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On the cover
On the Cover Greg Tate. Featured on "The Best Music Critics, According to Music Critics"

The Best Music Critics, According to Music Critics

Nick Catucci's media_gossip polled 22 top music journalists on who's actually worth reading, and the results are revealing — Greg Tate emerges as the consensus GOAT, Pitchfork still matters despite everything, and Substacks are where the interesting criticism lives now. The subtext is harder: a field that can't stop asking whether it's dying, gender representation that doesn't match the talent pool, and advice for aspiring writers that basically amounts to "good luck."

Cailey Rizzo · Essay

I wanted to be Anthony Bourdain—until I met him

Cailey Rizzo's personal essay cuts through the mythology we've built around Bourdain-style travel writing — the romantic excess, the burning bright, the freedom that's actually indifference to survival. With an A24 biopic incoming, expect another wave of aspiration toward that lifestyle. Rizzo's counter-testimony lands harder: she wanted to be him, got close, and recognized the destination. The piece is a warning dressed as a tribute, and anyone who's glamorized the road should sit with it.

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Pitchfork · Essay

The Story Behind Arthur Russell's Disco Bomb "Go Bang! (#5)"

Pitchfork's deep dive on Arthur Russell's "Go Bang! (#5)" traces how one track became a collision point between downtown avant-garde and disco's queer dancefloors. The real story isn't genre fusion—it's Russell treating the studio like a compositional instrument, layering graphic scores, James Brown's backing vocalist, and 24-track tape manipulation into something that still sounds like it's exploding outward.

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01 Music & Scene

An Introduction to the Ambient Rap Scene

Alphonse Pierre and Olivier Lafontant use Pitchfork's Off the Dome column to map “ambient rap” — a SoundCloud scene running against the rage-rap arms race that's ruled since Whole Lotta Red. Built by often-anonymous rappers pulling from DMV and Philly drill, plugg, and video-game soundtracks, it's hermetic headphone music where every muttered word and barely-there snare matters.

Read on Pitchfork →

Olivia Rodrigo continues a run of hits for women

Track Ten's chart roundup flags a broader pattern: women are driving the Hot 100 right now, with Rodrigo's "Stupid Song" debuting at #3 as her third top-five single from You Seem Pretty Sad For A Girl So In Love. The piece is useful for explaining why a #3 is genuinely impressive — the streaming-radio timing gap makes second #1s structurally hard to land.

Read on Track Ten →

Éliane Radigue's Trilogie de la Mort

Nick James Scavo writes about reaching for Trilogie de la Mort — Radigue's nearly three-hour ARP 2500 meditation on death, recorded between 1985 and 1993 — in the middle of a rehearsal week. The piece leans on Charles Curtis's counterintuitive read: that this music, which most would call sparse, is actually the densest thing he's ever heard. Scavo makes the case stick.

Read on 2020 Music Group →

John Beltran's Whisper Warmly

New Environments makes a case for Whisper Warmly, a cassette-only release of John Beltran's ambient work from book publisher Pomegranate Press — not a best-of, but a curated study designed to accompany reading. The argument is quietly sharp: streaming killed the joy of digging, so a thoughtfully sequenced tape feels like reclamation. Grab a cheap deck and head somewhere green.

Read on New Environments →

Who Really Invented The Concept Album?

An essay examining the often-misreported history of the concept album, challenging the common assumption that The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band was the first concept album and exploring earlier examples of records organized around particular themes or stories.

Read on Can't Get Much Higher →

The 2001 Project: Cannibal Ox's The Cold Vein

This essay examines Cannibal Ox's 2001 debut album The Cold Vein as part of a series analyzing rap albums from 2001 that defined the genre creatively and industrially. The album, produced by El-P and featuring the Harlem duo of Vast Aire and Vordul Mega, represented a futuristic sound that influenced the trajectory of underground rap.

Read on POW MAG →

if critics don't matter, why is everyone so angry?

Jackson Langford reads the Anthony Fantano–Halsey blowup — his 1/10 on The Great Impersonator, her very public rebuttal — as proof of the thing both sides claim is dead. His argument: if criticism didn't matter, neither would spend the emotional energy fighting about it. In an era of algorithmic playlists and passive listening, the feud is the cycle of art working as intended.

Read on Jackson Langford →

Curation is the summation...

An essay exploring music curation as an art form involving evaluation and filtration, distinguishing it from music programming, and examining how curators—particularly DJs—tell stories through song selection and create experiences for audiences.

Read on Tuma Basa Substack →
02 Music Industry Analysis

Fenix Flexin: The AI Music Hit Hiding on the Hot 100

Zinstrel makes the case that 'RUBBERZ' by Shoreline Mafia's Fenix Flexin may be the first mainstream AI-generated track to crack the Hot 100 — and that its artist has been denying it. The evidence is building despite his repeated pushback, and the piece is worth your time for what it reveals about how AI detection actually works and where it still fails.

Read on Zinstrel - AI Music Culture & Analysis →

Majors and BMG Ask US Supreme Court to Overturn Ruling Letting Songwriters Reclaim Copyrights

Music Business Worldwide breaks down Vetter v. Resnik, the case where the majors and BMG are asking the Supreme Court to reverse a Fifth Circuit ruling that would let songwriters reclaim worldwide copyrights under US law. The rightsholders are calling it a recipe for "chaos" — which tells you exactly whose interests the current system was built around.

