Approximately 40,000 masks will go to Tennessee, 50,000 to Rikers Island in New York, and 5,000 to Parchman in Mississippi. Additionally, 2,500 masks were sent to Rikers Island's medical facility, CBS reports. The rappers' donation will help protect staff and inmates from the spread of COVID-19, which has increased significantly in correctional facilities because prisoners live in crowded quarters and are unable to practice social distancing. Last week, rapper Tekashi 6ix9ine - who suffers from chronic asthma, putting him at increased risk for catching the virus - was released from jail and will serve the remaining four months of his sentence under home confinement.

Pantera is promoting social distancing in the shadow of coronavirus pandemic with a limited edition of 'Vulgar Display of Power'-styled shirt bearing the 'Walk' lyric, "Be yourself, by yourself, stay away from me". The iconic album art has been reworked to express precautions currently being taken to limit the spread of the coronavirus, Loudwire reports. Pantera's new T-shirt will ship in about three weeks and is selling for $30 with 40 percent of the proceeds being donated to the MusiCares Covid-19 Relief Fund to aid musical artists impacted by the coronavirus.

Cure for everything, actually

Music - fighting pandemics since 700 BC

The Guardian has an encouraging article about how music helped the humanity during the times of pandemics. When plague struck Sparta in the 7th century BC, city leaders petitioned the poet Thaletus to sing hymns. In summer of 1576, when plague of Saint Charles devastated much of the Italian north, thousands of Milanese men, women and children opened their windows and sang. Now, people in Italy, Spain, Canada and the wider world have used music to bring their communities together on a truly impressive scale. Dr. Chris Macklin, a former professor of musicology at Mercer University, explained to the G that “music was not a luxury in times of epidemic uncertainty – it was a necessity”.

Billy McFarland is serving a six-year prison sentence for wire fraud in relation to his ill-fated April 2017 Bahamas-based music Fyre Festival, and he is starting a new endeavor from inside prison: crowd-funding money for other inmates to be able to call their loved ones during these trying times. As he's told the New York Post, he hopes his initiative called Project-315 ($3.15 is the standard cost for a 15-minute prison phone call) will bring together and connect in-need inmates and their families who are affected by coronavirus by paying for calls "for as many incarcerated people across the country as possible". He swears it's no scam - “All the money that’s coming in is going directly to the initiative. I’m not on any of the bank accounts or documents and I don’t have access to any of the funds”.

Megadeth bassist and co-founder David Ellefson has launched the “School’s Out” initiative through Youth Music Foundation, to provide music lessons and mentoring via Skype from rock and metal musicians to kids who can’t participate in school activities because of coronavirus restrictions, Loudwire reports. Musicians participating as instructors include David Ellefson, Dirk Verbeuren, and Kiko Loureiro of Megadeth; Frank Bello of Anthrax; Jimmy DeGrasso of Alice Cooper, formerly of Megadeth; Ron “Bumblefoot” Thal of Sons of Apollo, formerly of Guns N’ Roses; Chris Kael of Five Finger Death Punch; Chad Szeliga of Black Star Riders and Walking with Lions; Phil Demmel, formerly of Machine Head; Dave McClain of Sacred Reich, formerly of Machine Head; Clint Lowery of Sevendust; Nita Strauss of Alice Cooper; Brandan Schieppatti of Bleeding Through; Thom Hazaert of Ellefson; Alex Snowden and Sydney Dolezal of Doll Skin; Ra Diaz of Suicidal Tendencies; Shani Kimelman of Cirque Du Soleil MJ ONE; Marc Rizzo of Soulfly and Cavalera Conspiracy; Danny Cooksey; Jeff Duncan of Armored Saint; Rusty Cooley of Day of Reckoning; Ra Diaz of Suicidal Tendencies; Shani Kimelman of Cirque Du Soleil MJ ONE, and more. Prospective students can apply here.

