In the last update to in Linux, Pithos (Pandora's little sister for Linux) listeners now have access to Pandora's Thumbprint Radio. The feature streaming option basically plays the collection of music that listeners have "like" or booked marked over the years of listening to Pandora Radio. So your stream your thumbprint is built around the music you listen to. So if you haven't given Pandora a spin lately, check it out. If you access Pandora via Linux (Pithos)... you never hear commercials.
Rumors have it Spotify is in talks to purchase SoundCloud. I hope these rumors aren't true.
The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has bought a suit against, YouTube-mp3.org. The labels claim that "tens, or even hundreds, of millions of tracks are illegally copied and distributed by stream-ripping services each month" and say that YouTube-mp3.org has more than 60 million unique monthly users. They are seeking $150,000 per every alleged act of piracy and asking the court to stop web hosts and advertisers from facilitating access to the site.
Good luck with this... there are up-teem other streaming ripping services to move too.
Judge Finds Sony-Spotify Agreement to Be Ambiguous in Big Royalties Lawsuit
Ethan Miller/Getty Images for DCP
19 Recordings alleges that "American Idol" stars have been cheated of streaming revenue.
When listeners hear "Since U Been Gone" by Kelly Clarkson on Spotify, they might not care too greatly how the exploitation of this song is characterized in contracts. But a judge's interpretation could upend the record industry as streaming platforms continue to grab greater market share.
On Wednesday, New York federal judge Ronnie Abrams delivered a new opinion in an important lawsuit. She finds that many of the licensing agreements that Sony Music has struck with streaming outlets like Spotify, Rhapsody and Last.FM are ambiguous as to how they describe streamed music. The result is that the case will continue — perhaps eventually to trial — and heretofore confidential contracts will be dissected at length.
American Idol-affiliated 19 Recordings is the plaintiff, contending that artists such as Clarkson, Clay Aiken and Carrie Underwood have been cheated on royalties from streaming. Specifically, 19 grants Sony Music the exclusive right to distribute and otherwise exploit recordings in return for royalties. In turn, Sony licenses the works to streaming outlets. If streams are treated as "broadcasts" or "transmissions," under the 19-Sony deal, that means the artists get a 50 percent royalty share. If on the other hand, streams are treated as "sales" or "distributions," then a lower record royalty rate — typically about 15 percent — applies.
The difference is humongous, and Idol artists are hardly the only ones with this arrangement. If 19 Recordings is correct that Sony has been mischaracterizing the distribution of music on services like Spotify as "distributions" rather than "broadcasts," there will likely be class actions brought on behalf of other artists against the record majors.
Back in March 2015, Judge Abrams ruled that in order to figure out whether streams were "distributions" or "broadcasts," the parties would need to look at the third-party agreements between Sony and streaming outlets. How did those classify streaming?
Well, after Sony threw up a huge fight over producing its contracts in unredacted form, the answer is hardly clear.
"Take, for example, Sony's July 1, 2013 Digital Audio Distribution Agreement with Spotify Global," writes Abrams. "19 argues that 'the exploitation' is exclusively characterized as a transmission because 'Stream' is explicitly defined as 'each instance in which any portion of a recording is delivered by means of digital audio transmission which digital audio transmission is substantially contemporaneous with the performance of the recording embodied therein...' The Court agrees with 19 that, under this definition, 'Stream' is unequivocally characterized as a 'transmission.'"
Of course, there's a "but" coming.
She adds, "But what complicates the analysis is the number of instances in which the word 'distribution' also appears in the contract, which raises the question whether those too constitute descriptions or characterizations."
The confused judge has a lot of questions.
"Does the fact that Spotify is described as a 'distribution service' amount to a characterization of 'the exploitation'?" she asks. "Should one take into account where in the contract the purported description or characterization takes place? In other words, where the key words appear in provisions where one would not expect such a description/characterization — like provisions covering the date the streaming service is authorized to release music, assumption of costs, financial audits, the conversion of foreign proceeds, and the currency for payments of service fees in Brazil — does the location bear on whether it amounts to a description or characterization?"
The judge finds that both sides make plausible arguments, meaning the case is now set to move to a summary judgment phase where, perhaps, there will not only be discussion of contracts but also extrinsic evidence pertaining to what Sony and third-party streaming outfits meant when they negotiated the deals.
At the moment, Abrams finds that most of the contracts are ambiguous, but not all. She's granted judgment in favor of Sony with respect to AOL's streaming while granting 19 judgment with respect to Apple's streaming. The case will continue to be a closely watched battle in the music industry.
