Anthony Fantano

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Anthony Fantano
AnthonyFantano2016.png
Fantano in 2016
Personal information
BornAnthony Fantano
(1985-10-28) October 28, 1985 (age 36)
Occupation
  • YouTuber
  • music critic
Spouse(s)Dominique Boxley
WebsiteThe Needle Drop
YouTube information
Also known as
  • Cal Chuchesta[1]
  • The Internet's Busiest Music Nerd[2]
  • Melon[3]
Channels ThatIsThePlan (Deleted)
Years active2009–present
Subscribers
  • 2.49 million (theneedledrop)[4]
  • 1.39 million (fantano)[5]
  • 73.8 thousand (TNDstreams)[6]
Total views
  • 778 million (theneedledrop)[4]
  • 355 million (fantano)[5]
  • 6.3 million (TNDstreams)[6]
YouTube Silver Play Button 2.svg 100,000 subscribers 2012
YouTube Gold Play Button 2.svg 1,000,000 subscribers 2017
The Needle Drop
The Needle Drop logo.png
Type of site
Music reviewing
Available inEnglish
Created byAnthony Fantano
CommercialYes
Launched2009; 12 years ago (2009)
Current statusActive

Updated: September 14, 2021

Anthony Fantano (/fænˈtæn/ fan-TAN-oh; born October 28, 1985) is an American music critic and YouTuber who runs the YouTube channel The Needle Drop and its tie-in website. His website and YouTube videos discuss and review a variety of music genres.

Early life[]

Fantano was born in Connecticut and is of Sicilian descent. He spent his teenage years in Wolcott, Connecticut.[8] As a teenager, Fantano became interested in politics through the work of the musician Jello Biafra, former lead singer of the hardcore punk band Dead Kennedys, calling him "pretty much my political idol".[9]

Career[]

Fantano started his career in the mid-2000s as a music director for the Southern Connecticut State University college radio station.[10] In 2007, Fantano started working at Connecticut Public Radio (WNPR), where he hosted The Needle Drop.[11] That same year, he launched The Needle Drop in the form of written reviews, eventually launching his series of video reviews on the YouTube channel of the same name in January 2009, starting with a Jay Reatard record.[8][12][13] Fantano has said that his review for Flying Lotus' 2010 album Cosmogramma appearing next to other Flying Lotus videos in YouTube's "Featured Videos" section gave him the "hint" to continue making video reviews.[11] In 2010, Fantano removed older reviews that contained music clips in order to avoid violations of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.[8] At the time, he was working on The Needle Drop at the college radio station, as well as at a pizza restaurant. In late 2011, he decided to pursue The Needle Drop full-time, but kept affiliation with WNPR until 2014.[10][8][11] Fantano was offered an album review show on Adult Swim but declined.[8]

In order to earn enough money to pay his editor Austin Walsh, by November 2016, Fantano had recorded more regularly on a secondary YouTube channel, "thatistheplan", on which he reviewed memes and recorded "often irreverent videos that don't fall into the record review format", according to Spin.[8] This secondary channel came into question and controversy in October 2017, when an article published in The Fader accused Fantano of promoting alt-right sentiments in videos on "thatistheplan". Fantano was criticized for the use of Pepe the Frog memes (which had recently been labeled an alt-right symbol) and targeting feminists.[14] After the article was released, multiple scheduled dates of "The Needle Drop" U.S. tour were cancelled, with at least one ticket booking site for a Brooklyn tour date stating that their cancellation was due to the Fader article.[15][16]

Fantano produced a video response calling the critical article a "hit job". He disputed accusations of sympathizing with the alt right and stated that the videos in question were satirical. The article was later deleted by The Fader, with both parties saying that the claims were settled.[17] In a later interview, Fantano acknowledged that there had been some "grubby, closed-minded, young, aggressive male" viewers on the "thatistheplan" channel and disavowed what he saw as the "toxic and problematic" side of internet humor, stating that the incident had led him to be more vocal in his advocacy for social justice issues.[18]

