Chris Dalla Riva of Can't Get Much Higher, who spent years listening to every number one hit for his book, has clocked something you've probably felt: pop stars are becoming anonymous. You save a song off TikTok, shuffle it a hundred times, and still can't name who made it. The context that album credits and MTV once forced on you is gone, and streaming profiles all look identical. He argues it's a design choice, not destiny, and points to who's fixing it.
Pitchfork digs into Maphra, the faceless metal vocalist whose viral Bring Me The Horizon cover racked up 50 million plays while half the internet insists she's AI. Here's the twist worth sitting with: she isn't denying it. The suspicion is the marketing. When your feed can't tell a real screamer from a generated one, the ambiguity itself becomes a growth strategy, and artists have every reason to lean in rather than clear it up.
Tuma Basa, the former YouTube exec who built out the platform's Black music strategy, watches a lot of YouTube, and he's got a name for what The Breakfast Club lost when it jumped to Netflix: algorithmic capital. It's the front-door delivery you get when the feed knows you. He puts it alongside money and positional power as a form of capital you can squander. Miss the placement and your motion goes cold. Ask anyone whose catalog moved platforms.
Max Freedman takes 'Lizzo's Pass,' Sam Taggart's name for the old fork between chasing Pitchfork acclaim or Target sales, and argues the binary has collapsed. Swift went commercial and watched her scores slide; Doja stumbled splitting the difference. But Charli's BRAT, Rodrigo's Best New Music run, and Chappell's number-three 'Subway' now hit both at once. Plotting scores against first-week sales, Freedman finds acclaim and commercial success correlate.
Starting from a ten-dollar cut of a door split fifteen ways, Asher Price argues that DIY's ethic of self-sacrifice has curdled into a 'mystical austerity' that dresses up exploitation as virtue. He traces the line from art-school punk through MacKaye's Dischord to what he calls a music-world Californian Ideology. His fix is material, not spiritual: stop believing in music's magic, look up rather than in.
The dancefloor, not the concert hall, is where Ammar Kalia's Guardian conversation with Ezra Collective's Femi Koleoso and James Mollison locates British jazz. Talking at Love Supreme, the pair trace their formation through shuttered rooms like Passing Clouds and the Haggerston pub, where a chance jam connected Koleoso to Tony Allen. The scene these venues built, they argue, was never government-funded.
The economics of ransomware have shifted, and Christina Caron's report on the ShinyHunters breach at Madison Square Garden shows how. When the Garden refused to pay, the group published 26 million records: internal emails, celebrity contacts, corporate data. Tufts' Josephine Wolff notes the play isn't fraud but humiliation, which now pays better. Three class actions followed in the Southern District.
Angela Watercutter goes behind Jay-Z's Yankee Stadium mini-residency with production designer Willo Perron, whose guiding principle was restraint: 'the statement piece in a Jay-Z show is Jay-Z.' Honoring Reasonable Doubt and The Blueprint, Hov worked a bare stage backlit by a 2,952-square-foot screen of early-career New York images, backed by a ten-piece band and eighteen-piece string section, and let the surprises carry the night: Beyoncé on the 'Can't Knock the Hustle' hook, Nas on 'Dead Presidents,' daughter Blue Ivy on keys, mentor Jaz-O in the flesh. Two shows became three after instant sellouts, an 'Extra Innings' night tacked on Sunday. Watercutter sets the run inside a charged New York summer of the World Cup, a Knicks title, and a Madison Square Garden celebrity wedding, with bleachers flanking the stage to summon the old Tunnel-era intimacy.
Poetic Outlaws offers a small, affecting portrait of literary lineage, casting Tom Waits as a lifelong reader who took the Beats to heart but crowned Charles Bukowski his true 'Godfather.' The heart of it is an interview excerpt in which Waits remembers meeting Bukowski a handful of times and failing, cheerfully, to match his drinking, filing him alongside Keith Richards as someone 'made out of different stock.' He recalls turning down Barbet Schroeder's well-paid offer to play Bukowski in Barfly, doubting his own acting, and admits he spent years seeking father figures because he had 'no operating father' of his own. The newsletter closes by pointing readers to Waits singing Bukowski's 'Nirvana,' one of his more quietly devastating performances.
JAŸ-Z's 30th-anniversary victory lap should be a family reunion, but the andre gee newsletter argues hip-hop is too estranged for one. Younger fans, more class-conscious and scattered across micro-scenes from Wale's lyricism to 2Slimey's rage rap, read him as a half-retired billionaire rather than the GOAT. Stan culture and Akademiks-style gossip finish the job, recasting artistry as reality-show plot.
