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In bloom: Troye Sivan at the Fillmore in Detroit, Nov. 7, 2016.
(Scott Legato/Getty Images)
Thursday - June 07, 2018 Thu - 06/07/18
rantnrave:// What's cool about LOW END THEORY, the long-running LOS ANGELES club night that's coming to an end this summer, is that it never tried to be. "It was really a bunch of misfits coming together," co-founder DADDY KEV tweeted on Wednesday. They came together, in October 2006, at a run-down bar in an out-of-the-way corner of the city, about a mile east of DODGER STADIUM. They were "kids from LA forging a sound and doing something that everyone thought was weird or wrong or super niche," in the words of rapper MC NOCANDO. "Underdogs coming up without co-signs." They weren't money, they weren't "industry," they weren't Hollywood. Just DJs and producers in search of a space to experiment and share. Which they've been doing every Wednesday for the past 12 years, with an almost incalculable influence on a decade's worth of electronic (and beyond) music, as heard directly through the likes of FLYING LOTUS, the GLITCH MOB and JAMES BLAKE, and indirectly through countless others who have made pilgrimages, both literal and spiritual, to the AIRLINER bar over the years. After THOM YORKE played a DJ set there in 2011, "people were looking at me like a unicorn," Daddy Kev said. "I can’t tell you how many promoters asked for his booking info. I laughed. That’s not something you can make happen based on will." The music had called him. There was, and still is, no need for an agent to call. The lines got shorter in recent years, according to NEST HQ writer NEAL RAHMAN, for a variety of reasons unrelated to the music. (Among them, Rahman suggests, might have been sexual assault allegations last year against the GASLAMP KILLER, who was a resident DJ. Low End Theory immediately dropped him, but the charges "put a damper on the event.") In its official announcement of the closing, the collective said there were several factors but mainly, "The general consensus... is that we have overstayed our welcome." And knowing when to stop the beat is as important as knowing when to start it. Fare thee well... SPOTIFY directly licensing but not signing indie acts: Slippery slope? Or ice-covered ski jump?... BON IVER's JUSTIN VERNON and the NATIONAL's AARON and BRYCE DESSNER have launched PEOPLE, a loosely structured streaming site where they and like-minded musicians will post music that falls outside their normal album and press cycles. "Hopefully," Bryce Dessner says, "this will be an environment where new types of music, new types of collaboration can pop up that don’t fit in with a standard release." The site shares a name with an experimental German festival they curated in 2016 and that will return in August. Hotelier TOM MICHELBERGER, a partner in both the site and the fest, says People is "not open to everyone, like SOUNDCLOUD, but it’s also not fully curated.” I don't know quite what that means but I look forward to finding out... BLAKE SHELTON was the big winner at the CMT MUSIC AWARDS Wednesday night... RIP JIMMY GONZALEZ and RALPH SANTOLLA.
- Matty Karas, curator
flying lotus
Passion of the Weiss
RETRO READ: An Oral History Of Low End Theory
by Jeff Weiss
As it prepares to wind down its storied run, the story of the influential party by those who created it. (Originally published in the LA Weekly in 2011.)
Billboard
Spotify Offers Managers, Artists Advances to License Music Directly to Its Streaming Service
by Hannah Karp
Under the terms of some of the deals, management firms can receive several hundred thousand dollars as an advance fee for agreeing to license a certain number of tracks by their independent acts directly to Spotify. Then, in at least some cases, the managers and acts stand to earn 50 percent of the revenue per stream on those songs on Spotify.
The Guardian
People: how the National and Bon Iver's streaming service frees musicians
by Michael Hann
Can the new, open-access audio ‘publishing platform’ attract more than just superfans of its indie-rock creators?
Village Voice
Teenage Riot: On Debut Album “Lush,” Snail Mail Deliver
by T.M. Brown
One of the best indie rock debuts in recent memory by anyone of any age. 
