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FYI

Music Biz Headlines, Nov. 18, 2019

Hawksley Workman (pictured) gets heavy, Michael Buble to get waxed, and the cautionary tale of Lil Peep. Others in the headlines include Daniel Caesar, Chris Frolic, Drake, Avril Lavigne, Alex Cuba, Music Canada, payola, Miss Pat, vinyl, Taylor Swift, Harry Nilsson, and Katy Perry.

Music Biz Headlines, Nov. 18, 2019

By Kerry Doole

Happy to get heavy for his great Median Age Wasteland, Hawksley Workman plays by no one's rules but his own

At the end of an interview that’s touched on everything from self-acceptance and substance abuse to childhood poverty and the horrors of the music business, Hawksley Workman admits he’s been surprised at the amount of ground that’s been covered. – Mike Usinger, Georgia Straight


Six degrees of Daniel Caesar 

On the eve of his Scotiabank Centre show, we explore how a kid from Oshawa raised on gospel music became the centre of modern R&B.  – Morgan Mullin, The Coast

Michael Buble becomes latest Canadian star to get waxed at Madame Tussauds

Michael Buble’s suave likeness is headed for the halls of wax infamy alongside British royalty. The Canadian pop crooner took to social media to announce he’s being replicated at Madame Tussauds wax museum in London. – David Friend, CP

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Death, disorder and a DJ: memoir chronicles the rise and fall of raves in Toronto

You never know which of your quiet suburban neighbours might once have been a globetrotting “superstar” DJ. Chris Frolic,  Samojlenko, has been leading a spy-like double life for nearly 15 years since retiring both his giddy Anabolic Frolic alias and the beloved Hullabaloo! rave brand in July of 2005, guarding his secret past so closely that until recently he almost didn’t admit it to himself. – Ben Rayner, Toronto Star

Drake showed up to a small concert in Toronto

It comes as no surprise when Drake makes appearances at major Toronto events such as Lebron James' Lavelle parties or important Raptors games, but it's all the more exciting when he shows up to a much more low-key event in the 6ix.  On Friday night, for example, he attended a 400-person Baby Keem concert at Adelaide Hall. – BlogTO

Avril Lavigne's rise to fame was all thanks to Shania Twain

Avril Lavigne's comeback earlier this year was all thanks to persistence, strength, and belief in herself, but her first ride into the music industry had a lot to do with another famous celeb.  Lavigne's discovery was basically the Canadian music gods at work. – Narcity

Dundas's Records On Wheels marks 40 years in business

Mike Clasen carves out niche in tough music retail business. – Craig Campbell, Dundas Star News

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Alex Cuba sharpens his award-winning songwriting even more on Sublime

Seven albums in, Alex Cuba has upped his game again with new album Sublime. He's back in Regina on Nov. 23 at The Artesian. – Star-Phoenix

Tafelmusik unearths obscure composer and scores

It’s not often that neglected pieces of music make a fresh argument for themselves. But Tafelmusik provides an eloquent case for the works of Venetian Baroque composer Antonio Lotti (1667-1740) in a program that had its first performance on Thursday night at Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre. – John Terauds, The Star

Music Canada announces new Strategic Initiatives portfolio 

This new division includes a portfolio of initiatives that are designed to better support the music ecosystem. The move follows a strategic restructuring of the organization designed to increase the positive and measurable impact that Music Canada can have on the entire Canadian music industry. –  Music Canada press release

Coach StrobCam: Of harmony, inspiration, and staying out of your own way

The Vancouver Island music scene was always a bit different from Vancouver’s. While Vancouver, after 1981, tended to embrace a politicized variant of hardcore, there remained a vibrantly poppy and varied scene on the island, which seemed to spawn a lot of bands that were more about fun than they were about smashing the state. – Allan MacInnis, Georgia Straight

International

Mechanical Licensing Collective reaches funding deal; will receive $33.5m for start-up costs

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The Mechanical Licensing Collective and Digital Licensee Coordinator have reached a deal on funding levels for the organization, which will see the MLC receive $33.5M for start-up costs and an initial annual assessment for 2021 of $28.5M. All costs will be divided up among licensees, with the largest services paying a greater share. – Murray Stassen, MBW

