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On the cover
On the Cover Featured on "Did Fenix Flexin Make the Song of the Summer—Or Did AI?" Art by DJ Short.

Did Fenix Flexin Make the Song of the Summer—Or Did AI?

POW digs into the chaos around Fenix Flexin's "Rubberz," a Smiths-meets-street-rap track that's either a genuinely weird creative swing or a case study in AI-assisted corner-cutting. The piece gathers voices from producers convinced something's off, and the real tension isn't whether this specific song is synthetic — it's that we've hit the point where nobody can tell anymore. If you're building anything that depends on authenticity as a value proposition, that ambiguity is the problem.

Music & Scene Read on POW MAG →
Joel Gouveia (Substack) · Music Industry Analysis

Good News: The Hype Machine Is Dying

Joel Gouveia draws a sharp line from the pre-SoundScan era—when Billboard charts were literally phoned-in guesses—to today's streaming metrics, which are just as manipulable and just as divorced from reality. The argument lands because you've seen it yourself: the suspicious comment sections, the overnight follower spikes, the playlist placements that smell like money.

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Pitchfork · Essay

Olivia Rodrigo: Blood on the Tracks

Shaad D'Souza's cover sit-down with Olivia Rodrigo, mid-'hurricane' rollout, is less about the records than the engine beneath them: a 23-year-old almost frantically mapping the wiring between her brain and yours, sure specificity is the only road to universal. There's a new festival and plenty of love-song talk — and for anyone building fandom in 2026, a lesson in how deliberately she does it.

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01 Music & Scene

ABADIR Has Had Enough of Futurism

First Floor profiles ABADIR, the Berlin-based Egyptian producer who's made a pointed argument of rejecting electronic music's futurist default — not as aesthetics but as ideology. He traces futurism's roots to liberal, capitalist, and even fascist thought, and argues it maps poorly onto artists from the Global South. His 2022 record Mutate, which braided maqsoum loops with jungle and footwork, made the case sonically.

Read on First Floor →

FR 175: The Field Was Out of the Loop for Eight Years. Now He's Back

Futurism Restated talks to Axel Willner about his return as The Field after eight years away — and the conversation turns quickly to copyright anxiety as a creativity killer. He describes how sample clearance fears crept into his process mid-career and never left, and how Tracklib finally let him use a full vocal verse. The most different album he's made, by his own account.

Read on Futurism Restated →

Marcus Pinn Has The Right To Scratch

An interview with veteran turntablist Marcus Pinn about his new mixtape "Music Has The Right To Scratch," a homage to Boards of Canada created by scratching over their tracks. Pinn discusses his journey from competing as a DJ in his youth to creating this project after gaining viral attention on social media.

Read on CABBAGES →

Die Lit

Garry Drake's entry in his Rolling Stone 250 ranking series lands on Playboi Carti's Die Lit — and the album holds up. Drake frames it against J. Cole's The Off-Season, ranked one slot above, and the contrast does real work: Carti's hypnotic repetition and synthesizer-driven trap feel genuinely visionary where Cole feels radio-ready and safe. A reminder of how much Die Lit quietly reset the ceiling.

Read on Breaking Ranks →

WHACK'S MUSEUM by Tierra Whack

A review of Tierra Whack's album WHACK'S MUSEUM, exploring how her characteristic sparsity becomes a sign of mastery and control. The piece describes the album as resembling a superb rapper executing a tightly rehearsed set with precise syllable delivery and considered disdain.

Read on POW MAG →

What's Behind the Declining Chart Performance of British Music in America?

Chris Dalla Riva digs into why British music has lost its grip on the American charts — and works backward through history to build the case. Starting with the British Invasion's structural conditions (post-rationing economic boom, end of conscription, a peaked baby boom), he frames transatlantic dominance as a specific cultural moment, not a permanent export advantage.

Read on Can't Get Much Higher →
02 Music Industry Analysis

Clive Davis is Dead

Harmony Holiday's essay treats Davis's death not as an occasion for tribute but as a reckoning — arguing that his 'ear for talent' was inseparable from a predatory apparatus built on extracting Black music and disposing of its sources. From Miles going electric to Whitney's death night gala, Holiday builds a case that the star-making machinery was always also a harvesting one.

Read on Harmony Holiday →

11 Essential Songs Shepherded by Clive Davis

The Times' Rob Tannenbaum builds the case for Davis as auteur — a Brooklyn lawyer with no musical training who ran Columbia on instinct. The image that sticks: Monterey, 1967, Davis in khakis and a tennis sweater working a transistor radio amid the hippies, where he signed Janis Joplin on the spot.

Read on NYTimes →
03 Music Recommendations

The Field — "New Album 2026"

Axel Willner's first Field album in eight years marks his most different release yet while circling back to From Here We Go Sublime's construction techniques. Tracklib licensing enabled him to finally use full vocal verses, sidestepping the copyright anxieties that had dampened his sampling approach mid-career.

04 Voice & Culture

When the Rents Were Low

Joe Dunthorne's essay in the NYRB opens with the New York School's defining paradox: a movement that refused to admit it was one. Built around cheap rent and a poetics of irreverence, the group resists the very analysis Dunthorne is attempting — and the essay is most alive when it sits with that tension rather than resolving it.

Read on The New York Review of Books →

New Jersey, N*zis, and Needing People

Believer's essay opens on a drive home from New Jersey — Olivia Rodrigo playing for a teenager, Ani DiFranco playing for a mom — and uses that stretch of road to explore what music actually does between people. Not canon-building. The quiet transmission: a song sent to a friend who needed it, a playlist that moves you one notch closer to tolerable in your kid's estimation.

Read on Believer →

Thoughts On My Appearance on Ezra Klein's Show

Gary's Journey Through Hell recaps what its writer calls one of his best interviews — an Ezra Klein podcast conversation that moves from the social-media dystopia of Super Sad True Love Story to the sensory pleasures animating his upcoming The Sensualist. The arc is the point: how a conversation about looksmaxxing and algorithmic dread pivots, almost effortlessly, into martinis, capybaras, and why Southern Europe understands joy better than we do.

Read on Gary's Journey Through Hell →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

AI reporters churn out error-strewn stories for football websites

Press Gazette reports that Clickout Media, a 'parasite SEO' firm, has acquired reputable football publishing brands and is using AI to churn out error-filled stories under their mastheads. It's a clean case study in what happens when trusted editorial infrastructure gets hollowed out — the brand equity stays, the editorial judgment doesn't.

Read on Press Gazette →

When Washington can switch off your AI

The Media Copilot makes the case that AI availability is now a planning variable, not a given. The hook is Anthropic's Fable 5 — the most capable public model at launch, pulled within days under government pressure. If your editorial workflow depends on a best-in-class tool, that tool can simply disappear. Worth building around.

Read on The Media Copilot →
06 AI Product News

Inside ChatGPT's ads push

Alex Heath reporting from Cannes Lions, where OpenAI held its first-ever briefing at the ad industry's annual blowout — 60 people, a villa off the Croisette, and a clear pitch: ads are coming to ChatGPT. The distance from DALL·E demos to selling inventory is the real story here.

Read on Sources →

MSG made dossier on activists opposing facial recognition

404 Media reports that Madison Square Garden compiled a dossier — literally a file named 'Facial Recognition Activists.docx' — on critics of its biometric surveillance program, including EFF's Adam Schwartz and Fight for the Future's Evan Greer. It's a reminder that the venues scanning your face aren't just collecting data on audiences; they're tracking anyone who pushes back.

Read on 404 Media →
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