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Curating the feed · Mon / Wed / Fri · Jul 17, 2026
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Essays · Analysis · Features
On the cover
On the Cover Steve Lacy. Featured on "I used to do acid on a Wednesday. I don't have time for that now: Steve Lacy on his struggles after Bad Habit"

The reject arc: How taste gets built out of distaste

Maarten at MUSIC x reaches for Bourdieu to make a point you've probably lived: your taste didn't start with what you love. It started with the band you couldn't stand and had to keep explaining why. The catch is that taste-by-distaste needs a shared wall to push off, and the monoculture that gave everyone a common Coldplay to reject has splintered into ten thousand micro-scenes. Now you build your own wall, one no at a time.

Music & Scene Read on MUSIC x →
POW MAG · Music & Scene

Ecstatic Heterosexuality: On Madonna's Confessions II

POW MAG makes the case that Madonna has always understood something her critics still don't: sexuality on the dance floor isn't for the male gaze, it's transcendence. Confessions II lands as a spiritual sequel to her 2005 peak, sponsored fittingly by Grindr, the gay fans who bought the flops finally rewarded. If you've watched the Sabrina and Olivia leash discourse and wondered where it started, here's your answer. Madonna got there in 1992.

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Hypebot · Music Industry Analysis

The Comeback Tour No Longer Sells Only Tickets — It Sells Memory.

Hypebot digs into what it calls the "Nostalgia Economy," and the argument lands if you've watched a comeback announcement drop lately. You don't get tour dates anymore. You get box sets, vinyl reissues, unreleased demos, a documentary, and VIP tiers built on a whole superfan tech stack. The tour is just the centerpiece. AC/DC and Bon Jovi are this summer's proof: legacy acts have learned from Hollywood, and the real product being sold is memory.

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01 Music & Scene

I used to do acid on a Wednesday. I don't have time for that now: Steve Lacy on his struggles after Bad Habit

The Guardian's Olive Pometsey sits with Steve Lacy as Oh Yeah? ends a four-year silence. The interview turns on the weightlessness of his fame, a cracked iPhone that produced Kendrick and now sits in the Smithsonian, then Bad Habit, a US number one that made his name bigger than his face. Relieved to be unrecognizable, he is candid about the punctured genius myth.

Read on The Guardian →

The Rise of the Corporate Rave

Pitchfork's Kiana Mickles goes undercover in the sanitized afterlife of rave, the themed pop-ups and sponsored parties that carried an underground form into the mainstream. Her way in is Daybreaker, a sober rave with paid huggers and pre-rave yoga. She holds two truths: for newcomers a low-stakes gateway into electronic music; for lifers a commodified echo of a scene built on transgression.

Read on Pitchfork →

The K-Pop Problem

Monia Ali argues the so-called K-pop problem is really a stan-culture problem the industry has systematized and profits from: coordinated bulk-buying, gamed data that renders Last.fm useless, and 801.5 tons of discarded albums in 2023. She calls the superfan machine a corporate cult dressed as devotion, and pre-empts the xenophobia deflection. Rigorous and out of patience.

Read on Monia Ali →

Where Rap's Avant-Garde Takes Shape

The New York Times visits Young World, the Brooklyn festival that has become a fulcrum for rap's independent avant-garde. Founded by rapper-producer Mike, who saw how few outlets let rising artists perform away from major labels, it reached its fifth edition at Herbert Von King Park, pairing newcomers with the older guard. A case for music programmed from inside the scene.

Read on The New York Times →

Inside the Universe of When There Is No Sun

Resident Advisor tells the backstory of When There Is No Sun, the 2026 compilation routing Sun Ra's cosmic legacy through club rhythms. Curated by Ricardo Villalobos with Turkish label Omni Sound, it hands Arkestra stems to fiercely individual artists like Chez Damier, Underground Resistance, and Calibre, tracing a web of connections back to 1990s Istanbul.

