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On the cover
On the Cover Fenix Flexin. Featured on "The Hot 100's First AI Doping Controversy is Here"
Stems · Essay

The Hot 100's First AI Doping Controversy is Here

Fenix Flexin's song "Rubberz" became the first mainstream chart hit suspected of being AI-generated, sparking investigation and raising questions about AI detection in music streaming platforms. The track hit #63 on the Billboard Hot 100 and was later confirmed as fully AI-generated using Treblo, an AI song generator.

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01 Music & Scene

We're Fluent In Discomfort: An Interview with SML

POW Mag interviews the progressive quintet SML around Spontaneous Music Live, an album that breaks from their earlier method of reworking live recordings into produced tracks by presenting two live sets as-is. The conversation with Chiu, Butterss, and Stardrum digs into improvised music's magic and terror, and how a band that performs in a circle among the audience builds something greater than its parts in real time.

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A History of Ghettotech in Ten Tracks

Resident Advisor charts the rise of ghettotech — Detroit's raw, bass-driven, unapologetically party-minded counterpart to the city's cerebral techno — across ten defining tracks, with genre pioneer DJ Godfather (Brian Jeffries) laying out the sound locals call 'mix music' or 'booty music.'

Read on Resident Advisor →

Anti-War Noise Rock From 1966

While the folkies back home sang honey-drop protest songs, The Monks made anti-war art out of feedback, fuzz bass, and a banjo rigged with an electric pickup. Range and Basin resurrects a 17-year-old review of Black Monk Time, the 1966 proto-punk record cut by five American GIs stationed in Germany, shaved into tonsures and aiming for anti-Beatles status. The Big Lebowski knew them as 'I Hate You.'

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Shaking Hands Shaped Coltrane's Tone

The tone we associate with Giant Steps and A Love Supreme may owe as much to a mouthpiece specialist as to Coltrane himself. Jazz Noted traces Frank Wells, who lathed saxophone blanks into clarinet mouthpieces and glued popsicle sticks to rubber rails for more ring, and worked on nearly all of Coltrane's pieces during his Atlantic and Impulse years. The catch: Wells left no blueprints, only testimony.

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Lauryn Hill Proves That All It Takes Is One

An essay examining Lauryn Hill's legacy and questioning the capitalistic lens through which music fans evaluate artists. The piece argues that artists shouldn't be held to arbitrary standards of productivity and output, and that one album can be enough to canonize an artist's place in music history.

Read on the andre gee newsletter →

Connecting to Divinities and Childhood Fantasy: Charlemagne Palestine Interviewed by Maud Seuntjens

Sonic Acts sits down with Charlemagne Palestine, the 77-year-old minimalist peer of Glass, Riley and La Monte Young who prefers 'maximalist,' and the conversation treats trance and animism as working method rather than mysticism. Palestine walks from his 1960s New York drone experiments to the 'Body Music' rituals he brought to Amsterdam's de Appel in 1977, and he's sharp on the friction of crossing from everyday life into the created world.

Read on Sonic Acts →
02 Music Industry Analysis

Do Fans Really Care if Musicians Use AI to Create a Song?

The AI backlash is just the electric guitar panic in new clothes, argue Michael Brandvold and Blasko on The Music Biz Weekly Podcast, writes Hypebot. Every leap from synths to samplers to DAWs drew the same purist fury before becoming standard kit. It's a tidy frame, though it sidesteps the harder question of whose labor AI actually displaces rather than augments.

Read on Hypebot →

Spotify at risk? Disrupted from 5 different angles

The threat to Spotify was never going to be a single giant-killer, STVDIO argues, and that's exactly why it's real now. Five competitors are chipping at different edges: YouTube Music outpacing subscriber growth, Audiomack winning developing markets, Suno building participatory listening, Qobuz taking audiophiles. The tell is in Spotify's roadmap.

Read on STVDIO →

The Music-Data Dashboard Has Two Years Left

Openstage and Viberate both shipped MCP servers in the same week, and Bruce Ramos, who runs distribution for a Regional Mexican roster at DSTRO7, reads it as the death notice for the music-data dashboard. His case is operator math: the catalog answers a manager wants sit unpulled because nobody has the forty minutes. Now the decision isn't whether to improve the dashboard, but whether your data is the thing an agent calls or the thing it routes around.

Read on Bruce Ramos →

The Five Stories Defining AI Music's First Half of 2026

Zinstrel's mid-year survey of AI music argues the story of 2026's first half is escalation, not resolution. No new settlements have followed the 2025 Suno and Udio deals, and Hagens Berman, the firm that took $260 billion from Big Tobacco, has joined the indie class actions. The AFM is now suing Universal and Warner over unpaid session players. Two July rulings, in New York and Munich, will test whether unlicensed training is fair use.

Read on Zinstrel - AI Music Culture & Analysis →

Why Do We Expect Singers to Perform Forever?

Singing is muscle, breath, and stamina, and it ages like any athlete's body, which is why Hypebot uses Daryl Braithwaite's low-key retirement announcement to ask why fans treat veteran performers like institutions that owe them a farewell tour. Against the Stones-and-Iron-Maiden model of touring until you drop, the piece reframes stepping away as an act of respect rather than abandonment.

Read on Hypebot →

Suno Built an A&R Department. Here's the Deal.

