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On the cover
On the Cover Olivia Rodrigo, Featured on "In Bloomers: Olivia Rodrigo's Un-Grunge Dilemma"

We Need a Recording Industry

Dada Drummer Almanach lays out the structural absurdity facing recording musicians: streaming platforms dodged the royalty frameworks that radio had to follow, and the result is 84% of recorded music income flowing through a system that pays almost nothing. The Living Wage for Musicians Act would close that loophole. Five major city councils have passed resolutions backing it.

Zinstrel - AI Music Culture & Analysis · Essay

Protest Songs & Propaganda: AI Music's Political Turn

Zinstrel tracks the flood of AI-generated political anthems now filling platforms — pro-Trump country, anti-Trump hip-hop, resistance ballads in multiple languages. The insight isn't that partisans make propaganda; it's that the gatekeepers who once mediated political music are gone. No label approval, no artist alignment, no licensing friction.

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James O'Sullivan · Essay

AI can write prize-winning fiction. Now what?

James O'Sullivan dissects the Commonwealth short story prize controversy, where a Caribbean winner was flagged for AI use. His close reading is brutal: negation staged as revelation, aphorisms with the cadence of profundity but no meaning. If you've ever read something that felt polished but hollow, O'Sullivan names the pattern. The judges praised it. That's the problem.

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01 Music & Scene

In Bloomers: Olivia Rodrigo's Un-Grunge Dilemma

A critical essay examining Olivia Rodrigo's aesthetic choices for her new album 'You Seem Pretty Sad For A Girl So In Love,' specifically analyzing the disconnect between her stated grunge and riot grrrl influences and her baby doll dress styling in the 'Drop Dead' music video, questioning whether…

Read on POW MAG →

Last night in Vienna

Patti Smith recounts performing a stripped-down acoustic version of "Fireflies" in Vienna with Jackson, Seb, and Tony Shanahan, discussing the challenges and importance of attempting new musical interpretations and the broader experiences from her Vienna visit.

Read on Patti Smith →

Dark by design: Versatility as focus

Profile of a musician trained classically on violin who blends classical tradition with R&B and hip-hop influences, creating dark, ambient, orchestral music that emphasizes space and emotional weight through lower registers.

Read on MUSIC x →

How Peter Frampton Changed Tom Morello's Life

An interview and essay by Grayson Haver Currin about how Peter Frampton's music influenced Rage Against the Machine guitarist Tom Morello, with Morello recounting his passion for Frampton Comes Alive! and the guitarist's impact on his musical development.

Read on Out + Back →
02 Music Industry Analysis

A scoop on Udio's upcoming app, Starstruck

Cherie Hu got access to a private Udio + Kobalt webinar and reports the first concrete details on Udio's upcoming consumer remix app, Starstruck — walled-garden architecture, four interaction modes (Cover, Reimagine, Remix, Create), royalties flowing to rights holders on every generation. Hu's analysis flags the structural weakness: closing the ecosystem solves licensing but kills the social sharing that drives fan creation, with Udio's top tracks already trailing Suno's by orders of magnitude.

Read on Water & Music →

On Clipping: Who Says The Metaverse Is Dead?

Sam Backer routes through the Geese / Chaotic Good marketing scandal into a wider essay on 'clipping' — the chains of content middlemen whose repackaged versions of material now eclipse the originals. The spine is the collapse of music criticism: reduced to another voice in the same algorithmic feed as the material it would otherwise examine. Closes by sketching whether smaller AI models on personal devices could return some grip on the algorithmic flow.

Read on Money 4 Nothing →
03 Music Recommendations

JPEGMAFIA — "EXPERIMENTAL RAP"

Shatter the Standards argues Peggy's provocations finally match his production on this record. 'Pop this Heat' stacks compressed contempt over pitched-up gospel-adjacent R&B and boom-bap, while 'Meet the Dealers' delivers the 'gnarled, rough, and ugly' aesthetic Earl Sweatshirt identified—grinding metallic synth bass against looped sirens with Kansas City collaborator DATPIFFMAFIA.

04 Voice & Culture

Art for Our Sakes

Zadie Smith takes on the oldest deflection in crisis politics — why talk about art when people are suffering? — in a lecture delivered at the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She anchors the question in E.M. Forster's 1949 address to the same room, post-WWII wreckage and all. The parallel does the argument's heavy lifting before she's made it.

Read on The New York Review of Books →

Water Pressure

Rafia Zakaria uses a Karachi neighbor's rage at overflowing water as an entry point into what scarcity actually does to a city of twenty million — how it breeds resentment, reshapes daily life, and exposes who the infrastructure was never built to serve. Personal and structural at once.

Read on The Believer Magazine →

A Guide to Kafkaesque Living

A collection of short stories and dispatches exploring Kafkaesque themes, including visits to a train station in Moldova, an unexpected inheritance, and figure skating scoring calculations. The author writes about the Swedish experience of seasonal change and creativity.

Read on The Bagatelles →

Some Thoughts about Twilight

A critical essay examining Stephenie Meyer's Twilight novel, analyzing its unreliable narrator technique and how the book differs from the film adaptation. The author discusses Bella's characterization and Edward's portrayal in detail.

Read on Isabel Pabán Freed →

The World Cup Squad Edition

Curaçao qualified for the World Cup as the smallest nation by population and geography ever to do so, breaking Cape Verde's record set just five weeks prior. The island's squad is built almost entirely from players born, raised, and trained in the Netherlands.

Read on Why is this interesting? →

How the West's Freedom Leads to Slavery

An exploration of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's 1978 Harvard graduation speech on the difference between modern and ancient conceptions of freedom, examining his argument that true liberty means knowing what and how to choose in accordance with the good, true, and beautiful.

Read on The Culturist →

What is happening to publishing?

An essay examining shifts in media consumption across formats—from books to podcasts to online articles—and arguing that long-form non-fiction books offer unique benefits like ownership, footnotes, and sustained narrative attention that newer media cannot replicate.

Read on Res Obscura →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

The AI Mirror Edition

An essay by Noah reframing common narratives about AI and writing, arguing that blame for AI-generated work is misdirected at young people handing in slop. The piece suggests the real issue lies with systems and education rather than individual misuse.

Read on Why is this interesting? →
06 AI Product News

Marc Andreessen: The AI moat is not the model

Marc Andreessen argues that the true AI moat is not the model itself but what companies build around it, discussing how technological moats decay rapidly, why the 'wrapper' critique is outdated, and how winning AI apps scale to multiple specialized models with proprietary intelligence from…

Read on The AI Corner →

Governing Seamless Human-AI Interactions

Luiza Jarovsky's newsletter argues that Thinking Machines Lab — Mira Murati's post-OpenAI company — released an interaction AI model that deserves more attention than it's gotten. The piece frames it as a genuine architectural shift in how humans and LLMs collaborate, with governance risks…

Read on Luiza Jarovsky, PhD →
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