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Entertainment

How Aaron Dessner Discovered His Voice (With an Help From Taylor Swift)

COLUMBIA COUNTY, N.Y. — Aaron Dessner sat down at the black upright piano in his Long Pond Studio, pressed the soft pedal and played a four-note phrase that had changed his life. It was the first notes — G F E-flat F — of a music file he sent to Taylor Swift in March 2020.

Swift had been a fan of Dessner’s long-running indie-rock band, the National, and she contacted him out of the blue as the pandemic shutdown was beginning. “One night I was just sitting at dinner,” Dessner recalled, “and I got a text saying, ‘This is Taylor. Would you ever be up for collaborating remotely with me?’

“I was flattered and said, ‘Sure,’” he continued. “She said, ‘Just send anything, even the weirdest random sketch that you have,’ and I sent her a folder of stuff I’d been working on. And then a few hours later, she sent that song, ‘Cardigan.’”

“Cardigan” — which became a No. 1 hit — started the collaboration that grew into Swift’s two career-repositioning 2020 albums, “Folklore” and “Evermore.” The creative partnership didn’t end there: She wrote and sings “Renegade” for Dessner’s own indie recording project, Big Red Machine, and supplied the title for its second album, “How Long Do You Think It’s Gonna Last?,” which arrives on Aug. 27.

“We talked a lot about, how did it actually happen that we made so many songs together in such a short period of time?” Dessner, 45, said in a conversation on his lawn, looking over the pond. “It’s kind of abnormal, and it’s hard to sustain. You have this streak going, but you don’t know when the ideas or the inspiration or the spark will extinguish.”

For Swift, Dessner’s music unlocked new ideas. “The quality that really confounded me about Aaron’s instrumental tracks is that to me, they were immediately, intensely visual,” Swift wrote in an email. “As soon as I heard the first one, I understood why he calls them ‘sketches.’ The first time I heard the track for ‘Cardigan,’ I saw high heels on cobblestones. I knew it had to be about teenage miscommunications and the loss of what could’ve been.”

She added, “I’ve always been so curious about people with synesthesia, who see colors or shapes when they hear music. The closest thing I’ve ever experienced is seeing an entire story or scene play out in my head when I hear Aaron Dessner’s instrumental tracks.”

The studio is in a converted barn a few steps from Dessner’s house near Hudson, N.Y. It’s an open room with a church-high ceiling, tall windows and a woodland view, neatly set up to record any of his instruments — guitars, keyboards, drums, percussion — whenever an idea strikes. He can open it up to let in the sounds of birds, insects, frogs or the wind in the trees. Dessner has recorded most of his music at Long Pond since making the National’s 2017 album, “Sleep Well Beast.” During the pandemic, he has kept busy there.

“For someone like me who’s traveled for 20 years, rarely with more than a month or two off completely from touring, it was good to be home for almost two years, where I’m just in this beautiful place,” he said. “I’ve made heaps more music than I had ever made before. And I think it’s allowed me to elevate or push what I was doing, and take it to different places.”

Dessner founded Big Red Machine with Justin Vernon, who records as Bon Iver and is known outside indie circles for working with Kanye West. The new album also draws on, as Dessner said, “almost everyone I’ve made a record with.” That includes his twin brother, Bryce, who is also a member of the National, along with the songwriters Robin Pecknold (of Fleet Foxes), Anaïs Mitchell (whose musical based on the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, “Hadestown,” will reopen on Broadway in September), Sharon Van Etten, Lisa Hannigan, Naeem, Ben Howard and others.

“Establishing and contributing to a musical community matters so much to Aaron,” Swift wrote. “He’s technically in the music ‘industry,’ but really all he wants to do is play and make music with his friends.”

Paradoxically, Big Red Machine’s sprawling collective effort grew into something deeply personal. As Dessner and the other musicians put together the songs, largely remotely, themes coalesced: childhood memories, lost innocence, struggles with mental health. And after years of working in the background — with the National and as a producer for other songwriters — Dessner has stepped forward, for a few songs, as a lead singer.

