More stories

  • in

    Ellie Goulding Shoots Down Matt Healy's Suggestion People Don't Buy Her Album

    WENN/Avalon/Lia Toby

    Reacting to The 1975 frontman’s comments about pop artists, the ‘Love Me like You Do’ hitmaker points out why she believes ‘people have been fairly invested’ in her music.
    Feb 1, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Ellie Goulding has responded after The 1975’s Matt Healy suggested in a recent interview that people don’t buy her albums.
    The 30-year-old rocker was asked for his opinion about how streaming affects record sales in an interview with Beat Magazine.
    “The artists whose single streams are in the billions, people don’t buy their albums, necessarily…Ellie Goulding, people will listen to her music at the gym and they will listen to it on playlists,” he mused. “They’ll put the Pop playlist on and it will get out there. When it comes to her putting out a record, which is someone saying, ‘Will you invest in my lifestyle?’ or ‘Do you want to invest in me, as an idea?’…I have a lot of ‘Yes, I want to invest in you as an idea, and less, ‘I’ll pop this on when I’m doing whatever.'”
    But Ellie was less than impressed by Matty’s quote, hitting back on her Instagram Story, “I’ve had 3 multi platinum albums so I feel like people have been fairly invested but ok I’ll let you have it.”
    Elsewhere in his interview, Matty took aim at Drake, insisting he’s more interested in achieving longterm success than having popularity in the moment.
    “I’ve said this before, but the Drakes of the world, they’re professionals at keeping people’s attention for three minutes,” he explained. “They can do that again and again. I’m not that good at that. A single will happen accidentally throughout the myriad of writing songs.”
    “The way that we express ourselves is like longform. I can do it and I do it occasionally, I’d love it if we can make it work where I get a big idea down in three minutes. We’ve always been an albums band.”

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Robert De Niro Has ‘Absolutely No Interest’ in Settling Lawsuit With Ex-Employee

    Related Posts More

  • in

    Aretha Franklin’s Estate Still Unsettled as Executor Resigns

    A year and a half after the death of Aretha Franklin, her tumultuous estate has again been thrust into confusion with the pending resignation of the singer’s niece as executor — a position she had accepted shortly after Franklin’s death with the full support of the singer’s four sons.The niece, Sabrina Owens, wrote a letter to her lawyer on Thursday announcing her “intent to resign,” which was submitted in probate court the same day. In her letter, she described the disputes between family members that have led to recriminations in court papers. The judge overseeing the case is expected to consider Ms. Owens’s petition at a hearing on Tuesday. The departure of Ms. Owens, who works as an administrator at the University of Michigan, comes as a number of major projects for the estate near completion. A biopic starring Jennifer Hudson — whose casting had Franklin’s personal blessing — has been shooting in Atlanta, and a season of the National Geographic channel’s show “Genius,” devoted to Franklin, is scheduled to air in May.When Franklin died at 76 in August 2018, her family believed she had no will. Under Michigan law, that meant her assets would be divided equally among her four grown sons, who unanimously backed Ms. Owens, their cousin, as the estate’s “personal representative,” or executor.But last May, while going through Franklin’s home in Detroit, Ms. Owens discovered three hand-scrawled documents — one of them under the sofa cushions in the living room — that appeared to be wills, although their validity remains unclear. Two of Franklin’s sons, Kecalf Franklin and Ted White Jr., have each asked the judge to name them as the executor.That discovery led to months of legal volleys and tense negotiations among Franklin’s sons and the estate. Those have included accusations of mismanagement by Ms. Owens and discussions over the distribution of Franklin’s personal items — among them the elaborate silver bow hat that Franklin wore to President Barack Obama’s first inauguration, which David J. Bennett, the primary lawyer for the estate, said had been requested by Mr. Obama.Lawyers for Franklin’s sons have in recent weeks been preparing for a possible trial in the fall.In a separate filing, Kecalf Franklin, asked to have Mr. Bennett removed as a lawyer for the estate. Mr. Bennett, who represented Franklin for about 30 years, and also represented Ms. Owens as the lawyer for the executor, did not respond to requests for comment on Friday.In her letter, Ms. Owens described a close relationship with Franklin, particularly at the end of her life — she said she accompanied Franklin to numerous doctor’s appointments and, six months before her aunt’s death, “quietly started drafting the blue print for her home going service,” or memorial, which ended up lasting more than eight hours and featured a long list of performers and speakers, including former President Bill Clinton and the Rev. Jesse Jackson.In her letter, Ms. Owens said she had accepted the role of executor “under two important conditions”: that “no fractured relationships” develop in the family, and that disagreements did not end up in court — “both of which,” she wrote, “have occurred.” More

