jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 12/14/2022 - Jingle Bell Credits, Megan Takes the Stand, Virtual K-pop Stars, SZA, Sudan Archives...

Who would have guessed that Taylor Swift fans would be advocating for changes to antitrust laws?
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Wednesday December 14, 2022
REDEF
Shining through: Cyndi Lauper sings "True Colors" at the White House to celebrate the Respect for Marriage Act, Dec. 13, 2022.
(Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"Who would have guessed that Taylor Swift fans would be advocating for changes to antitrust laws?"
- Sen. Amy Klobuchar, chair of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Competition Policy, Antitrust, and Consumer Rights
rantnrave://
Completions and Connections

The two people credited with writing the most successful Christmas song of the modern era, I believe you know the one I'm talking about, it's probably playing somewhere within earshot right now, are famously unable to agree on one simple fact: which one of them actually wrote it. What's publicly known about Christmas queen MARIAH CAREY and her co-producer WALTER AFANASIEFF is they evenly split the songwriting royalties for a song that the Economist estimated had already earned $60 million by 2017 (and that was before it hit #1 in the US for the first time), that he says they wrote it together, side by side, that she suggests they didn't, and that they apparently haven't talked in years.

If there's one thing songwriter advocates will tell any songwriter willing to listen, it's get the details in writing and figure out the splits before you think about doing anything with a song. At least Carey and Afanasieff took care of the splits, which will buy both of them all the presents they'll ever need under their Christmas trees for the rest of their lives, even if the lyric (which even Afanasieff says was primarily Carey's) insists she doesn't care about those things. But the fact that nearly 30 Christmases have passed since the song was recorded (primarily by him, he says) and they still haven't been able to make peace on all the other details is one of those things that makes me sad every holiday season. All I want for Christmas is for you guys to work it out. To set an example for collaborators everywhere.

This is on my mind again thanks to a Los Angeles Times story about one of the season's other perennial blockbusters, "JINGLE BELL ROCK," originally recorded in 1957 by BOBBY HELMS and written by—well, you should read STEPHEN THOMAS ERLEWINE's story. Suffice it to say, all available evidence disagrees with what the credits on the contracts and the records say, at a cost of millions of dollars to the ones whose names aren't there. Helms died in 1997. JOHN KLEIMAN, who managed him and owns his licensing, tells Erlewine that Helms never confronted his label, DECCA, about the writing credits "because if you got into it with them, they would stop putting your music out."

It's the oldest story in the book. You've read dozens like it in your music business guides and so, you assume, has every songwriter and artist who has access to those same guides and the internet and, most important, managers, lawyers and other artist advocates who can tell them where the money is hidden and how to get it unhidden. Everyone is supposed to have more information and more access now. Recording software has writing and production metadata built into it. The power balance has shifted. And yet... SUSAN GENCO, co-president of the AZOFF CO. and a founder of the MUSIC ARTISTS COALITION, tells Erlewine how some things, amazingly, haven't changed. She shares the story of an unnamed major artist and their manager who ignored her recommendation to lock down the artist's songwriting split on a new song before releasing it because, they said, "it was more important for the record to come out, to explode on streaming."

I hear echoes in that anecdote of streaming bosses and other captains of technology constantly telling artists (or "creators," as they'd more likely say) to just put out "content" and more "content" and let it go viral and then worry about the money. Followers now, monetization later. The tech captains, of course, are monetizing now. Because they've read their own business guides. And they know the power balance still favors the ones who can make you believe that, if you get into it with them, they can just stop and move on to someone else. Even if it isn't true.

