jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 12/27/2022 - Special Edition: Stories of a Year

Until James Dewitt Yancey recorded 'Fantastic, Vol. 2,' no one had tapped the true potential hidden in [MPC drum machines]: not to make a machine beat sound more like that of a 'real' drummer, but to make a kind of rhythm that no drummer had ever made before.
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Tuesday December 27, 2022
REDEF
Resistance rap: Ukrainian rapper Alyona Alyona in Castelbuono, Sicily, Aug. 7, 2022.
(Roberto Panucci/Corbis/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"Until James Dewitt Yancey recorded 'Fantastic, Vol. 2,' no one had tapped the true potential hidden in [MPC drum machines]: not to make a machine beat sound more like that of a 'real' drummer, but to make a kind of rhythm that no drummer had ever made before."
- Dan Charnas, "Dilla Time: The Life and Afterlife of J Dilla, the Hip-Hop Producer Who Reinvented Rhythm"
rantnrave://
Stories of Us

A man who reimagined the rhythm of popular music and another whose software sang the words of God. A tree that makes perfect guitars. The long and lively pre-history of a single THELONIOUS MONK tune. The boy-band fans and classic rockers who sort of invented the internet. Music, like all art, is storytelling, and for this sleepy week at the end of a not-so-sleepy year we offer a collection of our favorite stories *about* music from these past 12 months.

This is by no means an attempt to explain or recap or even comment on 2022. Some of these reads (and listens and watches) have nothing, per se, to do with this year. Some address very particular concerns of 2022, from the price of concert tickets to the price of copyright to the price an artist's connection to a vilified world leader. They're all, I think, great deep dives and/or diversions for a rainy (or snowy or sunny) day. Which maybe, together, do say something about where we're at at this particular moment. Or not. Maybe they'll just send you running to your stereo or your music hard drive or your streaming service, where many more stories will await.

- Matty Karas, curator
f.n.f. (let's go)
Rolling Stone
How J Dilla Reinvented Rhythm
By Dan Charnas
In this excerpt from hip-hop historian Dan Charnas' book "Dilla Time," we get the inside story of how iconic beatmaker J Dilla and an elite group of musicians, including D'Angelo, Erykah Badu, and Questlove, changed the shape of rap and R&B forever.
Input
His software sang the words of God. Then it went silent
By S.I. Rosenbaum
Who was Thomas Buchler, the late creator of beloved Torah program "TropeTrainer"? And can anything be done to revive his life's work?
Black Music and Black Muses
Mostly the Voice
By Harmony Holiday
The tonal bond between Future and Billie Holiday and how it exceeds itself.
Los Angeles Magazine
The Assassination of Drakeo the Ruler
By Jeff Weiss
After surviving a lifetime of brutal obstacles, the 28-year-old rap star was stabbed to death backstage by a mob of anonymous invaders just before a concert in December. A reporter's eyewitness account.
Medium
Who Was Mr. Rolling Stone?
By Jonathan Lethem
Outtakes & residue from encounters with James Brown (and others).
The New Yorker
How BTS Became the Most Popular Band in History
By E. Tammy Kim
In an age of despair and division, a boy band from South Korea remixed the rules of pop and created a fandom bigger than Beatlemania.
Last Week Tonight
Ticketmaster: 'Last Week Tonight with John Oliver'
By John Oliver
John Oliver explains why concert tickets are so expensive, who's making money off of them, and which One Direction is his favorite.
Lapham's Quarterly
Enjoy My Flames
By Jeremy Swist
On heavy metal's fascination with Roman emperors.
VAN Magazine
Can Anna Netrebko Reconcile the Political System She Lives in With the Apolitical Persona She Projects?
By Olivia Giovetti
The treachery of images.
Tim Lawrence
David Mancuso and Louis Vuitton: Can they "Fall in Love"?
By Tim Lawrence
The world's most profitable luxury corporation had a good, long think and concluded it would be entirely reasonable to align itself with a person who paid almost no attention to his appearance, spent the very minimum on clothes, placed no value on material possessions and ran a house party that placed anti-commercialism and egalitarianism at the centre of its ethos.
last last
Adam Neely
The Grotesque Legacy of Music as Property
By Adam Neely
Copyright Bad.
Pitchfork
How Deadheads and Directioners Made the Internet What It Is Today
By Kaitlyn Tiffany
Searching for Harry Styles's vomit shrine and a brief history of very online fandom, in this excerpt from Kaitlyn Tiffany's "Everything I Need I Get From You."
The New Yorker
The Despair of Generation 'Notti Bop'
By Jody Rosen
How do we respond to a wave of viral dance videos that reënact the killing of a fourteen-year-old?
Courage News
FOIA'd FBI Files on Aretha Franklin Show Repeated Suspicion of the Famed Black Singer, Her Work, and Activists Around Her
By Jenn Dize
It took 4 years to get these documents.
Smithsonian Magazine
The Legend of The Music Tree
By Ellen Ruppel Shell
Exotic lumber salvaged from a remote forest in Belize is the world's most coveted tonewood.
Sonos Radio
Dada Strain Radio: Electronic Improvisation with King Britt
By Piotr Orlov and King Britt
A conversation with producer, DJ and futurist King Britt about electronic music's improvised history, and how music and community have been guided by machines. Featuring tracks by King Britt & Tyshawn Sorey, Sun Ra, Jazzy Jeff, Herbie Hancock, King Tubby, Miles Davis, Tony Allen & Jeff Mills, Phuture and more.
The Washington Post
The Search for the Perfect Sound
By Geoff Edgers
Vinyl is booming in the digital age. So why does the best way to listen feel just out of reach?
The New Inquiry
Streaming Services
By Jaime Brooks
It doesn't bother me as an artist to know that most people who love music are going to be subscribing to services like Spotify for as long as they're available. I would just ask that you try to see Spotify for what it really is––a way to generate royalties from old music.
Tedium
The Death of the Key Change
By Chris Dalla Riva
One of the key changes—pun intended—to the pop charts in the last 60 years is the demise of key changes. What happened?
The Ringer
Size Matters: Inside the Politics of Festival Posters
By Ben Lindbergh
Joyner Lucas's Lollapalooza meltdown is just the latest manifestation of one of the touchiest subjects in the concert industry: how big the name is on the flyer. To get to the heart of the matter, we spoke to some experts about all things font size.
Study Hall
How Long Can Music Journalism Stay Segregated?
By Adlan Jackson
As the music journalism industry itself shrinks with the media industry at large, gestures at post-racial universality have in many ways entrenched white power in the music press.
rantnrave:// Postscript: Joe Bussard died in September.
The Washington Post
A savior of abandoned American music contemplates his collection
By Joe Heim
Joe Bussard amassed thousands of 78 records over a lifetime devoted to preserving early American roots music.
NPR Music
When the creek does rise, can music survive?
By Stephanie Wolf
How does a scene survive when disaster strikes its venues, music schools, rare instruments and priceless archives all at once? The musicians of flood-ravaged eastern Kentucky have a few answers.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Just Like This Train (live at the Newport Folk Festival, July 24, 2022)"
Joni Mitchell
"This is a trust fall."
Video of the day
"Naatu Naatu"
Rahul Sipligunj and Kaala Bhairava
From S.S. Rajamouli's 2022 film "RRR."
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