On Tuesday evening, for six hours, more than 250 artists from around the world will gather for an epic online performance of late composer Pauline Oliveros' 'The Lunar Opera: Deep Listening For _Tunes', an open-form opera in which the enlisted performers create their own characters, movements and sound based on sonic cues known only to themselves, LA Times reports. For this occasion the production is called Full Pink Moon: Opera Povera in Quarantine, it's free, but the viewers can also choose to donate to help cover production costs. It's on here, starting at 5 p.m. Los Angeles time, 1 a.m. (Wednesday) London time, 8 a.m. Beijing time.

The Weeknd's 'After Hours' remains atop the Billboard 200 in its second week on the charts with 138,000 equivalent album units, while 6 new albums enter the Top 10, as Billboard reports. Australian pop-rock band 5 Seconds of Summer scores its fifth top 10 album on the Billboard 200 chart as 'Calm' surges from No. 62 to No. 2 with 133,000 equivalent album units (up 1,159%). UK pop singer Dua Lipa lands her first top 10 album, as her second effort, 'Future Nostalgia', debuts at No. 4 with 66,000 equivalent album units earned. Grunge veterans Pearl Jam return to the Billboard 200 with their first studio album since 2013, as 'Gigaton' jumps in at No. 5 with 63,000 equivalent album units earned (14,000 copies sold on vinyl, the second-largest week on vinyl for a 2020 release). Canadian r'n'b singer PartyNextDoor lands at No. 8 with 50,000 equivalent album units earned with 'PartyMobile'. American rapper Joyner Lucas makes his chart debut with his first studio album, 'ADHD' selling in 39,000 equivalent album units, enough for No. 10 spot.

Madonna has donated $1 million to Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to help fund research into creating a coronavirus vaccine. Pink, who recovered from coronavirus just recently, has pledged $500,000 to Philadelphia’s Temple University Hospital Fund, and $500,000 to the City of Los Angeles Mayor’s Emergency COVID-19 Crisis Fund. Metallica's charitable foundation, All Within My Hands, has announced four grants totaling $350,000 to Feeding America, Direct Relief, Crew Nation and the USBG National Charity Foundation. R'n'b singer H.E.R. has provided her team with money to support them over the coming months.

Purity Ring

'Jesus Christ 2005 God Bless America' by the 1975 and Phoebe Bridgers is just great (and a wee bit closer to what she usually does); 'Keep it Chill! (In the East Vill)' is a witty and thoughtful and hopeful new song by the singer and comic Jeffrey Lewis; instrumental trio GoGo Penguin shared their beautiful and meditative 'Kora'; the indie-star of the moment Waxahatchee covered Caroline Polachek's 'So Hot You’re Hurting My Feelings'; Orville Peck released his first Columbia song 'Summertime' about "biding your time and staying hopeful"; Andrew Bird's 'Capital Crimes' touches the issue of giving IQ tests to death row inmates, whose life was spared if they scored below 70; The Tallest Man on Earth beautifully, of course, plays and sings the folk song 'Mole in the Ground'; Purity Ring's 'I Like the Devil' is piano-driven, dark electro-pop with a great video (below); 'Chosen Family' by Rina Sawayama is a grandiose ballad, which is rarely a good direction, but in this case it's a nice, catchy song with an important message; remember rap-metal? - Kool Keith and metal duo Thetan have a new take on it, with dark and slow 'Let's Take a Trip'; Thao and the Get Down Stay Down shared a psychedelic alter-pop song 'Phenom' with a video shot entirely within Zoom; 'Rider' is lush and dramatic, but Skylar Gudasz’s voice would be more than enough to dedicate two minutes for her new song; black metal turned trip hop turned synthpop band Ulver shared their new song 'Little Boy', presumably about the atomic bomb; "the drums and the bassline and the rhodes and the synths and the horns and the strings!!!" - RJD2 said about his new song '20 Grand Palace', and he's right.

Billboard is reporting about companies like Side Door, Looped, and StageIt trying to build online streaming business. Live event platform Side Door announced the launch of its ticketed private, streaming events with tickets ranging from $5-$35. Looped started as a virtual meet-and-greet platform between artists and fans until Wednesday, when the platform enabled those same artists to invite their super fans to ticketed livestreaming shows. Tickets typically range from $5-$30. Online venue StageIt has been in the business of monetizing livestreams since 2011 with 450 shows per month. Now they're doing anywhere between 30-40 shows per day (900-1,200 shows per month), with tickets averaging $10 each, offering fans the option to donate more.

