Shazam has now officially surpassed over 100 billion song recognitions since it launched.
Dan Campbell Talks with Anti-Matter
Dan Campbell of The Wonder Years is interviewed in the latest issue of Anti-Matter.
After The Upsides, people were talking to me after shows and they’d ask, “How did you cure your depression?” And I would be like, “I am deeply depressed right now. Right now. Things are bad for me at this exact moment” [laughs]. That’s where that line in “Local Man [Ruins Everything]” comes from: “I’m not a self-help book / I’m just a fucked-up kid.” It’s to say I don’t have the answers. All I can tell you is that you need to try. I can give you some techniques I’ve used, I could tell you that I am not a professional and you could maybe seek some therapy, but I don’t have this magic bullet for it. It’s just going to be about effort and consistency and accepting that there will be low days.
Fake AI Albums Flooding Spotify
Elizabeth Lopatto, writing at The Verge:
To understand how this works, you need a sense of the mechanics. Streaming platforms like Spotify don’t work like your Facebook page — Mena and other artists aren’t logging in and adding albums to their accounts directly. Instead, they go through a distributor that handles licensing, metadata, and royalty payments. Distributors send songs and metadata in bulk to the streaming services. The metadata part is important; it includes things such as the song title and artist name but also other information, such as the songwriter, record label, and so on. This is crucial for artists (and others) to get paid.
But this whole process effectively works on the honor system.
And:
“It was super weird,” says Marcos Mena, Standards’ lead songwriter and guitarist. “I thought, ‘Oh, this is something Spotify will take care of.’” After all, Standards has a verified artist page. But when a fake album was posted on September 26th, it didn’t budge. Mena emailed Spotify to tell them there’d been a mistake. The streamer responded two weeks later, on October 8th: “It looks like the content is mapped correctly to the artist’s page. If you require further assistance, please contact your music provider. Please do not reply to this message.” As of November 8th, the fake Standards album was still right there under the band’s verified, blue-checked name. It was finally removed by November 11th.
Cool, I definitely don’t see this continuing to be a massive problem.
All Time Low Drop Libel Lawsuit; Say Probe Found “Smear Campaign”
Rolling Stone have published an update on the All Time Low legal case. It’s behind a paywall, but some of the reporting has been shared:
According to a new statement from the band’s lawyer, a lengthy probe involving subpoenas and court orders determined that Doe 2 was actually multiple people who “spun an elaborate, fabricated story posing as a fan who incredibly and falsely claimed to have traveled with the band for more than 10 years.”
“There is no such person and no such incidents occurred. Rather, an investigation revealed that Doe 2 was an orchestrated smear campaign by multiple individuals posing as a fake fan. The investigations identified individuals behind the anonymous post who went to great lengths to hide their identities,” lawyer Michael B. Garfinkel of Venable LLP said Friday in the statement to Rolling Stone. “All Time Low has chosen to handle the matter privately and protect the identities of those behind Doe 2, instead of pursuing further litigation at this time.”
Vinyl Test Pressings for Sale
uDiscover Music has posted up a bunch of test pressings for bands like Thrice, Yellowcard, New Found Glory and more.
Nintendo Release New Music App
Nintendo has released a new music app. MacStories has a rundown:
The iPhone-only app is an exclusive perk for Nintendo Online members. Once you sign into your account, you’re greeted with a deep catalog of classic Nintendo music. You’ll find old favorites from the biggest titles, but there are also many, many more obscure songs. A prime example is the Globe: Daytime Forecast song from the Wii Forecast Channel. It turns out it’s an excellent tune for writing.
Lily Allen Earns More Money From Feet Pics That Spotify
Lilly Allen revealed that she makes more money per year posting pictures of her feet on OnlyFans than she does from Spotify streaming royalties:
{T]he 39-year-old singer-songwriter said on X Friday (Oct. 25) that her side business has been more lucrative than the streams she earns on one of the world’s biggest music platforms. “imagine being and artist and having nearly 8 million monthly listeners on spotify but earning more money from having 1000 people subscribe to pictures of your feet,” she wrote.
