jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 06/10/2022 - The Grammys' Write Turn, Saxophonist Outsmarts KGB, Underground Rap Reinvented, Anitta, Big Thief...

I don't tell people what to do. I encourage them to do what they can.
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Friday June 10, 2022
REDEF
BTS at the Grammy Awards, Las Vegas, April 3, 2022. "Proof" is out today on Big Hit.
(Johnny Nunez/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"I don't tell people what to do. I encourage them to do what they can."
- Chris Blackwell, whose memoir, "The Islander: My Life in Music and Beyond," is out now
rantnrave://
The Write Stuff

There were 10 categories for songwriters at this year's GRAMMYS, including one of the night's biggest awards, Song of the Year (winners: ANDERSON .PAAK, BRUNO MARS, D'MILE and BRODY BROWN), and nine songwriting awards in various genres and specialties. But songwriters often feel overlooked on the industry's biggest night, and you can hardly blame them: Even if they're shown on TV, which most of them aren't, the genre awards, like Best Rock Song and Best R&B Song, sound to the casual viewer like they're going home with the song's performers, not their composers. And Song of the Year has long been saddled with the problem that while the industry knows it's a songwriter's award, distinct from Record of the Year, a lot of fans don't. Fans, unlike people in the business, don't automatically think of "songs" and "records" as two different things (which can cause confusion in licensing and copyright discussions as well; nomenclature has never been the music industry's strong point).

On Thursday, the RECORDING ACADEMY gave songwriters a thing that will be theirs and theirs alone: a Songwriter of the Year award, which will debut at the 2023 Grammys. To make clear who the award is meant for, and to ensure, presumably, that this won't be just one more trophy for TAYLOR SWIFT or BILLIE EILISH to take home, the Academy said only "non-performing and non-producing songwriters" will be eligible. That excludes all four 2022 winners of Song of the Year, two of whom are performers and two of whom are producers. "The intent," said Academy chief HARVEY MASON JR., himself a songwriter, "is to recognize the professional songwriters who write songs for other artists to make a living." That explanation echoes long-simmering grievances in various corners of the business about the differences in how songwriters and artists are compensated. There will almost certainly be closed-door discussions, come awards time, about what "non-performing and non-producing" means. What if this songwriter self-released an album that only a few hundred people bought or streamed? What if that songwriter was one of five co-producers on one or two random album cuts? It wouldn't be a proper Grammy Award if it wasn't at least a little confusing.

There will be open-door discussions elsewhere about how you can call someone Songwriter of the Year without even considering the Taylor Swifts, Billie Eilishes, Anderson .Paaks and D'Miles of the world. The legendary Motown songwriting—and production—team of LAMONT DOZIER and BRIAN and EDDIE HOLLAND wouldn't have been eligible either. The Academy might discover that its rules shut the doors to entire genres while leaving a wide-open lane for others. Depending, as always, on what the fine print says.

Another notable change to next year's ceremony will be a special Grammy for best social change song—a song with "lyrical content that addresses a timely social issue and promotes understanding, peacebuilding and empathy." A request to the Academy, if I may: Not all social change songs are explicit about that change. Some of the best ones embody, rather than explicitly express, the idea. They show rather than tell. They don't preach. They make you feel. I hope those will be considered, too.

