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Songs to Accompany a Dreamy Summer season Dinner Get together

“Kris’s wife, Lisa Meyers, sent this to me several months ago and told me it reminded her of her father. We’re both daddy’s girls so she thought I would enjoy it and think about my dad. And just a few days ago, my boyfriend, Craig, played it for me and I said, ‘oh my gosh, this song is haunting me.’ I would love to record it some day.”

“Cmon Let’s Go” — Girlschool

“A fist-pumping rager that’s fun, fun, fun. Who doesn’t want to listen to something like this while hanging out with pals and eating barely cooked Greenmarket corn straight off the cob in someone’s backyard?”

“Far From Right” — Habibi

Rahill Jamalifard, Habibi’s vocalist, is a Superiority Burger alum from way back when we first opened in 2015. This track is from 2014, and it still hits really hard in 2021. It has a very difficult to achieve kinetic nonchalance with a vocal delivery that asserts the influence of Rahill’s Michigan upbringing.”

“Dressed in Black” — Teengenerate

“Greatest band of all time? Tokyo’s Teengenerate. No question. And Fifi, the former guitarist and vocalist, currently operates the greatest bar on the planet — Poor Cow, also in Tokyo.”

“Wiwasharnine” — Mdou Moctar

“This plays pretty much once every other day on the Superiority Burger iPod. The groove on this track is relentless. They are playing in Brooklyn in mid-September, a not-to-be-missed gig.”

“Clair de Lune” — Claude Debussy

Various — Sly & The Family Stone

“When you’re listening to folks nattering about, talking over one another and getting louder and louder, it’s time for Sly & The Family Stone to take over the room — quick! Take your pick — ‘Family Affair,’ ‘Everyday People,’ ‘If You Want Me to Stay,’ ‘Everybody Is a Star’ — or just put on all of them!”

“HUMBLE.” — Kendrick Lamar

“Reason to Believe (feat. Courtney Barnett)” — Vagabon

“As if the Karen Dalton version weren’t dreamy enough, this one makes me tear up instantly.”

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Entertainment

L’Rain’s Songs Maintain Ghosts, Demons and Therapeutic

Cheek has a full-time job presenting performances; she is an associate curator at MoMA PS1 in Queens, augmenting exhibitions with live shows and leading the committee that produces PS1’s consistently forward-looking summer music series, “Warm Up.” She has also backed up and collaborated with other musicians, lately with Vagabon and Helado Negro.

She was between bands in the mid-2010s when she started making her own music as L’Rain; Lappin gave her a decisive nudge: “My mom would always say, ‘You should just sing and play piano.’ And I just brushed her off. And then the bands I was in fell apart, and Andrew Lappin said, ‘Have you ever thought about making your own record?’ He was the catalyst. And my mom, also, with me eventually realizing, ‘OK, you were right.’”

Cheek had been warehousing dozens of musical ideas on a private SoundCloud page: “Anything from six seconds to two-and-a-half minutes,” Lappin recalled. As he helped her sift through them, they saw the potential for a coherent project, and “L’Rain” emerged as a moody, liquid, atmospheric album, with Cheek’s vocals often blurred amid the instruments.

For “Fatigue,” Lappin and Cheek decided to make her voice and lyrics clearer, and to allow more visceral, aggressive moments. “The first record was like a bunch of sounds all at once, and it’s hard to tell where one begins and one ends,” Cheek said. “This one is more defined. We were trying to be bolder with the sonic palette, and making more decisions.”

They recorded in New York and in Los Angeles, where Lappin worked at the venerable Sunset Sound studios. Some of L’Rain’s vocals were run through the same reverberation chamber — an isolated stonewalled room — that the Beach Boys used when recording “Pet Sounds” in 1966. L’Rain used live instruments, computer manipulation, assorted amplifiers and even a cassette player, along with Cheek’s field recordings; a deep drone she recorded on a subway ride was sampled and pitch-shifted to provide one song’s bass line.

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Entertainment

H.E.R.’s Soulful Suspicions, and 11 Extra New Songs

H.E.R. (Gabriella Sarmiento Wilson) has a rich grasp of soul and R&B history backed by her old-school musicianship as a singer, guitarist and keyboardist. There are 21 songs on her new album “Back of My Mind,” but most of them cling to a narrow palette: ballad tempos, two-chord vamps, constricted melody lines. “Cheat Code” is still a ballad, but a little more expansive. Its narrator is coming to grips with a partner’s infidelity — “What you’ve been doing’s probably something I ain’t cool with” — and warning, “You need to get your story straight.” The arrangement blossoms from acoustic guitar to quiet-storm studio band, with wind chimes and horns, only to thin out again, leaving her with just backup voices and a few piano notes, alone again with all her misgivings. JON PARELES

An insightful take on the way some relationships become sites of push and pull, one promise traded for another, one letdown making room for the next. “Sober & Skinny” is lonesome and doleful (some light melodic borrowing from Rihanna’s “Umbrella,” notwithstanding), the story of two people bound by their habits, and to each other, and how that can be the same thing: “I empty the fridge, you empty the bottle/we’re stacking up a mountain of hard pills we’ll have to swallow.” JON CARAMANICA