Allen’s remark came in response to someone who’d negatively commented on a post advertising her OnlyFans account. “Imagine being one of the biggest pop stars/musicians in Europe and then being reduced to this,” the fan wrote, to which the “Smile” singer added: “don’t hate the player, hate the game.”
Tom DeLonge Inducted into High School Hall of Fame
Tom DeLonge is being inducted into the Poway High School hall of fame.
Poway High School’s Titan Hall of Fame will honor four successful graduates on Saturday, including the founder of the pop-punk band Blink-182.
The event is an opportunity to celebrate former Poway High students that are joining 35 past honorees whose plaques are displayed at the Titan Museum and Hall of Fame on the campus. To qualify, contenders should have graduated from Poway High at least 10 years ago and attended the school for at least two years.
Simple Plan Announce Prime Video Documentary
Simple Plan announced over the weekend that they’ll be part of an upcoming Prime Video documentary.
The movie will follow Simple Plan’s formation in Montreal in the late 1990s and the band’s early success, featuring never-before-seen archival footage and fresh interviews with the musicians and their contemporaries.
Forums Are Alive and a Treasure Trove of Information
Chris Pearson, writing at Aftermath, highlights what many of you probably already know: forums are alive and awesome.
When I want information, like the real stuff, I go to forums. Over the years, forums did not really get smaller, so much as the rest of the internet just got bigger. Reddit, Discord and Facebook groups have filled a lot of that space, but there is just certain information that requires the dedication of adults who have specifically signed up to be in one kind of community. This blog is a salute to those forums that are either worth participating in or at least looking at in bewilderment.
Some great picks here. I, obviously, have an affinity for these kinds of smaller yet vibrant communities.
Report: Vinyl Sales Decrease 33%
Billboard’s recent music consumption report reveals a 33% decrease in vinyl sales year over year.
Read More “Report: Vinyl Sales Decrease 33%”UMG Acquires Indie Label Group PIAS
In an announcement on Tuesday (Oct. 15), Kenny Gates said he and his [PIAS] co-founder Michel Lambot were selling their shares to UMG, which acquired a 49% stake in the company in 2022, to “allow us to offer a truly global distribution and services platform to the independent music community.”
Nintendo Unveils Alarm Clock
Nintendo has announced a new alarm clock called Alarmo:
Read More “Nintendo Unveils Alarm Clock”In addition to the motion features, a big part of the device appears to be its immersive sounds, which are pulled from five different Switch games: Breath of the Wild; Pikmin 4; Splatoon 3; Super Mario Odyssey; and Ring Fit Adventure. There are 35 audio “scenes” in total, though you can also connect the alarm to your Nintendo account for more pulled from Animal Crossing: New Horizons and Mario Kart 8, which will be free updates coming later.
New Robert Smith Interview
Robert Smith of The Cure talked with The Times:
“Our songs always had a fear of mortality,” he says. “I don’t feel my age at all but I’m aware of it and when you get older that fear becomes more real. Death becomes more everyday. When you are younger you romanticise death, but then it happens to your family and friends. I am a different person to the last record and I wanted to put that across. It can be trite. People could say, ‘Oh, we’re all going to die — surprise me!’ But I try to find some emotional connection to that idea.”
Howard Benson Talks Early My Chemical Romance
Howard Benson talked with Grammy.com about working on My Chemical Romance’s Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge:
Nobody wanted to produce them because their record before mine was a thrash record. My manager said to me, “You need to meet these guys. Something is going on with them.” [When] I met them, [they had] no songs [to play for me]. But I looked the singer [Gerard Way] in the eye and I’d done enough at that point in my life where I had this feeling about this kid. He was going to be a star.
I asked him, “Are you worried about the 3,000 fans you have? Or do you want to have 300,000,000 fans? Which kind of record are we going to make?” He goes, “F— the 3,000 fans.” I was like, “Okay, we can do business.”
Their A&R guy Craig Aaronson called me up one night and goes, “At the end of one of these cassettes is a lyric that goes, ‘I’m not okay.'” I remember going to rehearsal and saying, “We have to write a song around that.” [Gerard] wrote the song literally overnight, came back the next day with a half-written song. From then on, the record took shape.