“I remember he was really nervous about having his own lead vocals on there,” Mitchell said by phone from Vermont. “And I was like, absolutely — you should do that. Especially given his work with Taylor over the last year, it felt like really nice to have people get a look behind that curtain, to get to know the person who’s behind a bunch of this stuff.”

Big Red Machine is not exactly a band. “To me it’s like a laboratory for experimentation and also a vehicle to collaborate with friends and try to grow,” Dessner said. “And also to just reconnect with the feeling of what it’s like when you first start playing music — what it’s like when you’re making stuff without really knowing what it is.”

Dessner’s musical fingerprint is a fondness for patterns: evocative little motifs that can interlock in complex ways. In the songs that the National has been releasing since its 2001 debut, they can be soothing and meditative, or they can hint at the agitation behind a pensive exterior. For Dessner’s collaborators, those little musical cells help spawn larger structures.

“I’ll catch myself in little patterns, where I get this feeling that you could build some sort of architecture out of it,” he said. “A lot of times there is something a little odd about the timing, or something I may have lifted out of a classical piece I heard. There’s a kernel, and then I start to build.”

For Dessner, there is also healing in repetition. “When I really started playing music seriously, I was going through a fairly severe depression when I was a teenager,” he said. “I wasn’t disadvantaged at all, there was nothing bad — it was brain chemistry. I found that playing music in this way is soothing to me. The rhythm and melody are in this circular way of playing. That’s when I feel the best with music. At some point the ideas started to take on odder time signatures, and there were more experimental sounds around them. But still, at the core of it is this emotional, circular musical behavior.”

Big Red Machine grew out of a fruitful misunderstanding. Dessner wanted to write a song with Vernon for “Dark Was the Night,” a 2009 all-star indie-rock album that the Dessner brothers produced for the Red Hot Organization, the nonprofit H.I.V. charity. He sent Vernon the sketch of a song he called “Big Red Machine” after his hometown baseball team, the Cincinnati Reds; Vernon, unaware of the sports reference, wrote lyrics about the human heart instead.

Dessner and Vernon went on to create and curate the Eaux Claires music festival in the mid-2010s and to assemble an idealistic music collective styled 37d03d (which reads, upside-down, as “people”). In 2018 they released the first Big Red Machine album, a gleefully experimental set of songs featuring Vernon upfront, full of cryptic lyrics and electronic effects, and they assembled a jammy live band for a handful of gigs in 2018 and 2019. (One song on the new album, “Easy to Sabotage,” was collaged together from boisterous concert improvisations, new lyrics from Naeem and complex computer processing.) Before touring evaporated in 2020, Vernon had convinced Dessner to play arenas as an opening act for Bon Iver.

Dessner had already been sketching new Big Red Machine tracks. Many of the new songs have a pastoral, rootsy tone, at times suggesting the Band, although they’re also often laced with drum-machine rhythms and stealthy electronic undercurrents. “I liked the idea of trying to make something that was more song-oriented this time, and more cohesive,” he said.

Vernon, meanwhile, wanted a less central role in Big Red Machine. “I wanted it to feel much more inclusive and representative of all the extracurricular energy that we’ve been putting in over the years, trying to make the music industry a little more communist or something,” he said. “And I got so tired of being lead singer guy, and I’m in another band. I was like, you’ve got so many connections. Let’s reach out and see what other people have feelings on these tracks. And I wanted to continue to support Aaron and honestly challenge him, frankly, to get out in front more. There are little bits and pieces that I show up and do on the record, and I obviously wrote some words and sang some tunes, but really, this is Aaron’s record.”

The songs often touch on loss and fragility. The album is bookended by two songs featuring Mitchell’s whispery soprano: “Latter Days,” which was written before the pandemic but imagines living through a disaster, and “New Auburn,” a reminiscence (set in the geography of Vernon’s Wisconsin) of childhood road trips, reflecting on when “We were too young to be unforgiven.”

One of the first songs Dessner wrote for the album was “Brycie,” which offers gratitude for the way his brother saw him through bouts of depression; it begins with folky guitars and turns into a prismatic mesh of hand-played and synthetic sounds behind Dessner’s gentle voice.

