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On the Cover Featured on "Feel That Thumping Bass? You May Be in Warsaw."

TIDAL Moves Streaming's AI Debate From Ethics to Economics

TIDAL moved the AI-music fight to new ground. Platforms spent two years on detection, labels, and disclosure (should this music exist, should listeners be warned). TIDAL's new policy skips the ethics for the money: tracks judged "primarily AI-generated" stay on the service but earn no royalties and no direct-to-fan payouts. AI-assisted work with a human at its center still gets paid. It's a sharp bet that slowing the upload flood isn't about banning the bots. It's about refusing to pay them.

Jaime Brooks (Substack) · Music & Scene

The Publicist is Part of the Band

Jaime Brooks writes about music and technology on Substack, and this piece uses Zane Lowe's rare flash of anti-AI contempt in The Atlantic as a way in. Lowe is a promotional machine, the guy who convinces you a record is important. Brooks's point: the labels signing Udio deals are quietly betting that machine is obsolete. If a hit starts with a prompt, there's no origin story to sell and no artist to interview. The narrative infrastructure was the product all along.

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First Floor · Music & Scene

How Skull Disco and "Blood on My Hands" Forever Blurred the Boundary Between Dubstep and Techno

First Floor digs into Lauren Martin's forthcoming oral history, Aftershock: The Seismic Impact of Dubstep, which pulls together 28 of the genre's architects (Mala, Loefah, Kode9, Skream) to trace how a specific London sound rewrote the dancefloor. The real payoff is what came after: how dubstep's headier mutations bled into techno and seeded the endlessly elastic "bass music" tag we're still leaning on in 2026.

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01 Music & Scene

Feel That Thumping Bass? You May Be in Warsaw.

A scrappy EDM scene — young collectives, buzzy D.J.s, all-night raves in convention halls and clubs tucked into bridge towers — is putting the Polish capital on the global nightlife map. The Times reports from Warsaw's dance floors as the city begins to rival Berlin for techno.

Read on NY Times →

Kelela draws on her past to carve out the future

On her third album 'New Avatar,' Kelela brings in guitars and mines her indie-rock past — a punk-house band, The Fiery Furnaces, Metric — before she became the artist who collapses R&B and electronic music. She tells NME it's about finding "a new place for us to live."

Read on NME →

Surf Against the Bank: The Life and Death of Éliane Radigue

An obituary and tribute to French composer and electronic music pioneer Éliane Radigue, who passed away at 94 in February. The piece explores her pioneering work in feedback and synthesizer music, minimalism, musique concrète, and later acoustic compositions, as well as her spiritual practice in Tibetan Buddhism.

Read on POW MAG →

Zouk La Sé Sèl: The Story of the Music That Means Party

Zouk wasn't born in the Caribbean but in Paris, where migration put gwo ka, biguine, and Haitian compas next to state-of-the-art studios. Bass Culture traces how Kassav', formed in 1979 by Pierre-Edouard Décimus and Jacob Desvarieux, answered the diaspora question every immigrant scene asks by making the synthesis explicit: unmistakably Antillean, utterly modern, and built to export.

Read on Bass Culture →
02 Music Industry Analysis

Google says AI training is 'fair use' and copyright should be policed on outputs, not inputs

The RIAA, music publishers and independent artists are all fighting AI companies in court over whether training a model on copyrighted work without permission is 'fair use'. Google, which builds its own AI music tools, has argued in a new policy paper that training AI models on publicly available web data should remain protected by fair use in the US.

Read on Music Business Worldwide →

Book Where You Stream

Those blue dots on Ticketmaster's maps aren't a demand crisis, Bruce Ramos argues, leaning on Luminate's June 2026 report: tickets got cheaper, perceived value rose, and Gen Z price resistance fell. The panic is a geography problem. Beyoncé's Cowboy Carter residency and Tyler, the Creator's LA overindex prove the fix is booking where you already stream, which Ramos reads as an untapped Regional Mexican play.

Read on Bruce Ramos →

How U.S. Streaming Trends Impact Talent Buyers and Marketers

English-language streaming's share of the U.S. market keeps slipping, down to 86% in Q1 2026 per Luminate, while Spanish hits 9.5% and Korean holds steady. Hypebot reads the numbers as a booking mandate: with Bad Bunny at #2 overall and casual fans everywhere, global acts belong in prime main-stage slots and secondary-market routing, not the 2 PM side stage.