Spencer Kornhaber reviews Madonna's 15th album, Confessions II, and finds the acclaim more interesting than the record. A nostalgic sequel to 2005's Confessions on a Dance Floor, it has drawn her warmest reviews in years, with fans saying she has tapped back into her essence.
Matthew Cantor reports from inside a Gaia Music Collective 'one-day choir,' where more than a hundred strangers gathered in a former Los Angeles synagogue to learn and perform a single song, a number from the Hannah Montana movie, three times, with no audience but themselves. The draw, participants tell him, is 'collective effervescence,' the church-like charge of many voices at once, and Cantor sets it against hard numbers on American loneliness: socializing down across every age bracket, weekly religious attendance fallen from 42 to 30 percent, third spaces vanishing. Born in a pandemic-era Brooklyn apartment, Gaia has since drawn thousands and spread to Toronto, Brisbane, and beyond, its viral clips (a 10-million-view 'Unwritten') doubling as recruitment. It reads as a dispatch on singing revived less as performance than as a technology for belonging.
The Herb Sundays Season 11 finale profiles Chanel Beads, Shane Lavers' avant-pop project, as an artist who captures the 2020s' "non-place" feeling precisely because there's no dominant sound to capture. Drawing lines to Varg, OPN, and ML Buch, the piece argues Lavers' power lies in calibrating romance, apathy, and urgency at exactly the right levels, then letting the whole thing fall apart a second later.
The patience of a Bryson Tiller show, songs left to breathe while the crowd sings the lyrics back, is the payoff for connection built long before the arena. Hypebot ties his Neo Trap Soul Tour to the restraint TRAPSOUL established in 2015: no strobes or relentless momentum, just an artist trusting the room to carry the emotional weight most headliners try to manufacture with spectacle.
NextDraft flags a Wired report on Madison Square Garden as a preview of the surveillance future: everyone who walks in gets scanned, and known visitors land in a database with risk ratings. Morgan Wallen is 'medium,' Freddie Gibbs and DaBaby 'high,' Lil Tjay banned outright. The venue also tagged 93 entries as LGBTQIA, quietly logging celebrities' race and sexual orientation.
The human labor feeding AI music models should be registered, protected, and paid, argues Steve Stewart in this Zinstrel guest editorial. Stewart, a decades-long artist-rights advocate, is founder of AIMRO (the newly rebranded AI Music Rights Organization) and SongHub, so read this as both argument and pitch: the infrastructure he describes is the infrastructure he's building. Still, his core case, that AI-assisted creators need rights machinery now, lands.
Darius Van Arman, who co-leads the Secretly Group of indie labels, argues the AI music fight comes down to training licenses, not the songs themselves. He takes Suno's fair-use claim personally, and quotes CEO Mikey Shulman's line that making music isn't enjoyable anymore as evidence of what these startups actually value. Independents, he warns, stand to lose most when art gets derived from patterns of the past.
Stems uses DeathbyClawd, an AI disruption-prediction tool built by a former Palantir engineer, as a lens for stress-testing conventional wisdom about which music industry players are vulnerable. The useful framing: LLMs are trained on received wisdom, so their outputs tell you more about consensus assumptions than actual risk.
An episode of the CUJO podcast featuring a discussion with writer and urban planner Drew Austin about how Silicon Valley has made taste a central buzzword, the phenomenon of "tasteslop," and what the tech industry's obsession with taste reveals about changing class dynamics and cultural gatekeeping.
SoundExchange CEO Michael Huppe warns in MBW that several EU member states are lobbying Brussels to overturn a 2020 European Court of Justice ruling guaranteeing US recording artists pay when their tracks air on European radio. The stakes: nearly $300 million a year. Huppe frames it as retaliation dressed as policy, and a direct threat to how American performers get paid abroad.
Lamniformes calls this 2026 Discombobulated track an absolute jam where the Richard Dawson bits are the most straightforward stretches. Stick around for the killer sax solo: the band stays consistent while the arrangement shifts like a constantly moving amoeba, never the same shape twice.
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From the trio's debut LP Magic Object, where percussionist Booker Stardrum (SML, Weyes Blood), saxophonist Will Epstein (Nicolás Jaar, Darkside), and synth player Ben Vida oscillate between spiritual jazz and Krautrock. Epstein's brass becomes the focal point above a Vida-Stardrum rhythm section, with overdubbed saxophone unisons giving the illusion of multiple horns in conversation. Grown out of a bar-band residency at Tubby's in Kingston, New York.
The Bollywood session musician blended ancient Indian ragas with electronic dance beats made on then-state-of-the-art Roland gear: the Jupiter-8, TR-808, and TB-303. The result uncannily anticipated the sound of Chicago acid house by five years, an album way ahead of its time now returned via reissue.
