jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 07/26/2022 - Joni at Newport, The Battle for Pappy & Harriet's, Dead Kennedys, Kendrick Lamar, Meta Music...

This is a trust fall.
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Tuesday July 26, 2022
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Joni, get out your cane: Joni Mitchell and Brandi Carlile at the Newport Folk Festival, Newport, R.I., July 24, 2022.
(Carlin Stiehl/Boston Globe/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"This is a trust fall."
- Brandi Carlile, on Joni Mitchell's electric guitar solo Sunday at the Newport Folk Festival
rantnrave://
In Newport They Jam on Main Stage

While you were still deciding whether to spend $99 or $262 or $5,000 on BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN tickets, BRANDI CARLILE was bringing JONI MITCHELL onstage at the NEWPORT FOLK FESTIVAL ($108 for the day or $257 for three days through digital ticketing platform DICE) for what may have been the most astonishing, moving and almost literally unbelievable set any classic rock or pop artist, or anyone really, will perform in 2022. The sheer wonder and impossibility of it all has been well covered. Here's ANN POWERS on a singing voice that had already undergone a watershed change once before in the 21st century, and now, "Here was another revelatory voice, showing the marks of her recent health struggles and her determination to recover, stunning in its honesty." Here's MARY MCNAMARA on a reimagined version of the 53-year-old "BOTH SIDES NOW" that "has never sounded so powerful, so genuine a description of the constant human tension between reality and hope, desire and downfall." And here's Joni herself suggesting to CBS' ANTHONY MASON that "I didn't sound too bad tonight"—which may be the biggest rave of all, coming as it does from someone who knows exactly what she had to do to get there. Relearning how to stand up and get out of a chair. Relearning, by watching old videos of herself, how to play guitar. (If you're going to learn again, why not learn from the best? Mitchell's virtuosity on guitar and other stringed instruments should be talked about more often.) And then having the courage and grit to get up out of her throne-like chair on the Newport stage, strap on an electric guitar and play a sizzling version of "JUST LIKE THIS TRAIN" in front of a live festival crowd and a worldwide YouTube crowd that she knew would be tuning in before the day was done. "This is a trust fall," Carlile said, introducing that guitar solo. No one, it turned out, was needed to catch Joni Mitchell. Except for every single soul who was there, onstage, in the Newport crowd and at homes around the world.

Both Sides Now

Seemingly every side of the Bruce Springsteen ticket fiasco that TICKETMASTER swears wasn't a fiasco has been aired out at this point. Here are revered rock promoter HARVEY GOLDSMITH and LIVE NATION CEO MICHAEL RAPINO having at each other in the letters section of BOB LEFSETZ's newsletter. Here's Springsteen fanzine Backstreets wondering "if it's not raining, why are we getting soaked?" But some questions still linger as additional shows for Springsteen and the E STREET BAND's 2023 tour go on sale over the next several days.

Ticketmaster says only 11 percent of tickets sold last week were so-called platinum tickets, subject to the variable, algorithm-driven pricing that saw some seats literally shoot up to $4,000 or $5,000. But is that only because buyers shied away from those seats? What percentage of tickets initially made available were platinum seats? What percentage were held back from public sale (and did some of those become the "verified resale tickets" that were prevalent on Ticketmaster's site last week)? What does the prevalence of those resale tickets say about the stated goal of variable pricing—to bring prices in line with market values to discourage reselling in the first place? ("One might cite inflation, market value, or any number of factors" for the eyebrow-raising prices of some tickets, Backstreets editorialized; "we'd argue that it can't be 'market forces' when supply is purposefully obfuscated, then manipulated by the platform of distribution.") And if Ticketmaster can "verify" resales, why can't it regulate them by, say, not allowing resellers to offer tickets at a markup for a certain window of time, if ever?