It's Friday

But it feels more like a Throwback Thursday, starting with PROOF, a 48-track anthology from BTS featuring the new single "Yet to Come (The Most Beautiful Moment)" and a handful of other new and unreleased songs along with three discs' worth of hits, album tracks, solo songs and demos documenting the first decade of one of the world's most popular pop groups. Only 35 tracks are on the streaming version; here are your various old-school options for hearing the rest... ELVIS COSTELLO throws it back a half-century on THE RESURRECTION OF RUST, a six-song reunion with ALLAN MAYES, his bandmate in an early '70s teenage duo called RUSTY. Their aim is Americana and the EP ends with a Neil Young medley... KELLY CLARKSON's KELLYOKE EP, actually released on Throwback Thursday, takes the signature karaoke segment from her daytime talk show into the studio for covers of Billie Eilish, the Weeknd, Radiohead and others... Robyn, Sia, Jamila Woods and Anohni are among the artists who reimagine NENEH CHERRY songs on THE VERSIONS, which is simultaneously serving as a tribute album and Cherry's own sixth album... RUFUS DOES JUDY AT CAPITOL STUDIOS is RUFUS WAINWRIGHT's second album of songs by JUDY GARLAND, who would have turned 100 today. It was recorded during a livestream a year ago with exactly one person in the audience—Oscar-winning Garland portrayer Renée Zellweger... LOOK AT ME: THE ALBUM is a companion to Sabaah Folayan's XXXTENTACION documentary "Look at Me" and features several songs by the late Florida rapper that have never been legally available for streaming before.

Also today: new music from music from Maluma (surprise!), Carrie Underwood, Joyce Manor, Sada Baby, Curren$y & Fuse, Blackhaine, Steve Reich/Ensemble Intercontemporain, the late Klaus Schulze, Levon Vincent, µ-Ziq, Max Richter, Yann Tiersen, Sam Gendel, Julius Rodriguez, Billy Mohler, Gabby Fluke-Mogul, Troy Roberts, the Dream Syndicate, Trail of Dead, Shearwater, the Inflorescence, Elucid, CyHi, the Range, Salamanda, Toshiya Tsunoda, David Lang, Benny Bock, SAD, Kula Shaker, Nick Mulvey, George Ezra, Vance Joy, Xylø. FKJ, Patty Griffin, Judah & the Lion, Florence Dore, Sinead O'Brien, onelinedrawing, Grace Ives, Liss, Marvin Sapp, Tauren Wells, Mapache, Life, American Aquarium, the Wrecks, Billy Howerdel (of A Perfect Circle), Kreator, downset., Seventh Wonder, Dragged Under, and the Never Broke Again label compilation "Green Flag Activity."