Read on Music Business Worldwide →

Spotify continues to gaslight on royalties

Infinite Catalog catches Spotify's director of global music policy using percentage growth to obscure absolute losses — the classic trick of making a $1-to-$2 gain look better than $100M-to-$150M. The piece uses Spotify's own numbers to show $1.2B in royalties shifted to the $2M+ tier since 2022, with fewer than 80 artists capturing 81% of that move. Pool-share math is zero-sum.

Read on Infinite Catalog →

Suno is Paying Grants to Independent Artists, as Long As The Agree to Not Criticize Suno

Music Business Worldwide reports on Suno's new Spark incubator — grants, mentorship, and marketing support for unsigned artists — with a catch buried in the terms: recipients can't publicly criticize Suno. It's a tidy structure: the company buys goodwill, silences dissent, and gets artist-facing credibility all at once. Worth watching how the independent music community responds to the non-disparagement strings.

Read on Music Business Worldwide →
03 Music Recommendations

Thomas Bangalter — "Mirage"

The Daft Punk co-founder's continued retreat from the dancefloor: a ballet score for 16 dancers, orchestral and steeped in Iannis Xenakis. Ambient composer Eluvium flagged it as recent listening — found off-algorithm, not by recommendation engine.

04 Voice & Culture

What Substack Isn't Telling You About Its Paid Tier

Shannon Bindler argues that switching on Substack's paid tier is less a paywall than an unlock: only accounts with paid enabled qualify for the “Rising” discovery shelf, and the new brand-sponsorship program is gated to badge-marked “Bestsellers.” Turn it on early while you're small, she says — though Stripe's geography still locks writers in entire regions out entirely.

Read on Shannon Bindler →

An Interview with Sigrid Nunez

Morgan English interviews author Sigrid Nunez about her mentors Susan Sontag and Elizabeth Hardwick, her memoir about Sontag, and how Hardwick helped her secure a position at The New York Review of Books as an assistant editor.

Read on The Believer →

WHAT DOES JOHN ELIOT GARDINER OFFER PRESENTERS THAT WOMEN CONDUCTORS DO NOT?

Classical music's habit of rehabilitating problematic men while credentialed women wait outside isn't news — but this Substack piece uses Sir John Eliot Gardiner's 2026 appearance at BachFest Leipzig as the latest, clearest example of the pattern. The argument isn't complicated; the point is that it doesn't need to be. The industry already knows the score.

Read on Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack →
05 Sound on Sight Video Archive

Nini Raviolette — "Suis-Je Normale?"

1980 · French new wave

French minimal wave specialized in deadpan existential dread, and Nini Raviolette put the bluntest version right in the title: "Suis-Je Normale?" Am I normal? The early-80s Paris underground ran on exactly this, homemade synths and studied detachment, the kind of record reissue labels spent the 2000s pulling back from the edge of vanishing.

06 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

The Wall Street Journal is betting AI can deepen reader trust

The Media Copilot sits down with WSJ's Head of Digital, Taneth Evans, who lays out the newsroom's AI framework: every tool has to earn its place by serving audience needs first. She's specific about where AI is already changing investigations and daily workflows, and makes a credible case that personalized, adaptive storytelling only works when trusted reporting anchors it.

Read on The Media Copilot →

Believe Me

(Re)Structured News makes the case that AI's real leverage point isn't content creation — it's persuasion. The argument: the layer that determines what people see and how it's framed matters more than whether the underlying facts are accurate.

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

SUNO'S LATEST LEGAL OPPONENT FOUGHT THE TOBACCO INDUSTRY – AND WON A QUARTER OF A TRILLION DOLLARS

Suno and Udio face a new legal adversary in their copyright disputes with independent musicians: Hagens Berman, the law firm known for its successful tobacco industry litigation. The firm has partnered with Delgado Entertainment Law to represent independent artists whose recordings were allegedly used without permission to train the AI music-generation models.

Read on Music Business Worldwide →
07 AI Product News

AI Policy as a National Security Issue

The argument here is structural: once AI policy gets framed as national security, every other concern — copyright, privacy, labor — gets demoted to a rounding error. The trigger was Anthropic's Mythos model, capable enough at exploiting security vulnerabilities that they pulled it from public release. Expect AI regulation to get reactive, unpredictable, and occasionally draconian from here.

Read on Luiza Jarovsky, PhD →

Cerebras Bet Against the GPU. It Just IPO'd at $56B

The AI Corner uses Cerebras's $56B IPO as a case study in how to read a hardware bet: is demand bending, and is the incumbent only accidentally good? The GPU was never designed for AI — just conscripted into it. Cerebras built from scratch around data movement instead. The framework is transferable to any moment where a dominant tool is doing a job it was never meant to do.

Read on The AI Corner →

If AI Is Sentient Then So Is 'Age of Empires II'

404 Media cuts through the sentience discourse with a blunt reframe: the behaviors we're treating as evidence of AI consciousness — adaptive responses, apparent distress, goal-seeking — are the same behaviors a 1999 RTS ships with. If the bar is that low, it's not a bar. Useful corrective for anyone watching AI vendors launder capability claims through philosophical ambiguity.

Read on 404 Media →
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