Afleveringen
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Every few days, I scroll through the top music apps on my iPhone. Usually, things are fairly status quo. Spotify. Shazam. YouTube Music. All the stuff youād expect. But occasionally an app catches my eye that had previously eluded me.
That happened this week with a somewhat peculiar app reaching the upper echelons of Appleās paid music app chart. Itās called āAmen Break Generator (Revived).ā In many ways, it signifies both the past and future of music.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here.
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Iāve never been a huge fan of Halloween or purposefully subjecting myself to ghostly fear, but today is October 31, so I thought it would only be appropriate if we spoke about what constitutes the ghoulish musical canon, why it is different than the Christmas carols that flood our airwaves at the end of each year, and how it might be growing more popular than ever before.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Before jumping into our history of band name punctuation, I wanted to let everyone know that on Thursday, October 31, I will be appearing in an online event with my former colleague Dave Edwards. This conversation is part of a series called The Smartest People in the Room that features āone-on-one conversations between music industry executives and personalities.ā While I wonāt claim to be one of the smartest people in any room, Iām really excited for this. In the past, the event has featured the likes of Stewart Copeland, Bob Lefsetz, Gloria Gaynor, and Simon Napier-Bell, among many others.
As noted, Dave Edwards and I worked together at Audiomack for years. As our Chief Revenue Officer, he has deep insight into the economics of how music streaming works and how it can be better. Recently, he left Audiomack to become the SVP of Revenue & Operations at Warner Records. Over an hour, weāre going to talk all things music. If you want to join us, feel free to register by following this link.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here.
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Being a songwriter is hard. And Iām not just talking about the fact that writing great songs is no easy task. Iām talking about how the economics around songwriting have made turning it into a career a near impossibility. As I mentioned a few months ago, songwriters donāt get paid upfront for their work. They only get paid via the royalties their songs generate after they come out. In other words, if your song doesnāt sell, you donāt get paid.
While this labor arrangement makes things harder for songwriters, itās nothing new. Itās how songwriters have been paid for a long time. That said, something has died in the streaming age that has made it even harder to survive as a songwriter. That something is mechanical socialism. And I donāt think itās being discussed enough.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe -
People have been going to concerts for thousands of years, but something about the experience dramatically changed in the last few decades.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening.
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Earlier this year, I spoke with Paula Toledo about her whirlwind 15 minutes of fame. Toledo made music in the 2000s that never got too big, and then moved on with her life. The problem? Nobody on the internet could move on. Unbeknownst to Toledo, people online had accidentally stumbled upon her songs and had spent a decade trying to find her.
Catherine Sinow, a frequent contributor to this newsletter, first told me about the Paula Toledo saga while working on a different story about how Jessica Simpson released 500 versions of her song āA Public Affairā. Toledo was just the tip of the iceberg, though. This week Sinow brings another story about how people online have been searching and finding lost songs at a quicker rate than ever before.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify.
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In a 2011 piece for the AV Club, music critic Steven Hyden defined a new metric for musical greatness: the five-albums test. An artist passes this test if they release at least five consecutive masterful albums. According to Hyden, very few artists pass this test. The Beatles do. So do Queen. That said, Bob Dylan and The Rolling Stones come up short. Inspired by Mr. Hyden, I want to propose a test of musical greatness that is even more stringent: the 40-year test.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe -
A few weeks ago, an upcoming writer named Chris Gunther reached out to me with an interesting theory. He claimed that song titles were appearing later in songs. Hereās an example he gave me. The Rolling Stonesā classic āAngieā, released in 1973, starts with Mick Jagger intoning the title. Compare that to Olivia Rodrigoās āVampireā, a piano ballad from 2023. It takes 132 words before Rodrigo reaches her title. Of course, those are just examples. Gunther claims thatās part of a larger trend, though. Iāll let him explain.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe -
A few months ago, my sister graduated from college. Sheās the youngest of our 22 first cousins and the final person to complete her higher education. Naturally, we were very proud and threw a big party to mark the occasion. As the drinks were flowing, my aunts and uncles began recounting family lore. One slice of that lore, stuck with me after the party ended. It was a story my grandmother had often told about how Frank Sinatra had performed at her high school while she was a student.
Iād heard this story many times. Since my grandmother is no longer alive, I thought it would be illuminating to try to track down more information about this alleged performance. What I didnāt realize is that this would send me on a multi-month journey digging through newspaper archives, pestering strangers on Facebook, speaking with leading Frank Sinatra experts, and questioning the honesty of my relatives. This podcast is the diary of my search.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify. If you want to hear my favorite Sinatra songs, click here.
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I always admire people who write in a way that I know I canāt. Robert C. Gilbert is one of those people. Gilbert runs Listening Sessions, a weekly newsletter that dives deeper into single artists, songs, and albums than I even thought possible. I know heās good at what he does because he can open my mind to new perspectives on music that Iāve been listening to for years.