Rest in Peace

Singer JULEE CRUISE, best known for her haunting collaborations with director David Lynch and composer Angelo Badalamenti for "Twin Peaks" and "Blue Velvet"... JOE FRIEDMAN, co-founder of New York music and audio retail mecca J&R Music World.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
raw like sushi
WIRED
How a Saxophonist Tricked the KGB by Encrypting Secrets in Music
By Lily Hay Newman
Using a custom encryption scheme within music notation, Merryl Goldberg and three other US musicians slipped information to Soviet performers and activists known as the Phantom Orchestra.
Complex
How Rap's Wild New Underground Reinvented Itself
By Eric Skelton
SoundCloud rap didn't die. It reinvented itself. Here's how a new generation revived rap's wild new underground scene.
Variety
Grammy Chief Harvey Mason Jr. Talks New Songwriter of the Year Award, Social Change and More
By Jem Aswad
Thursday morning's announcement of several new Grammy Awards, particularly the long-overdue Songwriter of the Year honor, has already gotten a strong response from the music community.
Creatr
Music Publishing and the missing £500 million
By Henry Marsden
Recent research by The Ivors Academy suggested the data-streaming gap to be worth £500 million annually. That's a LOT of money slipping down the back of the industry's sofa- tangibly pinching the pockets of creators.
Los Angeles Times
Brazil's Anitta is already a global phenom and LGBTQ icon. Now she's set to conquer America
By Suzy Exposito
The bisexual, multilingual funk singer Anitta, who dazzled audiences at Coachella, co-headlines this weekend's Pride in the Park concert.
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
Folk band Big Thief won't play in member's native Israel, days after defending concerts there
By Gabe Friedman
The Tel Aviv venue where the band was slated to play called them "spineless."
The Associated Press
War Rap: Ukraine War Fuels Angry Voice for Furious Generation of Rappers
Ukrainian rapper-turned-volunteer soldier Otoy is putting the war into words and thumping baselines, tapping out lyrics under Russian shelling on his phone.
Los Angeles Magazine
The Rock Star Next Door
By Rosecrans Baldwin
For two years, a flamboyant, out-of-work rock guitarist rode out the pandemic in our Hollywood Hills home. Then, one day, he was gone.
Texas Monthly
'Sailing' Was Supposed to Save Christopher Cross. It Drowned Him Instead.
By Rob Tannenbaum
San Antonio-born Christopher Cross defined yacht rock and made Grammys history with "Sailing." But the song's origins are further than that.
The Seattle Times
Central Saloon, storied grunge-era club, secures long-term future in Seattle
By Michael Rietmulder
On Monday, owners of the small club with a big legacy purchased the Pioneer Square building that the grunge-era hot spot has called home for decades.
homebrew
Music Business Worldwide
Music's biggest companies are waiting for a Spotify price rise. For now, Spotify isn't budging
By Tim Ingham
Daniel Ek is wondering if Netflix "didn't get ahead of itself" with its streaming price rises.
Music Industry Blog
Why Spotify's TAM is only part of the story
By Mark Mulligan
Spotify has long touted the concept of its total addressable market (TAM), its path to a billion users and the role of emerging markets as the surest path to this figure.
VICE
Lil Nas X's BET Awards Snub Is a Blow to Black Queer Artists
By Kristin Corry
The BET Awards are helping to exacerbate LGBTQ erasure by upholding many of the same structural blindspots as other award shows.
The Atlantic
The Vindication of Jack White
By Spencer Kornhaber
An obsessive protector of rock's past could hold the key to its future.
Nashville Scene
Festival Frenzy 2022: COVID Comes With
By Hannah Herner
Minimal protocols at music festivals mean it's up to fans to reduce spread.
The New York Times
Island Records' Chris Blackwell Finally Tells His Story
By Ben Sisario
In a new memoir, the 84-year-old founder of Island Records reflects on helping bring the music of Bob Marley, U2 and Grace Jones to the world.
PopMatters
Open Mike Eagle on Capturing Hip-Hop's Oral History via Podcast
By Luis Aguasvivas
Open Mike Eagle's podcast 'What Had Happened Was' is an enchanting and illuminating appreciation of hip-hop.
Deadline
'You'll Need To Be Sitting Down For This One': Emails Between Stephen Sondheim And Marianne Elliott Chronicle The Birth Of A 21st Century 'Company'
By Greg Evans
Some key early moments in the production's development are chronicled in never-before-released email exchanges between Elliott and Sondheim, and demonstrate moments of inspiration, reluctance, collaboration, adventure and ultimately joy as the "Company" of 1970 became the "Company" of today.
Andscape
Broadway's 'MJ' zooms in on Michael Jackson's genius while neglecting his abuse
By Soraya Nadia McDonald
Musical dances around some of the ugly facts of his biography.
Stereogum
We've Got A File On You: Neneh Cherry
By Rachel Brodsky
Today, genre fluidity is a pretty much a given in pop music. But Neneh Cherry was light years ahead of her time when she released her 1989 debut album, "Raw Like Sushi," which featured lead single "Buffalo Stance," a Grammy-nominated feminist proclamation melding hip-hop, electronica, and dance.
The New York Times
Ingram Marshall Built and Obscured Monoliths of Sound
By Timo Andres
The composer and pianist Timo Andres remembers his former teacher, who "gave the impression that all of music was at our feet."
what we're into
Music of the day
"Nos Comemos Vivos"
Maluma ft. Chencho Corleone
From "The Love and Sex Tape," surprise-released today on Sony Music Latin.
Video of the day
"Who You Gonna Call? A Portrait of Ray Parker Jr."
Fran Strine
Don't be afraid of no documentary. Out today on VOD.
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