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On the cover
On the Cover Tay Keith, Featured on "Remembering Tay Keith, an Unmistakable Producer"

The Shape of Enshittification

Ryan Levesque unpacks a Maryland / Google DeepMind study that told human from AI writing ~93% of the time across 61,608 stories, identifying five structural 'shapes' of AI slop — over-explained themes, flatter linearity, bodily metaphors, fewer specific references, less narrative diversity.

Simon's Substack · Music Industry Analysis

The End of Music's Youth Market

Simon Napier-Bell managed everyone from the Yardbirds to Wham!, and his argument here is blunt: the music industry has stopped investing in youth because it no longer needs to. Streaming turned back catalogue into the safer bet — algorithms know exactly when you'll reach for Fleetwood Mac, and they're rarely wrong. The result isn't that young artists disappear, but that they no longer arrive as generational ruptures. The industry now monetizes dreams after they've been dreamed.

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Vinyl Culture · Music Industry Analysis

Lawsuits Reveal Who The "Independent Artist" Language Actually Protects

Vinyl Culture connects two stories that belong together: a lawsuit framing Spotify's opaque filtering rules as indie artist harm, filed by someone who confirmed he uses Suno to generate his catalog, and The Atlantic's investigation documenting 21 million copyrighted recordings in AI training datasets. The structural complaints are real. But when the plaintiff's tool is built on mass infringement, the "independent artist" framing starts doing work it wasn't designed for.

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01 Music & Scene

Tales of a Hipster Nothing

Gabbie on the 'indie sleaze' / hipster-music-era revival (Vice's new guide, Girl Talk's 'Night Ripper' turning 20) — written from inside the era but outside its tastemaker class: a personal counter-history of who actually populated the 2000s scene versus who got written about.

Read on New Bands for Old Heads →

Restless Records, 1989: from a label intern's view

An ethnographic account of workplace culture at Restless Records and its parent company Enigma in 1989, examining how employees and employers negotiated informal atmospheres, low wages, and intense work expectations. The piece analyzes the trade-offs employees accepted in exchange for creative autonomy and an unconventional workplace environment.

Read on Musical Urbanism →

Remembering Tay Keith, an Unmistakable Producer

An obituary and tribute to Memphis hip-hop producer Tay Keith (Brytavious Lakeith Chambers), who died at age 29. The piece explores his distinctive production style, his breakthrough year in 2018, his iconic work on Travis Scott's "Sicko Mode," and his aspirations to become a college professor while supporting music education through non-profit partnerships.

Read on POW MAG →

One for the father

Harmony Holiday on Substack moves through grief, jazz, and inheritance in prose that reads like scored music — D'Angelo, Coltrane, Monk, and the children of musicians appear as figures in a meditation on fathers who leave and return, in life and in sound. The argument underneath: that the music we love is the liturgy of that cycle, and we've been dancing to it all along.

Read on Harmony Holiday →

Abdullah Ibrahim (1934-2026)

An obituary and interview tribute to South African jazz pianist Abdullah Ibrahim (also known as Dollar Brand), who died on June 15 at age 91. The piece reprises a 2011 interview discussing his early career in Cape Town's District Six, his work with the Tuxedo Slickers Orchestra, and the influence of apartheid on his musical development.

Read on JazzWax →

My Number One Song Is Not AI

Sam Hockley-Smith uses AI anxiety as a jumping-off point — he doesn't want to wonder whether what he's hearing is machine-made — then pivots to three recommendations worth your time: Fenix Flexin's surprising "RUBBERZ," Kashual Plastik's gorgeous new compilation A Mistake By Mistakes, and Mackeeper's claustrophobic summer earworm "Flat Soda."

Read on New Environments →

Chapter Six: Romper el Coco/Crack Open the Coconut

Cuba on Record traces Olga Guillot's path from a tenement patio in Old Havana — where she and her sister sang backup for their seamstress mother — to her first Panart studio session at 16. The detail that grounds it: her stage debut at seven, singing "El Manisero," the same song that cracked the American market open to Latin music a few years prior.

Read on Cuba on Record →
02 Music Industry Analysis

Is This the Needle Drop Moment of the Year?

Hypebot's sync column argues the needle drop that owns a scene — think "Go" in Apex or Kate Bush in Stranger Things — is almost never the obvious single, and almost never the newest one. The practical takeaway for artists: make your back catalogue emotionally searchable, not just genre-tagged, because supervisors brief by feeling first.

Read on Hypebot →

AI, Influence & the Future of the Hit Song

AI Music Newsletter goes inside Influur, the Miami influencer-marketing platform whose new AI system 'Pulse' turns creator discovery, campaign management and performance analytics into music's promotional control panel — clients include Warner Music, Meta, TikTok and Netflix.

Read on AI Music Newsletter →
03 Music Recommendations

Helado Tropical — "Sensación"

Roberto Carlos Lange and Fabi Reyna's collaborative project emerged from a three-day studio sleepover, building micro worlds across nine tracks. The fluid, chilled-out production grounds Reyna's trilling vocals in an essay-like outpouring about love and movement, channeling sun, wind, and water into vintage-hued dreamscapes.