Since Iām away at a wedding in California this week, I decided to give Mr. Gilbert the keys to Canāt Get Much Higher. He wrote about the importance of archival releases, a topic that might seem mundane but whose evolution has been fascinating. If you enjoy this piece, subscribe to his newsletter, Listening Sessions.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe -
Not too long ago, I couldnāt get my writing published anywhere. I was pitching so many stories that it felt like publications were being created just to reject me. Then I pitched a story about the decline of key changes in popular music to Tedium, a publication run by Ernie Smith that explores āthe dull side of the internet.ā Much to my shock, Smith agree to publish the piece. And Iām glad he did. It went so viral that it not only ended up becoming one of Tediumās greatest hits, but it led to me working with NPR and The Economist. Frankly, this newsletter wouldnāt exist had that piece not been published.
This week, I decided to try to return the favor to Tedium by running one of their pieces here. If you enjoy it, you should subscribe to their newsletter. Itās undoubtedly one of the best things on the internet.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here.
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I got in an argument last week. As is typically the case for me, it was about an important topic: the best year for Album of the Year at the Grammys. Since my friend and I couldnāt come to an agreement, I figured a newsletter about music and data was the best place to resolve it. Luckily, I write one. We decided the loser owed the other a beer. Data, donāt fail me now!
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe -
I almost got scammed a few years ago. A woman hit me up on Instagram asking if I wrote songs. āOf course,ā I responded. She then sent a long message asking if I could compose a song for her son Danielās sixth birthday. She claimed sheād pay me $500. I agreed. I already wrote and recorded music regularly. It sounded like an easy $500. Then the scam emerged.
After I sent the song, the delighted woman told me that she had a check that she would mail me. There was an issue, though. The bank accidentally made the check out for $5,000 instead of $500. She wanted to know if she could send me the $5,000 and then have me send $4,500 back. At this point, I realized it was some sort of check scam, so I blocked her and forgot about it pretty quickly. But last week this scam came rushing back when someone tried to scam me in an even stranger way.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here.
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If you read this newsletter each week, youāll know that I typically rant about some topic, usually one that brings together music and data. Then I recommend both a new song (i.e., one released in the last few weeks) and an old song (i.e., one released at least five years ago).
Youāll still get a rant from me this week. (Itās about crappy duets.) But the song recommendations will come from my friends at Songletter, a publication that delivers one to two songs to your inbox each week. Some of those recommendations will be new. Others will be old. But in either case, they will open your musical mind. Subscribe to Songletter if youāre looking for some exciting music.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe -
Since today is Independence Day in the United States, I decided to explore why "The Star-Spangled Banner" is as American as the tomato is Italian. As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here. If you want to here songs and their answer songs, check out this playlist that I made on Spotify.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe -
The other day a friend of mine asked me if I liked being a music critic. āMusic critic?ā I asked. āIām not a music critic.ā And I really meant that. Yes, I write about music. Yes, I give you my opinion on certain things. Yes, I recommend songs that I enjoy. But I donāt think Iām a critic in the same way that or Jessica Hopper or or are critics. I donāt think Iām giving you deep insight into particular pieces of music. I mostly write about trends.
Nevertheless, I love music criticism. So, when I came across a huge database of reviews from the last two decades, I knew I had to start crunching some numbers. As always, this newsletter is also available as a podcast. Listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts or click play at the top of this page.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here. If you want to here songs and their answer songs, check out this playlist that I made on Spotify.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe -
I feel like recent music news is often bad news. And Iām a contributor to that. Just last week I wrote a long piece about problems in the music industry that donāt get enough attention. But tomorrow is my 29th birthday. In celebration, I wanted to talk about some great things that are happening.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here. If you want to here songs and their answer songs, check out this playlist that I made on Spotify.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe -
I think the adage āNever meet your heroesā is generally good advice. I canāt say for sure, though. I havenāt met many of mine. Except one time. When I was in high school, I had a chance run-in with my greatest musical hero. It made me think that maybe some of our heroes are worth meeting.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here. If you want to here songs and their answer songs, check out this playlist that I made on Spotify.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe -
I've got a new song out today. It's called "Late Nite Kicks". In today's podcast, I give you an inside scoop of how my creative process works as we walk through how the song came to be. Listen to "Late Nite Kicks" wherever you stream music.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here. If you want to here songs and their answer songs, check out this playlist that I made on Spotify.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe -
Over the last few weeks, there has been an explosive beef between hip-hop stalwarts Drake and Kendrick Lamar. What started out as a standard tit-for-tat has devolved into a volleying of nuclear bombs, accusations of predatory behavior, domestic violence, and absentee parenting flying with abandon. If you want a summary of a situation that is starting to require way too much time to follow, I recommend these pieces from Stereogum and Pitchfork. Nevertheless, this back-and-forth got me thinking about how hip-hop diss tracks are really part of a larger, less defamatory tradition.
As a reminder, this is the podcast version of the newsletter Canāt Get Much Higher. Click here to read the newsletter. It contains charts, graphs, and pictures that will color your listening. Click here to listen on Apple or Spotify. For a playlist of every new song that Iāve recommended, click here. For a playlist of every old song that Iāve recommended, click here. If you want to here songs and their answer songs, check out this playlist that I made on Spotify.
This is a public episode. If youād like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.cantgetmuchhigher.com/subscribe - Laat meer zien