First Floor
With Movement week arriving, First Floor makes the case that Robert Hood is Detroit techno's Platonic ideal — tracing his arc from Underground Resistance co-founder to the minimal blueprint of 1994's Minimal Nation and the gospel-inflected Floorplan project he now shares with his daughter Lyric.
charli xcx from charli's substack
Charli xcx published new lyrics on her Substack — a sardonic fashion-week allegory where aesthetics substitute for accountability and 'heritage' becomes a PR play. The lines land as cultural criticism wearing pop clothes: if you look good in the clothes, maybe nothing else matters.
Don't Rock The Inbox
An essay by Marissa Moss examining the disproportionate work and sacrifice required for women to succeed in country music, using Lainey Wilson and Ella Langley as examples, and questioning whether the industry is willing to address these inequities.
Bass Culture
Bass Culture reframes Mali's music history by starting where it should: not with albums or genres, but with the griot tradition and the concept of nyama — music as living archive, not entertainment. Eight centuries of cultural memory before a note was ever recorded.
Brad Mehldau Substack
Brad Mehldau discusses ageism in music, his relationship with social media platforms, and how he uses Substack versus Instagram and Facebook. He explains his practice of self-care regarding social media due to his predisposition to obsessive-compulsive behavior and hypomania, and contrasts the…
POW MAG
A retrospective on Run-DMC's 1986 album Raising Hell on its 40th anniversary, examining how the group avoided fakeness in their recordings and executed commercial concepts with authenticity.
POW MAG
A review of Drake's triple album release examining how Drake's obsession with his feud with Kendrick Lamar plays out across Iceman, Habibti, and Maid of Honour, with analysis of Drake's approach to grief and victimization in the aftermath of their beef.
Futurism Restated
A review of Laurence Pike's solo album "Possible Utopias for Jazz Quintet," released on Balmat. Despite its title, the album is not traditional jazz but rather an experimental instrumental work created largely through live playing and triggered software processes, reminiscent of artists like Burnt…