Read on Hypebot →

What Streaming Looks Like Outside the West

When we say "streaming," we usually mean Spotify and a handful of Western majors. Money 4 Nothing talks with Northeastern's Ryan Blakeley about the ecosystem beyond that: state-affiliated services in Greenland, Chinese-backed African startups, the Middle East. The sharper thread is infrastructural, tracing the intermediary firms that connect local platforms to global rights-holders and quietly fold them into the same structural logic.

Read on Money 4 Nothing →

The Tech Backlash Gets Nastier—and Funnier

The anti-AI backlash has turned tactical and occasionally absurd, and The Honest Broker catalogs the range: Benn Jordan encoding tracks to poison generative training data, banner-towing planes over a Santa Monica AI conference, Deezer's bot detector, and YouTube's biggest music voices (Fantano, Beato, Neely) turning openly hostile. The sharp irony sits with Alphabet, funding AI while depending on the indie creators now fighting it.

Read on Ted Gioia →

TIDAL Says Fully AI-Generated Music Won't Earn Royalties

TIDAL will stop paying royalties on fully AI-generated tracks, Zinstrel reports, drawing a line most DSPs have dodged. The piece is sharper on the litigation gathering behind it: the Tony Justice suit now counts nearly 1,300 creators, including Anthony Fantano and Benn Jordan, and leans on a stream-ripping claim a federal court already refused to dismiss against Udio. Hagens Berman brings the firepower.

Read on Zinstrel →

Music Market Update - 1Q 2026

Where the money's actually moving in early 2026: Jimmy's quarterly Alderbrook slides show catalog M&A holding its record pace and private growth capital hitting recent highs, with late-stage funding concentrated in Artist & Label Services and AI Music Creation startups. Public raises stayed quiet under macro pressure.

Read on Leveling Up from Alderbrook →
03 Music Recommendations

SML — "Roundabouts"

Captured across a three-night Zebulon stint, this side-long cut finds the LA quintet spinning off from Jeff Parker's ETA lineage into cosmic disarray. Chiu drops a tricky 5/4 bass pattern the band layers polyrhythms around, climbing until Butterss triggers a chord change and Uhlmann and Johnson blow the lid off with intersecting transcendent high notes. There's krautrock in the stew, but Uhlmann eventually pulls the back half into robotically muted 16th-note tunnel vision.

04 Voice & Culture

Cities and Moods

Colin's piece argues that cities have moods — collective energies shaped by weather, sport, and convergent events — and that music lands differently inside them. His examples are vivid: Nick Cave's homecoming tour bleeding into Melbourne's Australian Open buzz; New York freshly euphoric from a Knicks title and World Cup arrivals. The argument is that context isn't backdrop — it's load-bearing.

Read on Why is this interesting? →

Avoiding the Cymbal

A Different Lens opens with an introduction to a life in film criticism, framed around the jazz jam session tradition of throwing the cymbal at unprepared musicians. The argument: public expression carries consequence, and forty years of woodshedding isn't about avoiding risk but arriving prepared enough that the risk is honest. A sharp distinction between the critic who waits and the one who simply never shows up.

Read on A Different Lens - see floyd muse →

An interview with Mary HK Choi

Famous and Beloved sits down with Mary HK Choi, whose novel Pool House she suspects is a slow burn that first-week sales pressure can't capture. The sharpest moment: Choi's observation that book tour media cycles now reduce authors to "recommendation machines" — live-action taste algorithms scraping each other for purchase suggestions. She calls it the "taste slop economy," and it lands.

Read on Famous and Beloved Newsletter →

Put your phone away.

Emily Sundberg's newsletter makes the case that phones are the thing everyone's quietly trying to escape right now. Writing from Liguria, she traces the impulse across Charli XCX's new music video, Adam Faze swapping phones for a live illustrator at his birthday party, and a Tribeca doc on influencer tourism overtaking Cinque Terre. The throughline is sharper than a trend piece.

Read on Feed Me →

SHIRT OFF

Katherine Needleman reflects on the social and legal considerations around women going shirtless in public, drawing on her experiences with bodily autonomy following motherhood and what her research revealed about the gendered double standards around toplessness.