The music is methodical and transparent: steady-ticking percussion, grumbling piano chords, spindly high guitar interjections, a melody line that barely budges. But Aldous Harding’s intent and attitude stay cheerfully, stubbornly, intriguingly opaque. “Old peel, no deal/I won’t speak if you call me baby,” she sings, utterly deadpan, enjoying the standoff. PARELES

Yves Tumor, the ineffable and audacious experimentalist, once again brandishes a reverence for Prince on “Jackie,” another venture into magisterial rock that clings to devastating grandeur. Tumor, who uses gender-neutral pronouns, assumes the role of a tortured ringleader, shepherding listeners into their surreal world of sexual and musical provocation. It’s almost easy to miss the song’s reality: a lament for the end of the relationship, in which Tumor’s anguish makes it difficult to eat and sleep. “These days have been tragic,” they wail, yearning for the possibility of a return of their body’s biological rhythms, and a promise that they will one day be whole again. ISABELIA HERRERA

A return to croaky bragging for Tyler, the Creator, over a beat that heavily samples “2 Cups of Blood,” from the Gothically gloomy debut album by the Gravediggaz. Tyler’s boasts take the gleaming aesthete excess Pharrell once celebrated and gives it a tart edge: “Rolls-Royce pull up, Black boy hop out”; “Salad-colored emerald on finger, the size of croutons”; a credit card that “really can’t max out.” It’s a posture he’s earned:

That’s my nuance, used to be the weirdo
Used to laugh at me, listen to me with their ears closed
Used to treat me like that boy Malcolm in the Middle
Now I’m zero, zero, zero, zero, zero, zero

CARAMANICA

Stiff Pap is an electronic duo from Johannesburg: the producer Jakinda and the rapper and singer Ayema Probllem. For “Riders on the Storm,” they’re joined by the Soweto band BCUC (Bantu Continua Uhuru Consciousness), adding gritty voices and salvos of percussion to both deepen and destabilize a track that’s already skewed and wily. Amid buzzing, hopscotching keyboard lines and fitful drumming, the song addresses, among other things, perpetual striving and social-media anxiety, doubled down by music that keeps shifting underfoot. PARELES

A false start, a tiptoeing piano hook, a video featuring a golf course invasion: with “Diri,” the Bronx rapper Chucky73 has assembled an easy home run. The chubby-cheeked, beaming Lothario dazzles here, his slap-happy persona only amplified by his self-assured, nimble baritone and punch lines about the spoils of his success: “En do’ año’ me hice rico/El dinero me tiene bonito.” “In two years, I got rich,” he says. “The money’s got me looking cute.” HERRERA

Elsewhere on her debut EP, “Baby Goat,” Young Devyn leans into her Trinidadian roots and her past as a soca singer, and also toys with Brooklyn drill music. But on “Like This,” she’s just rapping — pointedly, nimbly, eye-rollingly: “I don’t even speak to my pops /How the hell would you think I would speak to my exes?” CARAMANICA

Cochemea Gastelum, the saxophonist for the Dap-Kings soul and funk band, claims his heritage for “Baca Sewa Vol II,” his coming solo album. “Mimbreños” is named after his ancestors from the Mimbres Valley in New Mexico. It’s a call-and-response, his saxophone tune answered by vocal la-las, carried by calm, six-beat percussion. Then a marimba, hitting offbeats, supplies a vamp for Cochemea’s saxophone improvisations, abetted by biting electronic timbres. It’s untraditional, yet it feels deeply rooted. PARELES

Leon Bridges, the Texas-based singer whose voice harks back to Sam Cooke, probes his unhappiness as a lover’s desire wanes in “Why Don’t You Touch Me.” A patient beat and lean electric-guitar chords accompany him as he questions, apologizes, complains and begs. “Don’t leave me out here unfulfilled/’Cause we’re slowly getting disconnected,” he reproaches, desperately longing to get physical. PARELES

“Westward Bound!”, a collection of never-before-released concert recordings from the early-to-mid-1960s at Seattle’s Penthouse club, offers a chance to revisit the overlooked career of Harold Land. A coolly expressive tenor saxophonist, Land left his mark in bands led by Max Roach and Clifford Brown and by the vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson, but his own career as a bandleader never rose fully above the fray. In ways, “Happily Dancing/Deep Harmonies Falling,” a Land original, is quintessential hard-bop: the waltz-time swing feel, caught between elegance and heft; the cooperation between Land and the trumpeter Carmell Jones; the commingling of hard blues playing and balladic lyricism. But what sets this recording apart is Land, and his way of articulating each note with just enough restraint and sly timing to pull you in close. GIOVANNI RUSSONELLO

The clarinetist Ben Goldberg arranged “Everything Happens to Be.,” the title track from his rewarding new album (its name riffs on a jazz standard), in such a way that everyone in his quintet has a load-bearing role to play. The guitarist Mary Halvorson, the bassist Michael Formanek and the saxophonist Ellery Eskelin all carry different melodic parts, as the drummer Tomas Fujiwara employs a light touch to push things ahead, mirroring Formanek’s cadence without bearing down on him. RUSSONELLO

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Entertainment

Alix Dobkin, Who Sang Songs of Liberation, Dies at 80

Long before K.D. Lang transformed herself from a country artist into an androgyne pop idol and sex symbol, smoldering in a man’s suit on the cover of Vanity Fair being mock-shaved by the supermodel Cindy Crawford; long before Melissa Etheridge sold millions of copies of her 1993 album, “Yes I Am,” and in so doing came out as a gay rock star; and long before the singer-songwriter Jill Sobule’s “I Kissed a Girl” hit the Billboard charts, the folk singer Alix Dobkin chopped her hair off, formed a band and recorded “Lavender Jane Loves Women.”

