal: 13 best music streaming services in 2022
From major services to genre-specific ones and more, these are the streaming services you'll want to know about in 2022.
Passion of the Weiss
The Follow: Harold Bingo, Curator
By Abe Beame
What does it mean to be "good" at being online? Abe Beame connects with Harold Bingo to weigh in.
The Jazz Session
The Insider: South African Jazz Journalist Gwen Ansell
By Nicky Schrire and Gwen Ansell
South African writer, teacher, media consultant and researcher Gwen Ansell is a former Louis Armstrong Visiting Professor at the Center for Jazz Studies, Columbia University, and the author of "Soweto Blues: Jazz, Politics and Popular Music in South Africa." She is also the person to whom I defer whenever asked about anything relating to South African jazz
Los Angeles Times
Why Gladys Knight and the Pips' 'Midnight Train to Georgia' is still the perfect pop song
By Danyel Smith
In an essay adapted from her new musical memoir, Danyel Smith plumbs the underappreciated genius of Gladys Knight, and her group's forlorn masterpiece.
The Guardian
Fashion, fabrics and fishtails -- why we need to talk about what female classical performers wear
By Leah Broad
Classical performance is a visual as well as aural experience, so why are female soloists' choices of outfit so rarely discussed, apart from in diminishing terms?
The New York Times
Jorge Drexler's Music Connects Genres, Generations and Continents
By Jon Pareles
After three decades of making albums, the Academy Award-winning songwriter is still blending science and poetry, still reaching out to younger artists and still learning.
The Signal
Music's Ultimate Specialist
By David Katznelson
Art Rupe was a master of the mid-20th century music business.
The Common Reader
Turning Down the World's Volume
By Jeannette Cooperman
Elephants make more than seventy sounds, from shrill trumpeting to snorts, grunts, screams, rumbles, and groans. Anger an alligator, and it will roar. A breeze feels odd without an undercurrent of buzzing and chirping. But our noisy human machines and vehicles and explosions are crashing that concert.
what we're into
Music of the day
"La Expresiva"
NG La Banda
An early timba classic. RIP El Tosco.
Video of the day
"Live at the 1994 Montreux Jazz Festival (full concert)"
NG La Banda
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