  • in

    Demi Lovato’s Anguished ‘Anyone,’ and 11 More New Songs

    Every Friday, pop critics for The New York Times weigh in on the week’s most notable new songs and videos. Just want the music? Listen to the Playlist on Spotify here (or find our profile: nytimes). Like what you hear? Let us know at [email protected] and sign up for our Louder newsletter, a once-a-week blast of our pop music coverage.Demi Lovato, ‘Anyone’[embedded content]Demi Lovato is 27, but has lived much longer. A former Disney star, and the one who consistently had the most conflicted relationship to that enterprise, she emerged in her late teenage years as a pop star with a big voice and unexpected edge. But she also struggled with addiction, and in 2018, she suffered an opioid overdose. “Anyone,” which she premiered at the Grammy Awards on Sunday night, is her first single since then — a pensive eruption, a harrowing peal. It moves slowly and determinedly, and not totally steadily, which is the point — recovery is not a straight line. The pain here is palpable, and Lovato wields it like a weapon and a shield. She’s a torch singer for our modern era, which asks too much of those too young, and doesn’t stop until it breaks them. JON CARAMANICADua Lipa, ‘Physical’Little Dragon, ‘Hold On’Let’s have some fun, this beat is sick: There is hope for upbeat pop in 2020. The first song from a Little Dragon album due March 27 is an electro-soul benediction for an undramatic relationship set to a low simmer. The third track from Dua Lipa’s “Future Nostalgia” (out April 3) cleverly threads Olivia Newton-John’s 1981 song “Physical” through Lady Gaga’s album “The Fame.” It’s not as icon-clad as Lipa’s “Don’t Start Now,” but it has enough sizzle to winningly live up to the album’s title. CARYN GANZTorres, ‘Good Scare’Torres — the singer and songwriter Mackenzie Scott — ponders the volatility of romance and the relation between life and art in “Good Scare” from her new album, “Silver Tongue.” Booming percussion and sustained electric guitar tones give her a spacious backdrop as she observes a partner who’s scaring her by “eyeing all the exits”; her reaction is to think about writing a country song. This is not one. JON PARELESSturgill Simpson, ‘A Good Look’Will people learn line-dance moves from an anime? Sturgill Simpson, the insurgent roots-rocker, thinks they might. The underlying structure of “A Good Look” is funky blues-rock, but its sliding synthesizers and nonstop bass line make it feel machine-driven. And while Simpson is singing about all the things that compromise heartfelt songwriting — image, commerce, “you know they don’t like it when you take a stand” — the video clip is all artificial glee. Enjoy the paradox. PARELESMeek Mill featuring Roddy Ricch, ‘Letter to Nipsey’An earthy, uplifting tribute to Nipsey Hussle from Meek Mill with Roddy Ricch, one of Nipsey’s protégés. (They premiered it at the Grammys on Sunday.) Meek is in reflective storytelling mode, with scars still fresh: “When we lost you it really put some pain on me/Got me scared to go outside without that flame on me.” And Roddy sings his way through the pain. Even his melancholy is sweet, a balm for a feeling that’s never anything other than terrible. CARAMANICAKate Tempest, ‘Unholy Elixir’“Our songs were spells and our spells were plain facts,” Kate Tempest declares in “Unholy Elixir.” She’s more a poet than a rapper, but her recordings make the music an equal partner. “Unholy Elixir” feels unstable but obstinate from the start, with deep, wavery, not-quite-in-tune synthesizers and a lurching beat; other synthesizer riffs arrive to turn the track into glowering synth-pop. Tempest confronts