Tthe one thing I’ll always know is that people don’t know what they want until they get it. They didn’t know they wanted a song about taking a horse to the old town road in 2019. But they did. | | Do you know this man who has the #1 album in the US? NF at Lollapalooza, Chicago, Aug. 2, 2019. (Erika Goldring/FilmMagic/Getty Images) | | | | “Tthe one thing I’ll always know is that people don’t know what they want until they get it. They didn’t know they wanted a song about taking a horse to the old town road in 2019. But they did.” |
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| rantnrave:// I'm in neither the mood nor the position to moralize about rock lyrics, no matter how misanthropic or misogynistic they may be, and no matter how funny, unfunny or inappropriate the joke is. I've been around the block a few times and, no matter what it is, I've heard worse. But for Lucifer's sake, dearest members of the metal community, what the f***? As far as I know, I had never seen or heard the word pornogrind until less than 24 hours ago. I now know that it's been around for at least a decade and it has plenty of defenders, not all of them incels. Neither making it nor listening to it makes you a bad person; it certainly doesn't make you a mass murderer. But if someone wants to argue that hours and hours of listening to it might desensitize you to some horrifying thoughts, or that maybe not everybody at the PORNFIELDZ OF ILLINOISE GRINDFEST festival will get the joke, or even understand it's a joke, then that's a conversation I'd be more than willing to entertain. Or if someone simply wants to suggest that misogyny isn't funny, then yes, I will co-sign. It isn't. As the members of the small and apparently tight-knit pornogrind community are defending their art against some unwelcome and unexpected publicity, this might also be a good time for them to engage in at least a little self-examination about those lyrics and those jokes... LANA DEL REY recorded and Instagrammed her reaction to the weekend's two mass shootings Monday afternoon. "I'm still looking for my own version of America / One without the gun," she sings to the accompaniment of JACK ANTONOFF's guitar. I'm not in the business of telling artists what to write and record, and, as I may have said before, I think pop music is already doing a good job of reflecting and responding to the politics of 2019. But that all said, I wouldn't mind more like this simple, direct plea... KHALID, who went to high school in El Paso, is planning a benefit for victims of Saturday's terrorist attack in that city... The hip-hop community was somewhere between shocked and mortified that NF beat out CHANCE THE RAPPER for #1 in this week's BILLBOARD 200. It's actually the second #1 album for the Michigan rapper who came up through the Christian rap scene but rejects the Christian rap label (and who collaborated early on with FLAME, the Christian rapper now famous for successfully suing KATY PERRY for plagiarism)... TENCENT in negotiations with VIVENDI to buy a piece of UNIVERSAL MUSIC GROUP... Things that go to 11, including an early '70s GIBSON LES PAUL guitar. | | - Matty Karas, curator |
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| | BuzzFeed News |
"Another dime a dozen Ohio grind dude who caped progressive politics while treating women like s***." | |
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| Yahoo! Finance |
Spotify and other streaming mainstays continue to dominate the industry, but artists are struggling to gain in the changing music landscape. | |
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| The New York Times |
The 1969 festival was an epiphany and an indulgence. With five decades of hindsight, it still poses questions about the utopian ideals that surrounded it and our relationship to them today. | |
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| CBS Sunday Morning |
A new CD box set, "Woodstock 50: Back to the Garden," captures virtually every minute of audio from the 1969 music festival, from the performers to P.A. announcements and audience interactions. | |
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| The Undefeated |
In the debate over profiting from black creativity, these country singers prove that turnabout is fair play. | |
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| SongData |
On 5 December 2018, Billboard’s Country Airplay chart reported for the first time since the radio-based survey launched in January 1990 an exclusively male lineup in the Top 20 positions. The highest charting song by a female artist was Carrie Underwood’s “Love Wins” at #22. | |
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| NPR Music |
Bessie Smith's songs are tales of liberated women who are not afraid to speak openly about what they want, what they need, and what they are tired of. | |
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| Spotify for Artists |
Kindness, Kari Faux, and Hot Chip’s Felix Martin share what makes their decks such an important part of their careers as musicians. | |
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| The Associated Press |
Does access have any meaning in a streaming era when almost everyone has access to almost everything? The question suggested that technology may be outpacing copyright law. | |
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| NME |
In celebration of a book that dissects stan culture in young women hitting shelves this week, pop columnist Douglas Greenwood explains why, without teenage girls to rally behind the biggest musicians of today, the entire industry could crumble. | |
| | Rolling Stone |
An excerpt from upcoming Vaughan oral biography 'Texas Flood' details the blues guitar legend's inspired collaboration, and eventual rift, with a rock icon. | |
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| PopMatters |
Breakup albums have a rare power; they mark the moment when an image-conscious artist is suddenly compelled to let his guard down. Bob Dylan's "Blood on the Tracks" and Tyler the Creator's "IGOR" are similar in their vulnerability. | |
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| BBC News |
Many festivals around the world now offer much more than music, but what effect do they have on your health? | |
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| Business Insider |
Millennials love music festivals, but their bank accounts don't. Nearly one-third (32%) of millennials who attended a music festival in the past year took on debt to do so, a new report from CompareCards by Lending Tree found. It commissioned Qualtrics to survey 1,019 Americans in July 2019. | |
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| The New York Times |
Performing, in this case on Broadway, is a big chunk of the 76-year-old musician’s life, but he finds it torture. (Not that anyone would be able to tell.) | |
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| The Line of Best Fit |
The perfect storm of a popstar, Robbie Williams is a legacy act that progressive millennials can embrace with little hesitation in an age of cancellation, writes Moya Lothian McLean. | |
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| Hollywood Reporter |
A lawsuit over "Can I Be Me" fails because of the First Amendment. | |
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| Music Business Worldwide |
Full extent of expenditure revealed within new SEC filing. | |
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| Bandcamp Daily |
In India, the world's second most populous nation, underground rap has reached a milestone. What started off as mimicry of American hip-hop in the early 2000s has matured into an original art form, one that's gradually branching out into various styles and subgenres. With a firm foundation in place, the stage is set for innovation. | |
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| Mixmag |
Colombia's second city is becoming a go-to clubbing destination. | |
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