Maarten at MUSIC x argues that "community" has become the most overworked word in the business: every label wants one, every artist is told to build one, every platform sells the promise of one, until nobody asks what it's for. Drawing on a bootcamp he ran with the Association for Electronic Music, he replaces the vanity-metric version with something usable. Start with why anyone would belong, design for the ninety percent who only lurk, and write your success as a real number.
Damon Krukowski's Dada Drummer Almanach keeps digging into how the mechanics of distribution grind against working musicians, and Tidal's new AI policy is the latest test case. Tagging AI tracks, refusing royalties, blocking impersonation: sensible rules, all of them. But Krukowski's point is the gap underneath. Platforms live on volume, and Suno alone spits out 7 million songs a day. Not paying for slop doesn't stop the flood competing with you for attention.
The New Yorker traces how marriage moved through Taylor Swift's catalog, from the wedding fantasies of "Love Story" to the rejected proposals and empty altars of "Tortured Poets," then back to yearning on "The Life of a Showgirl" after Travis Kelce entered the picture. The piece reads her engagement as narrative closure, life catching up to two decades of songs. Then it follows the fans down the Madison Square Garden rabbit hole. Yes, there was a castle.
The chatter over an opening act, The Line of Best Fit argues, is really a crisis of trust in curation. When audiences treat gigs as a free-for-all built around their own experience, they stop investing in the artist's vision. The piece links that erosion to Lily Allen's contested West End Girl tour and to why discerning, human-guided discovery now feels urgent.
Pitchfork calls Madonna’s fresh, honest dance record her best in 20 years and a vital addition to her canon. A sequel to 2005’s Confessions on a Dance Floor and largely written with Stuart Price, CONFESSIONS II threads vintage club music through autobiography — Danceteria-era downtown New York, grief for her late brother and stepmother, a duet with her daughter Lola Leon — recalling the raw, memoiristic run of her late-’90s peak. Scored 8.1.
The FADER’s Gen F profiles Corridos Ketamina, the duo of Nico Malva and Henny Fay, who collide a centuries-old form of Mexican outlaw music with trap, cloud rap, punk and emo into a shapeshifting, internet-native sound. Ahead of their fall EP La Cktriz, they talk carne asadas, Juan Gabriel and Natanael Cano, and building a proud, inclusive community around a reinvented corridos tumbados tradition.
Harmony Holiday argues that the music industry's tributes to its dead are preemptive failures, talking over the tragedy before it lands. Her evidence is the BET Awards' D'Angelo segment, a Viacom-and-Black charade she watched like a Clockwork Orange patient: opportunism and obligation dressed as love, coherent only when his kids and his own footage cut through. Black music, she insists, is haunted, and extraction without offering invites the ghosts to stay.
A weekly chart roundup covering the Hot 100's top ten, with Ella Langley's "Choosin' Texas" holding the #1 slot for an 11th week. The roundup examines the chart performance of various artists and analyzes trends, including the rise of artist Sombr who has been endorsed by Taylor Swift.
A friend leaning over at a club to say "but listen to that drummer" becomes the case for appreciation as a discipline in this Call & Response essay. It's a pointed reply to Kelefa Sanneh's complaint that criticism has gone soft: the answer isn't sharper teeth but critics who understand an idiom well enough to hear what a player is reaching for, misses included.
Leonard Nevarez takes up a nagging puzzle: why the Gun Club, one of L.A.'s great post-punk bands, never quite belonged to the city that made them. His answer is partly circumstantial, an early New York Times rave for Fire of Love that pulled Jeffrey Lee Pierce eastward before he'd toured.
Tyler King explores the Japanese phenomenon of jazz kissa—intimate listening rooms where people can enjoy jazz with coffee—and traces his own jazz journey beginning with Dave Brubeck's 1964 Jazz Impressions of Japan. He discusses how Minneapolis is beginning to adopt this uniquely Japanese form of jazz appreciation through venues like Harmony coffee shop and HiFi Record Bar.
Ted Gioia explores recent breakthroughs in sonic healing, including MIT's use of 40 Hz soundwaves to eliminate Alzheimer's brain plaque, ultrasound treatments for inflammation and joint pain, and Parkinson's motor skill improvements through ultrasound. He highlights Midjourney's new ultrasound scanning technology that promises non-invasive 3D body imaging in 60 seconds.
POW Mag interviews New York duo Phiik and Lungs ahead of their album People Are Not Your Friends, and the craft talk is the draw. Both push back on the "weird hip-hop" tag, framing their density as relentless rather than fast: Lungs writes single words straight down a vertical line, rapping quiet to conserve breath, chasing Ip Man's punching style over Twista's velocity.
Zinstrel breaks down ElevenLabs' climb toward a $22 billion valuation, its third reset in under two years, via tender offer rather than a new funding round. That's a structure worth understanding: no dilution, no disclosure, just employees cashing out at a higher number. The revenue makes it defensible: $330M ARR at end of 2025, past $500M annualized by April 2026.