Read on Resident Advisor →

Ukrainian Field Notes ~ LVII

Gianmarco Del Re's latest Ukrainian Field Notes for A Closer Listen files dispatches from a scene making music under fresh ballistic-missile attacks: Kharkiv's Air Defence System on his EP, Iranian-Ukrainian filmmaker Ramin Ghaderian, Brooth on Zaporizhzhia's electronic underground, plus a rare four-years-on catch-up with Octopus Kraft and Viktor Pushkar.

Read on A Closer Listen →

Some international artists are skipping U.S. tours. Others may follow suit

NPR reports on a quieter cost of the current immigration climate: the international musicians, dancers, and comedians giving up on touring the United States. The artist-visa process was always punishing, a petition running hundreds of pages, stacked with press clippings, award records, testimonial letters, and contracts, and a wait that can stretch beyond a year.

Read on NPR →

How Electropop Rose in Hyperpop's Wake

Chartmetric charts a quiet succession in experimental pop: hyperpop, declared dead many times, is giving way to electropop. In Brat's wake, artists trade glitch and genre-hopping for beats that stomp rather than skip. The case study is Slayyyter, whose WOR$T GIRL IN AMERICA opener DANCE... climbed to a 98.8 Chartmetric score and two billion TikTok views. Louder, but more danceable.

Read on Chartmetric →

Half the Jazz Canon Hired the Same Bassist

Paul Chambers turns up on half the consensus classics of 1956 to 1965, and Jazz Noted traces why: leaders like Miles weren't buying accompaniment but a finished foundation, the Chambers-Kelly-Cobb engine that Wes Montgomery literally hired twice. When the column goes dark after 1961, the piece reads it as succession and decline, with Cass Tech quietly supplying New York's first-call bassists through institution, not mentorship.

Read on Jazz Noted →

Remembering Some Women in Texas Country Music

Outlaw and red dirt country sell themselves as inclusive by defining themselves against Nashville's establishment, but Natalie Weiner uses a Dallas library talk to show the genres rarely extend that outsider status to women. Rosie Flores, Kelly Willis, Miranda Lambert and the Chicks all claim Texas grit, yet red dirt won't claim them back. The progressive gloss is mostly branding.

Read on Don't Rock The Inbox →
02 Music Industry Analysis

Why Community Is The Music Industry's New Gatekeeper

Forbes profiles Kadijat Salawudeen, a 2026 30 Under 30 honoree whose organization Girls Who Listen turns mentorship into access for women in music, especially women of color. The argument: community is the industry's new gatekeeper. USC Annenberg numbers frame the gap, women were 37.7 percent of 2024's Hot 100 artists but 18.9 percent of songwriters and 5.9 percent of producers.

Read on Forbes →

Lorde on Spotify's AI Song Descriptions: “We Don't Want This”

Pitchfork's Hattie Lindert catches Lorde pushing back on Spotify's About the Song, an AI feature that auto-summarizes whatever is playing. In a July 16 Instagram story she wrote, I'm gonna go out on a limb and say we don't want this, after it mis-described her track Current Affairs. Her real objection is interpretation: an authoritative synopsis limits free listening.

Read on Pitchfork →

Luminate 2026 Midyear Report: Trends in Music, Television & Film

Luminate's 2026 Midyear Report, its first to combine music with film and TV, reads an industry growing in several directions at once. Global audio streams rose 9.8 percent to 2.8 trillion, led by ex-US growth, with dance and electronic the fastest-growing US genre. The surprises are physical and demographic: CD sales jumped sixteen percent, and one in ten US streams is now in Spanish.

Read on Luminate →

Spotify, TikTok, and Radio Still Can't Crack Discovery

Barrett Media sits with an uncomfortable question: after thirty years and billions in platform spend, why is music discovery still so hard? Spotify's new Release Radar filters, screening by genre or unfamiliar artists, read as a tacit admission the algorithm was never enough. Radio dropped the discovery mandate, the platforms picked it up, and still are not sure what to do with it.