Released in 1973, it was the first album recorded and distributed by women for women — arguably the first lesbian record. Ms. Dobkin started her own label, Women’s Wax Works, to do it.

Once a folk star playing Greenwich Village clubs with Bob Dylan and Buffy Sainte-Marie, Ms. Dobkin turned to writing songs like “The View From Gay Head” (“It’s a pleasure to be a lesbian/A lesbian in a no-man’s land”). Her lyrics sketched out a lesbian separatist utopia and also poked fun at its vernacular and customs, as she did in “Lesbian Code,” which contained lines like “Is she Lithuanian?,” “Is she Lebanese?” and “She’s a member of the church, of the club, of the committee/She sings in the choir.”

Her music was the soundtrack for many young women coming out in the 1970s and ’80s, a rite of passage spoofed by Alison Bechdel, the graphic memoirist, in her long-running comic strip, “Dykes to Watch Out For.” (A panel titled “Age 21” showed a young woman with cropped hair and pinwheel eyes, smoking a bong and reading Mary Daly’s “Gyn/Ecology,” another feminist touchstone, as the lyrics from Ms. Dobkin’s “The Woman in Your Life Is You” waft around her, a Lavender Jane album cover propped up in a corner.)

“I can’t tell you how cool it was as a young dyke to see those album covers,” said Lisa Vogel, founder of the Michigan Womyn’s Festival, otherwise known as Michfest, where Ms. Dobkin would perform for decades. “To see someone not trying to pass one bit.”

Ms. Dobkin died on May 19 at her home in Woodstock, N.Y., after suffering a brain aneurysm and a stroke. She was 80. Her former partner Liza Cowan announced the death.

She was a star of the women’s festivals that were an expression of the alternative economy lesbian feminists were building in the ’70s — a byproduct of second-wave feminism — with their own books, publishing companies, record labels and magazines. Michfest was the biggest, an entire city built from scratch each season in Oceana County, complete with health care clinics, crafts, workshops and food for thousands. It was a complete matriarchal society. No men were allowed.

When the festivals began in the mid-’70s, there were no safe spaces for lesbians, said Bonnie J. Morris, a historian and archivist of feminist music and the author of “Eden Built by Eves: The Culture of Women’s Music Festivals.” “You weren’t welcome to have a double bed in a hotel; there were no Disney Gay Days. Festivals were a way to get together, share information and recharge.”

It was backstage at a women’s festival in 1983 that Ms. Etheridge first met Ms. Dobkin. “She was in the tradition of the classic folk troubadour, changing the world through song and cleverness,” Ms. Etheridge said in an interview.

“She made an impact,” she added, “and she did it with humor. Until I heard Alix, I had no idea I would be an out lesbian performer; I just wanted to be a rock star.”

“When I told her I was thinking of recording an album, she said, ‘Oh, Melissa, there’s no radio station that’s going to play a lesbian.’ After ‘Yes I Am’ came out — and I came out — she said to me, ‘Damn it, you proved me wrong. I’m so grateful.’”

Alix Cecil Dobkin was born on Aug. 16, 1940, in New York City. She was named for an uncle, Cecil Alexander Kunstlich, a womanizing, drug-addicted ne’er-do-well who cleaned up his act and was killed in the Spanish Civil War. Her parents, Martha (Kunstlich) and William Dobkin, were, like many Jewish intellectuals of the time, Communist Party members and social activists. Alix grew up listening to the folk music of Pete Seeger, and Woody Guthrie, as well as the Red Army Chorus and Broadway show tunes, and singing at home with her parents.

Alix was 16 when the F.B.I. began investigating her. She had joined the Communist Party that year, but her parents had become disillusioned and left; there were too many F.B.I. informants, her father told her later.

The F.B.I. followed Ms. Dobkin until she turned 30, noting in her file that she had become a housewife and mother. The file, which Ms. Dobkin retrieved in 1983 under the Freedom of Information Act, proved useful decades later, when she was writing her memoir, “My Red Blood” (2009). It recorded her many addresses and helpful dates, like that of her wedding in 1965, though it had the venue wrong.

Ms. Dobkin studied art at the Tyler School of Art and Architecture at Temple University in Philadelphia, earning a bachelor’s degree, with honors, in 1962. A fellow student and Communist Party member was also a booker at a local nightclub, and he began to manage her, often along with a young comic named Bill Cosby. He found the pair regular work at the Gaslight in Greenwich Village, where she met her future husband, Sam Hood, whose parents owned the place, as well as Mr. Dylan and other folk luminaries.

When Ms. Dobkin married Mr. Hood, her career as a performer took a back seat to his as a producer. They divorced amicably in 1971, when their daughter, Adrian, was a year old.

Like many women in that transitional time, Ms. Dobkin was frustrated by her role as a housewife and had joined a consciousness-raising group. When she heard Germaine Greer, the feminist author of “The Female Eunuch,” interviewed on the countercultural radio station WBAI, it was a revelation. She wrote to Ms. Cowan, a producer at the station who had conducted the interview. Ms. Cowan invited her on the program to perform, and the two women fell in love.

