Sound Signal. Curating the feed every Monday, Wednesday and Friday
Today's Top Reads
Essays · Analysis · Features
On the cover
On the Cover Featured on "Pop subversion, robbing cowboys and Greek mythology" Art by @annajanemcintyre

Adapt or Die: How Country Took Rap's Place Atop The Charts

Eric at Track Ten digs into Billboard data to test what you've probably already felt scrolling through the Hot 100: rap's dominance is slipping, and country is filling the vacuum. The pivot isn't just vibes — he tracks the crossover success rates of genre chart-toppers across 15 years, and the trendlines are stark. Beyoncé and Post Malone aren't chasing a moment; they're reading the room. The question now is who follows them through the door.

Embedded (Nick Catucci) · Music & Scene

Will music criticism survive?

Nick Catucci's Embedded roundtable gathers critics from Pitchfork to the Voice era to ask whether music criticism can survive when the outlets that once sustained it have collapsed. The twist isn't nostalgia — it's the suggestion that algorithmic slop might actually create demand for human taste again. If your feed has ever surfaced a take so synthetic you could smell the content farm, you already know the argument. The question is whether anyone's still paying for the antidote.

Read →
Music Business Worldwide · AI + Content & Editorial Technology

Suno is paying grants to independent artists... so long as they agree not to criticize Suno

Music Business Worldwide breaks down Suno's new Spark incubator for indie artists, and the terms are telling. Grants, mentorship, marketing support — in exchange for social posts, likeness rights, and a clause forbidding any negative statements about Suno. Ever. It's less artist development than reputation laundering aimed at the exact community most skeptical of AI music tools. The quiet part is now contract language.

Read →
01 Music & Scene

Pop subversion, robbing cowboys and Greek mythology - Nancy Sinatra in excelsis

Ben Cardew's piece on Line Noise makes the case that Nancy Sinatra is one of pop's genuinely subversive figures — not adjacent to the mainstream but actively undermining it, from LSD odes disguised as easy listening to the deeply strange Greek-mythology fever dream of Some Velvet Morning. The argument hinges on her partnership with Lee Hazlewood, whose influence Cardew treats as load-bearing rather than incidental.

Read on Line Noise →

Anthony Fantano Is Annoying But He Has A Point

Robin Murray's piece on Anthony Fantano argues that the internet's most divisive critic is annoying precisely because he's right — and that's the engine of his durability. Artists hate him, audiences trust him, and Murray uses that tension to untangle why critical friction still has market value in a streaming era optimized to sand every edge off.

Read on Never Hurry a Murray (Robin Murray) →

Robert Henke on making music, then and now

Futureproofing goes deep with Robert Henke on what it actually takes to make dense electronic music cohere. The Monolake co-founder is candid about how Gerhard Behm functioned as a necessary counterweight — stripping back what Henke compulsively added — and how losing that dynamic forced him to internalize restraint as a strategy.

Read on Futureproofing →

that depends on what you know

On Substack, Vijay Iyer writes about Greg Tate — what it meant to be fully heard by him, through Burnt Sugar rehearsals, Baraka's band, and a post-9/11 airport pat-down Tate named in two words. Less eulogy than a meditation on how radical listening becomes an act of love, and how that shapes the artist you become.

Read on vijay iyer →

The Ex: 5 decades in 6 songs

Carl Wilson's Substack 'Crritic!' traces the Ex across five decades through six songs — a useful frame for a band whose longevity defies easy explanation. Wilson grounds the argument early: the Amsterdam anarcho-punk squatting scene that birthed them in 1979 was formative but limiting, and their real story begins when the borrowed outfits fell away and the rhythmic invention took over.

Read on Carl Wilson, 'Crritic!' →

Luciano Cilio

Free City Rhymes makes the case that Luciano Cilio's Dialoghi del Presente belongs beside Pink Moon and Bad Timing — a largely solo Italian record from the 70s, rediscovered late, that sounds like Morton Feldman reimagined with folk instruments. The Jim O'Rourke parallel is convincing, and the close reading of Patrizia Lopez's ghostly vocal entrance is the kind of specific that earns the comparison.

Read on Free City Rhymes →

Microtonal MCU, Unique Meme, Bad Music

Alexander Iadarola's newsletter opens with a viral meme about Woody Guthrie's Dust Bowl Ballads, then uses it to pick at a genuinely interesting problem: what does probabilistic surprise even mean when video compresses in a moment what prose needs four sentences to explain? From there it pivots into a defense of bad music as a critical tool — Skrillex included.

Read on 2020 Music Group →
02 Music Industry Analysis

How did 3 datasets quietly scrape millions of songs for AI training?

musicben's piece goes beyond the Atlantic's initial reporting to map exactly how three datasets — including LAION DISCO's 12 million YouTube links — were built to feed mass audio-extraction tools. The mechanism is clarifying: no music stored, just metadata spreadsheets designed to be ripped. musicben found their own work in two of them, which sharpens the piece's urgency without tipping into polemic.

Read on STVDIO →

Why Rod Wave's Fans Sing His Songs For Him

Hypebot makes a case for vulnerability as a live asset, using Rod Wave's tours as the evidence. His crowds don't just sing choruses — they carry full verses, reciting lyrics about depression and heartbreak word-for-word, at volumes that rival the PA.

