[Coachella is] kind of the groundhog for all the venues. If Coachella is OK to go, then everyone is going to feel comfortable.
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Friday April 15, 2022
REDEF
Coachella, the last time it was allowed to happen. The crowd at J Balvin's set on April 20, 2019.
(Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
quote of the day
[Coachella is] kind of the groundhog for all the venues. If Coachella is OK to go, then everyone is going to feel comfortable.
- Tokimonsta, on the uncertainty surrounding live music in 2022
rantnrave://
Spring, Forward

It's Good Friday, Passover begins tonight, Sunday is Easter, renewal is in the air and so is COACHELLA. And uncertainty. And dreams, for the first time in three years, of a more or less regular spring and summer festival season ahead. And a stubborn virus. Coachella, with debatable timing, has dropped all vaccination, testing and masking requirements, which makes you either super happy or super nervous. My contribution from my living room 3,000 miles away: Just because you don't have to wear a mask doesn't mean you can't wear a mask. You can.

The New York Times' BEN SISARIO has a good overview of where the live music industry stands at this moment. The road is crowded with touring acts and fans are starting to show up again (at least for some shows; some smaller acts appear to be getting crowded out). There's a general feeling of confidence in the air. There isn't a lot of insurance in the air against Covid-related cancellations, and a positive test within a band or its crew can therefore be financially devastating. There's an unwritten "don't ask, don't tell" rule among some musicians, who feel pressured to stay on the road and not get tested unless they're actually feeling sick. There are others—hopefully in greater numbers—who are being "scrupulously safe." In general, Sisario reports, "the machine is moving forward at full throttle."

This weekend's (and next's) headliners: BILLIE EILISH, HARRY STYLES, SWEDISH HOUSE MAFIA and the WEEKND. The latter two will perform both separately and together Sunday night, filling in for last minute dropout KANYE WEST. Here's the complete lineup with set times. For those of us staying home, YouTube will livestream the fest on three simultaneous feeds—giving us the same potential conflicts and choices to make as the thousands of fans who'll be there—starting at 4pm PT today. There'll also be interviews, behind-the-scenes videos and, of course, shopping.

If you're headed to Indio, there will be billboards to read along the way.

It's Friday

And I'm pretty sure I'm not alone in being left nearly speechless by SAULT's nearly wordless sixth album, AIR, which arrived (on Thursday) as a surprise in every sense of the word. No one had any idea it was coming until Thursday morning, when Sault posted the cover and five song snippets on Instagram, and no one could have been prepared for what it sounded like when it showed up online a few hours later. "Air" is a suite of orchestral pieces featuring harps, violins, brass, percussion and mostly wordless choral vocals that could pass for film cues for European romantic comedies from the 1960s (or, say, the 2020s), or vintage easy(ish) listening vinyl, or, as more than one commenter has noted, a lost David Axelrod album. The metadata for the versions on YouTube appear to include the phrases "Relaxing Music," "Sleep Music" and "Healing Music," and the last of those seems especially apt. There's a lush, gospelly a cappella section on one song, "Time Is Precious," that includes some of the album's only recognizable lyrics ("Don't waste time 'cause time is precious...") and the only hint of the poetic, politically conscious neo-soul on which Sault established its reputation during an amazing, prolific run of releases over the past three years. "Air" is an audacious left turn that comes with no explanation beyond the music itself, and there's no reason to believe any will come. Sault is a beautiful mystery that's gifted us with no interviews, no photos, no videos and, though the records do come with production and songwriting credits, no indication of who Sault actually is. We're left with no recourse but to listen and to let the mystery be...

Things EDM supergroup SWEDISH HOUSE MAFIA accomplished before releasing its debut album: a string of global hit singles, a breakup, a farewell tour, a reunion and booking its first headlining gig at Coachella. That debut album, PARADISE AGAIN, finally spins off the trio's turntables today, just in time to give the trio something to sell at that headlining gig, which happens this Sunday (with the Weeknd)... British drill rapper DIGGA D has cultivated critical acclaim and a growing audience while working under unusual restrictions for the past few years: a court order, because of a gang affiliation, that required him to get police permission before releasing any music, to not rap about death or injury and to avoid mentioning certain London neighborhoods. His third mixtape, NOUGHTY BY NATURE, features bleeped out names and places, a broadening of his musical palette into trap and pop (including multiple nods to 50 Cent) and, writes the Guardian's Alexis Petridis, "an authentic whiff of danger"... EDGAR WINTER pays tribute to his late great brother Johnny on BROTHER JOHNNY, an all-star session featuring the likes of Joe Walsh, Ringo Starr and Michael McDonald—and the first posthumous appearance of Taylor Hawkins, not on drums but on lead vocals on a version of Johnny Winter's "Guess I'll Go Away"...

Plus new music from ANITTA (released earlier this week), JERRY PAPER, KURT VILE, FREDO BANG, TEE GRIZZLEY, ISHA, ALEC BENJAMIN, JOEL ROSS, JAS KAYSER, CHAD FOWLER & MATTHEW SHIPP, FRED MOTEN/BRANDON LÓPEZ/GERALD CLEAVER, AXEL BOMAN, KOLOAH, the CRYSTAL METHOD TSTEWART, BODYSYNC JOYRIDE!, 50 FOOT WAVE (Throwing Muses' Kristin Hersh and Bernard Georges), JEWEL, WHEELER WALKER, KAITLIN BUTTS, JAMES KRIVCHENIA (of Big Thief), LA NEVE (aka Joey La Neve DeFrancesco of Downtown Boys), TIM KASHER, FLOCK OF DIMES, VUNDABAR, SAVAK, MONUMENTS, GREYHAVEN, A WILHELM SCREAM, CANCER BATS, MANEGARM and CARLOS DENGLER (of Interpol).