Etc Etc Etc

KOBALT MUSIC PUBLISHING—which says its songwriters are represented on 40 percent of the top 100 tracks and albums in the US and UK at any given time—is pulling its catalog of 700,000 songs from FACEBOOK and INSTAGRAM after failing to come to terms on a new deal with their parent company, META... Meta, meanwhile, is introducing a revenue-share model to pay publishers and labels for certain user-generated videos, a change the industry has been asking for. "Whether the music industry is united in being happy with the *size* of that revenue share," quips Music Business Worldwide, "is yet to be seen"... Joni Mitchell and NEIL YOUNG were seen in some corners as out-of-touch, out-of-date old rockers when they deleted their music from SPOTIFY earlier this year to protest Spotify podcaster JOE ROGAN. But who's out of touch now? If you felt the perfectly understandable urge to listen to Joni Mitchell anytime in the last couple days, Spotify could offer no help... Coming to Las Vegas: ADELE (finally) and U2... The emo dictionary.

Rest in Peace

Rapper-turned-politician PHYO ZEYA THAW, one of four pro-democracy activists executed by Myanmar's ruling military junta. He first came to national prominence as leader of the group Acid, whose politically charged 2000 album "SATIN GYIN" (which translates to "Beginning") is considered Myanmar's first hip-hop album; it was an unexpected hit in a country not known for its tolerance of protest music. Phyo Zeya Thaw turned to activism as part of Myanmar's Generation Wave movement and in 2012 he was elected to parliament, where he became a close ally of now-deposed civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi. He had left politics to return to music—"He wanted to write songs and perform onstage again," his girlfriend told BBC News—but the junta, which considered him a terrorist, arrested him in November 2021 and convicted him in a closed trial in January. Human rights officials condemned the trial and executions... Celebrated indie film director BOB RAFELSON, who co-created the TV show "The Monkees" and made his big-screen debut with the subversive Monkees feature "Head," which he co-wrote and co-produced with Jack Nicholson. Rafelson and partner Bert Schneider "encouraged us to be ourselves," the Monkees' Micky Dolenz said. "They did not want to hire four actors to play parts they made up. They wanted four different people with different energies and spirit." Rafelson went on to direct Nicholson in several films including "Five Easy Pieces," "The King of Marvin Gardens" and "The Postman Always Rings Twice."... Veteran Austrian conductor STEFAN SOLTESZ, who collapsed Friday while conducting the Richard Strauss opera "The Silent Woman" at the Bavarian State Opera in Munich, Germany. He died shorty afterward... PHILIP DRUCKER, multi-instrumentalist and founding member of experimental punk bands Savage Republic and 17 Pygmies; he had a second career as an intellectual property lawyer, professor and writer... One-time Suicidal Tendencies bassist BOB HEATHCOTE.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
court
Los Angeles Times
Inside the battle for control of a legendary music club — and the soul of a high desert town
By Randall Roberts
A bitter dispute over ownership of Pioneertown roadhouse Pappy & Harriet's has stirred fears among locals about the gentrification of their community.
Rolling Stone
Coachella's Parent Company Is Donating Major Cash to a Political Organization Pushing Anti-Abortion Agenda
By Judd Legum
The Anschutz Corporation -- which owns concert giant AEG Live and its subsidiary Goldenvoice -- gave $75,000 to the Republican Attorneys General Association days after Roe v. Wade was overturned.
gal-dem
We need to talk about the music industry's open secrets
By Emma Garland, Suyin Haynes, Tara Joshi...
According to the Musicians' Union, almost half of musicians have experienced sexual harassment at work.
VICE
'Nothing's Changed': Sexual Misconduct Is Driving People Out of Music
By Stephanie Phillips
"Every person of colour that works in my sector of the industry has mental health problems."
Billboard
Why Dead Kennedys' Founders Are Feuding Over 'Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables' Reissue
By Steve Knopper
"Listen before you buy," Jello Biafra warns.