04 Voice & Culture

An Interview with Margo Jefferson

Zinzi Clemmons's interview with Margo Jefferson in The Believer opens with a useful frame: memoir as critical method. Jefferson — Pulitzer-winning critic, author of Negroland and On Michael Jackson — treats her own life with the same forensic attention she brings to her subjects.

Read on The Believer →

Power Works by Making People Disappear

An essay reflecting on power structures and how they operate, prompted by attending the Obama Center opening celebrations. The author explores how visible forms of power like segregation and redlining contrasts with modern invisible systems that present political choices as inevitable technological developments.

Read on A Different Lens →

We Must Act Out Our Freedom' (2020)

A Juneteenth essay in The New York Review of Books returns to Ralph Ellison's argument that Black American culture was never sealed off from broader influence — and that the synthesis was the point. Ellison's reading of jazz, folk dance, and Oklahoma pioneer life frames segregation not as total severance but as a site of democratic possibility. Compressed and worth the detour.

Read on The New York Review of Books →

I made a movie about my life

i-D's newsletter opens with a personal premise: your camera roll is already a movie about your life, and you can make it. Woven in: a spotlight on Rose Gray's new single "Club to Your Arms," co-written with Justin Tranter, who calls it one of the best five songs he's ever worked on. Warm, digressive, genuinely fun.

Read on i-D →

To Be Superman, We Have to Learn How to Be Clark Kent

On Substack, a personal essay makes the case that figures like Dame Dash, Puff, and Russell Simmons did something specific and underrated: they gave a generation of Black men permission to see themselves in rooms where multimillion-dollar decisions get made. The piece is honest about the complexity that follows — giving those men their flowers while reckoning with what came after.

Read on Donny Slater →

Toward a Pathology of the Possessed

Esmé Weijun Wang opens with a provocation: schizophrenia's effects are almost always discussed in metaphor. Her essay, excerpted from Issue 113 of The Believer, uses the 1988 killing of Malcoum Tate — shot thirteen times by his sister while their mother waited in the car — to examine how language shapes what we're willing to see about mental illness, family, and violence.

Read on The Believer →

I Don't Need White Friends. I Need Comrades.

Floyd Webb opens with a stark ratio: 98% of Black Americans are not incarcerated, yet the 2% dominate the public imagination. His argument is about narrative construction — how a society that defines millions by a small minority isn't describing reality, it's building one. The piece names who disappears in that process: the professor, the veteran, the artist.

Read on A Different Lens - see floyd muse →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

A Camera, Not an Engine II

Contraptions returns to its "camera, not an engine" framework with a sequel on AI, photography, and latent space — now extended to agents. The central observation: working with AI turns language managerial. Every word risks unleashing a thousand more, and those words govern machines. We're not writing anymore; we're issuing speech-acts. Pharaohs, basically.

Read on Contraptions →

The AI backlash is getting louder and Sharon Goldman is listening

The Media Copilot makes the case that AI coverage has a blind spot: it's obsessed with model releases and Silicon Valley while ignoring what the technology is actually doing to communities, jobs, and public trust. Veteran AI journalist Sharon Goldman — launching her Substack Ground Level AI — argues the societal impact is the most undercovered story in tech right now.

Read on The Media Copilot →

Understanding the Luddites in the age of AI

Brian Merchant argues that the Luddites keep getting misread — and that the current AI moment is producing another wave of lazy mythologizing. His Substack traces the latest revival across NPR, The Nation, and Gen Z tech backlash content, using each as evidence that the historical Luddites remain widely misunderstood even as they're constantly invoked.

Read on Blood in the Machine →

AI-Driven Deskilling in Healthcare and Elsewhere

A Lancet study surfaces an uncomfortable finding: colonoscopy quality dropped 6% for procedures performed *without* AI after doctors had been using it — meaning the tool degraded baseline skill even as it improved assisted performance. The deskilling risk isn't theoretical. For anyone building AI into editorial or curation workflows, that's the structural tension worth sitting with.

Read on Luiza Jarovsky, PhD →
06 AI Product News

The fight to keep AI research in the open

Sources profiles Andy Konwinski — Databricks and Perplexity co-founder — who's putting $100M behind keeping AI research public via the Laude Institute. His framing is sharp: pay gaps between academia and frontier labs have gone from 3x to 10x, labs publish less, and whoever controls compute controls the field. "Feudalism with better branding," he calls it.

Read on Sources →

Anthropic Ships Major Claude Design Overhaul

TLDR Design covers Anthropic's second-pass fix for Claude Design, two months after its viral debut hit a wall: early users were burning through most of their weekly Pro token allowance in under 30 minutes on a single prototype. The update adds design system imports, Claude Code integration, and nine export partners — a pivot from generative novelty toward enterprise brand-compliance infrastructure embedded across creative and business workflows.

Read on TLDR Design →

Loop Engineering Replaces Prompt Engineering

The VC Corner flags a quiet but significant shift: the craft of working with AI is moving from writing clever prompts to designing systems that run themselves. Tools like Claude Code and Codex now support goal-driven workflows that loop autonomously until conditions are met — meaning the valuable skill is now building feedback loops and evaluation layers, not single-shot instructions.

Read on The VC Corner →
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