After they got together, Ms. Dobkin decided she wanted to make music for and by women only. Ms. Cowan would go on to found lesbian magazines like Dyke, A Quarterly. In the mid-’70s, the couple bought a 70-acre farm in rural Schoharie County, in central New York State — not an easy locale to plunk down a gay family.

“I remember being called a ‘hobo’ by the kids in school,” Adrian Hood said, “though they were trying to say ‘homo’. I craved a normal mom with long hair.”

Ms. Dobkin’s tour schedule slowed down a bit in the late ’90s, and when Ms. Hood had her own children, Ms. Dobkin took on a new role.

“She was a stay-at-home grandma by choice, which allowed me to work full time,” said Ms. Hood, who is dean of students and director of admissions at a day school in Woodstock. “That was a huge gift. She was able to express that everyday maternal attention that she missed with me.”

In addition to her daughter, Ms. Dobkin is survived by her brother, Carl; her sister, Julie Dobkin; and three grandchildren.

In 2015, a photograph of Ms. Dobkin taken by Ms. Cowan wearing a T-shirt that read “The Future Is Female” exploded on social media, thanks to an Instagram post by @h_e_r_s_t_o_r_y, an account that documents lesbian imagery. It brought the T-shirt, originally made in the 1970s by Labyris Books, the first feminist bookstore in New York City, back into production — and introduced Ms. Dobkin to a new generation of young women.

“I’ve prepared all my life for this job,” Ms. Dobkin told the crowd at a women’s music festival in 1997. “Because being a Jew and being a lesbian are very similar. That’s why I look so much alike. I have so much in common. It’s OK to be a Jew, it’s OK to be a lesbian — as long as you don’t mention it. And what we also have in common is that we were never supposed to survive.”

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Entertainment

DMX Songs: Hear 10 Songs That Confirmed His Vary

Earl Simmons, the gruff, formidable rapper from Yonkers, NY better known as DMX, died Friday at the age of 50. He spent his last days on life support at White Plains Hospital in Westchester County after suffering a heart attack on April 2nd.

DMX was one of the most famous MCs in the late 1990s and early 2000s, when hardcore New York rap could still make a claim as a central concern of hip hop.

Signed with Def Jam Recordings, his first five albums all debuted at # 1, an achievement no rapper has achieved before or since. DMX cut a unique figure for a superstar rapper: he fought his inner demons with the horror-centered imagery loved by heavy metal bands, but his albums reliably offered heartfelt, often a cappella, prayers to God. He made huge pop crossover hits, but they were bubbling with ferocious threats better suited to grindhouse theater. His shout rap energy made him a favorite in the outwardly fearful era of Woodstock ’99 and the nü-metal band Korn’s Family Values ​​Tour, but he was also a shirtless sex symbol who stood in the moonlight as an actor.

Here is a small selection from an artist with a range that spanned the shocking, the sincere, and the simply incredible. (Listen here on Spotify.)

After years as a ruthless battle rapper, mixtape hustler and early beneficiary of The Source magazine’s Unsigned Hype column, DMX and the up-and-coming label Ruff Ryder released the seldom heard “Born Loser” on a handful of 12-inch records. Soon after, “Born Loser” became the only song released as part of DMX’s false start on Columbia Records. Both DMX and the rapper K-Solo had claimed a rhyming style in which individual words are spelled out in bars. For example, on his 1990 hit “Spellbound”, K-Solo raps: “I spell very well / I only spell so everyone can say it.” Following the success of “Spellbound,” DMX wrote this track while it was raging in a Westchester prison cell. “Born Loser” wasn’t a hit, but as punch line rap where DMX makes itself a punch line, it would anticipate the self-disgorging rhymes of rappers like Eminem and Fatlip: “They kicked me out of the shelter for saying , I would have smelled a / little like the living dead and looked like Helter Skelter. “

This single would be epoch-making for several reasons. It sparked the lyrical war between LL Cool J and Canibus, perhaps the last wax battle on real vinyl – soon things like that were being fought out in the areas of mixtapes and MP3s. And “4, 3, 2, 1” was the breakout single for DMX, a new Def Jam signer at the time, taking on members of an elite group of MCs. Here he raps death threats through a filmmaker’s eye for details: “Believe what I say when I tell you / Don’t let me take you to a place where no one can smell you. “

DMX recorded its debut solo single Def Jam in the era of ’80s pop samples, big budget videos and a general feeling of being “nervous”. “I wasn’t done with all that pretty Happy-Go-Lucky [expletive]”Said DMX in” EARL: The Autobiography of DMX. “He added that Sean” Puffy “Combs” had the radio on, the clubs aflame, people thought hip-hop was all about bright lights and shiny suits went, and smiled up to the bench – X on the other hand, still lived in the dark. “Get at Me Dog” is a pure, unfiltered rhyme about a loop by the disco-funk band BT Express. If it sounds like mixtape rap, it started like this: Beat and hook were part of a freestyle for DJ Clue The song not only introduced DMX, the solo artist, but also his trademark bark and growl, sounds inspired by his beloved pit bulls. The video – a black and white affair directed by Hype Williams – was on New York’s hip-hop hangout was shot in the tunnel where Funkmaster Flex held court on Sunday nights, and the song became one of the most popular “tunnel bangers”.