Rest in Peace

Jazz bassist, composer and bandleader CHARNETT MOFFETT, who played with Art Blakey, Ornette Coleman, Herbie Hancock, Branford and Wynton Marsalis and many others... CHARLES MCCORMICK, bassist for '70s and '80s soul/funk group Bloodstone. He wrote and sang lead on the band's biggest hit, 1973's "Natural High"... Atlanta rapper ARCHIE EVERSOLE, best known for his 2002 single "We Ready," which became a popular sports anthem. He's at least the 10th rapper murdered in the US in 2022; it's April. Police have charged his brother with the crime... FRANZ MOHR, who as Steinway's longtime chief concert technician was the world's most in-demand piano tuner. "I play more in Carnegie Hall than anybody else," he once said. "But I have no audience"... Bassist TIM FEERICK of California post-rock band Dance Gavin Dance.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
don't waste time
Billboard
Politicians Hate Spotify’s Discovery Mode. Managers Love It -- For Now
By Elias Leight
Members of Congress are worried about the long-term impacts of Spotify’s new program, but artist teams see it as a tool to rise above the competition.
The New York Times
Coachella Kicks Off a High-Stakes, Still Uncertain Concert Season
By Ben Sisario
The live music industry is expecting a record year, as shows return in force following pandemic shutdowns. But coronavirus cases, and related setbacks, are complicating plans.
Los Angeles Times
Inside the Weeknd and Swedish House Mafia's very last-minute Coachella collab
By Mikael Wood
When Kanye West bailed as Sunday Coachella headliner, EDM stars Swedish House Mafia leapt at the chance to close the festival with friend Abel Tesfaye
The Ringer
The Nostalgia Festivals Are Here to Sell Your Youth Back to You
By Eric Ducker
As festival season returns in full for the first time since the pandemic started, promoters and artists see that the way forward may be to look backward.
Music Business Worldwide
Both of the UK’s two biggest independent albums in 2021 were over 6 years old
By Murray Stassen
UK trade body the BPI has put out stats this week showing the growing market share of the independent sector in the UK last year. And of old albums by Arctic Monkeys and Adele.
Pitchfork
Thirst Traps, Anime, and the Viral Power of TikTok Fan Edit Communities
By Cat Zhang
Fan-made video montages offer a sophisticated language of their own-with the power to propel songs out of nowhere.
UPROXX
Can Foo Fighters Continue As A Band Without Taylor Hawkins?
By Steven Hyden
Hawkins was, in a sense, *the* band identity for Foo Fighters, the person who made this one-time solo venture feel like a real gang.
Vulture
How Camila Cabello Brought Latin-Music History to the Present on 'Familia'
By Justin Curto
The secret weapons who injected mariachi, salsa, and more into the singer’s latest album.
The Tennessean
Breland emerges, at The Ryman, as an unprecedented country superstar
By Marcus K. Dowling
A sold-out Ryman Auditorium on Tuesday evening ushered in the arrival of 26-year-old country artist on the cusp of being the genre's most unlikely male superstar in years.
The Guardian
‘Capitalism didn’t understand community’: Brian Eno steps up the climate crisis battle
By Greg Cochrane
The musician and activist, who has collaborated with Michael Stipe on a new song for Earth Day, is asking questions of the music industry, and the likes of Coldplay are happy to answer.
'cause time is precious
The New York Times
‘We’re Never Going to Get That Top 40 Out of Us’
By Wesley Morris and Daphne A. Brooks
Wesley Morris loves awards shows, countdowns and best-of lists of all kinds. Is there any way to make them more inclusive?
Billboard
After Deezer Failed to Go Public Years Ago, Now Timing Is Everything
By Glenn Peoples
After abandoning plans to go public in 2015, there may be no better time for the streamer’s investors to cash out.
Attack Magazine
'Streaming Saved The Industry': Why Artists Use Spotify
By Harold Heath
In the fourth instalment of our investigation into streaming, we speak with a producer and label boss who are perfectly happy working with Spotify.
The Guardian
‘I don’t let my wife use it’ -- great TV theme tune composers savage ‘skip intro’
By Michael Hogan
Five years after Netflix nuked titled sequences, its infamous button is now pressed 136m times a day. What are viewers missing? The whole point, say top composers, including "Succession"’s Nicholas Britell.
Vulture
Vince Staples Is Showing America What It Refuses to See
By Craig Jenkins
Death is the only certainty on "Ramona Park Broke My Heart."
VAN Magazine
The Maestro’s ATM
By Anna Tarassova
Alexei Navalny’s team investigates the finances of Valery Gergiev.
The Walrus
What Is the Point of Cancelling Russian Artists?
By Katia Grubisic
Scrapped tours and broken contracts won’t hurt Vladimir Putin.
Music Business Worldwide
Myth-understandings: what price truth in musical memoirs?
By Eamonn Forde
Eamonn Forde explores mythology in music biopics and documentaries.
The Daily Beast
After Oscars Glory, Here’s the Plan for ‘CODA’ the Musical
By Tim Teeman
DJ Kurs, artistic director of Deaf West Theatre, reveals his pride watching "CODA’s" Oscars’ triumph, his plan for the musical, and his determination to help deaf artists succeed.
The Sydney Morning Herald
Thriving or surviving? Sydney’s live music scene on a knife’s edge
By Bernard Zuel
There are whispers of a revolution, but others are far less hopeful about the state of the industry.
what we're into
Music of the day
“Air”
Sault
From the album of the same title, out now on Forever Living Originals.
Video of the day
“Front Row Coachella 2022”
YouTube
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