jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 09/14/2022 - Rock v. Royals, Women's Sheet Music, PnB Rock, Sudan Archives, Breland, Elevator Music...

It annoys me when people think [that] because it's commercial, it's bad. It's completely opposite: If it's commercial, people like it, and that's what it's all supposed to be about.
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Wednesday September 14, 2022
REDEF
Olivia Newton-John in April 1972.
(Roger Allston/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"It annoys me when people think [that] because it's commercial, it's bad. It's completely opposite: If it's commercial, people like it, and that's what it's all supposed to be about."
- Olivia Newton-John, 1948 – 2022
rantnrave://
Redef Jam

Popular music, as a general rule, is good. As is lots and lots of less popular music.

I'd like to think this is blindingly obvious to most people who care about music and musicians. But I've learned over the years to never take anything for granted, and so I offer it here, as MusicREDEF continues to work our way back from our summer break, as a reminder of one of the fundamental principles behind what we're trying to do here.

Our aim, at heart, is to share stories worth reading (and watching and listening) and music worth hearing. Stories about music, musicians and the business, technology and culture that shapes their world and supports their art. We aren't a news service, though we share plenty of news stories. Our assumption is that if you're reading this, you're already seeing plenty of headlines over the course of your day and you're coming here for something more, a deeper read. One of the boss's mantras is "not THAT it happened, but WHY it happened and what it MEANS." (The boss also loves capital letters, in case that hasn't been made clear over the eight years we've been producing this particular newsletter.) So we start from there, and look for reported stories with good, verifiable sourcing, essays and thinkpieces with ideas worth engaging and features that make us want to sing and dance. Our aim every day is a curated playlist of good information.

We look for a diversity of voices, of sources, of subjects, of music, of points of view. We're a generalist pop newsletter but also a jazz newsletter, a hip-hop newsletter, a rock newsletter, a dance newsletter, a K-pop newsletter and a classical newsletter. We're not a tech newsletter but we're interested in technology that helps artists produce, distribute, promote or make a living from their art. We're not a business newsletter but we're curious about the businesses that enable artists to do what they do. We're not a gossip newsletter and, actually, that's the end of that sentence. We don't care who's dating who, who's investing in which restaurant and who's collecting whose sneakers. We do care who's using their art to build better communities and better worlds.

All of the above is subjective and malleable. A good read or a great single will trump everything else.

We sometimes use "we" and "I" interchangeably, because the nature of what we do is collaborative, and/or maybe that's just an old habit of ours.

We love provocative ideas. We hate provocation for provocation's sake.

And, yes, we really do believe that popular music, as a general rule, is good. Popular music is popular for a reason. There no doubt have been occasional lapses in public taste over the years, and the risk of payola, chart manipulation and other nefarious practices is ever present, but even then, it's hard to make a song last for any length of time in the public consciousness if people aren't genuinely responding to it. We like to start not by questioning how someone could possibly like a given piece of music, but by trying to understand why they do. Because otherwise, why even bother?

Etc Etc Etc (Royal Version)