Suno's new Spark program looks like a standard development deal (grants, a dedicated manager, studio camps, editorial placement, video intros) minus the masters and publishing grab. Bruce Ramos reads it as the $5.4 billion generation tool walking into the label and management business while Universal and Sony are still litigating training data. Worth noting: a "Good Vibes Only" clause bars artists from criticizing Suno.

Read on Bruce Ramos →

Adapt or Die: How Country Took Rap's Place Atop The Charts

Track Ten makes the structural case that country's chart dominance isn't a cultural moment — it's a market correction. As rap's grip on streaming numbers loosened, country absorbed the crossover playbook and moved into the vacuum. Worth reading for how it frames genre not as identity but as competitive strategy, and what that shift means for where platform attention flows next.

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03 Music Recommendations

Mary Lattimore & Julianna Barwick — "Tragic Magic"

A January release that became an instant contender for collaboration of the year: a springlike set redolent of a walk in the woods, complete with a surprising cover of a Blade Runner track.

04 Voice & Culture

A Movie Studio Is Not Your Personality

On Substack, the Supergirl pile-on becomes a doorway into a decade-old question: what does it mean when a studio becomes your personality? The piece is sharp on the distinction between fandom as genuine community and fandom as brand loyalty dressed up as identity, with the Infinity Gauntlet anecdote landing the argument better than most cultural criticism manages.

Read on Sean Fennessey →

What makes Taylor Swift fun?

Famous and Beloved argues that Taylor Swift's appeal tracks directly to cheating on boyfriends, literally and structurally: a career built on burning it down and starting over. The piece's sharpest move is questioning whether we simply lack a template for what a cool woman looks like, since the thing Swift does, treating each era as disposable, is exactly what Jagger and McCartney get credit for.

Read on Famous and Beloved Newsletter →

Why do I have the worst WikiFeet rating I've literally ever seen?

Words from Eliza turns a WikiFeet rabbit hole into something sharper: a reckoning with how much of ourselves accumulates online without our active participation. The discovery of a 3.25-star rating on a profile she never built prompts an honest look at digital footprint, parasocial attention economies, and why a score from strangers lands harder than it should.

Read on Words from Eliza →

Where Do Good Jokes Come From?

An interview with Sofía Manfredi, a staff writer for Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, discussing musical comedy, comedy writing formats, and the modern promotion circuit for comedians. The piece covers her thoughts on traditional interviews versus activity-based promotional content.

Read on Thought Enthusiast →

Menswear has exited the manosphere

After Paris menswear fashion week, designer collections have moved away from manosphere-adjacent aesthetics toward jubilant, elegant, romantic, and vibrant clothing. Shows from designers like Celine, Dries Van Noten, Rick Owens, Lemaire, and Comme Des Garçons demonstrated eclecticism and wackiness rather than meme culture or optimization aesthetics.

Read on i-D →
05 Sound on Sight Video Archive

they are gutting a body of water — "sour diesel"

2025 · shoegaze

The fuzz comes like a saw through brick, and, under it, Douglas Dulgarian narrates his block: the Philadelphia corner store he hits daily, his friend T out front asking for spares, a dead TV glowing in the window. This is shoegaze as squealing cinéma vérité.

06 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

LLMs Pre-Commodify Ideas

Sachin argues that because LLMs compress the historical record into one latent space, people working the same problem arrive at the same novel ideas independently and near-simultaneously — 'pre-commodifying' them before anyone can claim ownership, and shifting value from ideation to provenance.

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The Coldplay Protocol

People vs. Algorithms takes on what happens to authenticity when anyone can fake it: lo-fi, bathtub-recorded music is rising partly as a signal that a human was present, and AI's creep into songwriting is making 'providence' a selling point. The episode also works through why some influencer-economists get a pass to monetize while journalists get scrutinized for the same moves.

Read on People vs. Algorithms →

TIDAL Cracks Down on AI Music; Five Things AI Creators Wish You Knew

AI Music Newsletter covers TIDAL's move against AI-generated content alongside a counter-framing from AI creators themselves. The pairing is the point: platforms are tightening policy while the people most affected are still trying to shape how the conversation gets framed. Worth a look for anyone tracking how DSPs are writing the rules before the arguments are settled.

Read on AI Music Newsletter →
07 AI Product News

Of course Elon Musk is making an AI phone

Sources rounds up a week of AI product noise, anchored by the apparently inevitable Elon Musk AI phone, where SpaceX's infrastructure gives him a real angle others don't have. Also worth noting: Palantir's Alex Karp going after OpenAI and Anthropic on enterprise value, Anthropic's quiet push into life sciences, and a handful of agent-forward consumer platforms worth watching.

Read on Sources →

Companies Are Throttling Employees' AI Use Because It's Too Expensive

Joseph Cox & Emanuel Maiberg's piece at 404 Media documents what enterprise AI adoption actually looks like from the inside: Atlassian, Adobe, and Amazon telling employees to dial back usage because costs have spiraled, in one case to over $15 million a month. The reporting is built on leaked Slack chats and internal dashboards, which makes it specific in ways vendor announcements never are.

Read on 404 Media →

Brian Armstrong Runs 1,200 AI Agents at Coinbase. Here Is the Operating Model He Just Handed Every Founder.

The AI Corner breaks down how Coinbase now counts 1,200 AI agents as full-time workforce equivalents, with pods shrinking to two to four humans alongside ten agents. Code shipped per developer is up 2x year over year. The structural argument is pointed: the org chart no longer maps who does the work, only who reviews it. Teams still running 2022-style pods are already behind.

Read on The AI Corner →
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