Legendary soul singer-songwriter Bill Withers, the author behind such enduring hits like 'Ain’t No Sunshine', 'Lean on Me', and 'Lovely Day', died from heart complications on Monday, March 30, at age 81. Over the span of eight years, Withers recorded seven studio albums, beginning with 'Just as I Am' in 1971, and his final 'Watching You Watching Me' in 1985, in his brief but influential career. His music was also widely sampled in hip-hop: Famously, Blackstreet and Dr. Dre sampled Withers’ 'Grandma's Hands' for 'No Diggity', and Kanye West sampled 'Rosie' for 'Roses'.

Experimental electronic producer Yves Tumor turned, slightly, into "bold, loud art rock" on his newest album, but, Brooklyn Vegan argues, it stays "an experimental record even during its poppiest moments... it never relies on obvious, cheap tricks and it always earns the 'art' or 'avant-' prefix". The Quietus writes highly of it as well: "On 'Heaven To A Tortured Mind', Tumor harnesses his relentless curiosity to test the boundaries of rock and noise – and reinvents what we expect from both in the process". Stereogum hears "kaleidoscopic rock and soul anthems" on "his most approachable work by far, a move to the middle that never sounds like a compromise". Exclaim says it is "the sound of all of pop history", Alexis Petridis likes the unpredictability of it, and The Skinny emphasizes the message "that there's always calmness to be found amid chaos".

Alessia Cara

MTV is launching MTV Unplugged At Home today, stripped-down, acoustic sets from artists including Jewel, Finneas, Melissa Etheridge, Monsta X, Alessia Cara, Shaggy, Yungblud, and Wyclef Jean. The first episode, featuring Alessia Cara, airs Friday, April 3rd at 12:00 p.m. EST via MTV’s YouTube channel. NPR is taking a similar path with its beloved Tiny Desk series, having recently launched Tiny Desk (Home) Concerts. Early episodes have featured Michael McDonald and Margo Price performing mini sets from their homes.

Denis Ladegaillerie from one of the biggest players in the global record industry, Paris-based Believe shared some advice with Music Business Worldwide for artists waiting in the shadow of the big lockdown: "If you are an artist who is digitally-driven with a very strong fanbase, it’s actually in your interest to release rapidly right now. That’s especially true if you’re an independent artist because, as major labels are postponing a lot of big releases. With fewer new big releases, artists releasing music during a quiet time benefit. If they have strong and engaged fanbases, they benefit even more". Believe’s own, recently-released Creative Marketing Playbook is packed with further guidance for artists right now.

Dua Lipa / Lady Gaga

Dua Lipa, Sam Hunt, and The Weeknd are pop stars who decided to release their new albums despite the big lockdown. Lady Gaga, Haim, and Sam Smith have decided to wait. Dua Lipa said, as Variety reports, she "thought I’d be doing them a disservice to delay it, especially during this time”, while Lady Gaga said - “it just doesn’t feel right to me to release this album with all that is going on during this global pandemic”. Whether to release an album or not depends on the genre also - hip-hop sells close to 100% in digital formats so there's a good chance of selling the album in expected numbers, while some older-demographic artists are still selling 70%-80% physical, and the records stores are closed... Tours are equally cancelled for both sides.

R'n'b singer Ciara and her American football husband Russell Wilson are donating 10 million meals to nonprofit Feeding America, for its COVID-19 relief effort, MSN reports. Feeding America has estimated that a $1 donation can provide 10 meals, so according to that, Wilson and Ciara have pledged $1 million for the organization’s relief efforts. In the meantime, Feeding America got the biggest donation in their history - $100 million from Amazon's Jeff Bezos.

Lists are always great fun, right? Billboard made a totally unnecessary and a totally fun one - a list of the biggest pop stars every year since 1981 to 2019. It starts with Blondie, continues with Michael Jackson and Madonna from the 1980s, Nirvana and TLC, among others, from the 1990s, Eminem and Beyonce from 2000s, and Adele and Justin Bieber from the last ten years. Find the full list - here.

