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Curating the feed · Mon / Wed / Fri · Jul 15, 2026
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On the cover
On the Cover Featured on "Hack Reveals How Suno's AI Music Generator Was Made"

Hack Reveals How Suno's AI Music Generator Was Made

404 Media has made a beat of prying open AI companies' training practices, and this hack drags Suno's data sourcing into the light. If you've suspected the generator spitting out uncanny approximations of real records was trained on exactly what you think it was, here's the receipt. The details matter for anyone weighing whether to touch these tools, or defending the catalog that got fed into them without asking.

AI + Content & Editorial Technology Read on 404 Media →
The New York Times · Music Industry Analysis

Labels for Music Created With A.I. Could Join Explicit Lyrics Warnings

The Times reports the major labels' trade groups want two new tags for streaming: capital "AI" for fully machine-made tracks, lowercase "ai" for human songs with AI touches. If you've watched Deezer's stat that 75,000 slop tracks flood in daily, half its intake, you know why. But labels only work if platforms enforce them, and nobody's said who audits the disclosure. A parental-advisory sticker for the generative era, minus the teeth.

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Eugene Healey · Music & Scene

The Analog Revival Did Not Take Place

Eugene Healey has been picking apart the aesthetics of resistance, and here he turns on the film-camera, flip-phone, dumbphone revival you've watched fill your feed. His tell: the woman who shoots analog but only wants the digital scans. Going offline is a luxury most can't afford, so "analog" becomes just another performance staged for validation. Without affordable housing, healthcare, and real third spaces, your quiet act of disconnection gets reabsorbed by the machine it claims to reject.

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01 Music & Scene

Smalltown Supersound Is a Feeling

A label's aesthetic gets traced back to its founder's teenage obsessions in this Futurism Restated interview with Smalltown Supersound's Joakim Haugland. The through-line runs from Sonic Youth on 120 Minutes to saving lunch money for import runs to Oslo's Voices of Wonder, where he stocked Warp and Basic Channel before building his own label inside theirs.

Read on Futurism Restated →

In Yankee Stadium, Jay-Z Came Down to Earth

Alphonse Pierre uses Jay-Z's Yankee Stadium set to test the myth Jay built from that 1995 Stretch & Bobbito freestyle onward: the marked man with nine lives who rapped like there were stories inside his stories. Pierre, a self-described Vol. 1 head, tracks how the crossover behemoth reads at ground level, and what the fantastical rapping loses when the legend finally stands still.

Read on Pitchfork →

Things are ever more mysterious - an interview with Call Super

Ben Cardew catches Call Super at Primavera Sound, and the good stuff is in the mechanics: Seaton organizes rekordbox not by genre but by emotional folders like "Environmental pause" and "Ladbroke Grove," a system built to resist the premeditated pick. It's a rare window into how a working DJ actually thinks in the booth, plus a detour through Basement Jaxx and Ivy Compton-Burnett.

Read on Line Noise →

Open Wide. Say OM.

Tom Moon treats trend-spotting as the old critic's job: scanning past the arts for clues about what's driving the culture. His clue here is a Katya Ungerman Times essay on our slide toward mysticism, which sends him to OM's 2009 Pilgrimage, the Albini-recorded drums/bass duo out of Sleep. A record that sounds like it predicted this post-science moment of rising unseen forces.

Read on EchoLocator →

Untold Defined an Era and Then Disappeared Without Warning; Now He's Back

The post-dubstep era gets romanticized as the last time dance music felt genuinely healthy, all cross-border hybridity before the algorithmic regime set in. First Floor uses the return of Untold (Jack Dunning), the Hemlock Recordings co-founder who went silent for a decade, to revisit that moment. His disappearance read as intentional, which makes the reappearance worth parsing against everything the scene became.

Read on First Floor →

Cover Story: underscores, underground hero

The Fader crowns underscores its cover star, charting the 26-year-old's leap from hyperpop underground to the edge of the mainstream over a single, monumental half of 2026. Written by Reanna Cruz, the profile catches an artist figuring it out in real time, opening for Charli xcx, thinking aloud about personas and the pull of K-pop, and turning a sunset rave into a scene.

Read on The Fader →

Feminist Improvising Group

The Feminist Improvising Group left barely two documented recordings, yet Jazz Journey Newsletter traces how its late-70s run rippled outward. Founded when Maggie Nicols and Henry Cow's Lindsay Cooper met at a union meeting in 1977, FIG became a direct catalyst for Contradictions, the Canaille festivals, and Europe's women-led improvising scene. A reminder that influence rarely tracks discography.