The recording stopped being the product the moment it became infinitely available, argues this Substack essay, and the industry keeps trying to solve the wrong problem. The pitch: treat the master as a loss leader, the thing that introduces listeners to an artist's universe and creates demand for everything else. Same move tech and CPG companies made.
Nue Agency's Beats + Bytes newsletter, via Hypebot, lays out five trends shaping 2026, and the sharpest is the industry's breaking-new-music problem: Luminate finds 13-to-24s drifting toward pre-2000s catalog, which already drives 65% of streaming revenue.
The gap between what majors can automate and what indie venues run on spreadsheets is where Tobi Parks operates. In Hypebot's Backstage Pass, the entertainment attorney and owner of Des Moines venue xBk walks through SARA, her Setlist Aggregator and Royalty Application, which standardizes how venues capture setlist data so performance royalties actually reach the artists owed them.
An analysis of how Metallica maintains massive stadium-filling success despite inconsistent album output by deploying extensive fan engagement strategies and a charm offensive across multiple touchpoints. The piece examines their London tour events including pop-up stores, Q&As, film festivals, and community partnerships as evidence of their understanding of fan service.
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.
REC 01
KINACT
Gaingai
♪ Congolese experimental / noise performance
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.
The latest single from Lacy's self-produced third album Oh Yeah? (out July 26), billed as "a record for guitar kids who love synths and synth kids who love guitars." A slow, soulful number where the romance is undercut lyrically: Lacy examines why he's "never learned to love properly" and why he cheats, admitting "I don't even trust myself." SZA plays the at-odds lover trying to work things out in the face of his infidelity.
On Substack, Patti Smith shares audio from a collaboration with Soundwalk Collective made for the Hoffman Foundation — a soundtrack she improvised as a homage to Tarkovsky's Andrei Rublev. The text excerpt that follows meditates on Rublev's self-imposed silence and artistic sacrifice, framing the painter's dilemma as the artist's oldest burden: what it costs to turn away from a God-given gift.
Alfred Jung Lee's essay in The Believer opens a quiet but unsettling argument: description is never neutral. Using two scenes — a magazine profile's efficient physical sketch and a Times obituary of a child killed in a school shooting — Lee shows how what gets named, and what gets assumed, is itself a form of judgment about who requires explanation to exist on the page.
Sex Magazine profiles angelicism01, the anonymous critic who built a following on calibrated provocation. The piece traces how the pen name began as an email address and became a thesis: anonymity as elegance, dismissal of culture as genuine argument rather than performance.
i-D traces one person's years-long hunt for a specific early-2000s Issey Miyake Pleats Please top printed with a cherry bun recipe, and the piece earns its space by being about the particular logic of collector obsession: not status, not investment, but the garment that maps so precisely onto your identity that not owning it becomes its own kind of weight.
Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack publishes a piece built around a pointed counterfactual: what if America's public monuments honored women the way they honor men like Washington? The essay uses Washington's documented order to destroy 40 Haudenosaunee towns as its anchor, asking what it means to study music beneath monuments to men whose legacies were built on erasure.
A reflective essay exploring how history reveals itself through personal encounters and inherited knowledge, using Frederick Douglass, Tadeusz Kościuszko, and conversations with artist Robert Edmund Lee Jones as anchors for understanding the past.
Charlie Lee, a literary critic and senior editor at Harper's, discusses John Gregory Dunne's memoir Vegas: A Memoir of a Dark Season, recently reissued by McNally Editions. Lee explores Dunne's obsession with money and how Vegas presented a paradoxical landscape of transience and uniformity that appealed to the writer despite its darker aspects.
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.
SOS 01
they are gutting a body of water
sour diesel
♪ 2025 · shoegaze
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.
Press Gazette reports that Google AI Overviews are surfacing detailed suicide method information at the top of search results, drawing sharp criticism from safety advocates. The piece is a useful pressure test for anyone building AI-driven editorial tools: content safety failures at Google's scale make the case for human editorial oversight in ways that abstract policy arguments rarely do.
The Media Copilot covers Cloudflare's move to let publishers charge AI bots not just for crawling content, but for actually using it in a generated answer. It's the most concrete attempt yet to build a real market around the data feeding these systems, and worth watching for anyone whose catalog or editorial output is already being scraped without compensation.
404 Media got inside sources at Amazon, Adobe, Atlassian, Citi, and others, and the picture is the same everywhere: AI costs ballooned faster than the value showed up, and companies are now throttling access, shortening prompts, and rationing tokens like a shared printer. The gap between the deployment pitch and the actual budget line is catching up with the enterprise AI rollout story.
Luiza's Newsletter frames a 64-minute governance course around a gap that's hard to ignore: 74% of companies plan to deploy agentic AI within two years, but only 21% have a mature model for governing it. Coding agents are the fastest-growing use case, and the risks, including cybersecurity, accountability, and compliance, aren't abstract. The deployment is already happening; the oversight isn't keeping pace.