Waxahatchee, Jarvis Cocker, Basia Bulat

Jarvis Cocker, Ben Gibbard, Jim James, Devendra Banhart, Fred Armisen, UK folk legend Michael Chapman, Brazilian music great Marcos ValleThe Free Design‘s Sandy Dedrick, Super Furry Animals frontman Gruff Rhys, and more are taking part in a livestream COVID-19 relief benefit today at 4 p.m. PT via Light In The Attic’s Twitch and YouTube channels. Soccer Mommy performs today at 1 p.m. ET on Instagram Basia Bulat is on at 2 p.m. ET on Instagram Norman Brannon (Texas Is The Reason and Shelter) continues his daily livestream series at 3 p.m. ET, with Dennis Lyxzén (Refused) as guest Donita Sparks of L7 launches The Hi-Low Show with Donita Sparks weekly show today at 6 p.m. ET on YouTube. Friday’s guests are Lydia Lunch and Dani Miller Chick Corea is on at 7 p.m. ET, part of the Live from our Living Rooms Jazz Festival Levi’s brings "live performances from some of your favorite artists” every weekday at 8:01 p.m. ET on Instagram today it's Burna Boy and Kiana Lede Bad Brains’ H.R. is on at 9 p.m. ET on Stageit The Tallest Man on Earth is “planning a Youtube livestream on Friday”, “probably around Friday afternoon EST so Sweden is still up” Tomorrow, Waxahatchee, Snail Mail, Brian Fallon, Beach Bunny, The Marias, The Aces, and Cautious Clay play at Fender curated stage at UnCancelled Music Festival at 4 p.m. ET.

"I think I end up virtually seeing more friends from across the country than I’ve seen on any one night out for a long time. I’m having enough fun that it’s gone 5am when I realise I’ve been on this internet session for the best part of 12 hours and call it time to log off. No Uber fare and in bed within seconds" - Mix Mag's editor wrote after a weekned of virtual raving in online clubs such as Club Quarantäne, The Temple of Lost Future, and Isolation Station. “This is such medicine everyone, we are lucky to have this time alive together” - another raver said.

An interesting and easily read article in the Trapital about partnership between Adidad and Beyonce. It goes back to the 2000s and Adidas' misfortunate start with Reebok, to their change of luck with Kanye West, which makes for a promising deal with Beyonce.

Kings of Leon's frontman Caleb Followill released 'Going Nowhere', an acoustic song, quite simple, but just about right; Niniola made an Afrobeat banger 'Fantasy' featuring Femi Kuti; Amber Mark shared an r'n'b cover of 'Heart-Shaped Box', different, to say the least; Greg Fox - drummer for Ex Eye and Liturgy - released 'From the Cessation of What', an interesting progy-jazzy little thing; London singer-songwriter Eve Owen made an album with the National’s Aaron Dessner, 'Blue Moon' is the latest single from it.

The BBC has seen listening figures for its stations rise by 18 per cent during the lockdown, NME’s radio services have experienced their best month ever with a 12% month-on-month increase, while Global and Bauer have both witnessed surges of 15 per cent. Capital UK's Roman Kemp thinks that people search for consolation through something familiar - “As our world seemingly gets smaller, people want that communal experience”, NME reports.

Eminem, Snoop Dogg, Dr. Dre, Blink-182, and Cypress Hill are among the high-profile names who star in the new trailer for the upcoming Netflix documentary 'LA Originals' about tattoo artist Mister Cartoon and photographer Oriol. Directed by Estevan Oriol and set for release on April 10, 'LA Originals' is billed as “an exploration of the culture and landmarks of the chicano and street art movement".

Dolly Parton has donated $1m to research into a coronavirus vaccine to the Vanderbilt Institute for Infection, Immunology and Inflammation at Vanderbilt University hospital in Nashville, Tennessee. ABC reports. Also, on Thursday (7 p.m. ET). Parton is launching Goodnight With Dolly, a bedtime story series on YouTube, beginning with a reading of 'The Little Engine That Could'. She said she hoped the series would be “a welcome distraction during a time of unrest, and inspire a love of reading and books”.