Read on Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack →

66%: Not From Warsaw

A Different Lens uses polling data and donor-class infrastructure as the entry point for arguing that what reads as a racial story is always also a story about capital accumulation and institutional protection. Drawing on Taylor, Ferguson, and Reed, the piece contends that tracing who funds the certainty a poll produces reveals the actual power structure underneath it.

Read on A Different Lens →

The Odyssey's Most Uncomfortable Lesson

This essay examines Homer's Odyssey by focusing on the second half of the epic—what happens after Odysseus returns to Ithaca—to reveal deeper meanings about love, home, and war that are often overlooked in favor of the more fantastical adventures of the journey home.

Read on The Culturist →
05 Sound on Sight Video Archive

DER ANNA — "DOG"

2024 · post-punk

The Manfredini brothers built Der Anna in Brescia around a simple collision: '77 punk snarl fed through drum machines and analog synths. "Dog" rides that friction, the guitars biting while the electronics keep everything locked and obsessive. Barely a year old when they cut it, and already sounding like they've found their frequency.

06 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

The generic style of AI web design

Kyle Chayka's piece argues that AI design tools are producing a house aesthetic as recognizable as LLM prose tics: cream backgrounds, rusty orange accents, tracked-out subheadings, and heavy italic serifs. The culprit is the same force Chayka has been tracing across culture — defaults baked into the model that surface whenever a user doesn't actively push back. The generic is the path of least resistance.

Read on Kyle Chayka Industries →

The twilight of the chatbots

One Useful Thing makes the case that AI capability gains are now accelerating faster than most people's mental models account for. The benchmarks cited are concrete: METR, the UK AI Security Institute, and Epoch all show better-than-exponential growth in real work output. One data point lands hard: Opus 4.7 built a software package representing up to 17 weeks of engineering work, solo, for $251.

Read on One Useful Thing →

You Don't Need Hands to Play Guitar

The Axis of Music makes a case that AI tools don't save artists time so much as they redistribute it toward tasks that wouldn't have existed otherwise. The sharpest line comes via Carl Benedikt Frey: the chatbot answers what you ask; the expert tells you what to ask. For emerging artists replacing collaborators with prompts, that's the gap worth sitting with.

Read on The Axis of Music →
07 AI Product News

The Real Reason AI Costs Keep Rising

The AI Corner applies a 160-year-old economics observation to AI infrastructure: tokens got 600x cheaper since 2020, and spend went up anyway. Cheaper inference didn't reduce costs, it unlocked a more expensive computing pattern, agents that loop rather than answer once. If you're budgeting AI tools, the unit cost is the wrong number to watch.

Read on The AI Corner →

Changes to the AI Act Approved by the Council of the EU

Luiza's Newsletter breaks down the EU Council's approved amendments to the AI Act, and the date that matters most for music: December 2026, when the grace period ends for transparency requirements on AI-generated content. The update also bans non-consensual intimate imagery starting the same month, and pushes high-risk AI compliance deadlines into 2027 and 2028.

Read on Luiza's Newsletter →

The AI frontier is closing

Sources reports from Open Frontier, a San Francisco gathering where AI researchers and CEOs converged around a shared concern: too much talent, compute, and data is pooling inside a handful of closed labs. Laude Institute's Andy Konwinski framed it bluntly — the frontier isn't closing by accident, it's closing through deliberate decisions made by people in the room.

Read on Sources →

Why Cursor made an iPhone app

Alex Heath provides an inside look at Cursor's launch of a new iPhone app that allows engineers to control cloud agents and remotely manage Mac minis. The app features integrated voice control, push notifications, and live activity tracking, addressing the challenge of engineers needing to keep their AI coding agents running.

Read on Sources →

Anthropic's Claude Tag: AI as workflow participant

The Media Copilot covers Claude Tag, Anthropic's new Slack agent that stops starting cold each session: it holds a shared identity per channel, builds context over time, and can read across channels to understand a request. Ambient mode surfaces updates without being asked. The frame shifts from chatbot to standing workflow participant, which sharpens a real question about what a shared AI teammate should be allowed to see.

Read on The Media Copilot →

Building in Public Is Not What It Used To Be

An analysis of how AI has changed the dynamics of building in public as a startup strategy. The piece argues that while copying features has become cheaper, the real barriers to competition were never about execution speed, and that transparency now signals different risks than it used to.

Read on The VC Corner →
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