excuses for apathy — “don’t bother protesting because nobody listens” — but warns, “You better start sowing or there won’t be a harvest.” PARELESBraids, ‘Young Buck’Insistent, relentless six-beat patterns run nearly nonstop as Raphaelle Standell-Preston, of the Canadian band Braids, sings about lust overcoming rationality. Her “Young Buck,” she knows, is “the blaring example of what I am drawn towards/and should strongly move away from.” Layers of counterpoint accrue as her better judgment fades; it’s math-rock versus irresistible impulses. PARELESJah Wobble featuring Keith Levene, Richard Dudanski, Mark Stewart, Andy Weatherall and Youth, ‘A Very British Coup’[embedded content]Jah Wobble, the original bass player in Public Image Ltd., and other post-punk alumni — Keith Levene from the early Clash and Public Image Ltd., Mark Stewart from the Pop Group, Youth from Killing Joke — greet Brexit with the fractious “A Very British Coup.” It’s a dense, ever-shifting collage, variously hinting at ska-punk, Britpop, fiddle tunes and “Sympathy for the Devil,” with barbed bits of lyrics like “sordid, sentimental, sick souvenirs” and “Even the devil sold his soul.” In 2020, post-punk disgust and cynicism aren’t dated. PARELESDestroyer, ‘It Just Doesn’t Happen’Dan Bejar, who records as Destroyer, has a fey tenor voice perfectly made for easy whimsy. But this is not a playful era, and he knows it. On his new album, “Have We Met,” the idiom he chose is the reverberant, electronics-enhanced, early MTV tone of confidence with hidden misgivings. “It Just Doesn’t Happen” begins, “You’re looking good/in spite of the light,” and that ambivalence persists; it’s a portrait of the artist as winner, loser and lost soul. PARELESJazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra (featuring Wayne Shorter), ‘Contemplation’If Wayne Shorter is something like jazz’s Pablo Picasso — a master composer of the modern era who never abandoned tonality and form, but was constantly finding new ways to turn them upside down — then the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra works as a gilded frame to display his masterpieces. Members of the 15-piece big band, led by the trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, wrote arrangements of compositions from throughout Shorter’s career, and the orchestra performed them with him at Rose Hall in 2015. A glorious moment came on “Contemplation,” one of Shorter’s early works, first recorded with Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers in 1961. Playing it with the orchestra, he takes the tune’s only solo, subtly harking to the hollering style of the early R&B saxophonists he grew up hearing. But his blues phrasing often veers toward abstraction, his notes smearing and disappearing without an alibi — like a nose on a canvas shrewdly misplaced. GIOVANNI RUSSONELLOThe Westerlies, ‘Eli’An arty quartet featuring two trumpeters and two trombonists, mixing ideas from jazz, new classical and Appalachian folk, the Westerlies don’t really have the option of doing a straightforward cover of most songs. That’s doubly true when they’re dealing with Arthur Russell, the experimental-pop cellist and vocalist. His music is about melody and counterpoint, but it’s also about the grain of his voice, and treating sound as humid atmosphere. On this rendition of Russell’s “Eli,” the Westerlies smartly lean into the tune’s blend of harmonic splendor and hollering lament — and they’re mindful of the need for some textural play. One of the trombonists folded tin foil across the bell of his horn, creating a restless sibilance underneath the crystal tones and rough growls of his bandmates. RUSSONELLO More

