Sound Signal. Curating the feed every Monday, Wednesday and Friday
Today's Top Reads
Essays · Analysis · Features
On the cover
On the Cover Xania Monet, Featured on "The Man Building AI Music's First Pro Roster"

The Man Building AI Music's First Pro Roster

Zinstrel profiles Talib Murphy, the manager behind AI R&B artist Xania Monet, who's now building what amounts to a traditional artist management firm for AI music creators. The angle worth noting: Murphy sees a familiar pattern forming — a new creative space generating real money, populated largely by Black creators without industry knowledge, and the inevitable arrival of people ready to exploit that gap. His firm dai+drm is an attempt to get infrastructure in place before the extractors do.

The Gig · Essay

The Metaphysics of Sonny Rollins

Nate Chinen at The Gig traces Sonny Rollins' final recorded performance — a halting, two-minute reading of "Mixed Emotions" from Prague in 2012 — and the decade of silence that followed. Rollins, now living with pulmonary fibrosis, hasn't touched his tenor in years. For anyone who's watched a titan step back from the work that defined them, Chinen's portrait sits heavy: the unopened case in the corner, the tin flute, the waiting.

Read →
Joel Gouveia's Substack · Essay

How The Majors Get Rich Off Your Typos

Joel Gouveia spent four years inside Canada's PRO system manually matching SiriusXM plays to rightsholders, and what he found won't surprise anyone who's ever tried to track down a missing royalty: the metadata infrastructure is a dumpster fire. Typos, misregistrations, unmatched plays — all of it funnels money somewhere, just not to the indie artist who wrote the song. The majors have teams to catch these errors. You don't.

Read →
01 Music & Scene

The ICE Detention of Frankie Jax No Mad

A personal essay about the author's friendship with West Coast rapper Frankie Jax (also known as Baraka) and his unexpected detention by ICE agents announced on May 17th. The piece traces Jax's contributions to the L.A. underground rap scene through his Not Evil Records label and residencies, and his continued work as a Dublab DJ from Portland before his arrest.

Read on POW MAG →

Boards of Canada - Inferno Album Review

Loud And Quiet frames the real question around Inferno — BoC's first album in 13 years — not as whether it sounds like them (it does), but whether sounding like Boards of Canada still means anything when hauntological aesthetics have been fully absorbed into ambient playlists and bedroom sample packs. A sharp lens for thinking about what mystique actually buys you in 2026.

Read on Loud And Quiet →

A Remarc of obsession - saluting the Amen king

Line Noise makes the case for Remarc as the Amen break's most consequential extremist — the jungle producer who out-chopped everyone while keeping the dance floor intact, something Squarepusher never managed. A loving, specific tribute built around six drum tracks worth queueing up loud.

Read on Line Noise →

HOOKED - On Song Hooks and Musical Atmosphere

An essay exploring the nature of song hooks, arguing that the most effective hooks are often not specific lyrical or melodic elements but rather the overall atmospheric feel and emotional quality that permeates an entire song, using examples like Dire Straits' "Sultans of Swing" and The Beatles' "Hey Jude."

Read on Simon's Substack →

A guide to Wales' pastoral psychedelia

A feature exploring the unique strain of psychedelia that has thrived in Wales across generations, from 1970s hallucinogenic folk iconoclasts through contemporary artists. The author attended the FOCUS Wales music festival in Wrexham to document the history and contemporary evolution of pastoral Welsh psychedelia through conversations with artists continuing this tradition.

Read on Loud And Quiet →

Listening to 2001: A Space Odyssey

An essay analyzing the soundtrack to Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey, examining the role of silence, classical music by Richard Strauss, Johann Strauss, and György Ligeti, and arguing the film reveals how machines programmed by some humans manipulate others rather than depicting a simple human-versus-AI conflict.

Read on Film Comment →

Freedom from the Known

Beta Music for Beta People revisits Sonny Rollins' 1958 Freedom Suite — the first album-length Civil Rights statement in jazz, promptly suppressed by his own label and reissued four years later stripped of its cover, liner notes, and political spine. A sharp reminder that erasure isn't always external.

Read on Beta Music for Beta People →
02 Music Industry Analysis

The "quiet money" behind $4 billion music catalog deals

STVDIO maps the financial architecture behind Sony's $4B catalog grab (Bieber, Beyoncé, Fleetwood Mac) and Warner's $300M RHCP deal: sovereign wealth funds and PE giants like Bain Capital are the silent partners, trading capital for stable streaming royalty returns while labels contribute deal flow and catalog management. The joint-venture playbook is now industry standard.

Read on STVDIO →

The Catalog Wave Hit. The Money was Never for New Artists.

Bruce Ramos punctures the zero-sum anxiety around catalog capital: the LP mandates funding Shamrock or Pipeline bids never overlapped with A&R budgets to begin with. Thirteen dedicated vehicles in two months means music now has real buy-side density — enough for sellers to run a process, get comparables, and let buyers compete. Ramos's REIT parallel is the useful frame.

Read on Substack (Bruce Ramos) →

Live Nation faces calls for another competition investigation as UK lawmakers flag live music market dominance

Live Nation has created a "climate of fear" in the UK live music industry, according to a House of Commons committee report that concludes the company meets the threshold for market dominance across multiple areas of the UK live music supply chain. The committee is calling on the UK's competition regulator to launch a full market investigation before the end of 2026.

Read on Music Business Worldwide →
03 Music Recommendations

Olivia Rodrigo — "The Cure"

The guitar riff, lyrics, and string-laden build draw comparisons to Liz Phair's Exile in Guyville cuts and Smashing Pumpkins' "Disarm." The video channels Death Cab for Cutie's "Title and Registration" aesthetic, marking a textured turn for Rodrigo.

04 Voice & Culture

THE PULP BUSINESS AKA HOLLYWOOD

Nelson George maps three waves of Black Hollywood presence — blaxploitation, the Spike Lee era, BLM — and argues each opened doors that closed just as fast. With Warner Discovery folding into Ellison's empire and Trump back in office, he sees the pattern repeating: tech-sector gatekeepers have replaced studio ones, with even less commitment to voices outside the mainstream.

Read on The Nelson George Mixtape →

The Enantiodromia Edition

Why is this interesting? uses Jung's enantiodromia — the idea that systems pushed to an extreme flip into their opposite — to trace the cultural whiplash from Mötley Crüe to Nirvana's Incesticide liner notes. A personal essay that earns its theory.

Read on Why is this interesting? →

MEMORIAL DAY 2026

Katherine Needleman examines the career of horn player Philip Farkas and the treatment of female horn player Kotas in the Chicago Symphony under conductor Artur Rodzinski. The piece explores how professional networks and gender dynamics operated in mid-20th century orchestra management.

Read on Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack →

I saw every movie at Cannes

A festival report from a journalist covering their 10th Cannes Film Festival. The piece reflects on changes at the festival over the years, critiques the main competition as an old boys' club, and highlights emerging filmmakers and new stars in the sidebar strands.

Read on i-D →

LET US NOT FORGET ELAYNE JONES

Blind auditions were supposed to be the fix — Elayne Jones helped invent them. This Substack piece recovers her story: the first Black principal-chair musician in a major American orchestra, denied tenure in 1974 by an all-white committee that gave her 169 out of 700 points, while six white colleagues hired the same year sailed through. Pegged to Elim Chan's appointment at the SF Symphony.

Read on Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack →

A Short Interview with Rafia Zakaria

Rafia Zakaria discusses winning the 2026 National Magazine Award for her essay "Water Pressure" about her father's search for clean water in Karachi, Pakistan during a climate crisis. The interview explores the inspiration behind the personal essay and the challenges of developing the piece.

Read on The Believer Magazine →

Blasting from the Pasting: Making Plans in 2006

A nostalgic look at an email chain from 2006 between the author and her college best friend 'Lauren' discussing plans to see Bridge and Tunnel and coordinating their schedules. The piece captures absurd mundane moments from the early 2000s correspondence.

Read on Ottessa →

Feed Me's Summer Novel Reading List

A curated summer reading list of novels with reader commentary and personal anecdotes about the reading experience. Features recommendations including works by James Baldwin, Lauren Groff, Ian McEwan, and others, accompanied by vivid descriptions of where and how readers experienced these books.

Read on Feed Me →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

The New No. 1 AI Song Has Two Origin Stories

A new number one AI song titled "Let Me Be" by The Second Voice has debuted atop the SIQA Global Top 100 AI Songs chart, but two different African artists are being credited as its creator, indicating conflicting versions of its origins. The track is the first chart-topper from Warner's November 2025 Suno settlement and has generated millions of views and TikTok usage within days.

Read on Zinstrel - AI Music Culture & Analysis →

Choosing to Stay Human

One Useful Thing argues that AI-generated writing isn't just tedious — it's cognitively extractive. The piece coins a useful frame: 'meaning-shaped attention vampires' that read like thought but deliver none. The deeper concern is what outsourcing writing costs the writer, not just the reader.

Read on One Useful Thing →

The Power of the Derivative

An essay exploring how Aretha Franklin's cover of Otis Redding's "Respect" became the definitive version through creative transformation, and drawing parallels to how AI prompting differs from traditional artistic influence by reducing friction in the creative process.

Read on Joel Gouveia →

What the bots are saying about you

The Media Copilot asks whether AI search is just SEO with a new coat of paint — same broken incentives, different mechanics. The piece looks at early signals of what AI search engines are actually rewarding, and whether the new discovery layer might, against the odds, align better with quality journalism than the last one did.

Read on The Media Copilot →
06 AI Product News

The Artificial Intelligence Commission

A newsletter interview with Emory Law's Prof. Ifeoma Ajunwa on her proposal for a federal AI commission — covering governance structure, global coordination, and how to regulate AI the government itself uses. Substantive if you follow U.S. AI policy, though the value is mostly in the 55-minute video conversation rather than the post itself.

Read on Luiza Jarovsky, PhD →

This AI Company Has Paid Out $20M to Content Owners

Media & the Machine profiles Troveo, an AI data licensing company claiming $20M paid to content owners and a library of eight million hours of video and four million hours of audio. The piece is more interview transcript than analysis, but the scale figures are worth clocking — this is the infrastructure layer of AI training deals, and it's already operating at significant volume.

Read on Media & the Machine →
More from Today
Industry · Music · Archives · Quote