The third single from DMX’s debut album “It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot” shimmered a little brighter than its predecessor. His rhymes were no less uncompromising and violent – “Had it, should have shot it / Now you’ve left dearly,” he raps. But the song heralded the funky, pixelated debut of producer Swizz Beatz, whose sound would ultimately determine the next few years of the Ruff Ryder orbit: DMX, Eve, The Lox, Drag-On and Swizz Beatz’s own solo work. Swizz Beatz told Vibe it took a week to convince DMX to do the song: “He said, ‘I don’t want those white boy beats. ‘“Swizz then produced top 10 singles for Beyoncé, Lil Wayne, TI and Busta Rhymes and co-founded the popular quarantined streaming battle Verzuz.

The rapper’s most famous narrative rhyme involves having a conversation with the devil – a play about battling his own temptations. “At the time, X was in a really dark place, in and out of jail,” producer Dame Grease told Okayplayer. “He told me he thought he was spiritually in hell and could hear the devil talking to him. He wanted to find a way to restore that feeling. “This was followed by two sequels, including” The Omen (Damien II) “, also in 1998, with a guest appearance by shock rocker Marilyn Manson, who had a notable influence on hip-hop and influenced modern Gothic artists such as Travis Scott and Lil Uzi Vert among others. The second sequel is “Damien III” (2001).

On this bloody, emotionally rough track DMX meets his difficult upbringing, his time in various institutions and his addiction with a sober eye. It was a personal and vulnerable look at his life and struggles in the style of Diarist rappers like Tupac Shakur and Scarface. “X was slippin ‘for a while – six months, a year,” Ruff Ryders founder Joaquin “Waah” Dean told The Fader. “He wanted this song to affect people’s lives.”

Perhaps the most indelible DMX song “Party Up (Up in Here)” has a singable, dizzying chorus that denies the nimble, strict trash talk in the verses. (“Look, your ass is about to be missed / you know who’s going to find you? An old man is fishing.”) “It’s called ‘Party Up’ but it’s very disrespectful,” DMX told GQ, adding, ” The beat is for the club, I just spit out a few real ones [expletive] to. “The long-lived track has a long lifespan thanks to its use in films like ‘Disappeared in 60 Seconds’ and TV shows like ‘The Mindy Project’. Earl Simmons has a conversation due to interpolation in ‘Meet Me Inside,’ a song between Alexander Hamilton and George Washington describes, even a written contribution in the time-defining musical “Hamilton”.

The 2000 film “Romeo Must Die” was the first for R&B superstar Aaliyah and the second for DMX. Although they don’t play love interests in the film, they teamed up for this song from the soundtrack, a tune in the form of hip-hop-soul duets like Method Man and Mary J. Bliges “I’ll be there for you” / You is all i need to get through “It’s almost like DMX refusing to meet R&B halfway though: he’s rhyming a non-apologetic street narrative while Aaliyah plays a beleaguered partner who just wants him to be safe.

“Who We Be” is a simple list of political and personal grievances that comes with the roaring fire of an AC / DC song. It was the third and final DMX song to be nominated for a Grammy, but he never took one home.

Although it was a moderate hit when it was released as a single from the soundtrack “Cradle 2 the Grave” in 2003, “X Gon ‘Give It to Ya” has ultimately become the most popular DMX song of the streaming era thanks to its use in the “Deadpool” films and, on television, “Rick and Morty”. DMX intended it for his fifth album, “Grand Champ”, but when he saw its potential, “Cradle 2 the Grave” producer Joel Silver intervened. It went platinum in 2017, almost 15 years after its release.

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Business

Why there is a growth in boomer rock stars promoting their songs

Paul Simon performs on stage during the Nearness Of You benefit concert at Frederick P. Rose Hall, Jazz at Lincoln Center on January 20, 2015 in New York City.

Ilya S. Savenok | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

From Bob Dylan plugging his electric guitar on for the first time to Super Bowl commercials, there have always been moments in music history when die-hard fans accuse their idols of doing the unthinkable: selling out. But right now, “sellout” has a new connotation and it’s a booming market for both investors and superstar recording artists.

A wave of boomer rock icons are selling out their song catalogs. The steps of which Paul Simon took the last last week point to a clear truth about the intersection of art and money: music has always been a business where creative genius deserves to be richly rewarded. And it’s a business that is currently going through big changes from streaming and further disruption from the pandemic. The deals of Paul Simon, Bob Dylan, Neil Young (in Young’s case 50% of the shares) and Stevie Nicks (80% of the rights to their songs) highlight important trends in the entertainment industry, capital markets and wealth management.

Music publishers like Hipgnosis Songs Fund and Primary Wave Music, as well as conglomerates like BMG, Sony, Warner Music Group, and Vivendis Universal Music Group, are buying up top-notch song catalogs in big deals fueled by record low interest rates, with the belief that they will generate more lucrative returns in the future by selling the rights to these songs through entertainment platforms.

Pick up cheap fuel music deals

Larry Mestel, CEO of Primary Wave Music, the company that just acquired a controlling stake in the catalog of two-time Rock and Roll Hall of Fame candidate Stevie Nicks, told CNBC the economic environment that the coronavirus pandemic created have had a positive impact on companies looking to acquire large assets. These low interest rates make it easy to borrow money, and high returns have created a perfect opportunity for buyers.