Google Unveils Daydream View Virtual Reality Headset
10:36 AM PDT 10/4/2016 by Natalie Jarvey
Courtesy of Google
The headset, which comes in three colors, will go on sale in November for $79.
Google is making a big virtual reality push with the the Tuesday morning unveiling of its Daydream View VR headset.
The device, which will go on sale in November for $79, will work with Android phones that are equipped with the Daydream software. It comes in three colors — dark grey, light grey and red — and is made out of a soft, breathable fabric. Each device also comes with a controller that allows for interactivity within the virtual reality worlds.
Google announced its Daydream VR platform at its I/O developers conference in May. When the headsets ship in November, customers will be able to tap into a number of Google apps designed for VR. YouTube, for example, will offer a library of videos that play on a virtual big screen from BuzzFeed, CollegeHumor, PrankvsPrank and others. Google Street View will offer tours of historic places, Google Play Movies will make videos and TV shows available to watch in a VR theater and Google Photos will display 360-degree photos.
Daydream will also offer content from partners that include The New York Times, Wall Street Journal and J.K. Rowling's Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them. There will also be live sports, access to VR version of Netflix, Hulu and HBO, and games.
Google waded into virtual reality in 2014 with the launch of Cardboard, a design for smartphone-enabled headsets that can be made and distributed for a low price.
Daydream View will be available for preorder on Oct. 20 at Verizon and the Google Store.
Robert Clivillés, Freedom Williams, Zelma Davis, David Cole
In 1991, there were few musical groups hotter than C&C Music Factory. Launched into the stratosphere on the power of their breakout single "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)," the New York-based act solidified their white-hot status when they won the 1991 Billboard Award for Best New Pop Artist, beating out Boyz II Men, Color Me Badd, EMF and others. After performing an elaborately choreographed medley of their hits, representatives from the group—co-founders Robert Clivillés and David Cole and vocalists Zelma Davis and Freedom Williams—assembled at the podium to accept their award.
Williams, who rapped the two verses on "Everybody Dance Now, appeared longhaired and shirtless onstage. His ripped abs glistened with sweat. He closed out the group's acceptance speech by pointing to himself and declaring, "This ain't the C&C Music Factory." He then pointed to the screaming audience. "That is the C&C Music Factory!"
It was one of the last appearances C&C Music Factory would ever make together.
26 years after its release, everyone knows "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)." The song, which spent more than six months on the Billboard Hot 100 chart after being released in October 1990, helped solidify the post-disco, dance-pop era of the early 90s, joining a barrage of club-oriented Top Forty hits by artists like La Bouche, Haddaway, Technotronic and Black Box.
With its instantly recognizable staccato guitar riff and soulful, core-rattling refrain—"Everybody dance now!," scream-sung by 90s vocalist Martha Wash—the song has become something of a pop music cliché. Today, it's still a go-to anthem for basketball games and wedding parties, and has soundtracked countless movies and TV shows over the years, including Space Jam, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, The Simpsons, and The Office; it even appeared on a 2013 compilation of dance music released by Ellen DeGeneres, and in a 2016 Applebee's commercial.
But the story of the song's rise to prominence—along with that of the group that made it—is a far less straightforward affair. Since the late-90s, "Everybody Dance Now" and the name "C&C Music Factory" have been the subject of a bitter battle between the group's co-founder, Clivillés, and the now 50-year-old Williams, who left the group shortly after C&C Music Factory's Billboard Awards appearance to pursue a solo career.
Though he departed from the group in 1992, Williams legally trademarked the C&C Music Factory name in 2005. According to Clivillés, Williams has been performing shows under the C&C Music Factory moniker since the 90s, including recent shows in United States, Australia, and Brazil. Now, Clivillés is saying that Williams is profiting unfairly by positioning himself as the group's main (or only) member—when he was merely hired on contract as an ensemble player.
On July 2, 2016, Clivillés posted a 1,382-word, public open letter on his own Facebook page addressed to Williams, threatening legal action to get the C&C Music Factory name back. In the letter, Clivillés indicates that he's prepared to take Williams to court and asks, "Why must you profit/steal and distort from our hard worked & earned history? [sic]" The post racked up over a thousand likes and hundreds of shares, including hundreds of comments from friends and fans echoing Clivillés' outrage. But Clivillés told THUMP that Williams' responded by simply blocking him on Facebook. Williams has also repeatedly declined requests from THUMP to comment on this story, responding over Facebook message on August 29, "I'm way to [sic] busy at the moment to be bothered with that aspect of my business."
