[The 1990s were] a revolution in the mind of our people, that now they can do what they want... People in the Soviet Union were very strict, and then these people opened up all of these channels and borders.
Open in browser
Wednesday March 16, 2022
REDEF
Pop singer Max Barskih in Kyiv, Ukraine, Sept. 10, 2021.
(Alexandr Gusev/LightRocket/Getty Images)
quote of the day
[The 1990s were] a revolution in the mind of our people, that now they can do what they want... People in the Soviet Union were very strict, and then these people opened up all of these channels and borders.
- Kristina Bardash, aka Luna, Ukrainian indie-pop singer
rantnrave://
Battle Rap

KRISTINA BARDASH, a fashion-forward indie-pop singer from Kyiv who performs under the name LUNA, makes "hot sad girl music." IVAN DORN, who grew up in the north, near the Belarus border, is a pop star with a gender-fluid fashion sense who's gravitated in recent years to funk and soul influences. ALYONA ALYONA (who I've written about here) is an EMINEM-obsessed rapper from the middle of the country who celebrates her plus-side body and "can really spit—like, she's legit." These are some of the surface facts we learn from a wonderful New York Times Popcast hosted by JON CARAMANICA and featuring Vogue fashion writer and Eastern European culture expert LIANA SATENSTEIN; they chat about Ukrainian pop stars who've used their music in various ways to celebrate a country in the middle of a coming-of-age moment while pushing the boundaries of how that country's culture can look and sound.

They've all also, in the past three weeks, had things to say about Russia's cruel, horrific invasion of their homeland. But none have spoken out as much as dance-pop star MAX BARSKIH. He's the first major Ukrainian star to release a song and video about the invasion, and he's taken to Instagram repeatedly to speak, in Russian, about what it's like, for the benefit of fans in Russia who may not be getting the news. (Unfortunately, they may not be getting the news from him either anymore, as Instagram went offline in Russia at the beginning of this week.) "He has really just said, 'This is what is happening,'" Satenstein says. "And he speaks to them in Russian and just gives it a full breakdown." Before Instagram went down, Russia talked back, in the person of Russian rapper TIMATI, a VLADIMIR PUTIN apologist who told Barskih, via social media, to watch himself. Satenstein relates how another Ukrainian, POTAP, of the duo POTAP & NASTYA, stepped in on Barskih's behalf and turned the incident into a full-on proxy war. There's absolutely no front on which Ukrainians aren't ready to fight, and the verdict, at least from our admittedly biased judges, is the Ukrainians won handily. In Potap's video aimed at Timati, "he was like, 'You should talk to your mother; she's very smart,'" Satenstein says. "Like, ouch."

Satenstein and Caramanica also chat about the time and place that has spawned this culture and about the importance of language, especially in the years since the 2014 Maidan Revolution. They're good guides to the culture behind the news. Culture contains our souls, and that's why I've felt compelled to share music and stories of a country under siege over the past three weeks, and why I'll keep doing it. They are, on the one hand, just pop songs. On the other hand, they're a measure of a people.

Rest in Peace

Revered Broadway vocal coach BARBARA MAIER GUSTERN, who died five days after being violently attacked outside her New York apartment. Her students beyond Broadway included Debbie Harry and Diamanda Galas... Tibetan pop singer TSEWANG NORBU, who self-immolated on Feb. 25 to protest Chinese rule.

- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator
collaba
The New York Times
The Sounds of Ukrainian Pop
By Jon Caramanica and Liana Satenstein
A conversation about some of the country’s stars, the musical traditions they work within and how they have grappled with the war.
Los Angeles Times
Dolly Parton is a total rock star (even if she doesn't think so)
By David Cantwell
Parton bowed out of contention for the Rock Hall of Fame, but her strident independence, embrace of artifice and reinvention all scream rock 'n' roll.
Variety
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s Dolly Parton Pickle: Should She Be Inducted Anyway, Even If She Doesn’t Want It?
By Chris Willman
It's unclear whether the Hall could even remove her from the ballot, with voting already underway. Some are hoping she'd reverse course if she still prevails in the balloting. The hope is “for a Tom Brady," one insider said.
Billboard
SXSW Artists From Overseas Met With Red Tape and Hard Choices: ‘It’s Really a Hail Mary’
By Steve Knopper
Artists en route to Austin have had to take countless COVID tests and endure visa headaches. Some have even had to leave band members behind.
Dada Drummer Almanach
And the Band Played On: The Algorithmic Push Toward the Past
By Damon Krukowski
Algorithms don’t feel Covid anxiety. Algorithms have no nostalgia. Yet streaming algorithms would seem to have a distinct preference for older music.
Bandcamp Daily
Olivier Deriviere’s Radical Vision for Video Game Music
By Casey Jarman
The "Dying Light 2" composer is expanding the possibilities of interactive music and sound in games.
VICE
Why We Listen to Music With Lyrics We Don’t Understand
By Romano Santos
A musicologist and music therapist-in-training explain why the language of song lyrics doesn’t always matter.
Literary Hub
On Rap’s Linguistic Twists and Turns
By Daniel Levin Becker
The point of rap, among others, is the pleasure of finding words that aren’t just transparently informative but challenging to use.
Pitchfork
Sonic Youth and the Business of Keeping a Dead Band Alive
By Stuart Berman
A decade after their break-up, the experimental rock legends are back with a new album of rarities and a bounty of live recordings.
The New York Times
Ukraine’s National Anthem Reverberates Around the World
By Alex Marshall
“Ukraine’s glory hasn’t perished,” begins the anthem, which is being played by orchestras worldwide as a sign of solidarity with Ukraine.
ocen
Quartz
The iTunes single has never been so unpopular
By Scott Nover
Digital downloads, the dominant music format as recently as 2015, appear to be in terminal decline. We're entering an era of rebundling of music.
Fast Company
Amazon’s Amp has potential as a music hub, but it’s still a work in progress
By Moises Mendez II
Amazon’s new live radio app would be wise to learn from Clubhouse’s struggles.
Jacobin
The Political Economy of Classical Music
By Simon Behrman
The story of classical music is inseparable from the rise of capitalism. The new system made a musical revolution possible, but its crisis-ridden development then drove a wedge between musicians and their audience, leaving behind a frozen tradition.
Million Dollaz Worth of Game
Million Dollaz Worth Of Game: Lil Durk
By Gillie Da King, Wallo267 and Lil Durk
Lil Durk was nominated by the streets. There's no surprises when you hear the crowd chant "Voice of the Streets". From working with Thugger, Future to the beauty of a deep relationship, there's no topic we didn't cover in this special episode.
The Daily Beast
Chumbawamba Tried to Save the World. Can They Do It Again?
By Kevin Fallon
The new doc “I Get Knocked Down” considers the impact the anarcho-punk band had when they were “pissing the night away.” There was, and is, so much more to it than you thought.
Cultured Magazine
The World Has Its Eyes on Hanif Abdurraqib
By Rachel Elizabeth Cargle
Recently announced the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Guest Curator-at-Large, Hanif Abdurraqib has an ear (and a pen) for storytelling. He's who those in the know go to for discovery.
The Guardian
Music group Believe advises clients how to work around Russia sanctions
By Mark Sweney
Company, which has worked with Björk, La Roux and Slayer, vows to keep office open despite Ukraine invasion.
HipHopMadness
The Strange Legacy of T-Pain
His revolutionary use of autotune has meant that he’s a constant target for disrespect.
Streaming Machinery
Music at home
By G.C. Stein
Playing digital music at home can be extremely simple and easy but it can also get very complicated and frustrating.
The Washington Post
A new opera captures the contradictions and national ambivalence about monuments and memorials
By Philip Kennicott
“Written in Stone,” a series of small dramas that address statues, memorials and power both directly and obliquely, feels parochial, an “only in Washington” sort of project. But it capturse the national mood and ambivalence about memorialization.
what we're into
Music of the day
“Буде весна ('It Will Be Spring')”
Max Barskih
Released in early March in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Video of the day
“Live at Black Sea Games, 2021”
Max Barskih
Music | Media
SUBSCRIBE
Suggest a link
“REDEF is dedicated to my mother, who nurtured and encouraged my interest in everything and slightly regrets the day she taught me to always ask ‘why?’”
Jason Hirschhorn
CEO & Chief Curator
HOME | ABOUT | SETS | PRESS
Redef Group Inc.
LA - NY - Everywhere
Copyright ©2021
UNSUBSCRIBE or MANAGE MY SUBSCRIPTION