The American jazz giant who wrote, recorded and pressed a 20-minute suite for an audience of one—QUEEN ELIZABETH... The court composers who served during Elizabeth's reign... The non-court pop composers who sang about her... A very unofficial, and well thought out, Elizabethan playlist... The history of music at royal funerals... A fond farewell from the artist formerly known as JOHNNY ROTTEN.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
a little more love
Pitchfork
How Rock and the Royals Jostled for Britain's Cultural Identity During the Queen's Lifetime
By Simon Reynolds
From the Beatles to the Sex Pistols to the Smiths, disgust and fascination with the monarchy became a British rock tradition over the course of Queen Elizabeth II's reign.
The New York Times
She Couldn't Find Jazz Sheet Music by Women. She Fixed That
By Ayana Contreras
The jazz drummer and educator Terri Lyne Carrington's latest project is "New Standards: 101 Lead Sheets by Women Composers," a book due Friday, and an album featuring 11 of its selections.
Los Angeles Times
'It's sad, it's frustrating, it's infuriating': Mourning the loss of slain rapper PnB Rock
By Kenan Draughorne
Philadelphia rapper PnB Rock was fatally shot at a Roscoe's Chicken & Waffles on Tuesday during a robbery. The hip-hop world paid tribute.
DownBeat
Jazz Is Dead: Long Live Jazz!
By John Murph
Adrian Younge describes Jazz Is Dead as a "romance," its macabre-sounding trademark notwithstanding. He's a co-founder of the Los Angeles-based record label, a buzzworthy outfit that has been turning heads with eye-catching album artwork and a roster of luminary jazz veterans for the past two years.
Music Business Worldwide
'I'm confident that in the future, 15-20% of all music on the global charts will be by African artists.'
By Murray Stassen
MBW interviews Martin Nielsen, CEO of African music streaming service Mdundo.
interdependence.fm
Co-creating new music economies with Tim Exile (Endlesss)
By Holly Herndon, Mat Dryhurst and Tim Exile
Virtuosic musician and instrument builder Tim Exile discusses his collaborative online musical ecosystem Endlesss, the uneasy state of contemporary music, new folk traditions and what piqued his interest in web 3. 
Rolling Stone
Warner Music May Be Forced to Reveal Sexual Misconduct Allegations
By Ethan Millman
Dorothy Carvello filed a request through a little-known statute in Delaware's corporate laws to demand WMG share key documents.
DJ Mag
Sudan Archives' radical honesty
By Christine Ochefu
A violinist, beat maker and vocalist with a talent for humorous yet heartfelt lyricism, Sudan Archives new album 'Natural Brown Prom Queen' is out now on Stones Throw. She speaks to Christine Ochefu about her open-book writing style and her determination to follow her own path.
Billboard
Breland Talks His 'Cross Country' Aspirations: 'I Consider It a Social Movement'
By Jessica Nicholson
Breland discusses his musical journey, his new album, his global aspirations and the Latin-inspired song he has waiting in the wings.
NPR Music
Olivia Newton-John, a sexy nerd for the rest of us
By Evie Nagy
The brilliant badness of Hollywood's favorite good girl.
heart attack
ProPublica
Real Money, Fake Musicians: Inside a Million-Dollar Instagram Verification Scheme
By Craig Silverman and Bianca Fortis
A jeweler. A plastic surgeon. An OnlyFans Model. They and others received a blue check in likely the biggest Instagram verification scheme revealed to date. After ProPublica started asking questions, Meta removed badges from over 300 accounts.
Culture Notes of an Honest Broker
How Did Elevators Lose Their Music?
By Ted Gioia
My informal survey reveals the decline of an insipid but historic genre
Music In Africa
Is music on TikTok a different kind of art?
By David Cornwell
Is TikTok simply another vector for the music industry, or does it represent something new and unique?
Dada Drummer Almanach
De-mixing the Beatles
By Damon Krukowski
Albums are not stems.
Music Business Worldwide
YouTube says it paid the music industry over $6bn in the past year -- with around $2bn coming from UGC
By Tim Ingham
Right now, YouTube and Spotify appear to be keeping pace with one another.
The Guardian
Boos and encores: the division over Russian soprano Anna Netrebko
By Shaun Walker
Mixed reaction in Vienna to Anna Netrebko symbolic of Russian soprano's performing life since Ukraine invasion.
Trapital
Investing $200 Million In Music with Matt Pincus
By Dan Runcie and Matt Pincus
At his independent music publishing company, Songs, Matt Pincus was able to spot and develop up-and-coming songwriters, inking early deals with the likes of Diplo, Lorde, and The Weeknd. He'll be tasked with finding similar success at the music holdings company he co-founded, Music.
Billboard
Why Can Miley Cyrus Be Sued for Posting a Photo of Herself to Instagram?
By Bill Donahue
Why does this keep happening? What legal defenses does Miley have? And how much could she be facing in damages?
Pitchfork
Alex G Is Building a Mystery
By Quinn Moreland
Indie rock's normcore hero on God, dogs, and his wild new album.
The New York Times
How Music Loops Help Me Feel More Present
By Miguel Otárola
Loops open a dimension where, although time is ticking forward at its usual pace, I'm moving at my own speed, appreciating my body and the world around me.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Magic"
Olivia Newton-John
"I'll be guiding you..."
Video of the day
"Sympathy for the Devil"
Jean-Luc Godard
Originally released in 1968 under the title "1 + 1." RIP Jean-Luc Godard.
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