You can squeeze another dollar out of anything, but that’s not what makes a record company run profitably. This business is about freedom and creative control. |
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Mo Ostin, the artist-friendliest exec who ever ran a major label, with *the* Artist, Los Angeles, June 25, 1977. |
(Gary Leonard/Corbis/Getty Images) |
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quote of the day |
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rantnrave:// |
It’s Friday
And it’s an especially crowded one for new releases, even by 2022 standards, so kudos to K-pop queens BLACKPINK for only asking for about 25 minutes of your time for the entirety of their second album, BORN PINK. Rolling Stone pop maven Rob Sheffield is proclaiming it “the great pop album they’ve always had in them” while dropping the names Poison and Mötley Crüe as potential points of reference. “Born Pink” starts with its two lead singles, neon-lit K-pop hip-hop EDM productions covered wall-to-wall in hooks, one of them borrowed from Niccolò Paganini. All rose and no thorn, as it were. And then what follows is a sugar rush of new wave, slow jams and more than a few F-bombs that suggests the four women in Blackpink have no interest in being tied down to any particular idea of who they should be, not on record and not in life. “I say ‘F*** it’ when I feel it,” goes the opening line of one tune. Welcome back Jisoo, Jennie, Rosé and Lisa...
RINA SAWAYAMA’s second album, HOLD THE GIRL, is the weightier and slightly more classicist side of pop, befitting an album she says was born in intense therapy sessions. “I’m trying to infiltrate therapy into pop music,” she tells them.’s Michelle Hyun Kim. The arrangements regularly swing for the pop—and country-pop—fences. In the glorious single "This Hell," Sawayama's lyrics bounce back off the arena walls in solidarity: "F*** what they did to Britney, to Lady Di and Whitney"...
TERRI LYNE CARRINGTON’s NEW STANDARDS, VOL. 1 features her versions of 11 jazz compositions by women including Marilyn Crispell, Abbey Lincoln and Brandee Younger; they're among 101 pieces included in Carrington’s book “New Standards: 101 Lead Sheets by Women Composers,” also out today. The book, which covers a century’s worth of music, is Carrington's attempt to address the glaring lack of women in the collections of sheet music that have largely defined the jazz canon. An editor she was working with on the book asked her early on “Are there really 100 women composers?” “Yes,” Carrington told the New York Times, “and this is why we’re doing this book”...
Also today: New albums from NCT 127, Whitney, the Mars Volta (their first in 10 years), Symba, Pink Siifu & Real Bad Man, Michelle Branch, Noah Cyrus, Little Big Town, LeAnn Rimes, Gogol Bordello, Fletcher, Ka$hdami, EST Gee, Julian Lage, Samara Joy, Jessica Pavone/Lukas Koenig/Matt Mottel, Butcher Brown, Roxana Amed, Titan to Tachyons (instrumental jazz/metal band led by guitarist/composer Sally Gates), Claire Rousay (released earlier this week; benefiting the Trevor Project), Gloria de Oliveira & Dean Hurley, Death Cab for Cutie, the Beths, Mura Masa, Blood Orange, Lissie, Jesca Hoop, Ondara, Djo (aka Joe Keery of “Stranger Things”), Sumerlands, Mindforce, Behemoth, Innumerable Forms, the Devil Wears Prada, Clutch, Black Angels, the London Suede, Starcrawler, No Devotion (feat. Geoff Rickly of Thursday), Disco Doom, No Age, the Brazen Youth, Marcus Mumford (his solo debut), Mitchell Tenpenny, Adam Hood, Molly Lewis, Feid, Horace Andy, Steve Aoki, Ela Minus & DJ Python, Maggie Lindemann, Bazzi, Harlem Gospel Travelers, We the Kingdom, Lang Lang, the House of Love, Lyzza, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Marina Allen, Tenka, No Age, Crack Cloud, Hauser and PJ Western...
And notable archival releases from Miles Davis, Lou Reed, Joe Strummer and Creedence Clearwater Revival.
Video/Radio Stars
And speaking of the archives, today also brings BRETT MORGEN’s DAVID BOWIE documentary, MOONAGE DAYDREAM, to theaters... And SONOS RADIO drops AMERICA’S DEAD, a 10-episode podcast on the GRATEFUL DEAD.
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- Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator |
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NPR Music |
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The Man From Everywhere |
By Natalie Weiner |
How Charley Crockett makes new music sound old (and old music sound brand new). |
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Los Angeles Times |
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RETRO READ: Quotations From Chairman Mo |
By Robert Hilburn and Chuck Philips |
Mo Ostin let his artists do the talking for him his whole career. Now the record-biz legend steps out of the shadows and takes us on a tour from Ol' Blue Eyes to Red Hot Chili Peppers. |
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The New York Times |
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The Perseverance of Megan Thee Stallion |
By Jon Caramanica, Mankaprr Conteh and Heven Haile |
The rapper’s rise has been accompanied by outside noise. How has she grown on record, and how have extra-musical narratives shaped her career? |
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Music x |
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A not so Awesome Merch story |
By Maarten Walraven |
When you invest in a company at an early stage, there’s a risk there won’t be a return. When you’re a band or a label using a merch company you expect them to deliver and you aim for transparent communication. |
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Afropop Worldwide |
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Journeys with the Kora |
By Banning Eyre |
The 21-string harp, the kora, is a signature instrument of West Africa. Kora music was long the exclusive domain of griots, musical historians by heritage. But once recordings began to circulate in the 1970s, the instrument went international, finding its way into jazz, pop, rock and even classical and religious settings. |
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what we're into |
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Music of the day |
“Yeah Yeah Yeah” |
Blackpink |
Yeah! From "Born Pink," out today on YG Entertainment/Interscope. |
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Video of the day |
“Moonage Daydream” |
Brett Morgen |
Brett Morgen's David Bowie doc, in theaters today. |
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Music | Media |
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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?’” |
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