Dessner and Swift recorded “Renegade” in Los Angeles, during the week leading up to the 2021 Grammy Awards; days later, as producer and performer, they shared the award for album of the year for “Folklore” (along with the album’s other producer, Jack Antonoff.) Dessner already had a Grammy — best alternative album for the National’s “Sleep Well Beast” — but this was a much higher pop profile; lately he has been “approached by people,” he said.

“I love colliding with new people and learning from people, so it’s an exciting time,” he said. “But I also tend to be kind of shy. I like the idea that I could count my collaborators on one or two hands, to stay with this family feeling. So I’m not rushing out to work with a million people. It’s not really my personality.”

He added, “I’ve yet to make something where I’m feel like I’m trying to satisfy a commercial instinct. I don’t totally know how I would do it. I don’t know that I have the skills to do it.”

Not ready to gear up his own hit factory? He shrugged. “I guess I could move to L.A. and set that up,” he said. “But it wouldn’t end well.”

Categories
Health

Dr. Aaron Stern, Who Enforced the Film Rankings Code, Dies at 96

Dr. Aaron Stern, a psychiatrist who established himself as the director of Hollywood’s film ratings agency in the early 1970s as a sentry to moviegoers against carnal imagery and violence, died in Manhattan on April 13th. He was 96 years old.

His death in a hospital was confirmed by his step daughter Jennifer Klein.

As an author, professor and management consultant who has always been fascinated by climbing the corporate ladder, he competed against self-centered studio managers, producers, directors and actors – and provided plenty of content for his 1979 book “Me: The Narcissistic American”.

From 1971 to 1974, Dr. Stern director of self-regulatory classification and scoring administration for the Motion Picture Association of America founded just a few years earlier. It replaced the strictly moralistic production code introduced in the early 1930s and administered censored by Will H. Hays, a Presbyterian deacon and former leader of the National Republican Party.

The new judging panel, which initially struggled to gain credibility, rated films by letter to let moviegoers know in advance how much violence, sexuality and swear words to expect on the screen.

The board’s decision that a film deserves an R rating or is restricted could attract more adults, but would immediately eliminate the pool of unaccompanied moviegoers under the age of 17. An X rating would exclude anyone under the age of 17.

Dr. Stern has rewritten the PG (Parental Guidance) category to include a warning that “some materials may not be suitable for teenagers”. He also tried, but failed, to get rid of the X rating – for the reason, he told the Los Angeles Times in 1972, that it was not the job of the Motion Picture Association to keep people out of theaters. (The X rating was changed to NC-17 in 1990, but its meaning remained unchanged.)

It wasn’t until last year, with the release of Three Christs, a film about hospital patients who believed they were Jesus, that Dr. Stern a film credit (he was one of the 17 producers on the film). However, the lack of on-screen recognition belied the power he wielded as director of the board of directors who screened films privately and then voted on the letter rating to be given.

Even some critics gave the new letter-coded classification the benefit of the doubt in the early 1970s, agreeing that their decisions, unlike those of the old Production Code, were based more on sociology than theology. Still, two young members of the Rating Board, appointed on a one-year scholarship, wrote a scathing criticism of their methodology, published in the New York Times in 1972.

They accused Dr. Stern, for having meddled megalomaniacally, editing scripts before scenes were filmed and then edited, and tolerating gratuitous violence but being puritanical about sex. They alleged, among other things, that he warned Ernest Lehman, director of Portnoy’s Complaint (1972), that the focus on masturbation in the film version of Philip Roth’s novel risked an X rating.

“You can have a love scene But as soon as you start unbuttoning or unzipping you have to cut, ”Dr. Star quoted in The Hollywood Reporter about sex in movies.

The Times article prompted letters in which Dr. Stern has been commended by several directors, including Mr. Lehman, who said that Dr. Stern’s advice actually improved his final cut of “Portnoy’s Complaint”. The Times film critic Vincent Canby sniffed, “If Mr. Lehman was really influenced by Dr. Stern’s advice two years ago, he should sue the doctor for wrongdoing.”

Dr. Stern argued that the scoring system, while imperfect, served multiple goals. Among other things, he said it had repelled even more restrictive definitions of profanity by Congress, the courts and the local authorities; and it warned people of what they found intrusive as mores developed and society became more acceptable.