By the end of 2017, Fantano had reached a million subscribers and diversified his content to include weekly "track roundup" videos, livestreamed Q&As, and video thinkpieces alongside his album reviews.[13]

In June 2019, Fantano had a cameo in Lil Nas X's video for the Young Thug and Mason Ramsey remix of "Old Town Road", appearing as a worker for the Area 51 military installation (a reference to the "Storm Area 51" meme).[19] Later that year he curated a charity compilation, The Needle Drop LP, which consists of "artists that have either been featured on the site or reviewed favorably in the past". Profits from the album were donated to The Immigrant Legal Resource Center non-profit.[20]

Reception[]

The Needle Drop won the 2011 O Music Awards in the "Beyond the Blog" category.[21][22] In 2014, Nick Veronin of Wired said of Fantano "Instead of deploying ten-dollar words to describe a riff or synth tone, Fantano relies on gestures, clenching his fists or contorting his elastic, expressive face. It gets at some of the more ephemeral qualities of music that written words can't begin to touch."[2]

When asked about the merits of Fantano's reviews, veteran music critic Robert Christgau said in 2019:

[Fantano] seems to have arrived at a plausible brand of 21st-century rockcrit taste that runs toward what I'll call dark prog [...] Nowhere near as insensible to hip-hop/r&b as dark proggers tend to be, but note that very few female artists crack his top 10s, which in 2018 was really missing the action. Fantano seems to have figured out a way to make some kind of living by disseminating his own criticism in the online age. That's an achievement.[23]

In his 2019 book Perfect Sound Whatever, comedian James Acaster called Fantano's best albums of 2016 list "a real music fan's Top 50" and said of Fantano "perhaps more than anybody else, he appreciates how the reviewer's role has changed since the internet became a thing [...] The job of a reviewer used to be telling people what's worth their money but now it's telling people what's worth their time."[13] In September 2020, New York Times culture correspondent Joe Coscarelli described Fantano as "probably the most popular music critic left standing". According to Coscarelli, Fantano has successfully brought an "old art to a new medium" and has revitalized the record review format for a younger generation of music consumers.[18]

Personal life[]

Fantano is married, and resides in Connecticut.[8] He is an atheist[24] and a vegan, having swapped to the diet after first going vegetarian in his late teens.[10] Fantano also plays the bass guitar, and is frequently seen playing it during introductions to his "Let's Argue" and "Let's Agree" episodes on his second channel. A vocal supporter of socialism, Fantano endorsed Bernie Sanders in the 2020 United States presidential election.[25]

In March 2018, Fantano told Polygon that he is a "free speech purist".[26]

Discography[]

Albums

  • Taiga (2009) (as bass player)[27]
  • Anthony FanFiction Vol.1 (2015)

Guest appearances

  • "21 & Jaded" on Never Forget Where You Came From by Goody Grace (2021)[28] (as bass player)

as Cal Chuchesta[]

Fantano as his alter-ego Cal Chuchesta[1]

Mixtapes

  • The New CALassic (2015)

Singles

  • "Cal 2 B" (2013)
  • "Mykey Come Back" (2015)
  • "Panda (Remix)" featuring Pink Guy and NFKRZ (2016)
  • "Coin Star" (2018)
  • "Don't Talk to Me" featuring Fellatia Geisha (2018)
  • "Slap Chop" (2018)
  • "On Deck Freestyle" (2018)
  • "I'm in the Club (Lookin' for Some Love)" featuring Joycie (2018)
  • "Advice" featuring Rob Scallon (2018)
  • "Rubber Duck (Pickup Truck)" (2019)
  • "Best Teef?" (2019)
  • "East (Remix)" (2020)

References[]

