jason hirschhorn's @MusicREDEF: 04/11/2023 - Algo Rhythms, How to Evaluate a Catalog, Maggie Rogers Sells, Coachella's Sahara Tent, Gimme Radio...

The Manhattan brick-and-mortar chain J&R held on until 2014, but since its final location pulled down the shutters, there hasn't really been a store in New York City where one could browse all the important new releases in jazz, classical, and pop. If you aren't online, you're out of luck.
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Tuesday April 11, 2023
REDEF
Kelela at Here at Outernet, London, April 7, 2023.
(Burak Cingi/Redferns/Getty Images)
quote of the day
"The Manhattan brick-and-mortar chain J&R held on until 2014, but since its final location pulled down the shutters, there hasn't really been a store in New York City where one could browse all the important new releases in jazz, classical, and pop. If you aren't online, you're out of luck."
- Ethan Iverson, "The End of the Music Business"
rantnrave://
Algo Rhythms

There's been a lot of talk in recent years about the end of so-called monoculture, which raises a million questions, such as was there ever actually a monoculture or did radio and the rest of the media only pay attention to what a couple very specific demographics were listening to, and has there ever been a time in the past 100 years when someone wasn't complaining about it disappearing? But today's lead story, a kind of investigative essay by Vulture's NATE JONES that begins at his local cocktail bar, asks a different sort of monoculture question: What if SPOTIFY's algorithms and a handful of indie reissue labels are quietly conspiring to create a new one—"an unofficial canon of cool music," in which everyone is eventually being fed songs by Zambian rock band AMANAZ, ex-YELLOW MAGIC ORCHESTRA leader and chill-out star HARUOMI HOSONO and little-known '70s country singer KATHY HEIDEMANN? (You might want to check your DISCOVER WEEKLY playlist right now to see if they're there.) "Why," Jones wants to know, "are my secret Spotify songs following me around?"

The top four links in today's mix—two essays, including Jones', a podcast and a video set in the early 1950s—are all about how, why and where technology is taking over music and music discovery and why or why not we should be concerned. None of them is about A.I. (unless you want to label Spotify's long-entrenched recommendation algorithms as A.I., which I'll leave up to you). All of them have something important to say about the business of finding, and surviving, music, and they all overlap in one way or another.

In a long, thoughtful chat with SAXON BAIRD and SAM BACKER, hosts of the MONEY 4 NOTHING podcast, NICK SEAVER, author of the book COMPUTING TASTE, explores a strangely complicated question: What exactly *is* a recommendation? Like what, literally, does the word mean?... In the Nation, jazz pianist and critic ETHAN IVERSON, who's been hanging on to his iPod, the last great pre-streaming technology, for dear life, wants to know if music streaming has literally caused "The End of the Music Business." His final piece of evidence, after running through a century's worth of music technology: the fact that his local coffee shop is streaming a version of "GEORGIA ON MY MIND" that even he, Ethan Iverson, can't recognize, by an anonymous Swedish group called the NOUVEAU JAZZ TRIO, straight off Spotify's "Jazz for Study" and "Lazy Jazz Cat" playlists. "I I feel the same shiver down my spine," he writes, "that writers feel when they consider CHATGPT"... Of course, as Seaver mentions to Baird and Becker, technology and recommendations have been part of the culture of music for as long as music has existed, and the video podcast POLYPHONIC is here to tell us how the technology behind the long-playing record made the very music on DUKE ELLINGTON's 1951 classic MASTERPIECES BY ELLINGTON possible. As if to remind us that technology doesn't have to dictate or limit where music goes. The music can do the dictating, and the improvising. If only we let it.

Gimme Going Gone

Shoutout to my old RHAPSODY colleagues TYLER LENANE and JON MAPLES for the streaming, non-algorithmic, human radio throwback product they and their team built at GIMME RADIO, which Tyler announced Monday is shutting down after a six-year run (and just a year after completing a $3 million raise with investors including IHEARTMEDIA, the ORCHARD and CONCORD). "We wanted to build a venue where fans of genres outside of mainstream hip hop and pop were not marginalized, but catered to," Lenane wrote in a Medium post. But "even though we proved that engaged communities could generate real money at a higher average revenue per user than other music platforms, we unfortunately find ourselves in an economic climate where we have been unable to raise the financing needed to support the streaming services and grow Gimme to reach all music fans across all genres." Gimme Metal and Gimme Country will continue streaming through April 28. (And I officially forgive them for canceling my own Gimme Country show after one episode in 2019 for the crime of country impurity—slipping too many pop-leaning currents into the mix. It was an amicable d-i-v-o-r-c-e.)

Rest in Peace

S Club 7 singer PAUL CATTERMOLE, who was found dead Thursday, two months after the British pop group announced a reunion tour... NORA FORSTER, best known as the wife and muse of ex-Sex Pistol John Lydon and mother of the Slits' Ari Up. She had a been a West German concert promoter who moved to London and became, in the words of her late daughter, "a den mother to all the young punks"... Swedish session guitarist LASSE WELLANDER, best known for his long association with Abba. He played "an integral role in the Abba story," the group said... Percussionist CHUCK MORRIS of the jam band Lotus. The bodies of Morris and his son Charley were recovered in an Arkansas lake over the weekend, three weeks after they were reported missing during a kayaking trip... New Orleans jazz saxophonist and teacher EDWARD "KIDD" JORDAN... IAN BAIRNSON, a member of the Scottish '70s rock band Pilot who went on to a long career as a session guitarist for artists including Kate Bush and the Alan Parsons Project... RONALD COLEMAN, a singer in Asbury Park, N.J., '60s R&B kings the Broadways, a major part of what became known as the Sound of Asbury Park... Bassist JOHN REGAN, noted for his work with Ace Frehley and Peter Frampton... GUY BAILEY, guitarist for British rock band the Quireboys... British countertenor JAMES BOWMAN.