Music Business Worldwide
Facebook will now directly share a proportion of ad revenue with music rightsholders for UGC videos. Your move, TikTok
By Tim Ingham
 Meta has just announced that it is changing the way artists and music rightsholders are going to be paid from Facebook – and that it will be moving to a 'revenue-share' model for user-generated video content.
CBS News
Joni Mitchell performs in public for first time in nine years
By Anthony Mason
Joni Mitchell surprised the Newport Folk Festival crowd when she joined Brandi Carlile onstage. Anthony Mason spoke with Mitchell about recovering from a near-fatal brain aneurysm, teaching herself to play the guitar again and returning to the stage.
Complex
Kendrick Lamar Thinks Outside the Box on the Big Steppers Tour
By Andre Gee
Just as the concept album "Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers" rewarded attentive listeners, the tour is full of engaging visuals, providing an immersive experience that builds on the themes introduced in the album. 
Slate
Hip Hop, Crime, and Free Speech
By Jason Johnson and Stephanie Willis
Many American entertainers make art about violence, but rappers are largely alone in facing prosecution over their art.
The Guardian
RETRO MUST READ: The Monkees' Head: 'Our fans couldn't even see it'
By Dorian Lynskey
At the height of their fame, the Monkees teamed up with Jack Nicholson to film the psychedelic classic Head - and destroy their careers in the process. Dorian Lynskey asks the band how they feel about it now.
spark
Indiewire
From Elvis to Madonna, Here Are All the Musical Biopics in the Works
By Samantha Bergeson
Movie musical biopics are a beloved Hollywood tradition and one that - unlike erotic thrillers - shows no signs of slowing down.
The Daily Beast
Meet the Genius Who Brought the Disco Ball to Lincoln Center
By Larry Blumenfeld
Shanta Thake wants to throw open the storied cultural center's gates to new audiences. She intends to make a post-pandemic case for live performance. And she needs you to dance.
Billboard
Who's Afraid of User-Centric Royalties?
By Robert Levine
Streaming is broken. Can a new royalty system like the one SoundCloud is exploring fix it?
Music Business Worldwide
Kobalt is pulling its 700,000 songs off Facebook and Instagram. Is the music biz headed for a historic bust-up with Meta?
By Tim Ingham
The other day MBW jokingly remarked that the global music business had become a little "cozy" this summer - with a distinct lack of companies (publicly) falling out. Please, loyal reader, allows us to scratch that idea from the record.
The New York Times
His Audio Speakers Are Coveted by Supreme, Mark Ronson and Prada
By Alex Hawgood
Devon Turnbull is the founder of Ojas, a high-end audio company. Previously, he was the streetwear pioneer behind Nom de Guerre.
The Washington Post
Classical music is ditching printed programs. We're not happy.
By Michael Andor Brodeur
Long PDFs on cellphones are taking the place of paper, once an essential part of the concert-going experience.
Los Angeles Times
Can Arabic-language pop conquer America? A Tarzana ingénue and her power manager say 'inshallah'
By Amos Barshad
Pop singer Elyanna, championed by Weeknd manager Wassim 'Sal' Slaiby, leads a wave of Arab American artists aiming to become the next Bad Bunny or BTS.
NPR
In 'Rap Sh!t,' women in rap strive and thrive
By Aisha Harris
A new comedy series created by Issa Rae taps into the complexities of being an aspiring female rapper in the age of social media.
Backstreets
Freeze-Out
It's four in the morning and raining. We're feeling old, listening to the outcries of fans feeling similarly betrayed by last week's ticket sales, and remembering that things were different a decade ago.
KQED
Dave and Iola Brubeck, Louis Armstrong and the Civil Rights Musical That Never Happened
By Andrew Gilbert
A new book reveals the story of 'The Real Ambassadors,' a thwarted piece of musical theater about racism and the U.S. government.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Both Sides Now (Newport Folk Festival, July 24, 2022)"
Joni Mitchell with Brandi Carlile
Video of the day
"Just Like This Train (Newport Folk Festival, July 24, 2022)"
Joni Mitchell
Still a master guitarist!
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