  • in

    Iranian Rapper Detained in Turkey Faces Deportation

    LONDON — A popular Iranian rapper has been detained in Turkey and faces deportation to Iran after the Turkish police acted on an Interpol red notice to detain him, friends of the rapper and Turkish news media reported.Amir Hussein Maqsoodlo, better known as Amir Tataloo, was detained at an immigration office in the Fatih district of Istanbul, according to a music producer who was with him. He is being held at a detention facility for undocumented immigrants in eastern Istanbul near one of the city’s airports.Mr. Tataloo, 31, has been one of Iran’s most prominent rappers for the past decade. At one point several years ago he had some four million followers on Instagram.But Iranian clerics have long insisted that rap music is the devil’s work, and censure the lifestyle of rappers and the wearing of tattoos. Mr. Tataloo has had numerous run-ins with the authorities over his music; his hard-partying lifestyle; his outspoken attitude; and the tattoos he flaunts.He spent four months in Evin prison in Iran two years ago, and has frequently been detained for short periods over his tattoos, according to the music producer, known as MarG Lotfabadi, who was with him when he was detained in Istanbul.Yet even the strait-laced Iranian government has used Mr. Tataloo’s popularity to record a nationalistic video vaunting Iran’s military effort in the Persian Gulf in 2017. Standing on the Damavand, a frigate in the Caspian Sea, Mr. Tataloo sang that “an armed Persian Gulf” is Iran’s “absolute right.” He has also been allowed to travel abroad to play concerts.Mr. Tataloo has always been hard to pin down, said Nahid Siamdoust, a lecturer at Yale University and author of a book on political music in Iran.In his early career, she said, he was known for making bold political and social statements that were well received by music fans opposed to the government. But in the mid-2010s, he started recording tracks with nationalistic messages, including the one set on the Iranian frigate.During the 2017 presidential race, he even supported Ebrahim Raisi, the most hard-line and conservative candidate, appearing in a photo opportunity with him, tattoos showing.Mr. Tataloo’s millions of fans were never sure whether he genuinely supported the government or was simply pretending to do so to get permits to perform, Ms. Siamdoust said. “He became a real trickster figure,” she said.After Mr. Tataloo left Iran in 2018, he began openly criticizing the government, once insulting a revered religious figure. That switch could be what has angered the government, Ms. Siamdoust said.“He was on the inside and then he made very insulting comments against the whole establishment,” she said. “One of his newest music videos pictures himself in an Iranian court arguing his case for why he’s never going back.”Mr. Lotfabadi said Mr. Tataloo was not political, but rather an artist who spoke freely. He said he was asked at the last minute to play songs on the frigate and went along, only later realizing he had been used.“He has never supported the government,” he said. “They don’t like him because he is speaking very openly about society.”Turkish media reported that Mr. Tataloo was wanted in Iran for drug-related offenses. But Mr. Lotfabadi said the police had not mentioned that when they detained the performer on Tuesday, saying only that a red notice had been issued by Interpol.He said Mr. Tataloo did not espouse violence, and had spoken out against the slaughtering of animals. Many of his tattoos are of animals, Mr. Lotfabadi said, and others were of his mother, and of his heroes Bruce Lee and the Argentine soccer player Diego Maradona.Mr. Tataloo entered Turkey last summer and had applied for temporary residency in Istanbul, as many in the growing community of exiled Iranians have done. He is scheduled to play a concert in East London on Feb. 9, and already has a British visa organized, Mr. Lotfabadi said.Turkey is a popular spot for some Iranian hip-hop musicians, where they organize concerts, usually selling out. But Turkey is not necessarily a hospitable place for rappers.Turkish rappers have come under the scrutiny of the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, which says that some have encouraged drug use with their music. Some Turkish rappers have been detained in jail for weeks at a time.The rapper Ezhel, a rising star of Turkish hip-hop, was jailed last year, accused of promoting marijuana use in his songs. After a month in prison, Ezhel, whose real name is Omer Sercan Ipekcioglu, was acquitted of one charge and sentenced on another.People on Persian-language social media have compared Mr. Tataloo’s case with that of Ruhollah Zam, a critic of Iran’s government who disappeared from Iraq last year and ended up back in Iran.Under pressure to curb immigration to Europe, Turkey runs a strict regime of deporting undocumented immigrants, but many foreigners, including refugees and exiles from neighboring Muslim countries, are granted temporary residence permits.Alex Marshall contributed reporting from London. More