Highsnobiety
Is the Reign of the 'Sad Boy' Coming to an End?
by Jake Hall
The term ‘sad boy’ snowballed in popularity in 2009 after a tumultuous twelve months in which Kanye West’s emotive "808s & Heartbreak" landed just before Drake’s landmark mixtape "So Far Gone," sparked by a conversation with a friend which hinged on the question: “Are we becoming the men that our mothers divorced?”
British GQ
Longform music podcasts give music fans what NME couldn’t
by Dorian Lynskey
Could music journalism’s new horizon be the longform podcast?
The Fader
Zubin is emo-rap’s sleeping giant
by John Angell
Meet Zubin, who some fans call “the Soundcloud Weeknd." He's a Philly sing-rapper with an incredible crew and the voice to match.
Noisey
Why the Hell Is Tyler, The Creator Still Banned from the UK?
by Emma Garland
Despite being all about flowers and sunshine and love-and putting on the best Primavera performance-Tyler remains banned from the UK.
Rolling Stone
How David Bowie Invented Ziggy Stardust
by Jason Heller
An excerpt from the new book 'Strange Stars' explores how classic sci-fi and the works of William Burroughs fueled Bowie's iconic alter ego.
Nest HQ
In Remembrance of Low End Theory
by Neal Rahman
It’s hard to overstate Low End Theory’s impact on the larger scene. It was a formative ground for 21st century electronic music in the same way that Chicago’s The Warehouse created a space from which house music was born.
daedelus
Billboard
Why the Music Industry Is Still Rooting For Tidal, Despite Chronic Payment Issues
by Ed Christman
Tidal, Jay-Z’s streaming service, has become notorious for late payments to labels, but the music industry has largely kept quiet about the matter, banking on its forward-thinking partnership deals and a higher-priced $19.99/month premium audio tier.
Very Smart Brothas
Kanye’s 'Ye' Is a Soundtrack for Gentrifiers
by Damon Young
I was once a resident of Yeezus Island, but this spring has compelled me, finally, to put my house on the market. I doubt there will be any buyers, though. Maybe Jonah Hill might be interested, but my optimism has limitations.
Pigeons & Planes
Warping Rap's Weirdest Moments: An Interview With MuchDank
by Eric Skelton
"A trash channel that goofs on rappers."
Clash Magazine
"Here We Go, Another Battle!" On The Road With The Who
by Robin Murray
Long-time sound engineer Bob Pridden looks back on pop art, stadiums, and Fillmore East 1968.
Hollywood Reporter
A Landmark Legal Battle Over a Toddler Dancing to Prince Song Looks to Be Ending
by Eriq Gardner
After 11 years, and several brain-twisting takes including from the Trump Administration, the lawsuit brought by Stephanie Lenz against Universal Music is settling.
MusicAlly
Snapchat and music: ‘We ultimately want artists to be compensated for their work’
by Stuart Dredge
The parent company of Snapchat hasn't talked publicly often about its music strategy, but its VP of partnerships Ben Schwerin gave a keynote at the Midem conference in Cannes today.
Very Smart Brothas
An Ode to My Big Sister, Who Might Not Know That She Put Me On to Hip-Hop
by Panama Jackson
To be fair, she wasn’t actively trying to teach me the ways of EPMD or N.W.A. Naw, my big sister taught me the way so many of us youngins learn: I straight jacked her cassette tapes, made my own copies and put them back.
SPIN
There Is No Good Way To End a Rap Beef
by Israel Daramola
They either go too far or not far enough.
Red Bull Music Academy
Hype Williams Lecture (New York 2018)
by Hype Williams and Jeff Mao
In this conversation as part of Red Bull Music Festival New York 2018, the Queens native looked back on the early days of his career, working with Bad Boy Records, Missy Elliott and Beyoncé and what it took to leave his mark on the culture.
The Guardian
Jalal Mansur Nuriddin: farewell to the 'grandfather of rap'
by Abdul Malik Al Nasir
As the founder of the Last Poets, Nuriddin was a hero to everyone from Tupac Shakur to Jimi Hendrix and Miles Davis.
MUSIC OF THE DAY
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"Bloom"
Troye Sivan
“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?’”
@JasonHirschhorn


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