Read on Hypebot →

Majors and BMG ask US Supreme Court to overturn copyright termination ruling they say will cause 'chaos'

Music Business Worldwide reports that the majors and BMG are petitioning the Supreme Court to reverse a Fifth Circuit ruling with major implications for global rights ownership. The court held that US termination rights recapture worldwide copyright — not just domestic — which the labels say would upend decades of international licensing.

Read on Music Business Worldwide →

Spotify Stock Has Collapsed 40%—What's Going On?

Spotify's stock is down 40% from its June 2025 all-time high — and on the Honest Broker Substack, the timing of insider selling is what makes the story. CEO Daniel Ek unloaded shares at a scale rarely seen from a corporate leader, right before the collapse. It's the kind of detail that reframes how you read every Spotify strategy announcement from the last year.

Read on Ted Gioia →
03 Music Recommendations

Tara Clerkin Trio — "Lazy Daisy"

The Bristol trio's collage-like sound drifts between minimalist jazz, avant-pop, and trip-hop, built from hours of improvisation and layering around Clerkin's daydreamy vocals. Found sounds—scaffolding clangs, footsteps, chimes—enhance the uncanny atmosphere, while loop pedals allow three members to fill space like eight. Their forthcoming album Somewhere Good marks a more structured, pop-oriented turn while retaining the signature scatter of oddball textures.

04 Voice & Culture

GemStone

Tao Lin's Substack publishes a 4,843-word essay built around GemStone III, the text-based MMO that consumed his middle school years. The piece tracks how the game's pull — compounded by headgear wrecking his sleep and muting his social instincts — quietly rewired his adolescence. Eighth grade yearbook: happy. Ninth grade: dead eyes. That before-and-after is the whole argument.

Read on Tao Lin's Substack →

Did the Superhero Movie Era Mean Anything?

Sean Fennessey examines the 25-year arc of superhero cinema from X-Men (2000) and Spider-Man (2002) to the present, exploring how these films have permeated culture, discourse, and the film industry itself. He argues that Supergirl marks the definitive end of the superhero movie era and proposes a comprehensive analysis of what this period meant for cinema and audiences.

Read on Projections →

Bots in the Beerlight

Kneeling Bus flags Alex Rapine's Bar Tab and a post about Brooklyn's Carousel bar as a jumping-off point for thinking about how '70s aesthetic has fully detached from its nostalgic origins — it no longer references anything, it just is. A tight observation about how a cultural style survives by becoming self-contained.

Read on Kneeling Bus →

My Whole Life Is For Sale

Leah Mensch writes about two writers' efforts to find a permanent home for the archives of the late poet and novelist Kate Braverman. The piece explores Braverman's life, her dedication to her craft, and the ongoing work to preserve her literary legacy.

Read on The Believer Magazine →

Meet the Astrologist predicting Love Island USA

A feature by Nicolaia Rips exploring her obsession with watching Love Island USA and the role of an astrologer in predicting outcomes on the show. The piece uses humorous comparisons to The Hunger Games while discussing the immersive fan culture surrounding the reality dating show.

Read on i-D →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

How Do You Define An 'AI Song?'

The andre gee newsletter uses Fenix Flexin's viral synthpop oddity 'Rubberz' to probe a question the industry hasn't answered cleanly: what actually makes a song 'AI'? Flexin has denied it, citing autotune and reverb — but the denial itself is the story.

Read on the andre gee newsletter →

How Has AI Reshaped Internet Culture?

Stat Significant argues we're fixating on obvious AI slop — Shrimp Jesus, weight-lifting cats — while missing the subtler rewiring: the vocabulary LLMs favor, the punctuation patterns, the ideological grain baked into the prose. Research tracking word frequency post-ChatGPT finds terms like "delve" and "bolster" spiking beyond any prior trajectory.

Read on Stat Significant →

The Ghost in the Machine Wants a Cut

An op-ed from Walter De Brouwer, co-founder of SoundPatrol (a research lab for large music models), arguing that catalogs are becoming raw material for machines and that the music market is splitting into two: cheap, infinite AI music on one side and rare, verified human work on the other.

Read on Music Business Worldwide →

Strange Knowledgeability

An essay exploring the relationship between internal knowledge and external information systems, prompted by reading Robert Darnton's The Business of the Enlightenment about Diderot's 18th-century Encyclopédie. The author argues that the ability to search for information doesn't reduce the need for knowledge, and discusses how LLMs have pushed this dynamic to a crisis point.

Read on Contraptions →

What AI can't replace

Alex Heath reports on conversations hosted at Cannes Lions with Yahoo CEO Jim Lanzone and creator-economy panelists, exploring how AI is reshaping content value and the importance of unique, original content in the age of large language models.

Read on Sources →

Time and Axios turn AI prominence into advertising revenue

Press Gazette reports from Cannes Lions that Time and Axios have figured out how to convert AI visibility into actual ad dollars — turning their prominence in LLM outputs into a monetizable signal. The model is early, but the underlying logic is clean: if your brand shows up in AI answers, that's reach, and reach has always had a price. Worth watching as a template.

Read on Press Gazette →
06 AI Product News
More from Today
Industry · Music · Archives · Quote