Born from an accidental two-day session when Kiefer, CARRTOONS and Nate Smith gathered to test a new studio console, the record moves at the clipped, looped pace of a beat tape. Shatter the Standards singles out PEARL, where a light, Brazilian-influenced groove lets Kiefer deliver compact melodic cells while Carr weaves complex lines between them.
One of five versions on the Hypercube EP, drawn from the LP Evaporator. While early buzz gathered around the Basile3 Remix, a closer listen points to the Hard Version that opens the set: a retro bleed of breakbeats and hard trance, a summer banger.
From Kinshasa in Action on Nyege Nyege Tapes, the track channels the sound of overstuffed outfits made from discarded and repurposed metal used as instruments during a Kampala street fair. A closer listen offers it as vicarious access to an experience few have had.
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.
The Lebanese-Swiss producer from Sydney lays traditional Lebanese folk music over an idiosyncratic cocktail of trip-hop, dancehall, and post-dubstep. The drum samples alone justify the tune-in: as Mutek put it, this sounds like traditional Lebanese wedding music with a tough, stripped-back, clubby twist.
Pitchfork frames SML as LA's latest torchbearers of slanted jazz, spun off from the Jeff Parker/ETA lineage but openly discombobulating where Parker wanders. Captured live at Zebulon, "Roundabouts" opens on Jeremiah Chiu's tricky 5/4 synth pattern before the quintet climbs into intersecting layers of transcendent high notes, Uhlmann's nervy hammer-ons giving way to robotically muted 16th notes. Krautrock in the stew, but the destination stays up in the air.
The first single from The Singer In My Band, which Nate Amos calls his first "road record": ideas that incubated while daydreaming out the van window rather than home with a guitar. His father, bluegrass musician Bob Amos, rips banjo on the title track, and Nate cites a "lifelong reverence" for bluegrass and its particular rules, where songs have to stand up on melody, lyrics, and chord progression alone. Amos engineered, produced, and performed nearly everything himself.
Max Bolen's essay reads Netflix's cratering second seasons, The Night Agent down by half, One Piece off a third, Avatar down sixty percent, not as a mystery but as a bill coming due. By dismantling television's load-bearing structures, the long season, the weekly schedule, the staffed writers' room, Netflix optimized for instant engagement and got exactly what it built for: shows that vanish from memory as fast as they are binged. Bolen's sharpest charge is that Netflix openly designs for 'second-screen viewing,' making television meant to be half-ignored while you scroll, so of course the plot is gone by season two. The company, he argues, stopped competing with HBO and started competing with YouTube, turning prestige drama and licensed BuzzFeed clips into interchangeable content, and left the job of cultural repair to the rest of us.
Angelica Frey wrote her essay to rebut a viral claim that European women are somehow immune to body hatred, and her counterexample is the country she grew up in. Italy, she argues, runs on relentless female body-shaming, a lifetime of scrutiny over hair, features, breast size, and above all hip width, with 'narrow' held up as the ideal. She traces the programming to Berlusconi-era television and its veline, the barely dressed variety-show dancers broadcast daily to children, and notes that even the beloved Raffaella Carrà was mocked for 'wide hips,' while Sophia Loren's curves passed only because the waist stayed tiny. Frey names the machinery plainly, a patriarchal and Catholic conditioning that turns women against one another, and finds relief only in distance, which reveals the standard as cultural rather than true.
The New York Review of Books uses Cape Verde's improbable World Cup run as a lens on sodade, the untranslatable longing the islands carry everywhere they go. The piece moves between a nueva canción show losing its audience to a football match and a Congolese bartender correcting a too-literary read of a goal celebration.
Alex Vadukul profiles Mendel Uminer, a 31-year-old Hebrew translator and would-be literary editor whose landlord decided his 600-square-foot Upper East Side studio, and the 10,000 books stacked to its ceilings, constituted a fire hazard. Vadukul renders the 'temple of knowledge' lovingly, Judaica along the walls, opera history in the bathroom, novels swallowing the floor mattress, and the salons where striving writers drank beer amid teetering towers and argued over Greek poetry. Then the eviction notice arrives, citing 'over-accumulation of combustible books,' and Uminer, unbowed, resolves to fight it in court. The piece works as both a New York character study and a gentle provocation about devotion and excess, an unrepentant reader running his hand across the spines, insisting that in a rabbinic household no one would blink at a library like his.
Contraptions takes on taste itself: not as a set of preferences, but as a structured practice involving indifference, attention, and something close to cruelty. The argument is that most taste discourse stops at internalizing others' criteria and calling it judgment. The piece pushes past that into what taste actually requires: choosing what to care about means choosing what to harm.