“They talk about a low interest rate environment and they can get 7% to 9% … and then increase that through marketing and get returns for teens. This is a very attractive place for people to invest money,” he said.

Music catalogs have also proven recession-proof, and the pandemic has only increased the number of deals done as the music industry is going through a massive disruption caused by the closure of live venues and touring.

Streaming music is increasing

The deals also come at a time when streaming music – despite all the controversy and skepticism of the musicians themselves about getting a raw deal – has proven to be an economic juggernaut, at least for the record companies. In 2020, Goldman Sachs predicted that global music sales will hit $ 142 billion by the end of the decade. This corresponds to an increase of 84% compared to the level in 2019 of 77 billion US dollars and a streaming of 1.2 billion users by 2030, four times the level in 2019. Companies like Sony, who have bought Simon’s catalog, will benefit most from this , and Universal, who purchased Dylan’s songs.

Worldwide revenue from streaming music hit an all-time high in the industry last year (83% according to a recent report) and is also favoring the superstars. Spotify said its mission is “to enable one million creative artists to make a living from their art”. A recent analysis by the New York Times found that Spotify’s data generated only about 13,000 payments of $ 50,000 or more over the past year.

It’s not just streaming, however. Once purchased, the rights to larger catalogs of acts can be used for dubbing placements that license music for a variety of media including movies, television shows, advertising, and video games.

“From a publisher’s point of view, having the rights to a particular catalog that we can make available for dubbing is extremely valuable,” said Rebecca Valice, copyright and licensing manager for PEN Music Group. “A catalog can pitch its own just because of its legendary success.”

Appreciation of rock icons

The more recognizable a catalog is, the more valuable it becomes for businesses to buy and use films or television. The best catalogs “pay off over time,” she says, as syncing helps regain the money spent, “and then some over time”.

“I think the icons and legends are worth more than the other artists,” said Mestel. Primary Wave owns the catalogs of stars like Whitney Houston, Ray Charles, Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons.

Some famous boomer-era musicians have grappled with the situation the industry has put them in, like David Crosby, who said in a December tweet, “I’m selling mine too … I can’t work …” and streaming stole my record money … I have a family and a mortgage and I have to take care of them so it’s my only option … I’m sure the others feel the same way. “

In March, he sold his entire catalog to Irving Azoff’s Iconic Artists Group, which had recently also acquired a controlling stake in the Beach Boys’ intellectual property, including part of the song catalog.

“Given our current inability to work live, this deal is a boon to me and my family and I believe these are the best people to do it with,” Crosby said in a statement setting out the deal was announced.

Boomer Generation Estate Planning

For the musicians themselves, there is a megatrend: the estate planning needs of America’s richest generation. Boomer musicians age just like their fans. “Artists are getting older now so they can use cash and make estate plans,” says Mestel.

The downside, of course, can be the loss of control over an artist’s most valuable asset: the creative genius who made his career.

“These aging rock stars may want to cash out to care for their estates … but you lose some control of your brand and heritage depending on the protections you’ve put in place as part of the business,” said John Ozszajca , Musician and founder of Music Marketing Manifesto, a company that teaches musicians how to sell and market their music.

Crosby and Azoff have been friends for a long time, a point Azoff addressed in the deal’s disclosure.

It seems like everyone who has a relationship in the music business knows someone is trying to raise money.

Larry Mestel

CEO of Primary Wave Records

Some fans aren’t particularly happy to hear hits like Nicks’ “Edge of Seventeen” or Dylan’s “Like a Rolling Stone” selling cars and clothes – although Dylan has made several Super Bowl commercials for GM, IBM and his has songs featured in others alone – but choosing to sell catalogs can also help musicians avoid the posthumous litigation that they endured the estates of Tom Petty, Prince and Aretha Franklin.

BMG acquired the catalog interests of Nicks’ bandmate Mick Fleetwood of Fleetwood Mac earlier this year and in its announcement noted some stats that show that, as old as boomer acts, they can get a new lease on life from streaming viral hits . The Fleetwood Mac song ‘Dreams’ generated over 3.2 billion streams worldwide (in a period of eight weeks from September 24 to November 19, 2020) based on a video with a cranberry juice-loving fan and introduced a new generation who is used to TikTok to Fleetwood Mac. The band’s album “Rumors” peaked at number 6 on Billboard’s Streaming Songs chart 43 years after its release.

Dylan’s deal is the largest to date, valued at $ 300 million, although no sales price has been officially announced, and Universal said in only one publication that it was “the most significant music publishing deal of this century.”

Mestel believes the boom is not going to end.

“It seems like anyone who has a relationship in the music business knows that someone is trying to raise money. But that doesn’t mean they can identify assets to sell or even know what they’re doing.”

BMG and private equity giant KKR recently signed an agreement for a major acquisition of music rights. A senior executive told Rolling Stone, “We’re not chasing hits as of January 2021. We’re looking for a repertoire that has proven itself.” be a part of our life. “

KKR has made big music deals in the past and the trend of buying rights is not new, but the current boom is remarkable and fits in with the asset class appreciation that is happening in so many parts of the market as investors look for more avenues in their business Bring money to work. While the boomer deals are the biggest headlines, the latest acts are also seeing big paydays. Earlier this year, KKR bought a stake in OneRepublic’s Ryan Tedder catalog for a supposedly large sum.

