Almost all Black music is deeply rooted in metaphor. The only way that we could speak to the pain and the anguish of our experiences was often through how we codified our stories in the songs that we sang.
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Wednesday April 26, 2023
REDEF
Harry Belafonte circa 1970.
(Tom Copi/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
quote of the day
Almost all Black music is deeply rooted in metaphor. The only way that we could speak to the pain and the anguish of our experiences was often through how we codified our stories in the songs that we sang.
- Harry Belafonte, 1927 – 2023
rantnrave://
Calypso Farewell

HARRY BELAFONTE sang protest songs. He made protest movies and protest TV variety shows. He had a protest apartment on West End Avenue in Manhattan, which was a home away from home for his friend the REV. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. and others in the civil rights movement, which he helped fund with his protest money. He dreamed up “WE ARE THE WORLD” and recruited the likes of MICHAEL JACKSON and LIONEL RICHIE to create it. They were protest singers, too. He went to Sudan and Ethiopia to help deliver the money and supplies their protest charity song raised. He fought Apartheid. He fought guns. He wrote angry editorials. He inducted “radical, revolutionary and fearless artists” PUBLIC ENEMY into the ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME. He was immensely popular, especially in the 1950s and ‘60s when he was introducing calypso to North America. He was almost impossibly charismatic and good looking, and he used those gifts well. He sang that Caribbean folk song about counting bananas on boats (“daaaaaay-oh!”) and, whether or not you paid attention to the words, you better believe that, too, was a protest song. (“A work song,” in his words. “A song of rebellion.") The first album BOB DYLAN ever appeared on was one of his, playing protest harmonica. He had a mission and a very particular idea about how to live his life and in his 96 years he never strayed from the path. If Hollywood wasn’t offering the kind of parts he believed Black men should play, he’d walk away, for years if he had to. If people were marching for TRAYVON MARTIN, he’d walk that way. “Shining example of how to use your platform to make change in the world,” QUESTLOVE wrote Tuesday. “An agent of change, the musical voice of civil rights,” said HENRY LOUIS GATES JR. He didn’t have the world’s greatest singing voice, people would say and he would agree, but he had feel and soul and understanding, which is everything you need, whether you’re singing about drinking and dancing or slaves and cotton fields or women you have to leave behind. He brought people along with him everywhere he went. He moved the world as much as a lone protest folk singer ever could, or ever has. And he made this. Rest in peace and keep on protesting.

I Think, Therefore I Think Some More

I think we are ready to raise prices,” DANIEL EK said on SPOTIFY’s Q1 earnings call Tuesday, adding that “I think we have the ability to do that,” and then further adding that “it really comes down to those negotiations” with the streaming giant’s music biz partners. If only those partners could find a way to send a signal. (Also, if only my condo board could display that much hesitancy and can-kicking about raising my maintenance.) For what it’s worth, Spotify has raised prices in several markets around the world in recent years, as well as on a variety of subscription packages, but the price of the basic monthly plan in its biggest market, the US, hasn’t changed since [hang on a sec, checking my notes] ever. As for those quarterly earnings, worldwide subscriber numbers (210 million) beat expectations, while revenues (3.04 billion euros) came up short, which the company blamed on advertising, not subs.

Etc Etc Etc

A video of ED SHEERAN doing a medley of his “THINKING OUT LOUD” and MARVIN GAYE’s “LET’S GET IT ON” “is a confession,” a lawyer for the family of Gaye’s co-writer told a New York jury Tuesday, the first day of testimony in a closely watched (but aren’t they all?) plagiarism suit. “Most pop songs can fit over most pop songs,” Sheeran countered a short while later from the witness stand. “I’m just mashing up a song with another song.” KATHRYN GRIFFIN TOWNSEND, whose late father, Ed Townsend, collaborated with Gaye on his 1973 hit, told the jury she isn’t a “copyright troll” but “I have to protect my father’s legacy.” The trial is expected to last at least a week and Sheeran’s lawyers say he’ll testify again when they present their defense... Will TAYLOR SWIFT’s LONG PONG STUDIO SESSIONS be the first RECORD STORE DAY exclusive to crack the top 10 of the BILLBOARD 200?... Billboard’s International Power Players... There's a 74-year-old “Gig Slut” who goes to multiple live gigs in London almost every night.

