Phoebe Bridgers Profiled in Fader

Phoebe Bridgers

Phoebe Bridgers is interviewed for the cover of the latest issue of Fader:

When Phoebe was 18, an executive from a record label that was courting her told her that she needed to be “darker” on her Twitter account, because her online humor didn’t match her songs. “But me writing sad songs doesn’t mean I am a sad person,” she says. “It’s all real and true, and I suffer, but I am not going to be moody all the time just for a brand. I just want everyone to know, which is what everyone already knows: everyone is everything all the time.”

Dustin Kensrue Interviewed in Kerrang

Thrice

A new interview with Dustin Kensrue of Thrice from Kerrang can be read on Press Reader:

“I’m ac­tu­ally work­ing on a record with my brother while we’re on tour in the fall. We’ve been work­ing on it at ran­dom times here and there, but it’ll be dif­fer­ent from my solo stuff or Thrice. More indie-pop or elec­tronic.”

A New Spotify Initiative Makes the Big Record Labels Nervous

Ben Sisario, writing at The New York Times:

Over the last year, the 12-year-old company has quietly struck direct licensing deals with a small number of independent artists. The deals give those artists a way onto the streaming platform and a closer relationship to the company — an advantage when pitching music for its influential playlists — while bypassing the major labels altogether.

Although the deals are modest — with advance payments of tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars, according to several people involved — the big record companies see the Spotify initiative as a potential threat: a small step that, down the line, could reshape the music business as it has existed since the days of the Victrola.

This feels inevitable. At some point these digital streaming services will have better algorithms for figuring out what music is not only going to be universally popular but also own the distribution method to help make it so. At that point, what’s the point of a record label?