Read on Jazz Journey Newsletter →

Something Is Vacant When I Think It's All Beginning: A Beck Survey

Steven Hyden surveys Beck for Odelay's 30th anniversary, arguing it's the most nineties album ever made, less for its production than its philosophy of adventurous pop right before the internet reordered everything. His reading of the "New Pollution" video is the payoff: what once felt like the future now looks like the lid closing on the pre-"everyone's a curator" era.

Read on Evil Speakers →
02 Music Industry Analysis

What Are You Up to, Ariana?

The multi-night residency has mostly been sold on logistics: fewer travel days, lower costs, cleaner ticketing. Hypebot argues Grande's Eternal Sunshine tour reveals what that extra time buys creatively. By projection-mapping each arena's specific architecture across multiple nights, the crew shrinks the room enough to let a stadium-scale pop show turn quiet and intimate.

Read on Hypebot →

The Financial Engineering of the Music Industry

Private equity isn't buying indie distributors out of villainy, Michael argues at Mad Records, but out of the boring hunger for predictable cash flows. Catalogs and distribution turned music's historic volatility into something that reads like a bond, which is why the State of Michigan's pension system now owns Concord and, by extension, the label that signed Billy Strings. The valuations follow from there.

Read on Mad Records →

The biggest music industry deals 2026 so far

A comprehensive roundup of major music industry mergers, acquisitions, and catalog raises in the first half of 2026, including the $7bn Concord-BMG merger creating the 'fourth major,' Distrokid's $2bn acquisition by CVC Capital Partners, and billions raised in music catalog investments.

Read on STVDIO →

The Spotify Experiment That Changed My Mind

Two weeks off Spotify turned into a case against it, this Substack argues, built on a simple premise: the lean-back listener who never checks who's playing is the load-bearing wall of the whole scheme. It threads together a composer hiding behind 656 fake names, Spotify's origins as an ad-tech company that landed on music by accident, and Ek's line that the real competitor was always silence.

Read on Joel Gouveia (Substack) →
03 Music Recommendations

Kelela — "new avatar"

Kelela's most accomplished record yet, complementing her genre-splicing adventurism with a new sense of lightness and self-assurance. The opener "idea 1" leaps from downtempo meditation to space-age hymn on quicksilver guitars and skyscraping harmonies, while shoegaze textures from her D.C. indie years resurface across "linknb" and "crystalize." "don't piss me off" foregrounds UKG's slippery low-end with new confidence, and guests like PinkPantheress and AK Paul open up space that suits her.

04 Voice & Culture

saturn devours his trans daughter

Inigo Laguda's essay argues that Musk's anti-trans policy crusade, including X's ban on 'cisgender' and its amplification of far-right content, is a private grievance scaled into public infrastructure: a father's estrangement from his daughter Vivian Jenna Wilson, weaponized at platform scale. The classical framing earns its keep.

Read on Inigo Laguda →

Someone Scraped Our Database, Posted It on Reddit, and Got Treated Like a Hero.

Script Hive's piece is a clean case study in how curation gets laundered into content. A Reddit user ran automated scrapers against Script Hive's 11,700-screenplay archive, reposted it as his own passion project, and collected upvotes until a curator recognized identical naming conventions and exclusive scripts. The post was removed, the account banned — but no public correction was ever made.

Read on Script Hive →

What if I just tried operating in a different mode?

Mason Currey's latest Subtle Maneuvers uses Perfume Genius (Mike Hadreas) and his School of Song workshop as a way into the creative-process question Currey always circles: how do you get out of your own way long enough to make something real? Hadreas calls it a 'baby-smooth-brain somatic place.' Currey, a non-songwriter, found the pitch irresistible anyway, which is kind of the point.

Read on Subtle Maneuvers →

Living Out Loud (online)

An essay about the unexpected benefits of posting more frequently on social media and Substack, particularly the community connection that emerges when creators openly discuss industry struggles. The author reflects on how public vulnerability about challenges in the entertainment industry has led to DMs from other writers, actors, and crew members experiencing similar difficulties.

Read on Dara's Substack →

The 10 Greatest Failures of Orson Welles

An essay exploring Orson Welles' numerous failed and unfinished projects as a model for indie creators navigating precarious freelance careers. The piece examines how Welles' struggles with institutional support, Hollywood politics, and personal circumstances led to a career marked by rejection and incomplete works, offering lessons about resilience and the role of failure in creative practice.