Read on Barrett Media →
03 Music Recommendations

FATHERS — "STUB"

The grooviest cut on the self-titled Blue Note debut from the trio of Kiefer, CARRTOONS, and Nate Smith, where synths whirl over keys, drums, and bass in synchronous flow. Recorded in roughly 48 hours of improvised sessions with Kenny Beats as producer and creative director at his Putnam Hill studio.

04 Voice & Culture

Why We Stopped Going to the Movies

Daniel Parris marshals the numbers on why the theater habit broke: streaming rewired what audiences will wait for. The hinge was Warner Bros.' 2021 Project Popcorn, same-day theater and HBO Max releases that trained viewers to wait for the couch. He surfaces a paradox, the less people pay the higher they rate a film, yet concludes theaters still pay as a quality signal downstream.

Read on Daniel Parris →

Gian

A 5,000-word essay on Giancarlo DiTrapano, the downtown lit publisher who died in 2021, reconstructs a friendship through alternating accounts of the same night: two people passing a phone across a table at a reading, typing fragments at each other.

Read on Tao Lin →

Cultural Refugees

A Different Lens uses a Harlem kitchen table as an entry point into something larger: how St. Clair Bourne's Chamba Notes functioned as infrastructure for Black independent cinema before the internet existed. The detail that lands hardest is that Mingus and Roach played not as atmosphere but as participants.

Read on A Different Lens - see floyd muse →

Every Now and Then I Fall Apart

Ben Sinclair's essay turns personal heartbreak into the occasion: his partner moved out, he's six months sober, and Bonnie Tyler's death handed him the excuse to stop resisting the spectacle. Total Eclipse of the Heart, it turns out, was always about powerlessness.

Read on Low Maintenance →

MSG Kept A Database Flagging LGBTQIA Celebrities

Danielle Chelosky reports on leaked MSG documents, published by hacker collective ShinyHunters, showing a surveillance database with 93 entries flagged as 'LGBTQIA' — including Ricky Martin and Phoebe Bridgers. The system also assigns risk scores based on social media criticism. Class action suits are mounting, and MSG's response is to call the reporting false.

Read on stereogum.com →

NOTHING KNOWING SOMETHING

Yancey Strickler offers a small phenomenology of making things, splitting the creative act into three states he likens to matter: NOTHING, KNOWING, SOMETHING. NOTHING is not absence but potential, the phase that frightens him most yet proves most generative; KNOWING is the active shepherding toward shape; SOMETHING is recognizable but rarely finished. The cycle rewards patience.

Read on Yancey Strickler →

It's okay to hop on the bandwagon

An essay on the cultural dismissal of "bandwagon fans" and the false gatekeeping around fandom. The author argues against the idea that only long-time fans are legitimate, and celebrates people jumping into interests like the Knicks, World Cup, and other trends.

Read on i-D →

This is what my mom thinks of Jacob Elordi

Clare Frances calls her mother without warning and transcribes what follows: a wide-ranging conversation covering motherhood, plastic surgery, men, and dinner. The exchange is funny because the dynamic is real, not performed. Frances's mother dispenses accidental wisdom at high velocity and resists the format even as she participates in it. A small, specific piece of writing that earns its place by being exactly what it says it is.

Read on Famous and Beloved Newsletter →
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

When AI Transparency Becomes a Penalty

Zinstrel draws a line that platforms keep blurring: crediting a collaborator is generosity, but a label that kills your reach is a fine. The piece is sharp on how 'transparency' language launders what is functionally a penalty — honest disclosure gets you shadowbanned, not praised. Anyone tagging AI-assisted work and watching the numbers crater will recognize the pattern immediately.

Read on Zinstrel - AI Music Culture & Analysis →

We are not alone

(Re)Structured News makes the case that archives are suddenly valuable not because journalism discovered a new revenue model, but because AI finally made unstructured, undigitized material economically searchable. The real question isn't monetization — it's what that unlocked capacity means for how news organizations understand their role and who they should be building with.

Read on (Re)Structured News →
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