  1. ^ a b Ingham, Tom (March 23, 2014). "Interview: Anthony Fantano (The Needle Drop)". The Mancunion.
  2. ^ a b Veronin, Nick. (February 18, 2014). "The Hardest Working Critic in Show Business Never Stops Hunting for New Music". Wired.
  3. ^ "Anthony Fantano Responds To Alt-Right & Racist Accusations". Kill Your Stereo. Retrieved May 29, 2019.
  4. ^ a b "About theneedledrop". YouTube. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  5. ^ a b "About fantano". YouTube. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  6. ^ a b "About TNDstreams". YouTube. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  7. ^ Lefevre, Jules (October 5, 2017). "A Primer On The Almighty Shitstorm Surrounding The Needle Drop's Anthony Fantano". Junkee Media.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Gordon, Jeremy (November 30, 2016). "How Anthony Fantano, aka The Needle Drop, Became Today's Most Successful Music Critic". Spin.
  9. ^ Noonan, David (June 1, 2003). "A Generation Finds Its Voice". Newsweek. Retrieved August 11, 2021.
  10. ^ a b c Elabbady, Ali (October 30, 2013). "Interview: Anthony Fantano of The Needle Drop". Green Room. United States. Archived from the original on May 26, 2014.
  11. ^ a b c MADDEN, MICHAEL (October 9, 2014). "Anthony Fantano Wants to Turn You On". Consequence of Sound.
  12. ^ Johnston, Maura (April 28, 2015). "Anthony Fantano brings Needle Drop to Middle East". The Boston Globe.
  13. ^ a b c Acaster, James (August 22, 2019). Perfect Sound Whatever. Hachette UK. ISBN 978-1-4722-6032-1.
  14. ^ "Popular music vlogger accused of promoting alt-right sentiment – NME". NME. October 4, 2017. Retrieved August 23, 2018.
  15. ^ "Anthony Fantano's Entire Tour Canceled Over Racist, Alt-Right Allegations". Digital Music News.
  16. ^ "The Needle Drop Live Shows Cancelled Amid Controversy". Noisey by Vice. October 5, 2017.
  17. ^ "Fader Removes Article Amid Settlement With Anthony Fantano". Spin. March 21, 2018. Retrieved August 23, 2018.
  18. ^ a b Coscarelli, Joe (September 30, 2020). "The Only Music Critic Who Matters (if You're Under 25)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on July 20, 2021. The influential evangelist in question is the YouTuber named Anthony Fantano, 34, who has been speaking album and song reviews directly into a camera for more than a decade on The Needle Drop, his channel with 2.26 million subscribers, making him probably the most popular music critic left standing.
  19. ^ "Area 51 remix video proves it's the summer of Lil Nas X". The Daily Dot. July 19, 2019.
  20. ^ Hussey, Allison (September 13, 2019). "Open Mike Eagle Shares New Song to Support Immigrant Legal Resource Center: Listen". Pitchfork. Retrieved June 8, 2021.
  21. ^ WARNER, KARA (November 1, 2011). "O Music Awards Take Over Halloween's Largest Street Party". MTV News (Press release).
  22. ^ "Robyn Wows MTV O Music Awards; Bjork & Marilyn Manson's Butt Win Big". Billboard. Retrieved September 8, 2019.
  23. ^ Christgau, Robert (January 15, 2019). "Xgau Sez". Robertchristgau.com. Archived from the original on February 11, 2021. Retrieved August 12, 2021.
  24. ^ fantano (November 5, 2018), LET'S ARGUE: Greta Van Fleet DOESN'T Sound Like Led Zeppelin, retrieved November 6, 2018
  25. ^ "The Needle Drop's Anthony Fantano On Being A Berniecrat & Trump's Presidency". Retrieved December 14, 2020 – via YouTube.
  26. ^ Alexander, Julia (March 7, 2018). "Controversial YouTubers head to alternative platforms in wake of 'purge'". Polygon. Retrieved March 17, 2021.
  27. ^ "Taiga, by Anthony Fantano and Richard D'Albis". Anthonyfantanoricharddalbis.bandcamp.com.
  28. ^ ""I Played Bass On This Album"". YouTube. March 2, 2021. Retrieved March 2, 2021.

External links[]

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