The most exciting time for a successful band isn’t necessarily at its peak, playing huge sold-out shows... It’s at the cusp, the split-second hairline fracture that precedes the break... Once a band truly breaks, it can’t be replicated. The magic trick is impossible to pull twice. If there was any time in my life I wish I could freeze, live inside perpetually, it would be in this spot. | | Celebrities Listening to Music on Headphones Week: Jack Nicholson, Los Angeles, 1969. (Arthur Schatz/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images) | | | | “The most exciting time for a successful band isn’t necessarily at its peak, playing huge sold-out shows... It’s at the cusp, the split-second hairline fracture that precedes the break... Once a band truly breaks, it can’t be replicated. The magic trick is impossible to pull twice. If there was any time in my life I wish I could freeze, live inside perpetually, it would be in this spot.” |
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| rantnrave:// A year ago today, a terrorist killed 22 people with a bomb as they were leaving an ARIANA GRANDE concert at MANCHESTER ARENA. They'll be remembered today with both music and silence. BRITAIN will observe a national moment of silence at 2:30 pm local time. Five hours later, 3,500 choir singers will gather for a singalong vigil in Manchester's Albert Square. We mourn and we move on. We remember and we resist. We stop singing, but only for a minute. There may be no stronger response to darkness and terror than to sing and dance in its face, to shout it down in harmony, to continue making the music that terrorists seem to be so terrified of. "This is the third time in three years I've had the awful opportunity to write about mass killings at a concert or music club," I wrote in this newsletter a year ago tomorrow. Opportunity number four came five months later, in LAS VEGAS. The very fact that singers continue to sing, even louder than before, and that fans continue to gather to hear them, fear be damned, is the light that shines through this never-ending tunnel. We do not show fear, because, by and large, we do not feel it. Music, like life, is bigger than that... Ariana Grande's first reaction when her manager, SCOOTER BRAUN, asked her to play a benefit concert in a football stadium a few miles from where the bombing happened, was: No way. "I can never sing these songs again," she told him. Two days later, she texted him 16 times and said, "If I don’t do something, these people died in vain." She was 23 at the time. She's still processing the moment a year later, and says that part will probably never stop. Her upcoming fourth album is called SWEETENER because, "When you’re handed a challenge, instead of sitting there and complaining about it, why not try to make something beautiful?” MusicSET: "The Meaning of Ariana Grande"... Pro/con: LAWRENCE LESSIG on the CLASSICS Act. DAVID C. LOWERY on Lawrence Lessig on the CLASSICS Act... SONY buys out nearly all of EMI MUSIC PUBLISHING... MADDIE POPPE wins AMERICAN IDOL... Movie trailer: JOHNNY DEPP on the trail of NOTORIOUS B.I.G.'s killer in CITY OF LIES. | | - Matty Karas, curator |
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| The future of music doesn’t always turn out the way people planned: An illustrated timeline of 100 years of failed predictions for the future of music. | |
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The USA's leading chart is about to slash the value of "free" streams versus their paid counterparts | |
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Opry City Stage in Manhattan is the first satellite outpost for the Nashville institution. | |
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Modern headphones have their origin in opera houses, military bases and a kitchen table in Utah. | |
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“Through the Looking Glass” sold poorly upon its release, but a YouTube algorithm later brought it fresh attention; now the Japanese musician is on a U.S. tour. | |
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Jake Shears’s memoir, "Boys Keep Swinging," is a current example, packed with sharply told stories and proper moments of insider insight. | |
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Sustained public pressure is what will finally bring the singer down. | |
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| Los Angeles Review Of Books |
Erin Coulehan on Donald Glover, Kanye West, and "accessible genius." | |
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“In this day and age, your silence speaks f***ing volumes.” | |
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On May 22, their defiant voices will sing out when they take part in the Manchester Together - One Voice memorial concert. | |
| Christian McBride of Jazz Night in America joins NPR's Audie Cornish with a few criteria for what turns a regular composition into a canonized classic. | |
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Mary Halvorson, Rhafiq Bhatia and Steve Tibbetts have released terrific new albums. | |
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Kelly Clarkson, Janet Jackson and others contributed to a surprisingly timely vibe with words about women and gun violence. | |
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It is difficult to think of a music moment recently that has been more divisive than Kate Bush's "This Woman's Work" in season 2 of “The Handmaid's Tale.” | |
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Dolla took his first-ever vacation this year. He definitely earned it. | |
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The story of an improbable soul music LP, recorded in prison by inmates. | |
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Four childhood friends from Vallejo try to take over the world by doing what they’ve always done: sticking together. | |
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In voicing youthful outrage over inequality and violence, Bangladeshi rappers are creating a powerful form of protest music - just as American MCs have done for 40 years. | |
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As a new exhibition in New York celebrates classic punk images from the 70s and 80s, members of Blondie recall the era. | |
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Drawing from philology, astrophysics, and medieval history, Ramm channelled the chaos of seventies New York through his art and music. | |
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