“Social growth should make the rating system obsolete,” he told the Los Angeles Times.

Aaron Stern was born in Brooklyn on March 26, 1925, to Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe. His father, Benjamin Israel Stern, was a carpenter and his mother, Anna (Fishader) Stern, was a housewife. He grew up in Bensonhurst and Sheepshead Bay and was the youngest of three children and the only one born in the United States.

After graduating from Brooklyn College in 1947, he earned a master’s degree in psychological services and a doctorate in child development from Columbia University and a medical degree from Downstate Health Sciences University, State University of New York.

In addition to his stepdaughter Mrs. Klein, his wife Betty Lee (Baum) Stern survived; two children, Debra Marrone and Scott Stern, from his first marriage, which was divorced; two other stepchildren, Lauren Rosenkranz and Jonathan Otto; and 13 grandchildren.

Dr. Stern was introduced to Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association, by a Great Neck, NY neighbor, Robert Benjamin, a United Artists executive. He first began to review films for the club and was hired by Mr. Valenti in mid-1971 as head of rating administration.

He left the country in early 1974 to join Columbia Pictures Industries and eventually returned from Los Angeles to New York, where he revived his private practice. He has also taught at Yale, Columbia, New York University, and the University of California, Los Angeles, and was chief operating officer of Tiger Management, a hedge fund and trustee of the Robertson Foundation.

Dr. Stern, a senior educator at Irving Medical Center, New York Presbyterian / Columbia University, and his wife donated $ 5 million in 2019 to award a professorship and fellowship at Weill Cornell Medicine to treat patients with pathological personality disorders. The gift was in gratitude for the care he received during a medical emergency.

Dr. Stern had been interested in narcissism before his trip to Hollywood, but his experience there proved inspiring.

In Me: The Narcissistic American, he wrote that babies are born narcissistic without caring about who they wake up in the middle of the night and that they need to be disciplined as they mature to take others into account.

“When narcissism is about survival, like infancy and country founding,” he wrote, “it’s not as destructive as when one is established, successful and wealthy.”

In 1981, Valenti told The Times that he had “made the mistake of blaming a psychiatrist for the rating system.” Dr. Stern replied, “I am unable to answer that.”

But he had admitted when he was still on the job: “There is no way to sit in this chair and be loved.” He was constantly questioned.

Why should “The Exorcist” (1973) get an R-Rating? (“I think it’s a great movie,” he told director Richard Friedkin. “I’m not going to ask you to cut a frame.”) Why did you originally give Stanley Kubrick’s “A Clockwork Orange” (1971) an X for a ménage à trois filmed at high speed? (“If we did that, any hardcore pornographer could speed up their scenes and rightly ask for an R on the same basis.”) He later helped edit Mr. Friedkin’s “Cruising” as a private consultant for $ 1,000 a day. (1980), on a gay male serial killer for getting an R instead of an X.

“You can only evaluate the explicit elements on the screen – never the morals or the thought problems behind them,” said Dr. Stern 1972. “That is the province of religion, the leaders, the critics and each individual.”

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Business

Hank Aaron, legendary baseball participant, dies at age 86

The Atlanta Braves’ right outfield player Hank Aaron (see close-up photo) has been named to the National League All Star team for the 16th consecutive year.

Bettmann | Getty Images

Famer Hank Aaron’s National Baseball Hall has died at the age of 86, a spokesman confirmed on Friday.

Aaron was a pioneer and trailblazer in the sport. Almost 50 years ago, Aaron Babe overtook Ruth in home races and now lives in second place behind Barry Bonds.

At a time when 17.4% of major league baseball players were African American, Aaron managed to break up as an icon, according to the Society for American Baseball Research.

Hall of Famer Hank Aaron of the Atlanta Braves swings on the ball circa 1960

Sport in focus | Getty Images

Aaron began his baseball career with the Indianapolis Clowns of the Negro Baseball League after leaving his hometown of Mobile, Alabama, with only two dollars in hand.

“My mom told me that was all she had to give me and be very careful with,” Aaron said in an interview with NBC News.

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