The Weeknd leads the Billboard 200 chart with his fourth #1 album 'After Hours', Hot 100 chart with his fifth #1 single 'Blinding Lights', and he also sits at #1 on the current Artist 100 chart, Hot 100 Songwriters chart, and the Hot Producers chart. This makes him the first act to hold the #1 spot on those five rankings at the same time. He told Billboard how he refused to postpone his album, because - "hopefully it can help some people escape our reality, if only for an hour out of their day". So, people massively escaped...

Adam Schlesinger, the co-founder and songwriter of alter-rock band Fountains of Wayne, has died from complications of COVID-19, at age 52, Rolling Stone reports. He left plenty of work behind: six Fountains of Wayne albums, five Ivy albums, one Tinted Windows album, 157 songs for the TV series 'Crazy Ex-Girlfriend', one Broadway musical, one off-Broadway musical, one unforgettable hit song for a fake '60s rock band in a Tom Hanks movie, and plenty more.

"In my punk crew, in which we wore out outsider status proudly, I had to admit to myself: I didn't actually want to be an outsider anymore... I wanted to feel like a valued member of my school and my town, even as I rejected my town and my school (punk rock, you're so confusing)" - Phuc Tran writes in his new book 'Sigh, gone', about growing up in small-town America as "the Asian guy" in school. Punk rock offered consolation, but not answers - "the most punk thing for me to do was to be who I was without pretension or preamble or grandiose posturing. I had read it in Nietzsche but didn't know what it really meant: become who you are". Now, besides writing, Phuc inks tattoos and rides motorcycles. PopMatters describes the book as a "smart, tough memoir" that entices reading.

Ben Gibbard was performing online for two weeks because, as he's told Rolling Stone, "musicians who have had any modicum of success and who are in a position to wait out this crisis - have a moral obligation to pitch in in some capacity". When this is over - "I’m hoping that... we will enter a new era of increased empathy and understanding".

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Jaubi

In 1956, the US introduced the Jazz Ambassadors Tour, a showcase that sent American musicians overseas to parts of the world that were perceived to be under threat of Soviet influence. It was believed that jazz performers who were spearheading the civil rights movement would help generate a positive image of the US to newly independent nations. One of the countries the US focused on was Pakistan, so Duke Ellington, Dizzy Gillespie and Dave Brubeck were among the performers at state-funded gigs during the 1950s and 60s. These concerts wove jazz into Pakistan’s musical fabric and through its traditional instruments, resulting in sounds that remain relatively unheralded yet are still flourishing today, with bands like Jaubi, or previously Badal Roy, Tafo Brothers and Zohaib Hassan Khan, as Guardian points out.

Plenty of strings attached

Essay: Guitar sounds all over hip-hop

H.E.R.

"Electric and acoustic guitar sounds have spread onto more hip-hop records, through an assortment of production techniques, including an increased employment of loops and loop makers, who create short melodies for producers to build beats around" - Vice points out the new trend in hip-hop production. "On the Polo G’s latest album, 'Hall of Fame', nearly half of the 20 songs include a guitar sound in the beat. On H.E.R.'s 'Find a Way' the R&B artist H.E.R. uses a crystalline electric guitar as a canvas for her voice. On J. Cole's 'Pride is the Devil', a simple and somber guitar riff carries the beat"...

The electronic music festival Verknipt in the Netherlands has been linked to more than 1,000 new cases of the novel coronavirus, although the organizers have followed all the health guidelines. CNBC reports. In early July Verknipt hosted about 20,000 attendees in Utrecht. Now, 1,050 of those people and counting have tested positive. This is especially discouraging because the electronic music event followed many expert guidelines - the festival was held outdoors, where infections are generally much lower; concert-goers also needed to show a QR code confirming that they were either fully vaccinated, had recently recovered from a COVID-19 infection, or had tested negative within the last 40 hours. That 40 hours window is seen now as the main possible reason for the infection spike.

Olivia Rodrigo’s 'Sour' earned 83,000 equivalent album units in the U.S. in the week ending July 16, notching the fourth total week at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart. 'Sour' is the first debut album by a woman to spend four weeks at No. 1 since Susan Boyle’s 'I Dreamed a Dream' spent six weeks in 2009/2010, Billboard reports. Speaking of records, Inhaler’s 'It Won’t Always Be Like This' opens at the top of the Official U.K. Albums Chart, with 18,000 chart sales, and the fastest-selling debut album on vinyl of any band this century.