Rest in Peace

Live events promoter ALLEN BECKER, a dominant figure in Texas music with his Pace Entertainment Group and Pace Concerts.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
jingle bells swing
Los Angeles Times
A multimillion-dollar mystery: Who really wrote the holiday staple 'Jingle Bell Rock?'
By Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Bobby Helms' 'Jingle Bell Rock' has become a Christmas standard, but the singer and the song's famed guitarist may have lost out on a publishing windfall.
Los Angeles Times
Megan Thee Stallion takes the stand in Tory Lanez trial with support from demonstrators
By James Queally
For four hours in the witness stand Tuesday, Pete spoke in detail about a wild July 2020 night that started at a Hollywood Hills party and ended with her in handcuffs and later in a Los Angeles hospital with bullet fragments in her feet.
Billboard
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The justices asked the Justice Department to weigh in on whether the high court should tackle the case.
BBC News
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They may sing and dance like other musicians but they are made with artificial intelligence.
Consequence
SZA Is Trying to Save Herself
By Jewel Wicker
"Black music doesn't have to just be R&B. We started rock and roll. Why can't we just be expansive and not reductive?"
Pitchfork
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With her autobiographical opus "Natural Brown Prom Queen," Brittney Parks finally collects her crown.
Music Business Worldwide
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VAN Magazine
Tainted History
By Sammy Sussman
Former Juilliard composition students share allegations of sexual harassment and misconduct.
Variety
Senator Amy Klobuchar on Taylor Swift Fiasco, Ticketmaster Controversy: 'People Who Get Hurt by Monopolies Are Also Afraid of Them'
By Dean Budnick
"Who would have guessed that Taylor Swift fans would be advocating for changes to antitrust laws? They're the modern-day Grangers, and they are doing this on the internet."
Slate
The Jingle That Turned Cellino & Barnes Into Household Names
By Willa Paskin
And why we all cared when these two personal injury lawyers split up.
jingle bells ring
The FADER
The 50 best albums of 2022
By Alex Robert Ross, Jordan Darville, Gyasi Williams-Kirtley...
From Bad Bunny to Freddie Gibbs and Rachika Nayar to Jockstrap, these are the albums that soundtracked the past year.
Music Ally
12 big talking points around TikTok and music in 2022
By Stuart Dredge
TikTok was never far from the music industry headlines in 2022, for better or worse.
Music Business Worldwide
A year ago, Patrick Moxey sold Ultra Records to Sony Music. Now the label is suing his publishing company
By Tim Ingham
"I have every right to use the name Ultra in connection with Ultra International Music Publishing, and won't be intimidated by a massive global corporation," the former owner of Ultra Records says. But Sony Music says Patrick Moxey "is perpetuating the falsehood that he remains affiliated with his former company."
The FADER
Alex G is trying to tell you something
By Alex Robert Ross
As Alex G's music becomes more confounding and compelling, his process becomes more mysterious -- even to him.
i-D Magazine
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By Sheldon Pearce
After tackling loss, controversies, kids and growth, the hip-hop brothers have reunited on an amazing new album.
Pollstar
2022 Year-End Executive Survey (Pt. 1)
By Ariel King
Pollstar presents thought leaders across multiple live music sectors, including promoters, agents and artist managers, giving their take on this year and what the future holds. 
Billboard
Concert Venues Are Still Closing After the Pandemic -- My Local Club Just Shut Down
By Steve Knopper
Denver's Tennyson's Tap never made it out of quarantine. Now it's lumber and dirt.
The Guardian
Angelo Badalamenti was a master composer who created theme music history with 'Twin Peaks'
By Daniel Dylan Wray
The composer had an esteemed career working with David Bowie and Nina Simone, but it was his unique partnership with David Lynch that set a benchmark for dramatic scores.
Catapult
Listening to Ariana Grande's 'fake smile' and Holding onto My Teacher Persona
By John Bazley
In her rejection of performing happiness, Grande invokes gratitude for the impact she's made on others. I have to believe the same.
CNN
Inside the formula that made 'A Charlie Brown Christmas' a holiday music hit
By AJ Willingham
"A Charlie Brown Christmas" helped change the sound of Christmas music for generations to come.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Broken"
Little Simz
"Man, this week has been tough / Been sayin' that for a year." From "No Thank You," out now on Forever Living Originals.
Video of the day
"Anonymous Club"
Danny Cohen
Danny Cohen's 16mm documentary on three years in the life of Courtney Barnett, streaming at Amazon and elsewhere.
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