Companies like Primary Wave are partnering with artists like Nicks to try to keep them as part of the deal and make that deal even better for them in the future, according to Mestel, who says many didn’t understand they were signing a contract partnership, sell a piece of their catalog, and that piece may become more valuable in the future than the 100% they previously owned.

“If everything goes right, [artists] Get the most of what they want to sell it for and it’s usually a win-win scenario for both buyers and sellers, “Valice said.

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Phil Spector: Listening to 15 Songs From a Violent Legacy

Phil Spector died Saturday as an inmate in California, convicted of the 2003 murder of Lana Clarkson. By then, other facts about his volatile, erratic, armed behavior had emerged, particularly in Ronnie Spector’s 1990 memoir, “Be My Baby,” describing his abuses during their seven-year marriage. Some listeners may decide that all of their music is poisoned. But it is also inextricably linked with pop history.

It was decades before, in the early 1960s, that Spector made the hits he famously called “little symphonies for the kids”. He packed brazen innovations into three-minute melodramas, treating youthful romance as a universe of rapture and tragedy.

He brought dozens of musicians and singers into the studio to perform together, doubling up the parts for power and impact, and pushing mixes to the verge of distortion to create his wall of sound. He collected songwriters who were able to convincingly capture the female longing and the desire of his girl groups. And he found singers – many of them ambitious black teenagers – who would infuse these songs with gospel spirit.

After his amazing track record in the early 1960s, Spector found admirers eager to work with him in the 1970s: the Beatles (collectively and individually), the Ramones, even Leonard Cohen. Then Spector withdrew almost entirely from music for the next few decades. But countless others over the years – including the Beach Boys, Bruce Springsteen, the Walker Brothers, the Jesus and Mary chains, Abba, Meat Loaf, and Bleachers – have had the thunderous beat, ringing chords, and lavish drums of its Wall of Mimicked sound. “I still smile when I hear the music we made together and I always will,” Ronnie Spector told Billboard in a post-Spector interview. “The music will be forever.”

Here in chronological order are 15 of his most distinctive tracks. (Listen here on Spotify.)

Spector’s first hit turned the inscription on his father’s tombstone – “To know him was to love him” – into a present day declaration of love. The production in front of Wall of Sound is minimal and haunting. Annette Kleinbard sings over Spector’s gentle guitar playing, accompanied by muted backup vocals and a muffled drum beat. Her reluctance falls on the bridge when her voice jumps and explains, “One day he will see that he was meant for me.”

In this creepy 1960s artifact by Gerry Goffin and Carole King, the singer takes the violence of a jealous lover as evidence of his affection. The masochistic premise is underlined by a cowardly sounding lead voice, a sculking arrangement and the way the word “hit” arrives in a dissonant note. It’s even creepier given Spector’s later actions.

Spector didn’t waste potential hits and often placed instrumentals on the B-sides of his singles. The downside of “Why do lovers break each other’s hearts?” was named after Dr. Named Harold Kaplan who was Spector’s psychiatrist in the 1960s and was constantly on call. Some Spector B-sides are clearly studio jams, but this is a full-fledged arrangement with a boastful melody in the saxophone section, lots of hand claps, and a crazy mad laugh.

Darlene Wright, who would later become Darlene Love, was the lead singer of the Blossoms. The Spector vocal group traded in for the Crystals to record “She’s a Rebel,” and supported the Ronettes and the original Crystals. She earned the reckoning for “(Today I have) the boy I’m going to marry” on her own. She showed no doubt about her expectations of the marriage as the arrangement rings around her like wedding bells.

The combination of songs written with Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich, Spector’s productions, and the youthful voices of the Crystals and Ronettes led to the highlights of the Wall of Sound era. Love at first sight in this song means two minutes of pure euphoria that cannot even find words for joy: just nonsensical syllables, “Da doo ron ron”. Behind the jubilant harmonies of the crystals, triplets gallop on the piano and build on drums like a racing heartbeat.

The opening guitar lick is a harbinger of folk rock, and rattling castanets immediately help carry this chronicle of the fulfillment of girl group wishes from the first dance to falling in love to the proposal. Each step was affirmed with a kiss “in a way that I would never have been kissed before. “

One of the rock beats of rock – played by Hal Blaine and imitated since then – opens up a Barry Greenwich Spector song that is both a plea and a promise. Veronica Bennett, later Ronnie Spector, hovers over the band in a voice that is wiry, vulnerable, and absolutely certain that their love is the answer. The Ronettes would spend decades fighting Spector in court for their share of the royalties.

Santa Claus might as well ride a pimped-up steamroller in this full-throttle version of the song pumped by saxophones and flooded with chimes – an arrangement that Bruce Springsteen would make his own annual concert staple.

A steady, pounding thump trudges along as Bennett sings about breaking up and inevitably catching up. “I am yours and you are mine,” she emphasizes. But there is a wrong ending and then a new, unsafe episode. Wrapped up in wordless harmonies, she is no longer so sure that things will work out, and while fading out she begs, “Come on baby, maybe don’t say.”

The romantic abyss continues to open when Bill Medley and Bobby Hatfield, the Just Brothers, grapple with Spector about the end of an affair in a song by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil. You notice the growing signs of alienation when the strings swell over an inexorable beat and the despair becomes unbearable. Before the end they both cry: “Baby! I need your love!”