Music writer Ted Gioia read about the idea by a Norwegian company to build a doomsday vault to preserve the world’s most important music recordings, stored on an especially durable optical film. Gioia has a related business idea: "I suspect there’s demand for digital platforms that make a similar promise. The business I’m envisioning would use blockchain technology to ensure that a song could never be deleted from the Internet".

"The marvel of Billy, of course, is that in an era when being trans was apt to get one killed, he chose to 'hide in plain sight', concealing that he was assigned female at birth while embracing a profession that made him the constant center of attention" - the Daily Beast writes about the doc 'No Ordinary Man' which examines the life of Billy Tipton, a talented jazz artist in the 1940s and 1950s who, upon his death, was revealed to have been assigned female at birth. "That trailblazing courage is clearly an inspiration for everyone featured in Chin-Yee and Joynt’s film, who speak about his plight—and the bravery he exhibited in being himself, no matter the obstacles—with palpable reverence".

"It’s delightful that there are still questions Siri and Alexa can’t answer, and that people argue fervently about rock lyrics from more than 45 years ago" - LA Times writes in an article about the Internet argument over a Bruce Springsteen lyric. The song is 'Thunder Road', it begins 'Born to Run', the 1975 album that made Springsteen a star, and it's the opening lyrics - “The screen door slams, Mary’s dress waves”, or is it "sways"? The problem is, Springsteen isn't sure himself. In the original album gatefold design of 'Born to Run', the lyrics are printed “Mary’s dress waves”, but on page 220 of his best-selling 'Born to Run' memoir, Springsteen says “‘the screen door slams, Mary’s dress sways’ — that’s a good opening line”. Or maybe Boss just doesn't want the story to end, as he admits in his Broadway show: “I come from a boardwalk town where everything is tinged with just a bit of fraud. So am I. I’ve never seen the inside of a factory, and yet, it’s all I’ve ever written about… I made it all up”. Springsteen's longtime manager Jon Landau settled the matter in the New Yorker - “The word is ‘sways. That’s the way he wrote it in his original notebooks, that’s the way he sang it on 'Born to Run', in 1975, that’s the way he has always sung it at thousands of shows, and that’s the way he sings it right now on Broadway. Any typos in official Bruce material will be corrected”.

Preserved by memory for centuries, not it's the Internet's turn

Song Collectors: Recording Irish music never before recorded

Irish group Song Collectors Collective is traveling through Ireland, Scotland and England recording the elderly singing songs that exist only as oral tradition. "Those people are sailors, tinsmiths, tinkers, but most are from the reclusive and sometimes difficult-to-approach traveler communities. Their strong culture and tight-knit families make them living goldmines of folklore and Irelesong", Good News Network reports.

"Posing the question 'What makes an image iconic?' the [‘Icon: Music Through the Lens’] series seeks answers through the studio portraits, record sleeves, music magazines, live shows, exhibitions, social media, coffee table books and the fine art world" - PBS' press release reads about the new 6-part series.

Earlier this week, right-wing congressman Matt Gaetz arrived at the #FreeBritney rally demanding "freedom and liberty" for the singer, constrained "through guardianship and conservatorship”, Rolling Stone points out. "The #FreeBritney movement has also more broadly served as a talking point within the mainstream GOP. National Republican Congressional Committee has been using Spears’ case as part of its text message fundraising efforts, referring to her in texts to donors as 'a victim of toxic gov’t overreach & censorship'; Gaetz and other Republicans, including QAnon supporter Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, have also issued a formal invite to Spears to testify before Congress about her conservatorship struggles. And within far-right circles on the internet, the #FreeBritney case has been a flashpoint of discussion, in large part due to the issues it raises of sovereignty and bodily autonomy. A number of anti-vaccine accounts on Instagram have also shared content comparing Spears’s tearful testimony that she was forced by her father and handlers to have an IUD, to being forced to take a COVID vaccine".

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