This is not the first C&C Music Factory-related controversy over how its members are credited. In 1991, Martha Wash, who sang the huge vocal hook in "Everybody Dance Now," sued the group after another C&C Music Factory vocalist, Zelma Davis, lip-synced her parts in the song's music video. The case was settled out of court, with Sony requesting that MTV add a disclaimer to the video crediting Wash for vocals and Davis for "visualization." According to Rolling Stone, Wash's fight for proper credit set an important precedent for artists' rights in intellectual property law; following her case, federal legislation was created to mandate vocal credits on all albums and music videos. Had this legislation been in place when Wash recorded her vocals for "Everybody Dance Now" she likely would have been properly credited in the video for her contribution to the song.
Clivillés and David Cole met in the mid 80s, when Clivillés was DJing at New York City club Better Days. Before they had their big break with "Everybody Dance Now," they worked behind-the-scenes, co-writing and producing songs for artists like Chaka Khan and Grace Jones, co-producing remixes, and acting as managers for various groups. Together, they wrote and produced four songs on Mariah Carey's 1991 album Emotions, including the smash hit title track.
According to Clivillés, who spoke to THUMP on the phone from his home in New York this past August, he originally wrote "Everybody Dance Now" for Trilogy, a New York-based freestyle act he and Cole also managed. After Trilogy passed on it, Clivillés and Cole decided to use the track to launch their own collaborative project, C&C Music Factory. Clivillés said that when he presented the instrumental version of the track with Wash's vocals to Sony/Columbia execs Tommy Mottola and Donnie Ienner in 1990, they "immediately" signed the duo to a five-album deal. "Everybody Dance Now" would be the lead single from their 1990 debut LP, Gonna Make You Sweat.
Clivillés said he and Cole were "C&C," while the vocalists they recruited to sing on their productions were their "Factory." "It was a group created to feature new, unknown acts, or acts that maybe had a few hit records but were not known worldwide," Clivillés explained. Over the years, C&C Music Factory included, Clivillés said, more than a dozen singers, including Martha Wash, Deborah Cooper, Zelma Davis, members of Trilogy, and, of course, Freedom Williams.
Born in Brooklyn as Frederick Williams, Freedom Williams met Cole and Clivillés in 1989 at New York's Quad Recording Studios, where the pair were working on various tracks and remixes. According to Clivillés, Williams' had a job sweeping the hallways and cleaning the bathrooms at the studio, and was also going to school to become an audio engineer. Clivillés said he helped get Williams promoted to an engineering assistant position at Quad. It was during this time that he and David Cole also heard Williams rap for the first time.
Then in his mid-20s, Williams had a rich, baritone timbre and a rhythmic flow that was at once deadpan and bombastic. "I thought he had a good, deep voice for the mic," said Clivillés, who recruited Williams to rap on "Everybody Dance Now." Williams has a writing credit on the song; according to Trilogy member Duran Ramos, Clivillés wrote the first two lines of the rap—"Here is the dome/back with the bass"—and Williams wrote the rest of the two rap verses. (According to Discogs, Williams also has writing credits on four other tracks from Gonna Make You Sweat. Wash was listed as a backup singer on the album, though not the lead singer). Clivillés claimed that's as far as Williams' contributions went. "He had nothing to do with the photo or video sessions, the creation of the music, or the rest of the songs in the [C&C Music Factory] catalog," Clivillés said.
According to Clivillés, Williams signed a contract to become one of C&C Music Factory's featured artists. Under the terms of the contract, which was essentially an open-ended development deal, Cole and Clivillés would provide Williams with opportunities to record and perform with C&C Music Factory as well as other groups that Cole and Clivillés managed, like the female dance-pop trio Seduction. Speaking with THUMP, Clivillés stressed that the agreement framed Williams as one of C&C Music Factory's many featured artists, but not as a founder or owner of the group, a designation reserved exclusively for himself and Cole.
Ramos, who had a featured artist contract similar to Williams', explained in a phone call with THUMP that each person recruited to be a featured artist with C&C Music Factory had a similar contract. "Pretty much everyone had the exact same agreement," he said. "We were featured artists... it was like getting hired for a part."
"C&C Music Factory was always clearly David Cole and Robert Clivillés," said Zelma Davis, who was one of C&C Music Factory's lead vocalists. "Freedom and I were told that we were featured members of the group, not owners of the band."