- Matty Karas, curator
gimme metal
Vulture
Why Are My Secret Spotify Songs Following Me Around?
By Nate Jones
At bars, with friends, on TV, I kept hearing the same music from my "Discover Weekly" rotation. So I tried to peer inside my bubble IRL.
Money 4 Nothing
Inside the Algorithm Factory: Music Recommendations (w/ Nick Seaver)
By Saxon Baird, Sam Backer and Nick Seaver
In the digital economy, recommendation algorithms get...a LOT of attention. But for all the discussion of how these programs are transforming our world(s), there's surprisingly little analysis of what—exactly—they are, or how they're meant to work.
The Nation
The End of the Music Business
By Ethan Iverson
A century of recorded music has culminated in the infinite archive of streaming platforms. But is it really better for listeners?
Polyphonic
Duke Ellington's Forgotten Masterpiece
In 1948, Columbia Records introduced a new piece of technology that would change music forever: the long playing record. These new vinyl discs had a crisper sound than the 10" shellac records that were standard at the time, and more importantly, they fit upwards of 20 minutes a side.
Billboard
The Woman Behind Music's Most Important Catalog Valuations Explains How It's Done
By Elizabeth Dilts Marshall
Citrin Cooperman partner Nari Matsuura oversaw roughly 750 catalog valuations worth more than $15.5 billion between 2021 and 2022.
Vulture
Maggie Rogers Skips the Ticketmaster Line
By Zoe Guy
And brings her fans with her.
The New York Times
Live Music Is Roaring Back. But Fans Are Reeling From Sticker Shock
By Ben Sisario
Buying concert tickets has become a mess of high prices and surcharges, anxiety-inducing registrations and pervasive scalping as some of pop's biggest acts hit the road again.
Los Angeles Times
EDM may have waned, but the Sahara Tent remains the beating heart of Coachella
By August Brown
For 20-plus years, the Sahara Tent has hosted the top names in dance music and provided some A-list artists their signature Coachella moments.
NPR
Why K-pop's future is in crisis, according to its chief guardian
By Se Eun Gong
The chief producer behind BTS says K-pop is in crisis as global sales slow or decline - and BTS' taking a break is a big factor. But the industry is trying to pick itself back up.
Africa is a Country
The new Zimbabwe soundtrack
By Liam Brickhill
Zimbabwe is not Mugabe, Nkomo, Mnangagwa or Chamisa. A new Afro-electronic music duo is giving the country's complexity a soundtrack.
gimme country
Medium
"I've Seen the Future and I've Left It Behind": An Epitaph for Gimme Radio
By Tyler Lenane
Our goals were not simple and not small. We set out to create a new platform where fans could have meaningful connections with one another and the artists they loved.
Tidal
The Secret Literary Life of Sonny Rollins
By Aidan Levy
Though he has rarely published, the iconic saxophonist has long harbored a private passion for writing. Rollins' biographer unearths his inspired letters, essays and other prose.
The Guardian
Dorothy Ashby was the pioneer harpist who opened up the instrument to Black musicians like me
By Brandee Younger
A contemporary of Alice Coltrane's, Ashby mixed genres and broke down musical barriers. Now I am proud to be bringing some of her unreleased music to audiences for the first time.
Leveling Up
The Contrarian: Understanding MUSIC's $200M Raise
By Jimmy Stone
Matt Pincus, founder of SONGS, is building a new music investment firm.
Billboard
Is There Money in Metadata?
By Glenn Peoples
By improving the descriptive data underlying music, streaming services can provide a better user experience and grow the average subscriber's lifetime value.
The New York Times
'Hey, Mr. Living Composer': 'Champion' Takes Shape at the Met
By Seth Colter Walls
Terence Blanchard has been in rehearsals, with pencil and paper at the ready, as he tailors his opera ahead of its New York premiere.
The New Yorker
The Otherworldly Compositions of an Ethiopian Nun
By Amanda Petrusich
Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou, who died recently, wrote pieces that were elegiac, but suffused with a sense of survival: we are broken, we are wounded, we carry on.
Andscape
'Wu-Tang: An American Saga' reveals truths about the group through unconventional storytelling
By Marcus Shorter
Ol' Dirty Bastard, Raekwon, Ghostface Killah, and GZA star in mini-movies worthy of their 1995 albums.
PBS Newshour
How Peter One developed a unique style that crisscrosses the ocean musically
By Tom Casciato, Peter One and Anne Azzi Davenport
May will see the release of a new album by Nashville artist Peter One. But to call him simply a Nashville artist doesn't tell you the half of it. And though he's known as Peter One, he's soon to embark on a most extraordinary second act, playing at the Grand Ole Opry.
Los Angeles Times
A rock star's legacy lives on in Joshua Tree 50 years after his shocking funeral pyre
By Robert Annis
Ahead of the 50th anniversary of Gram Parsons' death, Joshua Tree and National Park Service officials are bracing for an influx of fans. So is the famed Joshua Tree Inn.
what we're into
Music of the day
"Divorce"
Kelela
"Why when it's done I keep trying?" From "Raven," out now on Warp.
Video of the day
"Lewis Capaldi: How I'm Feeling Now"
Joe Pearlman
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