Call & Response uses a screen-free summer camp as a frame for something worth sitting with: a banger isn't about volume, it's about never letting the audience catch you holding back. The piece traces what it actually takes to get a roomful of nine-to-fourteen-year-olds to fully let go, and the answer is performer commitment so total it grants the crowd permission.
An essay on celebrity divorce and separation, prompted by Jack Antonoff and Margaret Qualley's split. The author argues against the shame surrounding high-profile divorces and advocates for normalizing divorce as a valid life choice, particularly for young people.
Machine Girl's whole project is sensory overload as philosophy: breakcore, gabber, and noise punk fed through a blender until genre tags feel beside the point. This is a duo that's spent a decade making abrasion feel joyful, their maximalism never quite tipping into parody. The title alone tells you they're still in on the joke
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De La Soul flipped Steely Dan and Otis Redding into the same three minutes, then dressed the whole thing in a daisy-age sweetness that shouldn't have worked on wax or screen. Before the Native Tongues became a movement, this was the proof of concept: hip-hop could be goofy, lovestruck, and sample-drunk all at once.
Chris Cunningham built two porcelain Björks and let machine arms assemble them into a kiss. Coolant, sparks, and tenderness share a single frame. It's among the very few music videos in MoMA's permanent collection, and twenty-five years of CGI later the robot romance hasn't dated a second.
Will Anderson buries his voice under so much distortion it becomes another texture in the wall, a smear of vowels fighting through the fuzz. Hotline TNT's whole trick is making guitar noise feel like tenderness, and this one's the proof: a love song you have to lean into just to catch the words.
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.
At RAISE, the broader AI tech world wasn't sweating creative applications — but Zinstrel finds the one panel that mattered: Mistral's Zach Krasner arguing that expertise changes what you *notice*, not just what you produce. In a world where Suno users generate a Spotify library's worth of songs every two weeks, the ability to make something isn't the differentiator anymore. Care and taste are.
404 Media reports detection data suggesting 41 percent of longform LinkedIn content is fully AI-generated, with roughly a third of longer X posts following suit. Reddit and Substack sit closer to one-in-ten. The numbers reframe the platform trust question: if LinkedIn is nearly half synthetic, the professional discourse happening there is less a conversation than a performance of one.
A podcast episode featuring Paul Gewuerz discussing how AI could help rebuild local journalism after two decades of disruption from the internet and social platforms. The piece examines AI search engines as potential tools for news distribution and publisher compensation.
The Tow-Knight Center's (Re)Structured News takes ChatGPT's new voice interface seriously as infrastructure, not just a novelty. The argument: conversational AI isn't another distribution channel, it's a potential demand driver for news that also concentrates the "last mile" question — who owns the interface owns the relationship.
A report on the Summer of Ludd, a series of protests and performances in New York City organized to challenge big tech and AI. The piece features an interview with activist and documentarian Amanda Hanna-McLeer about the youth-led Luddite movement and its evolution from high school clubs to citywide activism.
An interview with writer and thinker Meghan O'Gieblyn about AI alignment and the parental metaphors used in discussions of artificial intelligence development. The piece explores how anxiety about creating AI mirrors maternal concerns and examines the philosophical implications of machine learning.
The Future of Life Institute's July 2026 AI Safety Index grades the major labs, and the pattern is consistent: safety rhetoric outpaces revealed behavior across the board. No company scored above a C- on existential safety, three received failing grades, and Anthropic, OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and Meta have all quietly weakened their pledges to pause if red lines are crossed. Luiza Jarovsky's newsletter breaks down the findings clearly.
The AI Corner draws a useful line between what frontier labs can do and what's actually available to everyone else. DeepMind's AlphaEvolve broke a 56-year math record and recovered 0.7% of Google's global compute. The practical takeaway: the harness layer around any model — prompts, memory, tools — is where the measurable gains live, and it's open today.
An analysis of how the AI landscape has shifted away from model dominance as the primary competitive advantage. The piece argues that open weights models have closed the quality gap while token-based billing has forced companies to optimize costs, making the frontier model less valuable than previously thought.
Alex Heath's piece confirms what the org chart had already signaled: Fidji Simo isn't coming back as OpenAI's number two. Greg Brockman absorbed her remit in mid-May on a non-interim basis, which Heath reads as the real announcement. The detail that matters is why: OpenAI couldn't hold velocity with a senior seat empty, even briefly.
Noam Segal's annual Tech Worker Sentiment Survey finds AI has split the workforce nearly in half: one group energized, another shaken. Burnout jumped 11 points in a year, and the number-one fear isn't job loss. Worth a read for anyone managing teams through an AI transition — the four emotional archetypes Segal identifies are a useful diagnostic.