"Everybody Dance Now" skyrocketed the members of C&C Music Factory to fame, with the song getting major play on MTV and earning the group a number of accolades, including the aforementioned Billboard Award. Gonna Make You Sweat also generated a number of other hits, most notably "Here We Go (Let's Rock & Roll) and "Things That Make You Go Hmmmm..." In February of 1992, Clivillés, Cole, Williams and Davis appeared with actress Susan Dey in a commercial promoting their appearance as the musical guest on Saturday Night Live.
But shortly after this performance, Williams was gone. According to Clivillés, in 1992, Williams asked C&C to release him from their contract together so he could launch his own career. "We featured him on C&C Music Factory to establish him as an artist, so he could then take it solo," Clivillés said. "The group blew up so fast that by the third single, he was like, 'Yo, I'm good. I'm out.'" Clivillés and Cole let him go, recording their sophomore LP, Anything Goes!, without him. The album generated a few successful singles, although nothing would match the massive success of "Gonna Make You Sweat." Then, in 1995, David Cole passed away from spinal meningitis at the age of 32. After releasing a final album, 1995's C+C Music Factory, Clivillés dissolved the group.
Joey Kid, Zelma Davis, Angel DeLeon, Duran Ramos
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Williams' 1993 solo album, Freedom, had stalled on the charts, with its lead single—the synthesizer-laden "Voice of Freedom"—peaking at number 74 on the Billboard Hot 100. It remains his only solo album to date. Williams also tried acting, performing in a 1996 episode of the Showtime erotic drama The Red Shoe Diaries before eventually vanishing into obscurity. In a 2014 video interview, he talks about making income as a construction worker.
But in the late 90s, Clivillés received an odd piece of news from his friends: Freedom Williams, he was told, was performing solo shows across the United States under the C&C Music Factory name, even though he had left the group years ago. Clivillés said he asked Williams to instead bill himself as "Freedom Williams formerly of C&C Music Factory" and that for a while, Williams did so. Clivillés said that it wasn't long, however, before he started seeing William playing shows in which he presented himself as a member of C&C Music Factory. Then, without notifying Clivillés, Williams legally trademarked "C&C Music Factory" under his birth name Frederick Williams in 2005. In 2015, he trademarked "C&C Music Factory" under his company Freedom Williams Entertainment LLC.
According to Colorado-based intellectual property lawyer Shirin Chahal, Williams was able to claim C&C Music Factory's trademark rights because he had toured with the name in the late 90s and early 2000s. "If Williams was touring nationally and his music under the C&C Music Factory name was getting national-wide play—radio, clubs, wherever—he would have a great position that he established common law trademark rights," Chahal explains.
Williams has played at least eleven C&C Music Factory-related shows in 2016. On his most recent tour flyers, Williams sometimes positions himself as "Freedom Williams of C+C Music Factory" and "C+C Music Factory Feat: Freedom Williams." Another says "Freedom Williams, the original frontman, face and voice of C&C Music Factory"—with "the original frontman, face and voice" in almost comically tiny font. A few just say "C+C Music Factory." Williams often appears at clubs and casinos alongside other 90s nostalgia acts like Snap!, Corona, and Tone Loc, performing shows that are energetic, if somewhat disjointed. When he performs "Everybody Dance Now," he typically has a female performer singing over Wash's hook. Clivillés estimates that Williams makes between five and ten thousand dollars per booking.
"[Williams] is profiting from the name," says Clivillés, who notes that the name "C&C Music Factory" was never trademarked in the 90s. "He's intentionally telling people that he's the actual creator of the group... It's time that something is done about it."
Former C&C Music Factory-featured artist Ramos believes Williams' actions are motivated by issues deeper than money. According to Ramos, Williams and Clivillés often clashed back in the 90s, with Clivillés frequently reminding Williams that he wasn't anything without C&C.
"Freedom has strong disdain for Robert," said Ramos, who claimed he remains friendly with both sides. "He would tell you that Robert is controlling, manipulative—that Robert thinks he's the man and didn't see how everyone else made it happen, which I would agree with. A lot of the time, Robert would forget The Factory. It was like, 'Dude, we're the Factory. How does the Factory run without any workers?"
Clivillés remembers the situation differently. "The only disagreement I ever had with Freedom was that he wasn't humble when the success came to him," he said. "He immediately thought he was the man, and that cost him his career overnight."
Ramos believes Williams is now attempting to get back at Clivillés, and lining his pockets in the process. "It's revenge," Ramos said. "Absolutely."