Read on The Honest Broker by Ted Gioia →

Genre Favoritism and High Sockery

Casey Lewis uses the old Williamsburg Urban Outfitters becoming a Breitling x Gary Vee members-only club as a lens into how taste hierarchies and genre loyalties calcify over time. The complaint that a neighborhood is 'gone' arrives long after it already left — and Lewis is interested in what that lag reveals about how we police cultural belonging, and who gets to say when.

Read on After School by Casey Lewis →

Madeleine Moments

Jörgen Löwenfeldt's piece in The Bagatelles takes the Proustian premise seriously: that the vacuum cleaner, a can of Perlenbacher Pils, the smell of toothpaste and drains can detach you from the present entirely. The central image is a childhood penalty shootout, balls sailing over a fence into a neighbour's unknowable garden, recalled by a father now vacuuming his own child's room. Quiet and precise.

Read on The Bagatelles →
05 Sound on Sight Video Archive

Chris Cunningham and Aphex Twin — "Monkey Drummer"

2001 · electronic

Chris Cunningham straps a six-armed animatronic monkey to a drum kit and lets it thrash through Aphex Twin's "Mt Saint Michel + Saint Michaels Mount." No narrative, no context, just polyrhythmic violence rendered in latex and servos. Cunningham's creatures always seem to be suffering something; this one suffers the beat itself, limbs jerking in mechanical possession.

06 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

The end of the working writer

T.M. Brown's case is that AI's threat to writing is being aimed at the wrong target. It's not literary fiction or criticism at risk — it's the commercial tier that kept working writers solvent: white papers, SEO copy, product prose. Brown's own confession anchors it: a $20,000 edge-computing white paper that required almost no real thinking.

Read on Teddy (T.M.) Brown →

The scoop isn't the story anymore

The Media Copilot makes a case that AI citation logic has quietly retired the publish-first reflex that shaped newsrooms for a decade. When search and social were the gatekeepers, speed was leverage. Now that AI systems decide what gets surfaced and quoted, authority is the variable that matters. Worth reading for anyone whose editorial strategy still has a 2015 heartbeat.

Read on The Media Copilot →

What VAR tells us about AI

Blood in the Machine uses VAR as a case study in what happens when automation is imposed top-down over the objections of the people it's supposed to serve. The numbers are striking: 91% of 7,000 fans say football is better without it, and just 2% find it enjoyable.

Read on Brian Merchant (Blood in the Machine) →

What "Made with AI" Actually Warns You About

An analysis of AI labeling practices that argues "Made with AI" is an imprecise label masking more specific concerns about consent, authenticity, and trust. The piece categorizes different scenarios where AI is used—faking facts, impersonating people, and pretending to expertise—and suggests more accurate labeling would be more useful.

Read on Zinstrel - AI Music Culture & Analysis →

Writing is thinking

An essay examining the relationship between writing and thought, arguing against the notion that AI can simply handle expression while ideas remain fully formed prior to writing. The piece draws on cognitive writing theory and literary figures to show how the act of writing itself is integral to the development of thought.

Read on James O'Sullivan →

Claude's ability to remix 'liquid content' is 'serious challenge for news media'

Press Gazette reports on Digital News Report author Nic Newman's argument that Claude's capacity to reassemble publisher content into new formats poses a real structural threat to news media. The framing of 'liquid content' is useful: once text flows freely enough to be remixed on demand, the original container loses its value. Newman's proposed responses will matter to anyone thinking about what editorial distinctiveness actually protects.

Read on Press Gazette →
07 AI Product News

The World's Strictest Law on Human-Like AI

China's draft regulations on "anthropomorphic interactive services" are the most specific AI disclosure rules yet written, and Luiza Jarovsky's newsletter breaks down what they actually require. The law targets AI that mimics human behavior, mandates clear labeling, and sets conduct rules for providers.

Read on Luiza Jarovsky, PhD →

DeepSeek Potential IPO

TLDR AI reports that DeepSeek explored raising $1.5 billion at a $71 billion valuation ahead of a possible IPO in late 2026 or 2027. For a lab that arrived as a cost-efficiency story, a $71B price tag reframes it as a major infrastructure player, not just a cheaper alternative to the U.S. frontier models.

Read on TLDR AI →

What will be left for us to work on?

AI as Normal Technology's ICML 2026 keynote argues that superintelligence won't obsolete human work because human performance isn't limited by biology — it's limited by learning and tools. The piece grounds this in chaos theory: a surprising number of tasks have inherent ceilings AI can't breach.

Read on AI as Normal Technology →
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