The Gig
Nate Chinen and Gabriel Kahane conducted a Substack Live conversation about creative practice, productive friction, and making art during precarious times. The discussion ranged from Stephen Sondheim's theatrical music to artificial intelligence and automation, with nuanced perspectives on both topics.
A Different Lens - see floyd muse
An essay on the death of musician Abdullah Ibrahim and the re-emergence of Ubuntu philosophy in late twentieth-century Black music and cultural resistance, examining how the concept of relational humanity was disrupted by colonialism and reclaimed through musicians and cultural workers.
Song Sommelier
Keith Jopling builds his case around a simple symmetry: if AI trains on songs, listeners need to train their ears in return. Anchored in David Hockney's work ethic and a Manchester trio whose practice showed in every note, the piece argues that deliberate listening — learning to hear transients, spotting AI's smoothed-off attack — is the fan's side of the bargain.
re:sonate
With 100,000+ tracks uploaded to streaming daily, re:sonate argues the scarce resource is no longer access but orientation — and that human curators (DJs, broadcasters, tastemakers) supply the trust, taste and context algorithms can't. A defense of human curation against algorithmic overload.
First Floor
Shawn Reynaldo on critique-fatigue: Sónar returns to Barcelona still owned by private-equity giant KKR (fossil fuels, weapons, surveillance, West Bank ties), yet hundreds of artists play on. A weary, pointed essay on complicity and boycott fatigue.
The Nelson George Mixtape
Nelson George makes the case that Black new wave — Prince's Minneapolis sound cross-wired with UK dance, Linn drums, and skinny ties — was its own coherent genre moment, not just a detour. Writing from memory (he was at Trax and the Peppermint Lounge), George maps the movement through Cameo, Shalamar, and Jermaine Jackson, then hands you the playlist.
POW MAG
An in-depth interview with 54-year-old rap veteran AZ discussing his new album 'Doe or Die III', his observations about gentrification and changing New York City, his lyrical approach to aging, and his evolution as an artist since his 1995 debut and his famous verse on Nas's 'Life's A Bitch'.
The Line of Best Fit
Angel Olsen writes about Leonard Cohen's "Night Comes On" in The Line of Best Fit's Friday Dispatch — specifically what the song unlocked about fatherhood, distance, and a 90-year-old neighbor named David who lets strangers borrow his canoe. It's a small, precise piece of music writing: the kind where a song arrives on shuffle and suddenly reorganizes something you'd been circling for years.
POW MAG
Wiki's new LP Ancient History is a gorgeous, blooming album centered on New York City's park benches and creeping flora, representing a deepening of technique and personal insights following Ratking's dissolution.
Bayesian Barn Dance
A historical investigation into the peculiar trend of fake brother acts in early country music, examining why unrelated performers adopted shared surnames and the 'Brothers' designation, with particular focus on the clustering of such acts in New York City and Richmond, Indiana.