Still, Ramos thinks Clivillés is ultimately in the right. "By taking the name of C&C Music Factory," Ramos said, "[Williams] is taking bread from the table of people that were a part of it, like Trilogy, Zelma, Deborah Cooper and so many others. He's performing songs like 'Do You Wanna Get Funky?,' which he had nothing to do with. That was a song I wrote, and he's doing my rap."
"I think it's very arrogant, what Freedom is doing," Ramos concluded. "He'll say Robert is arrogant, but what he's doing [by performing as C&C Music Factory] is the same way."
In June of this year, Williams performed "Everybody Dance Now" on longstanding Brazilian variety program Domingão do Faustão. In Portuguese, the show's host asks Williams about the history of the song. Williams replies that he wrote the song for a group he produced for back in the day—when it was actually Clivillés who wrote and produced the instrumental track and laid down Wash's vocals for Trilogy—and that he was homeless at the time of the song's creation. "He's really talking about me, which is weird," said Ramos, who himself was intermittently homeless between 1987 and 1990. "You've gotta be a little nuts to position yourself that way."
Though Williams declined to comment for this piece, he did make what appeared to be a public acknowledgement of the accusations leveled at him on Instagram, posting an apparent response shortly after Clivillés' open letter. Amongst selfies, travel photos, concert videos, and event flyers promoting C&C Music Factory shows, Williams shared a text image stating, "One of the most annoying things you could do is get into an argument on social media with a person who makes no sense and watch people agree with them."
While Clivillés said that he and Williams are not in contact, a few months ago, Ramos claimed he attempted to broker peace between them in conjunction with a television show about C&C Music Factory he was planning to pitch to VH1. (Ramos said the show didn't pan out.) Meanwhile, Clivillés said he has requested all of the original C&C Music Factory contracts from Sony and is interviewing potential lawyers as he gets organized to sue. According to Chahal, his legal options for cancelling the trademark are narrow: because the original trademark was issued more than five years ago, Clivillés will likely have to sue for trademark infringement.
Beyond his Instagram posts and performances, Williams remains silent. He doesn't have any current tour dates on the calendar as C&C Music Factory, but his most recent performance under that name happened on September 17, in Fresno, California.
Despite the taste of worldwide fame C&C Music Factory experienced two and a half decades ago, it seems a judge will now decide who's free to get onstage and relive these past glories. Regardless of the legal outcome, this situation serves as a reminder that behind many of the enduring tracks in the pop culture canon, there are often small armies of artists and producers fighting over credit and money. Spotlights fade—often sooner than musicians hope—and everyone is left scrambling for a piece of the legacy.
You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
Rush Won’t Go Forward Without All Three Current Members By Nick DeRiso | November 1, 2016 | Ultimate Classic Rock
Rush were riddled with physical issues over the course of their R40 tour, as the new documentary Time Stand Still makes clear. But don’t expect the band to ever take the road without drummer Neil Peart or guitarist Alex Lifeson, who have dealt with (respectively) chronic tendinitis and arthritis.
“We always said that if the three of us aren’t on board, we don’t do a thing,” frontman Geddy Lee says in Time Stand Still (via Rolling Stone). “So, one guy doesn’t want to do that thing anymore that I love to do. That hurts. But there’s nothing I can do about it and that’s part of the agreement.”
Time Stand Still chronicles a 35-date North American tour that marked Rush’s 40th anniversary. Band members have said that it will be their last major jaunt. The documentary makes clear just why, as Peart ends up dealing with a debilitating foot problem in addition to his tendinitis.
The drummer, who said he wanted to be closer to home for his new daughter, admits to flying into a rage over the prospect of returning the stage in the first place. “I felt trapped,” says Peart, who replaced John Rutsey in 1974. “I was stomping around and cursing. But by the next day it was like, ‘It is what it is. Deal with it!'”
A fan of traveling from show to show on his motorcycle, Peart ended up developing a fungus after riding through torrential storms with wet boots. That then developed into eczema psoriasis and a series of bacterial infections. Suddenly, walking – much less playing drums for hours on end – became unbearable. But Peart soldiered on, even it meant playing on “two raw stumps,” as he described them. “He’s such a stoic guy,” Lifeson says. “I can’t believe he played through that.”
When the tour drew to a close on Aug. 1, 2015, at the L.A. Forum, an emotional Peart could be found – in a very rare moment – at the front of the stage, joining Lee and Lifeson in a final bow. “I’ve never crossed what I call the back-line meridian,” Peart says. “I stay behind my drums and cymbals for 40 years and never go out front, never. It’s not my territory. Eventually, I talked myself into it. … It was totally the right thing to do.”