- Matty Karas, curator
jamaica farewell
The New York Times
Harry Belafonte, Folk Hero
By Wesley Morris
Cool and charismatic, Belafonte channeled his stardom into activism. He was a true people person, who knew how to reach, teach and challenge us.
The Washington Post
Harry Belafonte, barrier-smashing entertainer and activist, dies at 96
By Adam Bernstein
A star after ‘The Banana Boat Song,’ he became a key ally of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. during the civil rights struggle.
Catalog
Anti-Scale: Music Discovery for the 10%
By Alex Siber
An essay exploring design pitfalls failing "music discovery," potential DSP improvements, defining "discovery" itself, and alliances for the future.
Billboard
Spotify’s Daniel Ek Praises AI’s Potential to Boost Music Creation -- And the Company’s Bottom Line
By Elizabeth Dilts Marshall
While acknowledging some of the risks, the CEO says AI tools for artists are “great culturally” and could “benefit Spotify” by growing engagement and revenue.
Vulture
You’re Livetweeting 'Succession.' Nicholas Britell Is Livescoring It
By Zoe Guy
He’s recording music as the final season airs, giving Kendall hip-hop confidence boosts and writing an elegy for that old man.
Polygon
'The Legend of Zelda' is everywhere in modern music
By Mat Ombler
Koji Kondo’s legendary compositions have never been bound by the video games.
The Guardian
‘A male-dominated team does not reflect society’: why are only 5% of music producers women?
By Rhian Jones
Beyond the stereotype of the knob-twiddling bloke are brilliant female producers, but gatekeeping, toxic masculinity and a lack of concrete support are holding them back.
Music Business Worldwide
Bill Ackman thinks there’s a lot of growth ahead for Universal Music Group. These analysts agree
By Tim Ingham
Ahead of Universal's Q1 results, a number of Wall Street watchers are reiterating their faith in music.
KQED
How I Stopped Fearing ‘Cringe’ and Learned to Embrace My Music Taste
By Olivia Hopkins
Skyline High School student Olivia Hopkins investigates why some of us hide our Spotify listening activity.
Vanity Fair
RETRO READ: In 1968, a White Woman Touching a Black Man on TV Caused a National Commotion
By Donald Liebenson
Petula Clark and Harry Belafonte remember a televised moment that inadvertently became a scandal--and a civil-rights cause célèbre.
man smart (woman smarter)
Music Business Worldwide
Spotify needs to woo the boomers if it wants to keep growing in the US market
By Daniel Tencer
A recent Edison Research report broke down why there may be a big opportunity for Daniel Ek’s company amongst the 55-plus crowd in the States.
Rolling Stone
Kesha Reveals Her New Album: 'I Really Dug Into My Uglier Emotions'
By Brenna Ehrlich
Working with Rick Rubin, not to mention her beloved cat Mr. Peeps, made ‘Gag Order’ a new kind of breakthrough for the singer.
Bandcamp Daily
Patten Taps Into Text To Speech AI’s Musical Potential
By Chal Ravens
"These systems can actually help us to break out of our linearity.”
Billboard
Inside A New Era For New Orleans On Eve of 2023 Jazz Fest
By Ben Sandmel
The city exudes energy and optimism about its place in the global music business as it enters a new era.
Los Angeles Times
A sculpture shown at LACMA ended up on Craigslist. A DJ turned it into a sound studio
By Carolina A. Miranda
'Migrant Dubs' was created by Los Jaichackers and shown in the groundbreaking 'Phantom Sightings' in 2008. Now it's a sound studio for DJ Escuby.
Austin American-Statesman
Austin's 'Hi, How Are you' mural stands alone after building demolition. What happens now?
By Kelsey Bradshaw
The Hi, How Are You mural was created by Daniel Johnston in 1993 near UT. Owners of building site have promised to preserve the wall with the art.
NPR
Lucinda Williams and her suitcase full of songs
By Noah Caldwell, Courtney Dorning and Juana Summers
NPR's Juana Summers talks with singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams about her new memoir "Don't Tell Anyone the Secrets I Told You."
The New York Times
Tim Hecker Helped Popularize Ambient Music. He’s (Sort of) Sorry
By Grayson Haver Currin
The artist’s phosphorescent electronic albums helped make way for the recent bloom of lifestyle playlists and background music. He’s turned on that trend to take on real life.
WIRED
How the Streaming Era Turned Music Into Sludge
By Morgan Meaker
The launch of the iTunes Store 20 years ago laid the groundwork for platforms to transform songs into generic background noise.
PassTheAux
What does an artist 'owe' their fans?
By Eleanor Halls
From Lauryn Hill to Frank Ocean.
what we're into
Music of the day
“Darlin' Cora”
Harry Belafonte
From "Belafonte at Carnegie Hall" (1959).
Video of the day
“Sing Your Song”
Susanne Rostock
2011 Harry Belafonte documentary
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