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Essays · Analysis · Features
On the cover
On the Cover Smog Collage, Featured on "Breathing Smog: Thoughts on Early Bill Callahan"

Suno's Data Grab, Spotify's Legal Fortress, and the 'Blue Dot Fever'

Vinyl Culture bundles three pressure points into one read: Suno's training data questions, Spotify's legal armor, and the "Blue Dot Fever" that keeps you compulsively clearing notifications. The connective tissue is algorithmic manipulation — how platforms shape listening behavior while AI reshapes creation. If you've felt your relationship to music subtly hijacked, this names the mechanisms.

Beauty Blew a Fuse · Essay

Breathing Smog: Thoughts on Early Bill Callahan

Mark Richardson at Beauty Blew a Fuse uses a recent Bill Callahan show as a springboard into something more personal: what happens when an artist you've followed for decades grows out of the darkness that first drew you in. The early Smog records gave voice to alienation so total it hurt. Callahan's moved on. Sometimes you haven't. That's the tension worth sitting with.

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Zinstrel - AI Music Culture & Analysis · Essay

AI Music Tools Don't Support Collaboration. The Artists Figured it Out Anyway.

Zinstrel digs into how AI music artists are building collaborative workflows despite tools designed for solo use. The workarounds are clever — placeholder verses, mashup permissions, extend chains — but the real story is what happens when a community outpaces its platform. These artists aren't waiting for features; they're inventing protocol. That's how scenes form, even synthetic ones.

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01 Music & Scene

In Praise of Juliette Gréco

A biographical essay celebrating French chanson and jazz singer Juliette Gréco, exploring her harrowing experiences during World War II, her role as the Muse of Existentialism in 1950s Paris, and her distinctive husky voice that influenced musicians from Miles Davis to The Beatles.

Read on JazzWax →

The Greatest Gift Kendrick Gave Drake

Sam Hockley-Smith discusses SALEM's new album Red Dragon, highlighting their lo-fi, messy aesthetic and the return of Heather Marlatt's vocals, alongside a review of Jump Source's album in Fold and billy woods' guest appearance on "Empty Bars."

Read on New Environments →

#IndieSleaze Will Never Die

A retrospective on the return of indie sleaze aesthetics in post-COVID culture, tracing how Gen Z revived mid-2000s party-rock visual styles and music through TikTok, and examining how contemporary acts like Slayyyter and the Dare are channeling the spirit of early 2000s dance-punk and electronic…

Read on Ethernet →
02 Music Industry Analysis

MARKETING MISERY

Simon Napier-Bell traces the music industry's long habit of monetizing artist pain — from Victorian sheet music to Amy Winehouse — arguing the real question isn't whether exploitation happens, but where the line sits.

Read on Simon's Substack →
03 Music Recommendations

SUSS — "Counting Sunsets"

The New York trio channels Ry Cooder, Daniel Lanois, and Ennio Morricone through pedal steel-infused ambient with a wistful air. Their signature sound—built by veteran musicians including Pat Irwin—carries the memory of late synth player Gary Leib, who passed in 2021.

04 Voice & Culture

OBITUARY ACCOUNTINGS

A Substack post uses Michael Tilson Thomas's NYT obituary as a lens on classical music's gender problem — 63 professional men named, three women. The MTT piece runs 2,600 words; Wayne Moss's obituary, 750. The numbers do the arguing.

Read on Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack →

Still on the Hook

A personal essay marking the author's 42nd birthday and reflection on life during a seven-year cycle. The piece discusses the author's experience with a writing sabbatical, attending Phish shows in Las Vegas, and exploring psychedelics and sobriety.

Read on Low Maintenance →

What Is a Film Festival For?

Projections dispatches from Cannes with a question worth sitting with: what do film festivals actually do for the people who attend them? The piece probes the gap between industrial strategy and artistic encounter — useful framing for anyone thinking about how live or curated events create…

Read on Projections →

All I want to do is dance

A personal essay about experiencing writer's block and creative funk while working on finishing songs for an audio book project. The author reflects on the paralysis of self-imposed deadlines and how dancing and movement offer an escape from the mental corner she's painted herself into.

Read on Unfit to Print →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

Just Asking Questions

When coding and data are cheap, the scarce resource is knowing what to ask. (Re)Structured News uses Semafor Intelligence — built in hours using OpenAI's Codex to synthesize 300+ conference speakers — to argue that question design is where editorial value now lives.

Read on (Re)Structured News | Tow-Knight Center at CUNY →

The Machine Rages Back

NextDraft draws a sharp contrast between two tech eras: the internet empowered indie creators to compete with institutions; AI is doing the opposite, concentrating power in well-capitalized platforms while individual creative output gets absorbed into training data.

Read on NextDraft →
06 AI Product News
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