Time Stand Still will be presented in a one-night-only Fathom Events screening nationwide on Thursday.
You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
Mariah Carey is coming to VH1 to perform for the network's holiday special, VH1 Divas Holiday: Unsilent Night.
"I'm thrilled VH1 asked me to return to the Divas stage this year. The Divas special offers offers a wonderful opportunity to perform for my fans over the holidays, which is my favorite and most festive time of year," she said in a statement.
This will be her third VH1 Divas appearance. Her first occurred in 1998 in a duet with fellow music legend Aretha Franklin singing "Chain of Fools."
Other special guests for the show will be announced at a later date. VH1 Divas Holiday: Unsilent Night will be taped on December 2 at the Kings Theater in Brooklyn, New York and will air on December 5 at 9 p.m. ET on VH1.
A blockbuster deal this week by Prince’s estate to sell the late icon’s songwriting rights to Universal Music Publishing Group has created industry friction as parties desperately vie for pieces of the Prince pie.
The Universal deal means that Prince’s songs could become more widely available on streaming services after Prince in life only allowed his music to stream through Jay Z’s Tidal service.
(Prince’s estate — managed by industry pros L. Londell McMillan and Charles Koppelman, as assigned by bank Bremer Trust — still retains ownership of the songs, and there’s expectation of another major bidding war for recorded music rights to Prince’s catalog.)
But before the Universal deal was reached on Wednesday, Tidal — which exclusively put out Prince’s final albums “Hit n Run Phase One” and “Hit n Run Phase Two” — was already lobbying a Minnesota court as a creditor in the Prince estate case, claiming that Prince granted Tidal exclusive rights to his vast catalog of master recordings. In 2015, Prince pulled all his music from rival apps such as Spotify, leaving his tunes only on Tidal, a boon to the service when Prince passed. But the terms of the deal were unclear.
Sources tell us that on Oct. 21, Tidal told probate court Judge Kevin Eide, via a legal letter, that it will seek injunctive relief if any deals by Prince’s estate violate its agreement with him, which Tidal asserts included a “Hit n Run” remix album, another new album and rights to his catalog.
Another source close to the situation told us that’s wishful thinking — that Tidal only had a one-year deal to stream Prince’s music, and it’s not entitled to rights going forward.
Making matters even more complicated, multiple sources said Prince’s siblings — who are also interested in controlling rights to his music — are not fans of McMillan.
But others close to the case tell us McMillan is not going anywhere and remains in charge with Koppelman to decide the fate of the tunes.
Reps for Bremer Trust, Prince’s sister Tyka Nelson and Tidal did not get back to us.
Paul McCartney Co-Signs 'Black Beatles' With Mannequin Challenge (Nov. 10, 2016)
You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
Neil Young Is Working With Rapper D.R.A.M. By Nick DeRiso November 16, 2016 Ultimate Classic Rock
Neil Young has been collaborating with the rapper D.R.A.M., though it’s still unclear when they might release the new music. Check out the above video, where Young is seen hanging out during D.R.A.M.’s sessions at Rick Rubin‘s Shangri-La Studios.
“I worked on one of his records; he worked on one of my records,” D.R.A.M. confirmed in a talk with Brooklyn Magazine. “It was really, really cool, man. I mean, a guy from the old-school, like a real Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, just embracing my take on music, my sound. And the fact that I’m able to collaborate with someone so legendary, from a whole ‘nother side of the spectrum, it’s monumental. It’s one of those real defining moments, like, ‘You’re really out here.'” (D.R.A.M. stands for “Does. Real. Ass. Music”; his real name is Shelley Marshaun Massenburg-Smith.)
Sessions with Young were first mentioned back in February on Twitter and Instagram, but the rapper’s full-length debut – titled Big Baby D.R.A.M. – arrived in October without any mention of the former Buffalo Springfield and Crosby Stills Nash & Young member. Young’s next studio album, titled Peace Trail, was also recorded at Shangri-La.
In the above clip, both artists seem thrilled with their collaboration. “We’re working with Neil Young and s—,” D.R.A.M. enthuses. Later, Young admits that it was “definitely a happening for me.” The Social Experiment, Chance the Rapper‘s backing band, are also seen in the video, which was filmed inside an old Bob Dylan tour bus on the Shangri-La property that Rubin has converted into additional studio space.
You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton