95 episodes

A podcast on music and capitalism. Dropped bi-weekly.

Money 4 Nothing Money 4 Nothing

    • Music

A podcast on music and capitalism. Dropped bi-weekly.

    Karaoke and Personal Pop

    Karaoke and Personal Pop

    This past March, Shigeichi Negishi passed away at 100. While you might not know his name, you’ve certainly enjoyed the musical world he helped create. Negishi has long been credited as the inventor of Karaoke—pulling together consumer electronics, post-work drinking culture, and a love of pop tunes into an era-defining mix. A deeper dive, however, makes the story more complex (and honestly more interesting). Negishi was actually just one of a handful of simultaneous inventors. Far from a distinct commercial product, Karaoke might be better understood as the necessary, albeit somewhat-off-key, shadow of the modern music business.
    To celebrate this legacy, Saxon and Sam dig into one of the most fascinating elements of our contemporary musical…practice? Industry? Culture? Karaoke has a way of blurring all those the lines. And so, in addition to the history, we explore the big questions: What does it mean to imagine yourself a star? Why do we want to perform Katy Perry songs in front of friends and strangers? How has Karaoke’s meaning in American culture changed over time? Where does all this fit into the history of folk music—and what does it mean for our social-media future? A first pass, and definitely not a final say. Just hoolllddd onttooo that feeeellinnnnn....
     
    Subscribe to our Newsletter

    • 59 min
    Millennials Nostalgia Tour

    Millennials Nostalgia Tour

    Dear Listener, Have you found yourself coming down with more consistent cases of nostalgia lately? Do you consider yourself a millennial? Well, if so, you might be soon buying a pricey concert ticket to one of the hottest trends in live music: The 20 year Anniversary Album Tour. Yes, your favorite album of 2004 (or perhaps 2014) can soon be heard live, in its entirety, front to back at a concert venue near you. But why is this becoming such a trend? Is it the pre-packaged social media ready presentation? Or that Millennials got deeper pockets now and will shell out big bucks on tickets (and a babysitter) to hear their favorite album played live? Or is it just Hollywood risk-aversion bleeding into the touring industry? As a jumping-off point, Saxon and Sam discuss an excellent recent article on Passion of the Weiss wondering on this very subject and then suss out whether Earl Sweatshirt really is touring ...too...much? 
     
    Read: We Outside: Congrats, Your Favorite Album is Old Enough to Go on Tour by Pravash Trewn
     
    Subscribe to our Newsletter!
     
     
     

    • 31 min
    Keep on Streamin’ in the Free World

    Keep on Streamin’ in the Free World

    This week, we take a roundabout tour of the platform power that drives our musical landscape. First up is Neil Young, whose one-man stand against Spotify for its support of Joe Rogan just ended in….well…total defeat. We explore why Ol' Neil was unable to escape the musical monopsony that defines our streaming age (with a few detours into the terrors of lo-fidelity audio and the dream that was Pono). Then, we look at what Universal Music has been up to, more specifically, by examining a set of recently announced partnerships with Spotify (they have videos now?) and K-Pop powerhouse Hybe (everyone, quick, into the WeVerse!) If platforms were already inescapable, what does it mean when the major labels start doubling down on them? Come for the secret, dollar-drenched sound of Scooter Braun and Taylor Swift burying the hatchet. Stay for how we LOST THE UNIVERSE.
    Subscribe to our newsletter!
    Music: Chromatics - Fade to Black

    • 1 hr 2 min
    A Living Wage and a Tik Tok Ban: Could…Congress Transform Music?

    A Living Wage and a Tik Tok Ban: Could…Congress Transform Music?

    Much of the time, it feels like almost nothing could shake up the streaming status-quo. This isn’t one of those times. Over the past week, Congressperson Rashida Tlaib (with support from the Union of Musicians and Allied Workers) released the Living Wage for Musicians Act—a fascinating piece of legislation that (if passed) would completely transform the contemporary music industry. Like…really REALLY change things, in ways both obvious and subtle.
    While it’s hard to see an immediate path towards it being signed into law, the act demonstrates a genuine hunger for large-scale structural change—and helps to lay out an imaginative framework for what that could look like. We dig into the details, but also explore what this newfound sense of possibilities might mean for the future—a question that also connects to current, racially-coded attempts to ban music-biz-hotbed Tik Tok. Connecting such seemingly disparate events, we wonder what this emergent energy means, and where it could go next. Come for the 12-Million Stream Cap—stay for the beautiful dream of major label transparency.
     
    Subscribe to our newsletter!
    Music: La Sécurité - "K9 Freaks Mix (Freak Heat Waves Remix)"
     

    • 1 hr 11 min
    Imagine Dragons: The Most Popular Band of the Millennium?

    Imagine Dragons: The Most Popular Band of the Millennium?

    Is rock dead? Not according to Imagine Dragons. You know the band with 10 different billion-streamed songs? The one that’s sold 46 million records? You’ve definitely heard of them, but....have you ever really HEARD them? Probably not. And that’s because despite being the most successful band of the past 25 years, Imagine Dragons has received next to no critical attention. Not even a proper 0.6 take-down, let alone a serious examination. 
    And that’s honestly a mistake. Because the group has a tremendous amount to tell us—about our changing musical tastes, about the psychic landscape of modern America, and about the trajectory of rock in a post-genre future. Come for Sam listening to the entirety of the ID catalog for the sake of science. Stay for a new perspective on the merits—and singular focus—of an act that’s defined an era of angst.
     
    Subscribe to our newsletter!
    Follow us on Twitter!

    • 1 hr 9 min
    Universal VS. TikTok: The Showdown No One Should Have Wanted

    Universal VS. TikTok: The Showdown No One Should Have Wanted

    This past week, negotiations broke down between Universal Music—the biggest and most powerful of the three major labels—and Tik Tok, the world’s most viral social media platform. The result: Universal’s music has been pulled—almost entirely—from the mimetic app. It’s a show of raw muscle the likes of which we haven’t seen for years, and the implications are fascinating. But how did it come to this? Why are two of the biggest forces in the music business in a battle that neither should have wanted?
    To better understand the story, we dig into the payout structures that define the conflict, the inter-sectoral strategies that shaped it, and the negotiations that led to everything falling apart. Once again, it’s a fight about the future of sound—and which type of business is going to own it. Come for everyone talking about AI without anyone talking about AI. Stay for a KILLER data-science research project.
     
    Subscribe to our newsletter!
    Follow us on Twitter!

    • 29 min

Top Podcasts In Music

Sidetracked with Annie and Nick
BBC Sounds
A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs
Andrew Hickey
60 Songs That Explain the '90s
The Ringer
The Story of Classical
Apple Music
NO ENCORE
NO ENCORE
Dissect
The Ringer

You Might Also Like

Tech Won't Save Us
Paris Marx
Know Your Enemy
Matthew Sitman
This Machine Kills
This Machine Kills
How Long Gone
Chris Black & Jason Stewart / Talkhouse
Talkhouse Podcast
Talkhouse
Jacobin Radio
Jacobin