Spector’s run as a non-stop hitmaker ended – inexplicably – with the great bombast of “River Deep, Mountain High,” which he wrote with Barry and Greenwich. Spector was determined to create a masterpiece, and the production focused on everything in his arsenal: tape, horns, strings, maracas, backup vocals “doot-do-doot” – behind no less than Tina Turner who is in front the first chorus turned to full rasping. Whatever hit the song’s first American release peak at a somber number 88 on the Billboard Hot 100 is long forgotten.

“Instant Karma” begins relatively softly, with Lennon’s voice, a piano that is not quite in tune and a rudimentary backbeat. But Spector’s production makes everything sound bigger than life, Lennon soon works his way up to a scream and a full chorus materializes behind him; it was never as casual as it seemed.

George Harrison’s 1970 album “All Things Must Pass” was produced by Spector and Harrison, and “What Is Life” spurs Harrison on with his own wall of sound, featuring walloping drums, a buzz-bomb guitar line, massaged horns and strings, and one very busy tambourine.

Leonard Cohen’s album “Death of a Ladies’ Man” was one of the biggest mismatches between songwriter and producer. Cohen raised his voice to barely hold his own against Spector’s excesses in the sink. But the stately, nine-minute title cut is a major anomaly for both: leisurely, orchestral, serious and slightly cheesy at the same time, while Cohen considers the sexuality, revelation, metaphysics, disenchantment and comedy of a “big deal”.

The last album Spector produced decades ago of retirement was the “End of the Century” by Ramones, a collision between the usual fast and dirty recording methods of the Ramones and Spector’s meticulous perfectionism. But they shared a commitment to precision and drive, and Spector-esque touches – huge drums, double guitars, layered vocal harmonies, a key change during the song – only add to the two-minute explosion.

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What Are the Best 2,020 Songs Ever? Philadelphia Is Deciding

But Warren is no fool. All of this genesis bears witness to some of the station’s older listeners “who grew up with WMMR”. He says the last 200 songs will represent a consensus between these ballots and that “No. 1 is by far number 1. “I wouldn’t let it spoil, what a consensus, but I wonder. Would that be what my friends, who are tired too, predict? “Ladder to Heaven”? “Born to Run”? Would Aretha Franklin perform her usual canonical role of bringing both Black America and women to the top of the pile? Didn’t anyone put the words “Sinead” and “O’Connor” on their ballot?

One compelling aspect of this countdown business is philosophical. With more than 2,000 songs, a certain percentage would likely always match the taste of XPN. Local acts like the Hooters, Amos Lee and Low Cut Connie are very present here. And believe it or not, “local” extends to Bruce Springsteen and Billy Joel, who had nearly 30 entries between them by Monday noon. But how would a countdown of the 2,020 greatest songs run, for example at WDAS, where the format is now old-school R&B and “The Steve Harvey Morning Show” anchors the Am-Block? Power 99 used to have a nightly countdown show in which one song – Shirley Murdock’s “As We Lay” or Keith Sweat’s “Make It Last Forever” or Prince’s “Adore” – dominated for weeks. What would a more epoch-making company look like? Would WMMR find a way to move forward there too?

And what would the same countdown at a similar station in Anchorage or Montgomery or Chicago or the Bay Area reveal? Does it matter that some company sizes flattened the pop palette? Can a diagram still quantify local tastes? Would an accurate answer prove as annoying as accurate polling data, since we now partially live on Spotify, Apple Music and YouTube? Is this whole process just too random and subjective to continue?

I agree no; it is not. I appreciate the folly, the surprises, the mind-boggling idea that a ranking process could put the number 1,995 next to something as heavenly as Franklin’s “Amazing Grace” and play another song after Ella Fitzgerald made “Mack the Knife” In Exciting Mass murder. I think “Brilliant Disguise” is a better Springsteen song than certain finalist “Born to Run” but no chart will ever reflect that because it’s a blasphemous position. But I like the drama of blasphemy and the certainty of what a diagram tells you: modernization is hard work. XPN is still a kaleidoscope.

It is true that you can create your own massive, perfectly tailored playlist. But you will miss the astonishment that Kate Bush’s “Cloudbusting” starts the 767-to-764 block and A Tribe Called Quest’s “scenario” tears it to pieces. It wouldn’t be a shock to hear Edith Piaf’s “Non, je ne Regrette Rien” (1.093) follow Notorious BIG’s “Juicy” (1.094), which Paul McCartney and Wings’ “Band on the Run” had followed ”(1.095 ). There’s nothing wrong with Dan Fogelberg’s 40-year-old Same Auld Lang Syne, and he swears it’s the lonely ghost lurking on Taylor Swift’s two quarantine albums. Same thing – if you get up late enough – to hear XPN’s newbie Rahman Wortman go a little crazy and exclaim that Outkast’s “BO B (Bombs Over Baghdad)” actually made the cut.

And Olivia Newton-John’s “Xanadu” and the Richard Harris travesty known as “MacArthur Park” certainly couldn’t be frightened. I suspect the people who voted for these two knew they were trolls. But it doesn’t matter. Even songs that are as confusing (well, so terrible) as they culminated in days and days from something we have become increasingly estranged from: word of mouth.