New Bands for Old Heads
Gabbie on the 'indie sleaze' / hipster-music-era revival (Vice's new guide, Girl Talk's 'Night Ripper' turning 20) — written from inside the era but outside its tastemaker class: a personal counter-history of who actually populated the 2000s scene versus who got written about.
Musical Urbanism
An ethnographic account of workplace culture at Restless Records and its parent company Enigma in 1989, examining how employees and employers negotiated informal atmospheres, low wages, and intense work expectations. The piece analyzes the trade-offs employees accepted in exchange for creative autonomy and an unconventional workplace environment.
Track Ten
An essay arguing that Lil Nas X is a major pop star whose queerness and openness about his sexuality, demonstrated most notably through 'MONTERO (Call Me By Your Name)', allowed him to break free from one-hit-wonder status and establish a sustained career despite initial industry resistance.
POW MAG
An obituary and tribute to Memphis hip-hop producer Tay Keith (Brytavious Lakeith Chambers), who died at age 29. The piece explores his distinctive production style, his breakthrough year in 2018, his iconic work on Travis Scott's "Sicko Mode," and his aspirations to become a college professor while supporting music education through non-profit partnerships.
Harmony Holiday
Harmony Holiday on Substack moves through grief, jazz, and inheritance in prose that reads like scored music — D'Angelo, Coltrane, Monk, and the children of musicians appear as figures in a meditation on fathers who leave and return, in life and in sound. The argument underneath: that the music we love is the liturgy of that cycle, and we've been dancing to it all along.
JazzWax
An obituary and interview tribute to South African jazz pianist Abdullah Ibrahim (also known as Dollar Brand), who died on June 15 at age 91. The piece reprises a 2011 interview discussing his early career in Cape Town's District Six, his work with the Tuxedo Slickers Orchestra, and the influence of apartheid on his musical development.
New Environments
Sam Hockley-Smith uses AI anxiety as a jumping-off point — he doesn't want to wonder whether what he's hearing is machine-made — then pivots to three recommendations worth your time: Fenix Flexin's surprising "RUBBERZ," Kashual Plastik's gorgeous new compilation A Mistake By Mistakes, and Mackeeper's claustrophobic summer earworm "Flat Soda."
Cuba on Record
Cuba on Record traces Olga Guillot's path from a tenement patio in Old Havana — where she and her sister sang backup for their seamstress mother — to her first Panart studio session at 16. The detail that grounds it: her stage debut at seven, singing "El Manisero," the same song that cracked the American market open to Latin music a few years prior.
The Quietus
A dispatch from New Trad Fest in Saint-Aignan, where The Quietus's folk column hears 'trad' reframed as future-facing rather than backward-looking — Elizabeth Vogler's layered future-folk drifting through a medieval crypt — in a roundup of the festival's best new folk and experimental music.
Night Beat
Mikal Gilmore's interview with Dylan — conducted during his mid-80s tour with Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers — captures him pushing back hard on the Springsteen-Mellencamp Americana wave: America means the Indians, full stop, and everything else is trespassing. It's vintage Dylan, slippery and pointed, and Gilmore lets the transcript breathe.