Don’t blame DJs, radio owners are the reason for Payola in the system – GhCALI

– Adu Sarpeah, GH Base

The Lil Peep documentary Everybody’s Everything is a cautionary tale of modern music stardom

At a critical turning point in the new Lil Peep documentary, Everybody’s Everything, the rapper falls into a wall of digital flames. The grainy footage is taken from a LA show on May 10, 2017, when Peep was emerging as emo-rap’s answer to Kurt Cobain. But that night he had taken too much of something, and the line between his depressive, drug-obsessed music and his own reality felt dangerously blurred. – Quinn Moreland, Pitchfork

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‘The music business was my husband’: Miss Pat, the 82-year-old queen of dancehall

There can’t be that many 82-year-old dancehall and reggae svengalis. But Patricia “Miss Pat” Chin, who founded the VP Records shop, distributor and label in New York 40 years ago with her late husband, Vincent “Randy” Chin, (VP stands for Vincent and Pat) is still going strong, 60 years into a remarkable career. –  Joe Muggs, The Guardian

London Calling! Here’s a look inside The Clash’s brilliant new exhibition

A new exhibition celebrating The Clash has arrived in London, and it’s a near-essential pilgrimage for fans of the punk icons across the globe. Marking the fortieth anniversary of the band’s seminal third album, ‘London Calling’, the exhibition is on at the Museum of London and it’s full of items that played a huge role in writing the band’s name into the annals of music history. –NME

This vinyl record is made from recycled ocean plastic

Nick Mulvaney, a Mercury Prize-nominated artist from Cornwall, teamed up with a brewery and a record label to create this: a 10-inch released entitled “In the Anthropocene.” It is made from plastic garbage found along the coastline. Sales of the record proceeds from digital streams will benefit Surfers Against Sewage, a UK-based anti-pollution organization. –  Alan Cross, A Journal of Musical Things

Why Taylor Swift is to blame for latest twist in music rights drama

Taylor Swift has set her fans loose on one of the biggest talent managers in the music industry. Here's why she's actually in the wrong. Swift's petty move - calling on her fans to bombard Braun and Borchetta - will only make matters worse.  – Nathan Jolly, NZ Herald

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How Ludwig Goransson became directors’ secret musical weapon 

The 35-year-old Swede has worked closely with Ryan Coogler and Donald Glover. Up next: the score for the “Star Wars” series “The Mandalorian.” – Tim Greiving, NYT

Rediscovering Harry Nilsson, an artist who defies all category

If there is anyone whose career has benefited more from Netflix’s Russian Doll series than co-creator and star Natasha Lyonne, it has to be Harry Nilsson. – David Berry, Globe and Mail

Katy Perry at OnePlus Music Festival 

Before Katy Perry hit the stage, Dua Lipa, Amit Trivedi, Ritviz, The Local Train and Aswekeepsearching entertained the audience at OnePlus Music Festival. Katy performed in India after seven years. –  Indian Express

Placido Domingo to sing at 100th anniversary Salzburg Festival

Placido Domingo is scheduled to sing two concert performances in Verdi’s “I Vespri Siciliani (The Sicilian Vespers)” next summer as part of the 100th anniversary Salzburg Festival Domingo, who turns 79 in January, has withdrawn from all his U.S. performances since reports detailed accusations against him of sexual harassment or other inappropriate, sexually charged conduct. –Ronald Blum, AP

Minneapolis couple Sally and Chris Mars turn their talents toward rescuing dogs

The photographer/producer and the ex-Replacement drummer up support for strays from the streets. – Kevyn BurgerStar Tribune

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Metro Boomin & Future
Matt Adam

Metro Boomin & Future

Rb Hip Hop

Future & Metro Boomin Are Coming to Toronto and Vancouver on 2024 We Trust You Tour

The rapper-producer combo hits the road this summer.

Future and Metro Boomin are looking to heat up the summer, as the rapper-producer duo will be hitting the road in support of their pair of albums.

Live Nation announced the We Trust You Tour on Tuesday (April 16), and the arena trek is slated to kick off in Kansas City, Mo., at the T-Mobile Center on July 30. Openers and supporting acts have not yet been announced.

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